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THE
Homoeopathic Recorder
MONTHLY
Volume XXIV
1909
PUBLISHED BY
BOERICKE & TAFEL
Index to Volume XXIV.
A Great Programme, 184.
A Remarkable Case, 319.
A Tale Twice Told, 225.
A Very Remote Similitude, 481.
Abscess of Labia Pudenda, 170.
Aconite and Aconitine, 93.
Aconite and Belladonna, 45.
Adonis Vernalis Proving, 36.
Allen, Dr. H. C, Books, 161.
Allen, Dr. H. C, Letter to, 267.
Allopath and Homoeopath, 225.
American Institute, 191 1, 540.
Amputation vs. Calendula. 451.
An Inexcusable Gratitude, 195.
An Old Bunco Game, 184.
Anopheles, Not in This Epidemic,
477-
Antitoxin, Danger of, 519.
Antitoxin, Death From, 91.
Antitoxin, The Seamy Side of, 453.
Apocynum, Alcoholic Poisoning,
371.
Arnica and the Law, 523.
Articular Rheumatism and Ferrum
Phos., 506.
Atigens 178.
Bacillus Tuberculosis, Nature of,
90.
Barcelona Academy. Fornias, 311.
Bee Sting Cure, 231.
Benzoate of Soda, 233, ^25.
Bernhard Shaw and the Doctors,
229.
Beyond the Germ, 327.
Bill Collecting, 277.
Black Tongue, 142.
Bleeding, 383.
Blindness and Quinine, 330.
Bovine Tuberculosis Not Trans-
missible to Man, 486.
Calendula, 271, 541.
Calendula, A Physiological Anti-
septic, 30.
Calendula, Local Use of, 124.
Calmette Reaction, 232.
Cancer and Homoeopathy, 413.
Cancer vs. Tuberculosis, 92.
Cantharis, A Discovery Concern-
ing, 337-
Catarrh, Chronic, 176.
Catarrh, Chronic, 85.
Cancer, a Law Unto Itself, Each,
521.
Cause That Is Doubted, A, 268.
Chiropractice, The, 502.
Chloral in Alcoholism, 70.
Cholera 115.
Christian Science, Possibilities of,
51.
Color in Tinctures, 284.
Coming Events Cast Their
Shadows Before, 226,
Comments on Homoeopathy, 397.
Concerning "Science" Taught in
Our Colleges, 291.
Concerning Dr. Mclr. lyre's Contri-
butions, 459.
Confusion of the Law of Simili-
tude, 460.
Consistency, Thou Art a Jewel, 212.
Consumptives, A Possible Resort
for, 116.
Crataegus Oxyacantha, 71, 123, 131.
Cure Must Stand First. 283.
Curious Reasoning, 282.
"Dared," 137.
Delayed Healing of Wounds, 328.
Detroit Meeting, Random Notes,
302.
Diabetes Mellitus, 149.
MAK 20 1910
76582
Index.
of Nephritis, 189.
5mall-pox, 328.
Diphtheria, [49.
Dipsomania, 131.
Disintegration of the Homoeopathic
>n, 339.
- and Sayings of the I. II. A .
544-
n^n't be a Wobbler, 228.
Drug Strength, 140.
5i rum. 29,
Echinacea. 316.
Enuresis, Nocturnal, 130.
Epidemic Remedies, 446.
Erotic Dictionary. The, 224.
Extracting Sunbeams Prom Cu-
cumbers. 188.
False Label on Medicine, 325.
Fashions and Homoeopathy. 97.
Fauces, Inflammation of. r68
Ferrum Phos. in Articular Rheu-
matism. 506.
Ficus Religiosa, 17. [63, 277, 455.
Filters. How to Make f<>r Cisterns,
539-
Fluxion Potencies, 359.
Foot and Mouth Disease, 261. 327,
4T2.
Fraxinus Americanus, 89.
Fresh Air and Pneumonia, 80.
Fruit Juices and Syrups, 214.
num. \n Old Experience
With, 1
Gelsemium, Discovery of. 70.
German Medical Journalism, 94.
Germs to Cure Germs, 202.
Glands, Scrofulous, 172.
ip, '."I
I [ahnemann's I '
Hahnemann Vindicated in S
no
1 lent "Tonics," 46.
I [igh Potencies, 435.
Homoeopathic Rei
dermatieallv.
Homoeopathic Vaccination,
Homoeopathy and Mysticism,
Homocopathv and th<
387.
Homoeopathy and Typhoi
Homoeopathy v<. Toxin-. 2
Horses, Acute [ndigestion i
Hydrophobia. Is There? 531.
Hypodermic Injection of
269.
1 [yoscyamus in Mei
Hypodermic and Inoculative
ment, 185, 3*7, 54 1.
I [ysterics, 21 1.
I. A. H., Doings and S
544-
Idea. An "Exploded," 90.
Immune. 385.
Incomes of Medical Men. 227.
Infantile Scurvy, 328.
Infectious and Contagious. 135.
Insomnia and Gelsemium, 209.
Intermittent Fever, A Case of, 518.
Intermittent Fever, Masked.
Itch, A Possibly New Kerne'',
465.
Kali Phosphoricum, An Analysis
and Challenge, 366.
Kalmia Latifolia and the ileart.
3/2.
Knighting a Homoeopathic Phy-i-
cian. Mattoli, 310.
Lachesis Bothrops [37.
Learning to Cure Diseas ;
Fines to 1 lahnemann. 263.
l.i<»n and the Country Doctor, The,
193.
Liver, Congestion of, [29.
Making Mad. [70,
"Making Us Ridiculous," 88.
Malaria, 51 1.
Malaria. The Treatment o\. 458,
510, 516, 542
Index.
Malandrinum, 25.
Materia Medica, Some Ideas of,
497-
Materialism, 251.
Medical Examinations, 426.
Mellilotus in Cerebral Hyperemia,
71.
Mercury and Tuberculosis, 138.
Metchnikoff, 180.
Minimum, The Dose, 245.
Mortality Statistics, 241, 551.
Mosquito, Malaria Theory, 300.
Myrtus Checkan, 538.
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
Anshutz. Guide to the Tissue
Remedies, 222.
Blackwood. The Food Tract,
558.
Browne. Parsimony in Nutri-
tion, 221.
Butler. Physician Detective,
178.
Clarke. Tumors, 39.
Clarke. Vital Economy, 324.
Cooper. Primitive Fundamental,
324.
Copeland. Scientific Reasonable-
ness, 467.
Cowperthwaite. Materia Medica.
467.
Dewey. Essentials of Horn. Ma-
teria Medica, 40.
Farrington. Clinical Materia
Medica, 87.
Ghose. Life of Mahendra Lai
Sircar, 561.
Gould. Fifty-seven Ophthalmic
Blunders, 559.
Hahnemann. Chronic Diseases,
40.
International Hom. Directory,
325.
Kent Repertory, 39.
Marrs. Confessions of a Neuras-
thenic, 423.
Nash. Leaders in Respiratory
Organs.
Ramseyer. Rademacher's Uni-
versal and Organ Remedies.
Reed. Sex Cycle of Germ Plasm.
222.
Ribot. Diseases of Personality,
422.
Strong. Machination of A. M.
A., 221.
Surgical Suggestions, 700, 178.
Taber. Pocket Dictionary, 135.
Wilcox. Surgery of Children.
559-
Wilson. Diseases of the Nerv-
ous System 87.
Natrum Muriaticum, 23.
Neuralgia, Facial, 78.
Not Properly Up to Date, 183.
Nux Vomica, 65.
Odd Cases in Practice, 307.
Old Books, 331.
Olive Oil and "the Cup," 89.
Olive Oil Hyperchlorhydria, 313.
Olive Oil, Stomach Diseases, 33.
Olive oil, Surgery, 381.
"One Aim," 180.
One, The Aim, 566.
Opium Smoking, 138.
Opsonins, 44.
Organ on 163.
Organotherapy, 217.
Osier Again, 477.
Osteopathy, 228.
Ovaries, Inflammation of, 320.
Pariah, The New, 278.
Pathological Knowledge, Errors to
Which Lack of May Lead, 3.
Pathologist, A, on Homoeopathy,
475.
Peace Maker, Sulphur, 210.
Pellagra, 504.
Pessimist and Optimist, 433
Pharmacopoeia, The Question, 454.
Phaseolus Nana, 73.
Phthisiotherapy, Biochemical, 535.
Potencies, 230.
Prodigal, The Return of, 186.
VI
Index.
Professional <
Progn es, 470.
• Sharing, [58
Enlarged, 1 \i.
Something About, 329
U7
Pulsatilla and Complementary
Remedie-.
nium, A Case, 61.
Quack-.
Quarantine, [37.
Quinine and Malaria Again, 542.
Rademacher, 201.
Radium in Therapeutics, 3'-
Rattlesnake Bites. 279
snake Bite, Cimicifuga, 122
Remedy. According to Patient's
Sensations. 165.
Remedy. The Single, 98.
Repertories, 65.
Rheumatism. Articular. Chronic.
173-
Roentgen Rays and the Sweat
Glands, 381.
Salt. 188.
Sausages, 472.
Scutelaria Laterifolia, 68.
Sectarianism. 229.
Senecio, [65.
Sensational Medicine, 100.
Serums, 280. 326.
Scrum Diseases, 428.
in, 292, \u.
Shearing the Lambs
Sherlock Holmes, 00.
Silica Marina, 33.
