| Medicine - 1904 - 100 pages
...and all other portions of Legal Medicine in which laboratory investigation is an essential feature. Under "Expert Evidence" not only is advice given to...on Legal Medicine, though of far more than passing significance to both the medical expert and the attorney, is that on the medicolegal relations of the... | |
| R. H. Andrews - Medicine - 1903 - 424 pages
...attorneys as to the best methods of obtaining the desired information from the witness. The Bertitlon and Greenleaf-Smart systems of identification are...on Legal Medicine, though of far more than passing significance to both the medical expert and the attorney, is that on the medicolegal relations of theX-Rays.... | |
| 1903 - 638 pages
...attorneys as to the best method of obtaining the desired information from the witness. TheBertillon and Greenleaf-Smart systems of identification are...on Legal Medicine, though of far more than passing significance to both the medical expert and the attorney, is that on the medicolegal relations of the... | |
| Medicine - 1903 - 612 pages
...also made to attorneys as to the best methods of obtaining the desired information from the witness. An interesting and important chapter is that on "...frequently depends the legal conduct of a given case, ana the guilt or innocence of the accused. Included in the work is the enumeration of the laws of the... | |
| Medicine - 1902 - 700 pages
...chapter, with considerable local flavor, on gunshot wounds, burns and scalds. Walter H. Haines writes on the destruction and attempted destruction of the human body by fire and chemicals. Important medicolegal chapters are those of railway injuries, by J. Chalmers Da Costa ; injuries and... | |
| Medicine - 1904 - 762 pages
...difficulty and perplexity. The volume is enriched by a number of graphic and beautiful illustrations. Under "Expert Evidence" not only is advice given to...on Legal Medicine, though of far more than passing significance to both the medical expert and the attorneys, is that on the medico-legal relations of... | |
| Medicine - 1904 - 790 pages
...methods of obtaining the desired information from the witness. The Bertillon and Greenleaf-Smart system < of identification are concisely and intelligently...on Legal Medicine, though of far more than passing significance to both the medical expert and the attorney, is that on the medicolegal relations of the... | |
| Medicine - 1902 - 644 pages
...chapter, with considerable local flavor, on gunshot wounds, burns and scalds. Walter H. Haines writes on the destruction and attempted destruction of the human body by fire and chemicals. Important medicolegal chapters are those of railway injuries, by J. Chalmers Da Costa ; injuries and... | |
| 1903 - 918 pages
...the best methods of obtaining the desired information from the witness. The Bertillon and GreenSmart systems of identification are concisely and intelligently...on Legal Medicine, though of far more than passing significance to both the medical expert and the attorney, is that on the medicolegal relations of the... | |
| 1903 - 672 pages
...methods of obtaining the desired information from the witness. The Bertillon and Green leaf -Smart systems of identification are concisely and intelligently...on Legal Medicine, though of far more than passing significance to both the medical expert and the attorney, is that on the medico-legal relations of... | |
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