Word: liverance
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...returns (reckoned up each year); reviews of his books (measured by inches); and the society of interesting people. After a party in London he writes: "This sort of thing is the real reward for having written a few decent books." But there were other, less pleasant rewards-headaches, insomnia, liver trouble, nervous exhaustion. At some times it "occurs" to him that he is "almost happy." At other times he writes: "Habit of work is growing on me. I could get into the way of going to my desk as a man goes to whiskey, or rather to chloral." The struggle...
Professor Israel Mordecai Rabinowitch, 41, director of the department of metabolism of Montreal General Hospital, who, especially interested in diets for diabetics, guides research on the parathyroid gland, gall bladder, kidney, liver...
When the Cincinnatians made their announcement, Dr. William Parry Murphy of Boston and Drs. Joseph Edward Connery & Leonard J. Goldwater of Manhattan announced the preparation of new, more potent liver extracts. These extracts are injected into muscles of anemics. The blood picture improves in a few hours...
...Bovril sales in the U. S. and Canada have been handled by Harold F. Ritchie, "world's greatest salesman," who owns Eno's Fruit Salt (morning-after tonic), Pompeian Cream (face restorer) and who recently purchased for several million dollars Scott's Emulsion (delicious white cod-liver oil). William S. Scull Co., the newly appointed sales agents for the U. S., recently celebrated their 100th Anniversary in the wholesale coffee and tea business and were doubtless aware that many food experts believe there is big opportunity for some branded hot-drink (other than coffee) to rival...
Last week's product is even more convenient. Heretofore it has been dangerous to inject liver extracts directly into the blood stream. The extracts behaved like protein poisons. By fiddling with the liver juices after a method which has been patented, Professors Sturgis & Isaacs developed an innocuous fluid. Once introduced into a vein it whips the blood into a fury of red cell reproduction. The fury lasts for four to six weeks, when another intravenous injection becomes necessary. That is more pleasant, anemics find, than swallowing hog stomachs once a day or eating beef liver at every meal...