Something About Prescribing, etc.,
289.
Something We May Never Know,
Spine. ( *■ mcussion 1 >f, [30
Still and ( >steopathy, 400.
Stomatologists, 124.
Stop Making 1 >is< ases, [86,
Strong "ii Fits, 326.
Symphoricarpus Racemosa, 311,
411.
Symptom Covering. 535.
Symptom, the Story of, 19.
Synthetic Drugs. 94.
Syphilis, Treatment, 169.
Teaching Homoeopathy, Up-to-Date
Methods of. 12.
The Making of the Small
146.
The Purpose of Nature in the Law
of Cure, 440.
Then and Now — Simmons, III.
Theapeutic Pointers 38,
Testing the Patient. 477.
Tissue Building. 343.
Tongue, Abscess. 171.
Too Much Antisepsis. 140.
Traumatic Neuroses Questioned,
382.
Trichinosis, 478.
Tuberculosis, Inoculation Test for.
181.
Tuberculosis, The Cause of,
Tuberculosis Congress, 1.
Tuberculosis, Lime Dust. 37.
Tuberculin Tests, 44. 4"
Tuberculous Literature, 471.
"Twisted Thoughts," 42.
Typhoid Carrier-. 281.
Unrest, 332.
Vaccination, \ Rejected Letter. ri8.
Vaccination, Changing Vie*
43.
Vaccination TIL. Hom. Treatment,
2-
Vaccination, Internal and tL Pa.
Law. 6oi
nation in the S
Penna.,
ation, 1 lomcei •pathic, in
.1 . 31 -.
Vaccination, More, 472.
Variola, I .atesl Word on, 03.
Index.
vn
Variolinum in Treatment of Small-
pox, 198.
Vivisection, 223.
War in the A. M. A., 227.
War on Tuberculosis, 409.
Water as a Vehicle in Homoeop-
athy, 445.
What Is Scientific? 529.
Who Killed Cock Robin? 553.
Wild Oats, 128.
X-ray Caution, 91.
THE
Homoeopathic Recorder.
Vol. XXIV Lancaster, Pa., January, 1909 No. 1
THE REVERSE SIDE OF THE INTERNATIONAL
TUBERCULOSIS CONGRESS.
The world has read so many eulogistic notices of the late Tuber-
culosis Congress that perhaps a peep from another vantage point
may interest some. Dr. Geo. B. H. Swayze, of Philadelphia, fur-
nishes it in the December issue of The Medical Times, N. Y.
According to Dr.. Swayze imperfect elimination is the root of
physical ills and degeneration.
"The uric acid form of degeneration maintains a great variety
of physical discomforts. The tubercular form of degeneration
constitutes the other predominating plane of diseased conditions,
call them by what names we choose. Then what? Sanitary
breathing air. nutritious diet to feed the blood supply for building,
and ample elimination of wornout material are in themselves
curative alike in every form of diseased manifestation. What is
breathed mainly determines what type of disease will be sooner
or later developed. That is an eternal law of God's truth from
which there can be no deviation.
"The ignorant, miseducated public, half the doctors also for that
matter, habitually mumble their chants about 'a cold' — yet 'a
cold !' whereas 'a cold' had no more to do with the cases than a
firefly has to do with a destructive conflagration. Unitv of cause
— unity of results."
"Neither Koch nor the food infectionists," he writes, "have dis-
covered the bottom cause of consumption, their theories can never
harmonize on the ground floor facts of conditions." the facts of
bad air, food and environment. The cause of the disease "is an
abnormally carbonized blood defection which, unregenerated hour
by hour, prepares the material for the development of tubercle
2 Reverse .side of I \< ■ <
bacilli in the system as an auto-generated infection in nowise
entially dependent on the incidental emigration of bacilli from
outside sources. Ml the treatment that will ever prove reliably
effective in reducing the ravages of consumption will be in proof
of the natural fact j ust stated. These lengthy speech* ring
around the pivotal facts, but with eyes set upon the bacilli or sec-
ondary stage of physical degeneration, arc apparently blind to the
ical precedent which alone install its the development
of tubercular conditions."
The gentlemen who arc commanders in what the) dramatically
term "the war against the great white plague" tell us that any
case of consumption can be cured by them if taken in time, and
their cure is in following what Dr. Swayze outlii ery
can be cured" if taken in hand before physical degeneration
has proceeded too far, by means of good air. food and environ-
ment, and it may be added, with these the d radi-
cated, but where is the medical Muses who can. lead the millions
the slums, who live in most "disgraceful," unsanitary conditions
and breed tuberculosis and other unpleasanl "germs" which arc
the "'cause*' of disease, to a Land where they ma) earn wages that
will put them on a sanitary basis? And echo answer-. "Who?"
This is the heart of Swayze's paper, but be pokes some grave
fun or satire at some of the means and views advocated by some
delegates to the great congress. < >r, in Ins <>wn words: 'Among
so many men of so many minds and ambitions there must arise a
'corporal's guard' t<> project side theories by which to distinguish
their personality amid the overflow of tuberculosis ideas in a
greal congress." Among these are the gentleman who finds some
of the "germs" in tin- water supply, though indeed, pure
an essential, the man with the X-ray machine, the man who tl
on the bovine hobby, milk and meat, the man who finds in "con-
tact" the root of the disease, and others, and among them the man
who wages "the war" by wholesale slaughter of harmless cattle,
the man who inoculates and uses vaccines, the man with his
"reactions," the man who gets excited over sputum.
Dr. Swayze devotes rather more attention to the warrior who
finds his iiiissj(,n in slaughtering cattle because 1 are
"tremendousl) costly" and tin- onl) effeel <^ whose work is I
make living dearer and thus sink the slums a little lower. Of
Lack of Pathological Knowledge. 3
these he writes, rather dryly : "Men who draw salaries usually
do something because authorized with privilege and pay." Also
"Evidently it was as much the purpose of delegates to worst Koch
as it was a desire to solve the facts of truth."
'Thrift, Horatio, thrift." Dr. Swayze did not write that. It is
a quotation from Hamlet, otherwise Shakespeare.
ERRORS TO WHICH LACK OF PATHOLOGICAL
KNOWLEDGE MAY LEAD.
By Eduardo Fornias, M. D.
In a previous paper, on the subject, I endeavored to show the
variable importance of a given symptom, under different circum-
stances and in different diseases. For elucidation I took the
symptom vomiting, just as I could have taken diarrhoea, constipa-
tion, cough, dyspnoea, vertigo, or faulting, and now my task shall
be to point out the validity of my contentions, and to do this suc-
cessfully I can do no better than present a few cases of errors,
due to ignorance which have come under my immediate observa-
tion during my practice in this city.
t) A case of coxalgia treated for weeks with Bryonia under
the supposition that the pain in the knee, worse on motion, was
due to rheumatism, came near to proving fatal, if a surgeon had
not come to the rescue, and saved the physician's reputation.
The surgeon was a professor of the Hahnemann. The attending
physician ignored completely that pain in the knee could be reflex,
due to hip disease, or the result of obturator hernia, and even be
produced by a loose cartilage. Just, indeed, as others have not
learned that pain in the shoulder occurs in disease of the liver, or
of the colon, and that in those cases where the pain and even the
tenderness are referred to the opposite side, the difficulty, in the
absence of objective symptoms, may be insurmountable. But, the
pain in the knee, depending, as it does in such cases, upon well
"known physiological laws, should never have been a cause of
error. Perhaps a little more difficult would be to determine if
pain in the angle of the right scapula is due to cancer of the liver
and not to rheumatism, and more difficult still, if pain in the tip of
the shoulder blade is the result or not of tumor of the suprarenal
.capsule.
4 Lack of Pathological Knowledge.
2) This was a case of persistent metrorrhagia in which my
predecessor contented himself with giving repeated doses of
Ipecac 200, on account of the nausea which attended the con-
tinuous flow of bright red blood. Examination, however, revealed
a prolapsus of the ovary, which another professor of the Hahne-
mann replaced with cessation of the trouble.
3) A common source of error is the cessation of the stitching
pain in pleurisy, due usually to nothing else, but to the effusion
which diminishes and even stops friction between the opposing
surfaces of the inflamed pleura, as it progresses. Every educated
physician does know that pain ceases or changes its place as effu-
sion comes on, and is not increased as formally by breathing or
coughing, hence there is no excuse for attributing this relief to
any other influence. True enough the pleurisy may be dry
(plastic), and then is not followed by fluid effusion, but it is a
frequent indication of tubercular disease, which is very important
to know. Moreover, are not such signs as lack of re-expansion, a
dislocated heart, an inflamed diaphragm, interpleural pressure.
and adhesions, worth our consideration ? Are we to disregard these
changes and allow the disease to take a bad course without know-
ing what is taking place in the tissues involved? Mortal syncope
if frequently imminent when the intrapleural pressure threatens the
circulation, and the signs indicating this pressure are : A bloody,
viscid sputum with crepitant rales and a suffocative cough, so we
cannot afford to miss these signs. Neither must we forget that
pleurisy may become chronic in many ways, and that the effusion
may remain unabsorbed for many months and perhaps years.
And how if the effusion becomes purulent? Are we to prescribe
for the fever, cough, muco-purulent sputa and night sweats and
allow the danger to continue without calling a surgeon to remove
the pus ?
I shall never forget a case of acute sero-fibrinous pleurisy, from
cold, which came under my observation several years ago, and
where the relief of the pain by the serous effusion, was attributed
by the attending physician to Bryonia, with the result that the
case was somewhat neglected under a supposed improvement and
empyema ended in death.
