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America

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2018

Extract

If, in this the ninth annual letter of your correspondent to the Journal, he should leave out the usual introductory plaint as to the impossibility of crowding the important psychiatric news of the year, even in shortest form, into the allotted space, the patient reader—if there be such—might welcome the change of style. Some vindication, however, is due the writer if he seems to supply a parcel of fragments rather than a true epitome.

Type
Part II.—Epitome
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1913 

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References

(1) Journ. Ment. Sci., Vol. lviii, No. 242, pp. 494, ff.Google Scholar
(2) Osler, .—Practice of Medicine, 6th edition, 1906, p. 384.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
(3) Babcoclc, J. W.“How Long has Pellagra Existed in South Carolina?” Amer. Journ. of Insan., Vol. lxix.Google Scholar
(4) Harrington, A. H.“Pellagra in Rhode Island,” Boston Med. and Surg. Journ., Vol. clxvii, No. 1.Google Scholar
(5) Hoag, David Edward.—“Pellagra,” Journ. Am. Med. Assoc., Vol. lix, No. 16.Google Scholar
(6) Noguchi, Hideyo and Moore, J. W.Journ. of Exper. Med., Vol. xvii, No. 2, 1913.Google Scholar
(7) Channing, Walter.—Bost. Med. and Surg. Journ., Vol. clxvii, No. 5, pp. 156158.Google Scholar
(8) Clouston, Thomas Sir.—Ibid., February 27th, 1913.Google Scholar
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