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Word: listers (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Bennett '28, R. C. Berresford '28, H. W. Bragdon '28, F. B. Cutts '28, Langdon Dearborn '28, J. L. Gray 1L., C. S. Haight 2L., S. G. Hardy '29, Willard Howard oc C., R. R. Ketchum '29, Hulburd Johnson '29, R. W. Ladd oc C. J. M. Lister '29, L. M. McTurnan '28, F. C. M. Lister '29, L. M. McTurnan '28, F. C. Manak '30, A. L. May '28, R. W. Meadows '30, A H. O'Nell '28, L. B. Osborne '29, C. H. Pforzheimer '28, J. M. Preston '28, A. E. Reed 2 G. B., W. G. Saltonstall...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: UNION BUFFET TO SERVE H-Y GUESTS | 11/16/1927 | See Source »

...things you say about people under their pictures are sometimes little short of disgusting. What a blasphemy to print the photograph of saintly Joseph Lister and underneath it say: "They reminded him of sewage." I wish my husband was here to write you the indignation he, a doctor, would have felt at your indecency. "Joseph Lister slopped carbolic acid."' Ugh I Evidently you never heard that medicine is a ministry. I am sure Dr. Lister performed his miracles with grace...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Apr. 25, 1927 | 4/25/1927 | See Source »

TIME reported accurately that the smell of festering wounds suggested to famed Dr. Lister that carbolic acid might be applied to them as it was to sewage in Carlisle, England...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Apr. 25, 1927 | 4/25/1927 | See Source »

These were mild eulogies, spoken by men who might not now be alive, were it not for the sanitary, antiseptic methods which Lister taught the midwives of his time. Many men have forgotten Joseph Lister's work in antisepsis. Few now know the meaning of "to listerize" and of "listerism," words brought into the language as a tribute to him. Were it not for the Lambert Pharmacal Co.'s broadcasting of Listerine (aromatic antiseptic), his name would have disappeared altogether from the colloquial tongue...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Joseph Lister | 4/18/1927 | See Source »

...scarcely 60 years since hospitals were like charnel houses. Every other patient then carried into a hospital for surgical treatment, was carried out dead of blood poisoning, his wound a stinking fester. Joseph Lister, a young surgeon in Glasgow, smelled at the festers. They reminded him of sewage; and sewage reminded him of how the city of Carlisle was deodorizing its wastes-by carbolic acid. He slopped carbolic acid on the open wounds of accident cases brought to him. The acid worked; it prevented development of horrid "hospital gangrene." Joseph Lister had discovered antisepsis and thenceforth surgery became cleanly. Surgeons...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Joseph Lister | 4/18/1927 | See Source »

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