4) Probably the most interesting case I shall refer to is one of
surgical or traumatic aphonia. The patient solicited homoeopathic
Lack of Pathological Knowledge. 5
advice after being in the hands of able allopaths, who pronounced
the case incurable. Our ultra-purist, however, thought different,
and after tampering with the very highest dilutions, walking in
the dark for months, and presenting a bill of a few hundred
dollars, was ignominiously discharged to the discredit of Ho-
moeopathy. This patient had been operated, I do not remember, if
for post-plmryngeal abscess, or for laryngeal tumor; at any rate
he lost his voice gradually from crippled contracted cords, and
nothing could be done for him. After this disappointment, and
through the insistence of a lady patient of mine, he consulted me,
and, of course, I became well acquainted with the history of the
case and the ridiculous claims of our man.
When we consider that loss of voice is not only due to post-
pharyngeal abscess, or contracted cicatrices on the vocal cords,
but to many other morbid states and lesions, one can hardly un-
derstand how there can yet be physicians who claim to be able to
do without a knowledge of pathology. Loss of voice {aphonia)
can be the result of aortic aneurism, acute ascending paralysis, en-
largement of the bronchial glands, diphtheritic laryngitis, exhaus-
tion, exophthalmic goitre, excessive vocal exercise, foreign body,
laryngeal growths, hysteria, insanity, tumor of the larynx, lead
palsy, lupus of throat, chronic laryngitis, mediastinal tumor or
cracked, oedema laryngis, large pericardial effusion, bilateral pa-
ralysis of adductors, syphilis, trichinosis and violent emotions.
And in aphonia I do not include hoarseness, which recognizes
many other causes.
5) Interesting also was a case of dilatation of the stomach, in
which I was consulted by one of the most amiable of confreres,
but who would not acknowledge the necessity of pathology in our
practice. I do not know if our discussion and its issue ever con-
vinced him. The history of this case runs as follows : The at-
tending physician asserted that his remedies acted charmingly for
a time, in what he called gastric irritation with copious vomiting
(not a bad name), but which returned, he thought, with increased
intensity after a couple of days of complete relief. I had the time
of my life explaining him that in a dilated stomach the food ac-
cumulates, owing to the atony of the walls, the result of direct
distention from excessive drinking and gluttony, or from chronic
gastric catarrh, and that in some cases it was due to inability of
6 Lack of Pathological Knowledge.
the food to pass into the pylorus on account of a stricture. I
further told him that the cause of stricture is to be found, either
in a cicatricial formation from ulceration, or in carcinoma, though
in rare instances it could be produced by compression of a tumor,
by a twist or bend of the duodenum from peritoneal adhesions, or
by a floating kidney. But all this, even ballooning of the stomach
and the siphon was new to him, and naturally he contented him-
self with hunting remedies which could cover, if not the periodical
overdistention and copious vomiting of decomposed and fermented
substances, at least the constipation, the scanty urine, the dry skin,
the emaciation, etc. When, however, he found that the relief was
only temporary and the vomiting returned over and over again,
he decided to have a consultation.
I tried to ascertain the presence of dilatation by percussion and
palpation (ballooning and siphon were not accepted), and found
visible peristalsis of the thickened wall and perceptible splashing
sounds ; both the epigastrium and left hypochondrium were hol-
lowed, and the lower parts of the abdomen prominent. An ex-
amination of the vomited matters revealed floating tor nice (oval
cells of the yeast plant) on the surface, and sarcina (rectangular
bodies, divided into smaller rectangles by cross lines), at the
bottom of the vessel. In view of these results, and sure there was
no ulceration, I advised, besides the indicated remedy and proper
hygiene, the stomach siphon, which was refused by both patient
and family physician. I learned that this patient was not only a
glutton but a hard drinker, and had received repeated and pro-
longed doses of Arsenic, Nux vom., Phosph., Lachesis. Opium,
Sulphur and Veratrum, without the least benefit, but showing a
correct knowledge of materia medica, if not of pathology. I lost
complete track of this case, as the patient moved to the country
and his physician died.
6) My next illustration deals with a case of impacted car wax,
with complete loss of hearing in an old lady, of Spanish origin,
stopping at the Colonnade Hotel, who, after a prolonged internal
treatment by a renowned physician of our school, was instantane-
ously relieved by the removal of the obstruction. It is unneces-
sary to say more of this case. Its frequent occurrence, however.
has placed many careless prescribers in a ridiculous position.
7) I was once consulted in a case of vicarious hematcmesis, in
Lack of Pathological Knowledge. 7
a young girl, who, at every lunar mouth, or thereabouts, vomited
blood at the time of the menses. The diagnosis of an old school
physician was pulmonary tuberculosis on account of the family
history, and my friend thought it was a case of gastric ulcer.
The results proved that both were wrong. This is an interesting
case for study, for vomiting of blood may occur in haemophilia
without an essential cause, it may be vicarious, as in the present
case, or due to ulcer of the stomach, when the vomited matter is
composed of fresh, dark red, inodorous blood, or the result of
cirrhosis of the liver. Then, again, when the blood vomited is
old, decomposed, sometimes badly smelling (coffee ground), we
have a pathognomonic symptom of carcinoma, and is also knowTn
under the name of black vomit in yellow fever. But, then, it may
also be present in abdominal aneurism, purpura, scurvy, typhus,
valvular disease, and in chronic arsenic poisoning, and in acute
phosphorus poisoning.
In order to avoid mortifying errors we should be careful also
to exclude swallowed blood coming from the nose or teeth, and in
infants from cracked nipples. We should be watchful to distin-
guish between vomiting of blood and coughing of blood. In the
majority of cases patients will describe characteristically either
hematemesis or haemoptysis, but sometimes coughing is attended
by retching, and sometimes blood which has been coughed up is
swallowed. In cases of gastrorrhagias and consecutive hcemate-
mesis, the blood is red if not altered by the gastric juice, but if it
remains for some time in the stomach, it takes the aspect of di-
luted soot, or of coffee grounds, or it is ejected in clots of more or
less volume. These are the changes occurring in cancer of the
stomach. Ulcer of the stomach and certain infectious maladies, as
icterus grave, yellow fever, etc., give rise to gastorrhoea (vomito;
negro). In this coffee-ground-vomit the red corpuscles are disas-
sociated and the haemoglobin is transformed in hematin, verified
by the reaction of haemin crystals.
Moreover, in some eases, haemoptysis or haematemesis is the
first stage of a pulmonary, or of a gastric disorder which may
have been concealed until the appearance of this sign startles the
patient to the highest degree so that he cannot describe accurately
the manner in which it appeared. In such cases (seldom occur-
ring) it may be much more difficult to establish a differential diae-
8 Lack of Pathological Knowledge.
nosis than in cases of fresh bleeding where it should be always the
rule to exercise the greatest care in conducting the examination
of the organ or to postpone it until all haemorrhage has ceased for
some time.
I could present more than one error in diseases of women, due
entirely to unpreparedness for this class of work. In this practice
we must take into account, on the one hand, the false modesty,
the stoicism, or the ignorance of the patients, ready always to
conceal their ills and deceive the inexpert. It is a grave mistake,
I think, to ignore, in such cases, the skill and dexterity of the
specialist, and to imagine we can do without the surgeon's help.
It is as important to be able to appreciate the need of a major
operation requiring this help, as it is to know the proper remedy
to apply when special advice is not required. How many cases of
cancer of the cervix might be cured if the physician first con-
sulted knew the importance of the symptoms and acted promptly
in having it removed.
How are we to estimate the relics left by mal-practice, or crimi-
nal or self-abortion, without a thorough knowledge of pathology?
Think for a moment the adhesions, displacements, Hbromas. ma-
lignant growths, etc., unexpectedly met with in practice, which
we could discover and diagnose by digital examination, and the
intelligent use of the speculum, sound, tenaculum, etc. And how
about the age of puberty, presenting morbid phenomena which
must be understood to appreciate the difficult evolution, exposures
and excitements of this period of life, so continually threatened
by the demands of society, associations, errors of living, and the
ignorance of those changes which render possible the reproduc-
tion of the species, and may blight a useful life forever.
No less associated with misguiding symptoms is that time of
life, when, as the result of age, the gradual normal cessation of the
ovarian function takes place. The menopause, as we all know, is
often preceded by a period of irregular menstruation, which
chiefly at its final stoppage may interfere with the normal vaso-
motor tone, and give rise to vaso-motor disturbances. Palpita-
tions, chills, flushings, heats and sweats occur without any known
cause, and may persist for two or three years after the cessation
of the menses, but, as a rule, they do not last very long. During
the dodging time, as it is known by women, the hemorrhages are
Lack of Pathological Knowledge. 9
sometimes so profuse, and may be so prolonged, as to lead one to
suspect changes in the uterus, which, of course, only the educated
can verify. Then, again, losses of blood from other channels
may occur at this period, as from the nose or from haemorrhoids,
and this at such intervals that the haemorrhage may appear to re-
place the missing menstrual flow. The presence of fibroids in the
uterus usually delays the change of life, and we should guard
against mistakes. But, above all, we should bear in mind that
many diseases are prone to attack women at this epoch. Among
these are vertigo, epilepsy, cerebral hemorrhage, dipsomania,
hypochondriasis, melancholia, flatulent dyspepsia and pseudocyesis
with its singular symptoms and paresthesia:, as well as embon-
point, obesity, gout, gall stone and cancer.
