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Food of this description, without fatiguing the gastric organs, furnishes an abundant chyle, from which is elaborated a rich blood, and in which the secretory organs find materials of an excellent quality, and in an almost constant proportion with the regular consumption of their products.

The cells of the gastric glands are thrown into a state of greater activity by the increased quantity of blood supply. As a result, soon after food enters the stomach, drops of fluid collect at the mouths of the glands and trickle down its walls to mix with the food. Thus these glands produce a large quantity of gastric juice, to aid in the digestion of food. Digestion in the Stomach.

Each division of the alimentary canal has its own distinct digestive juice, and I give them in the order in which they occur. First, The saliva; secreted from the glands of the mouth: alkaline, glairy, adhesive. Second, The gastric juice; secreted in the inner or third lining of the stomach, an acid, and powerful enough to dissolve all the fiber and albumen of flesh food.

Mowle! Well, Mr. Mowle, sir, how are you? Binder. How, how's Mrs. Binder and the kids? All blooming? BALD: Why, yes, thank you, Mr. Mowle, but Mrs. Gastric. Something cruel. CAP: They do suffer cruel, as you say, do women, Mr. This indigestion ah! Mowle? Binder. Nor not inclined to neither. Binder, and intend so to adhere. Binder. That was young Cobbler's joke in times gone by. Mowle?

Towards the close of the year the Prince had a brief but painful attack of one of the gastric affections becoming so common with him. In January, 1861, the Queen received the news of the death of the invalid King of Prussia at Sans Souci. His brother, the Crown Prince, who had been regent for years, succeeded to the throne, of which the husband of the Princess Royal was now the next heir.

And as we watched the men trying to rip the vest buttons off a dummy and expose its gastric arrangements with a bayonet, while loping along at full speed, we recalled a Civil War story which may well be revived here. A Down-easter from Vermont and a Southerner were going around and around one day at Shiloh, each trying to get the other with the bayonet, but both were good dodgers.

The gastric juice smelled highly acid, frequently the liver was discolored and contained a bluish liquid, its lower part in most cases hardened and bluish; the gall bladder, as a rule, was empty or contained only a small amount of bile; the mesenteric glands were mostly inflamed, sometimes purulent; the mesenteric and visceral vessels appeared often as if studded with blood.

For example, in one of them I read that no person who ate pickles, vinegar and condiments could hope to live to a healthy, green old age. Another stated that good vinegar and condiments in moderation caused the gastric fluids to flow and thus materially aided in the process of digestion. For awhile I was a confirmed vegetarian.

From the splenic branch which passes into the pancreas, and from the upper part, arise the posterior coronary, gastric, and gastroepiploic veins, all of which are distributed upon the stomach in numerous branches and twigs, just as the mesenteric vessels are upon the intestines.

Then, at last, Catherine got hold of him, and he submitted to be taken home, shivering, and deeply depressed by the failure of his efforts. A violent gastric and lung chill declared itself almost immediately, and for three days he had been anxiously ill. Catherine, miserable, distrusting the local doctor, and not knowing how to get hold of a better one, had never left him night or day.