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nter, about 1785. That of the external iliac by Abernethy, 1796. The internal iliac by Alexander Stevens, in 1812. The common iliac successfully by Dr. Valentine Mott, in 1827. The common carotid by Sir Astley Cooper (successfully), in 1808. The innominata by Mott in 1818, and successfully by Dr. J. W. Smythe in 186Mott in 1818, and successfully by Dr. J. W. Smythe in 1864. Ambrose Pare, born at Laval, in France, in 1509, was a member of the fraternity of barber-surgeons; but, such was the reputation he acquired as an operator, he was made surgeon to four successive sovereigns of France, and, among others, to the weak and cruel Charles IX., by whom, however, although Pare was a Huguenot, his liedle carrying a thread. a, Fig. 2944, is Post's chain-saw carrier. b is Tiemann's instrument to carry ligature for chainsaw. c is an aneurism needle. d e are Mott's aneurism needles. f g h are Van Buren's arteryligating instruments. i is Carrol's knot-tyer. j is Gooche's double cannula for uterine polypus. k is Charriere
. p. 109; Francis's Dictionary of Arts ; Partington's Dictionary, 2 vols.; Weale's Dictionary of terms in art The Nott stove was patented in England in 1830, 1831. It is a base-burning illuminated stove, without an internal fuelchamber. The Mott stove is shown at j, Fig. 5917, and had a suspended magazine, and mica doors to the fire-chamber. The Harper and Walker stove (k, Fig. 5917, English) of 1839 is a magazine base-burner, with a mica door to the fire-chamber. The Walker stove oFig. 5913), had a grated fire-pot at the lower part of the magazine-cylinder. Magazine-furnaces. (Stratton, 1817 and 1822.) Sexton, in 1856 (p, Fig. 5920), had a covered fuel-cylinder in the fire-chamber. Magazine-stoves. (Nott, 1830) (Mott.) (Harper and Walker, 1839.) Cantelo's U. S. patent in 1859 (Fig. 5921) shows a petticoat fuel-cylinder projecting downward into the fire-pot. Magazine-stoves. (Cantelo, 1846.) (Walker, 1849.) Base-burner. (Grant, 1850.) Roney, in 1<
a (Fig. 6570) is Tiemann's direct-pressure tourniquet. Both sides of the pad are free from pressure, so as not to stop the circulation of the venous blood. b, Petit's spiral tourniquet. c, United States Army field-tourniquet. d, Valentine Mott's tourniquet. f, Lawrence's eye-tourniquet. e, tourniquet by Professor Esmarch of Kiel, particularly adapted for operations, as necrotomy, in which a great effusion of blood is to be apprehended. The lower portion of the limb is enveiece out of the cranium. It is a cylindrical saw, with a cross-handle like a gimlet and a center-pin (called the perforator), around which it revolves until the saw has cut a kerf sufficient to hold it. The center-pin may then be retired. a b, Mott's socket-handled trephine and handle. c, Galt's conical trephine. d, antrum-drill. e, trepanning-elevator. Trepang. Trephines. The trephine is sometimes worked by a revolving brace like that of the carpenter, and has even been so