There is no question that at the period of the normal cessation
of the menses, the errors into which the ignorant may fall are
many and humiliating. It is at this time of life that it is so im-
portant to have an early appreciation of cancer, and the fact that
neoplasms in the uterus of old women are usually malignant
necessarily calls for an early examination, whenever a suspicious
flow of blood is found. So as certain inherited tendencies mani-
fest themselves at puberty, so does the past life come out now,
and the trials to which the system has been subjected reveal them-
selves. The matron with many children may exhibit the broken
health of constitutional exhaustion induced by child bearing. In
the involuntary spinster there is often such sexual excitement as
leads to mental derangement. But in the widow and maiden lady
is where the menopause is particularly severe, either from ill
health, often the result of uterine disorders, or from a recrudes-
cence of the generative instinct. It is then that many respectable
and pure-minded women make the worst social bargains known,
or form unfortunate or even disreputable .attachments. After this
period, women, who are not libertines, as a rule, enjoy compara-
tive good health, certainly much more so than men who are more
frequently the victims of intemperance and vice. Let us think for
a moment what alcohol, cigarettes, morphine and cocaine can do,
especially when combined with improper nourishment, late hours,
fatigue, foul air, polluted water, depravity and sin.
Childhood and senility, the two extremes of life, demand
greater insight and knowledge still, as otherwise we shall not be
io Lack of Pathological Knowledge.
able to form a correct estimate of the peculiarities, propensities
and vicissitudes of an organism in the state of development, or in
the state of decay. The first, presenting only objective symptoms
of value, and unable to express their sufferings with accuracy and
nicety. The second with its faulty metabolism, pipe-stem arteries,
sluggish circulation, mental weakness; atrophic, apathetic, hypo-
chondriac, chilly, trembling, ready to succumb whenever the or-
ganic cells can no longer select and appreciate nutritive material,
or reject the products of disintegration.
Are we not to endeavor to explain why pneumonia in an infant
starts with convulsions and vomiting, and does not exhibit in its
course any expectoration, while in old age the onset is insidious,
with no chill, stitch in the side or rusty sputa? Are we to ignore
that in the aged pneumonia may be latent and end in sudden
death ; that the crepitant rales are larger in the old than in the
young adult; that pneumonia may be massive, double, central or
of the apex ; that the apex is more frequently affected in drunk-
ards, and in old and cachectic subjects ; that in such patients pneu-
monia easily ends in suppuration, is attended by adynamia or the
typhoid state, does show but slight expectoration, and hardly any
stitching pain, and that in hard drinkers pneumonia is a serious
malady, often marked by delirium tremens, and has no cough,
stitch in the side, or expectoration.
There is no drug in our materia medica, I believe, which can
arrest the evolution and course of an infectious malady when
well developed. Take typhoid fever, for instance, and who can
affirm that there has been a single case in which the processes of
infiltration, ulceration and cicatrization have not coincided with
the ascending, stationary and descending oscillations of the tem-
perature, and in which any drug has even arrested or altered any
of these processes. We. may have, true enough, atypical cases of
acute specific fevers, due probably to the fact that the poison was
in too minute a quantity to produce its specific effects, but when
the system has been in a state of receptivity and the disease has
fully developed, the usual symptoms, more or less, will follow
each other with precision, and the most we can do with the indi-
cated remedy is to prevent complications and carry the case to a
successful termination.
Other common sources of error are the rashes and other symp-
Lack of Pathological Knowledge. n
toms caused by the abuse of drugs, but probably the most com-
mon is found in parasitic skin diseases, and particularly scabies.
We all have fallen in, I am sure, with cases of scabies which have
been allowed to infect whole families, and the disease to become
chronic, by those opposed to external applications and which ex-
pect to combat the acarus and destory it with the internal remedy.
I think it is criminal to ignore that the distressing itching is due
to the lesions caused by the burrowing insect, and that the scratch-
ing is responsible for the character of many of the eruptions ob-
served. YVe should also remember that the state of health of the
afflicted largely determines the kind of eruption ; the strong and
healthy may complain only of pruritus, but the lesion is nothing
more than a furrow, a pimple, or a vesicle, whereas the debilitated
and strumous develop pustular rachcs, which the overdoing of
Sulphur ointments may aggravate extremely, especially children,
whose rudimental tissues and vast adaptabilities {congenital de-
bility, artificial feeding, soothing syrups, etc.) offer a favorable
pasture field to the insect. So, treat the struma, if it exists, with
the indicated remedy, but do not permit the itch-insect to pro-
long its abode in the tissues, just as you would not allow a
tccnia solium to dwell permanently in the intestine.
By the above examples, I have endeavored to show that symp-
toms, like signs of disease, have different meaning and importance
under different circumstances and conditions, at different ages,
and in different sexes. In fact, the same symptom may have more
than one origin or cause; for instance, vomiting, and this origin
or cause must be known, either to point out the gravity of the
case, or its probable course and termination. Moreover, we must
know that a symptom is sometimes the prelude of a known dis-
ease, at other times it characterizes the disease of which it forms
a part, and establishes the diagnosis ; then again it has only an
accessory value and consequently not essential to the malady ; or it
is sympathetic, affecting or present in a part distant from the seat
of the lesion ; or it may be associated with others, increasing, then,
in value or diminishing in meaning. Furthermore, a symptom
takes place in a syndrome, or figures in several syndromes, where
its relative importance, if it has any, must be minutely considered.
There are causes of disease in which a symptom is present at the
onset of the disease and increases in intensity up to the crisis, i r
12 Plan for Up-to-Date Methods.
may disappear from the prodromal stage to return again before
the crisis, and then complicate the disease. A symptom may even
persist after death, as the rubeoloid eruption of typhus, or remain
as stigmata, after the disease that caused it has disappeared (syph-
ilis, general tuberculosis, etc.).
Symptoms are also accidental, ephemeral and only of value to
individualize one case from another of the same type, or to select
from drugs of similar effects. Another important thing to re-
member while studying a case is that many individuals go through
life with slow pulse, a furred or fissured tongue, or contracted
pupils, etc., and are none the worse for these variations. Others
show habitually hyaline casts, or present some solitary contingent
physical signs of no significance. And still others are easily in-
fluenced by suggestion; in fact, we know quite well that pain and
other nervous symptoms can be both removed and created by
suggestion.
So then we may conclude that the supreme elements of decision
in all matters concerning diagnosis and treatment are the symp-
toms. But without a correct knowledge of the symptoms and
signs of disease, we can know but little of the art of medicine,
since a thorough acquaintance with the structural and functional
disorders to which the human body is liable, essentially comprises
a recognition of existing symptoms and signs, a proper apprecia-
tion of their value, source, antecedents, causes, relations and con-
nections with each other, and the results which may be expected
to flow from them singly or in combination.
706 W. York St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Note. — To be followed by papers on the single remedy and the
minimum dose, two of the imperative precepts of Homoeopathy.
A PLEA FOR UP-TO-DATE METHODS OF TEACH-
ING HOMCEOPATHY.
W. H. Freeman, M. D., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Homoeopathy can never be mastered or properly understood by
any one who has failed to master its philosophy. Therefore, all
attempts to teach the subject without a thorough instruction in
the Organon and the rules of practice enunciated therein, have
been and will continue to be failures, and no amount of materia
Plan for Up-to-Date Methods. 13
medica can ever compensate for a lack of proper instruction in
this vitally important subject.
In order for such instruction to be practical and thorough, it
should be continuous during the whole four years of the college
course, and the didactic work should be supplemented by practical
demonstrations in the clinic, because didactic work alone can
never give satisfactory results.
The method hitherto in vogue., that of attempting to teach the
subject in a single course of lectures to freshmen or sophomores
as a sop to the consciences of the few, and usually by a man not
en rapport with and too often a butt for the ridicule of other
members of the faculty, has been practically a waste of time and
effort. Can any one conceive of anything so suicidal to the best
interests of Homoeopathy as the manner in which this most es-
sential study has been emasculated and rendered ridiculous ?.
Various puerile objections to the Organon, most frequently
made by those least familiar with the work, are that it is not up-
to-date ; that it is abstruse and difficult of comprehension ; that it
is uninteresting and full of ancient and exploded and unpopular
medical theories, and that it abounds in arguments and abuse of
Hahnemann's opponents, etc.. etc.
Even though part of this may be true, the fact remains that it
is accurate in all essentially scientific details, and is the standard
and most up-to-date text-book on homoeopathic science from the
pen of the man who originated and knew more about the subject
than any one of his own time or since.
The importance of this work may be better appreciated, if we
realize that a practitioner, who might know nothing about materia
medica to begin with, might still make excellent and accurate
proscriptions by consulting the materia medica and the intelligent
use of a good repertory ; provided, he knew how to properly ex-
amine and elicit the symptoms of patients ; how to properly group
and rank these symptoms according to their age and etiology ;
how to decide which were characteristic (individualistic) for each
patient, whether to prescribe for a particular group only or for all
the symptoms manifested ; how to select the proper dose and po-
tency, and when to repeat or change the potency or remedy, ac-
cording to accurate and established rules of procedure. Whereas
the man with a head full of drug characteristics and no knowl-
14 Plan for Up-to-Date Methods.
edge of philosophy is like the ship without a compass. The latter
may try to fit any drug characteristics he can think of to anything
similar he can find in the patient, sometimes making a good pre-
scription, but more frequently otherwise, for which fault Ho-
moeopathy is often damned, and the compound tablet and other
temporary expedients resorted to with increasing frequency as a
more certain method of doing something even though such may
not be of benefit to the patient.
As has been said before the didactic work in philosophy should
be elucidated in the clinic and the same holds true for materia
medica also. The two branches should be combined in a chair of
clinical medicine, which ought to be the most important and dig-
nified of any in a homoeopathic college deserving the name.
Demonstrations of correct methods of case examination, case
study, . case analysis, repertory work, and drug selection should
be constant and continuous in general clinics and sub-clinics, and
as far as possible, at the bedside in the hospital wards and in the
out-visiting department of the hospital or dispensary.
As far as possible all such work should be done by the students
themselves under the direct supervision and guidance of com-
petent instructors. This is the only right method of forcing into
a student's head the practical side of medicine in general and of
Homoeopathy in particular.
Much of the- foregoing will, no doubt, be considered too ideal-
istic or impractical and chimerical, but it is the right method
nevertheless, and the nearer we approach such an ideal, the nearer
we will be to the hoped-for goal when all graduates but the in-
vincibly stupid will be able to practice their art in an intelligent,
scientific and universally successful manner.
Homoeopathy in recent years has been treated as if she were
nothing but a tail for the allopathic kite. Does anything but
lethargy and lack of combined effort on the part of the homoeo-
pathic profession prevent her taking the lead in matters educa-
tional, scientific and therapeutical?
The ideal method just outlined can probably never be fully ob-
tained without the assistance of an adequately paid staff" of pro-
fessors and assistants, who would be enabled to give at least three
hours daily to the work.
Other institutions of learning have secured endowments to
Plan for Up-to-Date Methods. 15
carry on work of less importance to humanity, and if a successful
movement in the right direction were inaugurated for the ad-
vancement of scientific therapeutics, might not endowments in aid
of such work be asked for with a good prospect of securing same D
Endowments are but seldom given, however, except for the fur-
ther advancement of important and original work, promising dis-
tinct benefits to humanity, and which invariably has been success-
fully inaugurated in spite of lack of funds.
In the case of a homoeopathic college such work should consist
of the special teaching outlined above ; in the proving of drugs ;
in the collating of valuable but scattered bits of knowledge, and in
the compilation of improved works of reference on homoeopathic
materia medica, completing and bringing down to date the work
of Hahnemann, Bcenninghausen and Hering.
In the clinical work just outlined the aim should be to have all
cases accurately diagnosed as far as modern scientific methods
allow, and to have complete and constant co-operation from the
laboratory and diagnostic experts at all times or whenever any-
thing of interest can be added for the study and treatment of
cases.
The equal importance from the point of view of patient and
physician of the medical as compared with the surgical case
should be insisted upon, as well as the necessity for sufficient
time, care and precision of technique \<\ the medical operation of
examining, diagnosing and prescribing, as in the examination,
diagnosing and operating for a surgical condition.
In order to make the work complete and absolutely practical
the chair of theraoebt.cs should be given medical supervision over
certain cases in all other departments — surgical, gynaecological,
obstetrical, skin, eye. ear, nose, throat, chest, etc.. etc.. and the
selection should be left to the first named chair in order to obtain
satisfactory cases for teaching purposes and prevent a possible
dumping of undesirable patients only on the part of departments
wishing to be rid of same.
The latter proposition is of the greatest importance in order
that the advantages of Homoeopathy in combination with other
essential measures, hygienic, mechanical or operative, may be
accurately and scientifically demonstrated. It would probablv be
a still greater improvement to turn all cases over to the chair of
1 6 Plan for Up-to-Datc Methods.
therapeutics for prescription in order to obviate the discrediting
of Homoeopathy on the part of men who are incompetent ho-
mceopathically.
It seems hardly necessary to add that a man filling this chair
should combine the qualities of a good teacher, an up-to-date
scientific physician, an expert prescriber, and an enthusiastic and
conscientious homoeopath, otherwise the best results will not be
obtainable.
The foregoing may in the opinion of some have been unduly
dilated upon, but in the opinion of the writer, as before said, it is
vitally important to Homoeopathy and should be the principal
course in the curriculum by which there is not the least intention
of belittling the importance of any other branch of medical
science, but to insist on the superlative importance of compre-
hensive homoeopathic instruction.
On the subject of materia medica it may be said that the mere
spouting of lists of characteristics before a class does not con-
stitute teaching, neither does the mechanical memorizing of thou-
sands of such symptoms constitute a knowledge of materia
medica. Much of what has passed for instruction in materia
medica in the past has resulted in the student acquiring an un-
classified jumble of word-pictures with drug labels in which true
drug pictures were lacking.
It is doubtful if fhe stuffing; of students' heads with thousands
of disarticulated "symptoms from some hundred' or more drugs,
many of which, are relatively unimportant and infrequently used,
ever will" be' productive of results commensurate with the time
and labor involved. Too frequently it results hi brain-f:ig and a
decided disgust for the subject ever after.
The subject is a hard and difficult one at its best. However, a
more rational and interesting and productive method of teaching
it ought to be evolved, if possible.
It isn't possible to teach it all during four years ; therefore, why
not teach fewer drugs and spend the same time doing it more
thoroughly and more interestingly?
Since most of our daily work is accomplished with less than
thirty drugs, why not limit the didactic work principally to the
thirty most frequently used polychrests ?
A graduate thoroughly familiar with such remedies as Aeon.,
Ficus Religiosa. 17
Apis, Ars., Bell, Bry., Cede, Cham., China-, Gels., Repay, Ign.,
Ip., Kali hi., Kali c., Lach., Lye., Merc., Merc, cor., Nat. m.,
Nux, Phos., Puis., Rhus, Sepia, Silicea, Sulphur, Thuja and
Veratrum is pretty well equipped for the average run of cases.
If he can have in addition a fairly comprehensive knowledge of
Aloe, Alum., Ant. t., Am., Bor., Calendula, Canth., Caust., Chel,
Cina, Colch., Graphites, Hypericum, Hyos., Ledum, Nit. ac,
Opium, Phos. ac, Podo., Strain., Symphi. and possibly a few-
others, he has about all his head can conveniently hold in con-
junction with his other necessary medical studies and the entire
list enumerated will cover 95 per cent, of all cases met with in
practice.
Such treatment of the subject won't be so apt to disgust him
with the materia medica or prevent him from picking up other
drugs for study when necessary for cases in the college clinic after
graduation, and then he can always fall back on his repertory and
materia medica for further information.
In the opinion of the writer a fairly comprehensive course
should also be given in physiological or allopathic materia medica,
but it should be properly and honestly labeled for what it is, and
any attempt to palm off allopathic palliatives as an up-to-date
brand of Homoeopathy by any member of a homoeopathic faculty
should be heartily discountenanced.
FICUS RELIGIOSO.
By Dr. W. A. Yingling.
Anent the articles on Ficus in Medical Advance and Recorder,
I would say: The experience of Drs. Mattoli and King only
proves that neither was a sensitive to Ficus. If either had a
haemorrhagic tendency very likely results would have been seen.
If Lyco podium were subject to the same test very probably it
would be deemed a fake remedy, simply from the fact that thou-
sands of people have used it in quantity on their old style pills
without apparent results. Even the crude Lycopodium would
have results on the sensitive. We know it has wonderful results
in the potencies. We cannot afford to fake any remedy on such
meagre evidence. I have not the least doubt but that Dr. Ghose
had just such results as he reports, and in substantiation of this
1 8 Ficus Religiosa.
belief I give the following two cases. The fact that another rem-
edy was required to complete the cure is not evidence against
Ficus. I report these two cases merely to show that Ficus does
act. My potencies are based on the 30th of Boericke & Tafel.
I have not time to go into detail but give results only :
Nov., 1904. Mrs. L., after a fall from a wagon with injury to
abdominal organs, severe pain in stooling, etc. A couple months
after her menses, as she reports by letter, became "real bad" for
seven days, then less for some time ; at first flow was very dark, if
late it is brownish. Flow worse when sitting after being on feet
some time. No odor, but stringy and muddy color after drying.
No pain. Growing very weak. Mouth of womb open. Feet
cold. Horrible dreams. After Ficus 200 (y) 6 powders, one
every three hours till better, she reports feeling better generally.
Flow has almost ceased, and what remains is a pale pink. Then,
December nth, flow started up again. Ficus 900 (y) two pow-
ders promptly checked the severity, leaving a pinkish, watery dis-
charge. Calc. c. completed the cure.
The above proves that Ficus does have an action.
1904. Mrs. P., married last December. The past two months
the old trouble of "bloody leucorrhcea" has come on. growing
rapidly worse. Father died of chronic liver trouble. Consump-
tion on both sides of the family. Insanity on mother's side. Pa-
tient aborted at third month ; very serious time, "ending in peri-
tonitis." Menses regular, very profuse for one week. Following
Ficus 900 (y) she reported discharge scarcely noticeable and
leaving a brownish stain ; only flow is from exertion. Don't
sweat under arms so freely as before. No bearing down at all,
which was marked before. In January menses came "without
a pain or a symptom of any kind. Could hardly tell I was flowing,
yet free, dark and so far no clots and no odor." This period con-
tinued ten days, became very dark when she took Ficus, and
reports "flow checked at once except a secretion of brownish
color on arising in the morning." At another time she reports:
"On receipt of last medicine (Ficus) I had been flowing for over
ten days and took the remedy, which checked the flow at once."
The last of February she reports : "Menses lasted usual time,
seven days ; no pain ; stopped very naturally ; scarcely any leucor-
rhcea as usual." Lil. tig. completed cure finally. But why go
Story of the Symptom. 19
on? This will show that Ficus does act The only thing needed
is a full proving on several sensitives. She only received a few
doses each time. Once when menses had delayed a couple weeks
she took a couple doses of Ficus of her own notion, and reported
that "the flow came on at once."
Emporia, Kansas.
THE STORY OF THE SYMPTOM.
By E. R. Mclntyre, M. D.
In all works on fiction we not only find a central character, but
a number of associated characters, else the plot would be incom-
plete. So the story of the symptom must of necessity contain
that of other symptoms that are associated with it or related to it.
Therefore, this story must tell of other symptoms than the prin-
cipal one. It must start with it, and give all that go to make up
the complete picture, else the plot will be incomplete,, and we
never can "Take the case" so as to make a scientific homoeopathic
prescription. Again, the story of a symptom is not the symptom
itself, but what it tells us. And it never fails to tell us its story
whether we are able to understand its language or not.
But what is a symptom? Any objective or subjective manifes-
tation of departure from health.
The present story is one that has been in the medical courts, so
to speak, for a long time. The plaintiff is some sores on a
woman's legs below the knees, the defendant is the woman her-
self, the courts are the various doctors whom she has consulted.
The defendant is a lady aged about 44, weighing about 190 pounds
and rather short, brown hair, grey eyes and of pronouced lym-
phatic temperament, the mother of one child.
The case comes to me, as do many others, on appeal from other
courts, who, on seeing the witnesses in court, took it for granted
that they were all right, and did not take time to hear them testify,
but, rendered decisions without knowing anything about what
they have told them. Now what would we think of a judge on
the bench, who would attempt to render decision before hearing
the testimony? But this is just what our keynote prescribers are
doing every day. Not only this, but they even teach that the
testimony cannot be understood. That is, they say, in effect, that
20 Story of the Symptom.
since they do not understand it no one else can. The homoeo-
pathic physician should be able to read the story told by the
symptoms as he does a book.
Let us hear the testimony in the case before us. We first put
the plaintiff on the stand, and find several irregular circular
patches of scarlet red color and covered by loose thin white
scales, having well defined margins changing abruptly into healthy
skin. The skin between the sores showed no indications of dis-
ease. The sores were not specially sensitive to the touch, and
there was but little itching or other discomfort except when the
patient was perspiring, when there would be some burning.
There was no discharge of any kind, even when the scales were
removed, which left an angry looking red surface. "I fancy I
can hear some keynote man saying, "This is an Arsenicum case.
It is a dry, scaly eruption." And then I hear that other class who
prescribe on pathological appearances or changes saying, "Why
this is a case of psoriasis," and on this diagnosis he is ready to
base his prescription. That is just what had been done in the
other courts, with such unsatisfactory results, and the costs being
thrown on the defendant in every case, she took an appeal. As a
matter of fact, nothing had been done for her except the applica-
tion of local measures, plasters, ointments, etc. And when the
sores began to heal under this very scientific ( ?) treatment,
others came about her hips and in the edges of her hair around
the back of her scalp. Then she was gravely informed that noth-
ing could be done for her. That she must go through life with
those sores on her leg. This is just what some of our alleged
homoeopaths are doing now. They can't take the time to hear
the evidence, and so they plaster up the mouths of the witnesses
to prevent them from testifying. And when they finally wake up
to the fact that their treatment frequently results in failure, they
blame it on the system, and go into a mongrelism that is worse
than allopathy.
The story of the plaintiff is the history of attempts on the part
of the skin to do double duty in attempting to rid the system of
waste products that should be carried off by other excretory
organs. At the same time it is suffering from lack of proper
nutrition that renders its excretory glands incapable of doing
even their normal amount of work. This because of some dis-
Story of the Symptom. 21
turbance in their proper rhythmical action, and they are clogged
with end products. This brings us to another witness.
By passing our finger over the sides of the neck we discover
several enlarged indurated glands, and are told that they are of
long standing. "Now," says another keynote man, "this is a
clear case for Calcarea carb." But wait till we get all the evi-
dence before deciding the case. What do these witnesses have
to tell us? That their normal function is to collect from the
tissues the waste products, and send them on through the differ-
ent lymphatic vessels to the various excretory organs ; that nor-
mally they have a regular rhythmical action, but owing to dis-
turbance in their nerve supply (which is from the sympathetic
system) this has been lost. Therefore, they are so disabled that
they can no longer rid themselves of the lymph as rapidly as it
comes to them, and so they are clogged with the residue from
which the water has been absorbed, leaving a cheesy mass.
But let us examine another witness that is closely associated
with the latter. The muscles appear to be well developed, but on
touch they are very soft and flabby. "Certainly," says our friend
of the keynotes, "this is another keynote for Calcarea carb/' But
we have not all the testimony yet. The hair is very harsh and
dry. This tells us of interference with the nutrition of the scalp,
as the flabby muscles do of them. "Well, this certainly proves
that it is a Calcarea carb. case." says our friend.
But now we will put the defendant on the stand, and see what
she can tell us. She likes cool air and feels worse from heat, her
digestive and urinary organs are normal, the stools are light and
soft, the menses are profuse with occasional delays or premature
as to time, sleeps well, but is very easily tired out from exertion.
Now let us sum up the case as it is presented for our con-
sideration. We have a woman who is carrying 40 or 50 pounds
more than she should with her height, with soft, flabby muscles,
dry and unhealthy appearance of hair, long history of enlarged
glands, skin rather dry and harsh, with sores on legs that burn
when she is very warm, and show no tendency to penetrate deep,
but little inconvenience except when warm, general weakness, as
shown by her becoming tired on slight exertion. Feels better in
cool air, always too warm. The sores are scaly with red base and
are limited abruptly by a well marked line of demarkation, the in-
22 Story of the Symptom.
tegument between them healthy, except somewhat dry. The
sores covered by thin white scales but without discharge.
The scaly eruption would indicate Arsenicum if there were any
other Arsenicum symptoms. Much of the other testimony would
make one think of Calcarea carb., were it not for the fact that the
Calcarea carb. patient is always cold, and wants to be kept warm,
while this one is the reverse. Therefore, after considering all the
testimony, not forgetting the fact that the sympathetic nerves
that have control of all the functions of nutrition were more or
less crippled, and having a calcarea patient, but one who was too
warm, I prescribed Calc. iod., which covered every phase of the
case. And its action has been so satisfactory that no appeal has as
yet been taken, and the sores are almost well. When I first ex-
amined the case I told her that I would not pay much attention to
the sores, but direct my treatment to curing her, and when she
was cured by the removal of the cause, the effects (the sores)
would cease.
YVe are too apt to blame our neglect to consider all the elements
that enter into a case on the lack of time. But as a matter of fact
if we know the normal functions of the body, and the very im-
portant role played by the sympathetic nerves in every act of
nutrition, digestion, absorption, circulation, assimilation and
elimination, it takes less time to do our work properly than other-
wise.
But I fancy I hear some one ask wrhat is the difference how we
do it if we cure our patients ? There would not be so much if we
did cure as many as we should. But this is out of the question
without the best kind of work. Even a judge who knows but
little law will sometimes be sustained by the higher courts, but
this will happen less frequently than in case of one who is well
versed. Besides this there is the difference of knowing that we
have really done our whole duty, and I take it that few will say
that it is not better to do our work scientifically than otherwise.
And what is of as much importance, it leaves no excuse for
mongrelism in practice.
70 State St.. Chicago. 111.
Natrum Muriaticum. 23
NATRUM MURIATICUM.
Chemical Name— Chloride Sodium. Common Name-
Salt. Antidote— Spirits Nitre Dulc. Vegetable
Analogue — Ignatia.
By Dr. W. A. Cheeseman.
There are a number of remedies, such as Cat. c, Sepia, Ars.
and Silicea, that we call great remedies. Natrum mur. is one of
these. The characteristic symptom which seems to stand out most
prominently is chilliness. Chilly the whole day. constant chilli-
ness, want of animal beat, cold hands and feet. Now we have
other remedies which have chilliness or coldness, viz. : Pulsatilla,
Camphor, Veratrum alb., Secale cor. and Carbo veg. The chilli-
ness seems to be caused by imperfect circulation. Going back a
little farther X at rum mur. seems to give back to the impover-
ished red corpuscle new life and vigor, and in this way the anaemic
patient is benefited.
Another very characteristic symptom is the time of aggrava-
tion, 10 to 11 A. M. No symptom is more guiding in the selection
of a remedy than the time of aggravation or amelioration.
There is another symptom which you can always depend upon,
i. e., great craving for salt. Again your patient has been under
allopathic treatment and has had large doses of sulphate quinine.
Natrum mur. is its best antidote.
Pathologically. Natrum mur. is a great remedy for liver
troubles. There is violent aching in region of liver, stitches in
region of liver. You will find in almost every case when you in-
quire that there is a history of intermittent fever preceding the
liver trouble which was suppressed by quinine. I am now of the
opinion that the great majority of liver troubles begin in this way.
Emaciation is a prominent symptom of Natrum mur. They lose
flesh while living well. They have enormous appetites but do not
seem to take on fat. Iodine is another remedy with this symptom.
There is also great weakness, as great as Arsenicum, exhaustion
and pains from talking, they are indolent, do not want to take ex-
ercise, have no life or ambition.
More cases of intermittent fever have been cured with Natrum
■mur. than with anv other remedv.
24 Natrum Muriaticum.
Clinical. — Clarence B., age 21, was taken with intermittent
fever while under treatment for another trouble. The following
symptoms were developed : Chills lasting a long time. Chills
with pain in back of neck, chills every day, chills before noon,
high fever, perspiration very profuse. Chills, 4 to 5 P. M. Per-
spiration at night. Chills postponing — perspiration stains linen
yellow. A' at nun mur. 1 M. one dose. This case was completely
cured with this remedy.
There is one symptom which you should notice carefully, it has
the tearful characteristics of Pulsatilla with the difference the
Pulsatilla subject is soothed and comforted by consolation, but
under Natrum mur. they become angry and are aggravated.
Natrum mur. is a great remedy in chronic headaches ; they are
beating or throbbing in character and they come in paroxysms.
Here you may compare Belladonna, Mellilotus and Nux vomica.
In women the headache is apt to occur after the menstrual flow,
as if caused by the loss of blood. Compare China which has this
symptom also. Natrum mur. also cures the headaches of school
girls, and it may be sometimes difficult to choose between it and
Calcarea phos.
Jahr in his materia medica gives us a peculiar symptom : this
symptom comes on and is increased by lying down even in the
daytime, and at night she is obliged to sit up in bed to obtain re-
lief. Natrum mur. acts on the whole alimentary tract, sour re-
gurgitation of food, pressure in region of stomach, contractive
cramp, throbbing and burning in stomach, cutting pain in the
abdomen every day early in the morning, frequent distension of
the abdomen, incarceration of flatus, and gurgling in the abdo-
men. The lips and corners of the mouth are dry. ulcerated or
cracked. Cundurango has this also. It also resembles Nitric
acid in these symptoms. The anus is sore, fissured or painful or
bleeding. There is one symptom which you should carefully
note — the troubles of Natrum mur. like Arsenic, are relieved by
perspiration. It is a valuable heart remedy, frequent palpitation,
palpitation from the slightest motion, irregularity of the beats of
the heart and intermittent pulse. There are many other symptoms
which I might mention concerning this wonderful remedy, but I
will stop ere I weary you.
Clinical. — Homer B., age 52, complains of great soreness in
Ills Resulting From Vaccination. 25
the body, as if he had been pounded : chilly all the time, can't bear
the slightest draft,, has had chronic nasal catarrh for many years.
Hawking and spitting. Had pneumonia very bad one year ago,
right lung involved. Sensation now as if there was a hole in that
lung; enormous appetite, but as thin as a match; drowsy and
sleepy in the daytime. Remedy, Natrum mur. 10 M. one dose.
This man was completely cured.
Chicago, 111.
MALANDRINUM.
Detroit, Mich., Dec. 3, 1908.
Dr. Wm. Jefferson Guernsey,
Frankford, Philadelphia, Pa.
Dear Sir: Some years ago you sent me a graft of Malandrinum
30th, which you advised as a substitute for vaccination, and also
to remove the ill effects resulting from bovine vaccine. I have
recently tried the same on two children, one with an eruption on
the chin, and the other on the knee, resulting, as the parents dis-
closed, from vaccination four years ago. In both cases there was
a decided improvement in a week, and complete cure in two weeks.
I believe it to be a remedy of decided merit.
Yours truly,
E. R. Ellis, M. D.
P. S. You may send this to the Homoeopathic Recorder if
you care to.
ILLS RESULTING FROM VACCINATION AND
THEIR HOMOEOPATHIC TREATMENT.
By Dr. C. Wirz, Durlach.
While the ruling school denies the injuries caused by vaccina-
tion, although these usually plainly manifest themselves, Ho-
moeopathy not only teaches us their existence, their harmful con-
sequences and symptoms, but it also teaches us how to cure them.
Of course, only the practitioner who has a rich store of experience
of such cases can form a right judgment of these- affections, and
can then act with a full conviction of the correctness of these views
in all his therapy. It makes a great difference what soil the virus
26 Ills Resulting From Vaccination.
■s
falls on ; the one is not harmed much by it, but others will be
harmed thereby for life. We can affirm that whenever after vac-
cination the arm is at once inflamed, the glands swollen, and an
eruption extends all over the body, that intoxication from vac-
cination will remain in the system a man's lifetime unless it is
cured, and it will even be communicated to his children. Also
those cases are to be considered as poisoned by vaccination, and,
indeed, they are the worst, where persons have been vaccinated
several times without showing any effect. It is peculiar that all
poisons show their worst effects when they infect a hydrogenoid
constitution. Only in such a constitution will the gonorrhceic
virus and malarias have their most dreadful effect. The same is
the case with the vaccine poison. This may be explained the
more easily, because the blood which is the most effective foe*of
the cocci and bacteria, when it is itself morbidly changed, can no
more offer an effective resistance. Since the blood in hydrogenoid
constitutions contains a considerable admixture of water, it offers
to the cocci a more favorable soil, as they flourish better where
there is more moisture or water. With the gonorrhceic virus we
know that there are the gonococci, in the malarial poison the
bacteria, and in the vaccine virus there seems to be a toxalbumin.
Often there is a mixture of infection from streptococci, as vac-
cination is often not antiseptically administered. According to
prescription, in vaccination, not a drop of blood should be shed,
but frequently vaccination is so administered that blood flows,
which is against the official directions. But when streptococci are
found in unclean vaccination (as in the case of a child where the
arm swells up immediately) then the ailment approaches a real
poisoning of the blood. The blood in general, even after con-
valescence, takes up so much of the virus that it takes years be-
fore there is a full restoration. But such a full restoration may
never take place, if the blood is watery, and care is not taken to
restore it by means of homoeopathic remedies. This explains why
we meet with persons who are forty to forty-five years old. and
are still suffering from the consequences of this vaccine poison-
ing, but who may be very easily cured by giving them Thuja and
Natrum sulph.'
My attention was first called to the evil sequelae of vaccination
about ten years ago through a very striking case. A farmer's
Ills Resulting From Vaccination. 27
daughter came to my office, and told me that she had now been
sick for fifteen years, having consulted at least ten doctors without
benefit. Because she did not feel well she had never married. I
myself had had her under my treatment for about half a year ; she
had always looked very pale, but in examining her no actual dis-
ease could be discovered. I had to acknowlege to myself that I
had not benefited her, and I thence concluded that she must have
an ailment of which I had no knowledge. By accident I was then
studying the evil effects of vaccination, and on being questioned,
she said that she had been vaccinated three times without effect.
I prescribed for her Sulphur 30 and Thuja 30. Three years later
I accidentally met her again as a blooming maiden, and she told
me: "The remedies which you then prescribed for me restored
me to perfect health." This plainly shows that nothing else was
involved than poisoning by vaccination. I had only prescribed
Sulphur in order that Thuja- might work the better. Since this
had been the trouble all the previous treatment had been ineffect-
ual. This shows also how important Thuja must be in anaemia,
since so frequently poisoning by vaccination lies at the founda-
tion of anaemia. Vaccination without results is the most harmful
in its effects.
Last week I was called to see a child in Durlach that had con-
vulsions, and was lying there so utterly emaciated that it seemed
as if it was dying. Since the child had never been vaccinated, no-
body would have thought of poisoning from vaccination. The
mother told me that all her children had been weakly, so that she
always had much trouble with them. She herself had had a very
bad arm from vaccination ; it being swollen very intensely. Then
the thought entered my mind, might the child perhaps have had
this poison transferred into its system through the blood of the
mother and through her milk ?
I gave Thuja 10 in pellets, and Abrotanuni. When I called
again in three or four days I found the child so much better that
the parents manifested their joy at the sudden improvement. My
prescription was owing to a case of Dr. Burnett's. He was called
to see a child that seemed to be dying. He heard that the nurse
had been lately vaccinated. He gave the nurse Thuja, her vac-
cination pustules healed up, and the child, which, continued to
take her milk, was cured. A scientific commission of professors
28 Ills Resulting From Vaccination
<s
would probably not consider the case as proved, but for me as a
practitioner it is of incalculable value, as it enabled me to save
many atrophied children whom I could not have saved without
Thuja.
I was once called in to a family in which already four children
had died ; the only daughter was always sickly, and they were
afraid that they would also lose her. I looked at the child and was
struck by its delicate features and its weakly build of body. I at
once told the father that I suspected poisoning by vaccination.
Such children always take cold in every draught, they suffer much
from headache of a pulsating kind, "as if a nail were being driven
through the temporal bone." The child had even then just taken
cold again, and was suffering from pleurisy. The father con-
firmed my suspicion by showing me a picture of the girl before
vaccination. Before that time the girl had been blooming and
full, but later she became weakly and frail. I soon cured the
pleurisy, and after giving her for some time Thuja, she became
sound, and her whole appearance seemed changed. Such children
become freaky, love solitude and become peculiar. When evening
comes they become sad, they suffer from pains in the spleen when
they walk fast, and also as they grow up they do not feel like other
people. The eruption that appears after vaccination is quite
peculiar, and it requires a penetrating eye to recognize it at once
in its true nature. The complexion is usually yellow and jaun-
diced. Yesterday a boy was brought to my office, who, after vac-
cination, was afflicted with tuberculous inflammation of the knee
joint. The knee was anchylotic and immovable, being consider-
ably flexed. I gave Silicea, which is also a good remedy for vac-
cination. It would lead too far if I would adduce any additional
cases of disease ; we meet with such every day.
The question then arises, what can we do, to protect our chil-
dren from this pernicious excrescence of civilization, and preserve
them in good health for future years? We are not altogether
defenceless with regard to this misery. My advice is to give the
children a week before vaccination, as also for four weeks after
vaccination, Sulphur 3 D. and Natrum sulph. 2, in alternation
with Thuja 3 D., every two or three hours, and later on Thuja
30 twice a day for some time. He who does this may be sure that
vaccination will injure the children but little or not at all. Sul-
Eel Serum. 29
phur is to drive out the poison and Thuja to cure it. X at rum
sulph. improves a hydrogenoid constitution. When Homoeopathy
gradually comes to prevail in our fatherland, the law for com-
pulsory vaccination will, I hope, soon be done away with for the
salvation of our country. The advice given above for preventing
vaccine poisoning is very important also because diphtheria is
considered to be one of the pernicious sequelae of vaccination, and
there is no doubt that this is so. Many a family may through fol-
lowing this counsel be saved from a sad experience. But what
would we do if small-pox should actually break in upon us ? With
Variolin and Hepar sulph. given in alternation every hour,
this fearful disease can be cured with certainty ; where there are
burning pains Arsenicum is also given. — Leip. Pop. ,c. f. Horn.,
December, 1908.
EEL SERUM
As the serum of the eel, triturated and potentized, in the cus-
tomary manner of homoeopathic pharmacy, is attracting consider-
able attention in France and elsewhere, we give here an abstract
of what has been published in various journals concerning it and
its use :
Eel serum was first introduced as a heart remedy by Dr. P.
Jousset, of Paris, a distinguished homoeopathic physician, who
knew of the great analogy existing between this serum and the
venom of the vipera.
The serum is obtained from the blood of a healthy, live eel by
means of sterilized pipettes, is then allowed to settle so as to de-
cant it properly without disturbing the clot. Being an organic
product the first attenuations are made with glycerine or distilled
water, the higher ones with alcohol.
The Eel serum is similar to Digitalis in action, but it does not
take its place. Each has its indications, each its characteristic.
The action of the serum is primarily on the kidney, and affects
secondarily, the liver and the heart. (Vannier.) Digitalis is in-
dicated in asy stolia, with aterial hypotension and anasarca. It
re-establishes tension, increases arterial tension, and indirectly
causes diuresis without interfering with the kidneys. The Eel's
serum, on the other hand, has a more complete action upon the
30 Fraxinus American us.
kidney, liver and heart, and, clinically, is given when Digitalis
fails, and especially to maintain the compensation this remedy has
established. Asystolia, cardiac liver and albuminuria are the
symptoms calling for the serum. (Jousset.)
When under the influence of cold, infection or intoxication, the
kidney becomes acutely affected with deficient secretions of urine,
anuria and albuminuria, the serum will be efficacious in re-estab-
lishing diuresis and rapidly checking the albuminuria. Again,
when during the course of cardiac trouble, the kidney becomes
suddenly affected, or we observe cardiac irregularities and a
marked state of asystolia, we will find yet a useful remedy in the
serum. Arterial hypotension and oliguria without oedema always
point to the serum. (L. Vannier.)
CALENDULA A PHYSIOLOGICAL ANTISEPTIC.
Dr. R. D. Homsher, of Denver, Colo., writes in Ellingwood's
Therapeutists: "Calendula is an antiseptic of great efficiency,
working in harmony with the natural laws of life, that one is con-
strained to call it a physiological antiseptic so compounded by the
Almighty that given a proper vehicle and timely application, it
seems complete. No suppuration occurs when promptly used. It
holds in abeyance the sensory nerves ; it stimulates the vaso-motor
nervous system to clear the way and bring on reparative ma-
terials; it stands guard over the injured part to destroy the septic
enemy if it should threaten to interfere, while the great sympa-
thetic, with God-like omniscience, hastily closes the breach and re-
stores the citadel to safety, comfort and peace.
"And the leaves shall be for the healing of the nations."
FRAXINUS AMERICANUS.
Burnett seems to have made much use of Fraxinus, and gave it
a prominent place among his "organ remedies." his sole indication
being, as far I can see, uterine hypertrophy.
With me Fraxinus Americanus stands as one of a group, the
other members of which are Belladonna, Lilium tigrinum. . lurum
muriatic um natronatum and Hydrastis Canadensis. Belladonna
Radium in Therapeutics. 3]
seems preferable when there is considerable pain, tenderness and
vascular engorgement with bright red, warm, profuse menstrual
flow and but little intermenstrual catarrhal discharge. For the
choice of Lilium tigrinum I rely especially on the peculiar head-
ache as well as on the eye and heart symptoms. Lilium also has a
profuse menstrual flow and an intermenstrual discharge that is
often brownish. Both this remedy and Belladonna have marked
ovarian symptoms and well defined mental states. The Hydrastis
patient is usually sluggish, with evidences of deficient biliary ac-
tion, obstinate constipation, free menstruation and a profuse, tena-
cious, usually yellow, leucorrhcea. The objective uterine condi-
tion that leads me to think of Aurum mu'riatieum natronatum is
one of local indurations rather than general and uniform hyper-
plasia and leucorrhcea is not marked. The general symptoms are
debility and lowness of spirits. The coexistence of sigmoid dis-
ease also leads me to think of this remedy.
The indications upon which I prescribe Fraxinus Americanus
seem to be summed up in the objective and subjective symptoms
of uterine hypertrophy without definite indications for another
remedy, but those are precisely the cases in which I need it. Xo
helpful proving of this remedy has been made, and it would ap-
pear to be highly desirable that provings be made by members
of the sex that derive most benefit from its use, that we may
know definitely when to administer it. As is usually the case with
remedies for which there are no clear cut indications, it is given in
material doses. T usually order five drops of the mother tincture
two to four times a day and continue its use for a considerable
period. — Dr. J. J. Davis, Racine, Wis., in the Clinrque.
RADIUM IN THERAPEUTICS.
Dr. W. Dean Butcher writes an interesting paper published in
the British Medical Journal, September 12th, on this subject. He
uses the drug in the same manner the X-rays are used and cau-
tions his readers against too long and too frequent exposures be-
cause of the consequences that may follow, as is the case with the
X-rays. His experience will act as a guide to homoeopaths in the
internal use of the drug.
His first case was himself, "a patch of eczema on the ankle,"
32 Olive Oil in Diseases of Stomach.
which quickly yielded to the exposure. The next case was in a
young lady of 25, with terribly itching vulva, emaciated and
neurotic. "The fopi of irritation appeared to be two small in-
durated eczematous patches on the vulva." The case had not been
bettered by the X-rays, but after four weeks of Radium "the pa-
tient returned to her home cured." Among the diseases men-
tioned by Dr. Butcher as amenable to Radium are eczema, pruri-
tus, rodent ulcer, hardened, thick cicatrices, lupus, epithelioma,
naevus and possibly syphilitic sores. But, as said before, "The
treatment should be conducted with great caution, since, like the
X-ray irradiation, Radium treatment may give rise to the so-
called late reaction, and the production of telangiectases after
many months." These hints coincide with the experience of ho-
moeopaths who have used the drug, potentized, internally. The
same caution given by Dr. Butcher may apply to its internal use —
do not give it too low or too frequently, as some of those who
proved even the 30th potency found the effects lingered for
months.
OLIVE OIL IN THE DISEASES OF THE
STOMACH.
The following is an abstract of a paper by Dr. L. Rutimeyer
that appeared in the Correspondenz-Blatt fuer Schweizer Aertze:
"In some cases of hypersection and hyperacidity, with or with-
out neurasthenia, the secretion was reduced when 30 gm. butter or
100 gm. warmed oil was taken, fasting in the morning. In another
case of threatening post-operative spasm of the pylorus, with ex-
treme dilatation of the stomach, 100 gm. of oil poured into the
stomach each morning, with lavage of the stomach twice a day,
promptly cured the spasm. In one case a merchant of 41 pre-
sented signs of chronic ulcer and spasm of the pylorus with ex-
cessive secretion and intense pains ; only partial and transient
benefit was obtained during two years of various measures. The
old troubles returned at every excessive effort or excitement or
dietetic error, and finally an operation was proposed. A sys-
tematic course of oil was instituted as a last resort, with brilliant
success. The patient rinsed out his stomach every morning and
then took 100 gm. of oil, and in two weeks the pains and spasms
Silica Mariana in Constipation. 33
had vanished. The man gained rapidly in weight and was soon
able to eat any ordinary food. During the five years since he still
occasionally takes a little oil after some gross dietetic error, and
it promptly relieves any slight disturbance. The most striking
benefit of the oil treatment is in its influence on the subjective dis-
turbance. The oil banishes the pain and restores the earning
capacity, even although the objective findings may occasionally
persist unmodified." — /. A. M.
SILICA MARINA IN CONSTIPATION.
By E. Cronin Lowe, M. B., B. S.
The constipation which one finds constantly represented in
temale patients especially, and indeed is to-day the prevailing
and almost universal condition accompanying and complicating
•every form and condition of illness, is in a large percentage of
cases represented in the pathogeneses of Silicea. But yet how
often this or another equally well indicated remedy fails to dis-
turb this old established constipation. The condition of bowels
may have persisted so long, and been so altered and obscured by
futile purgation, that no decent description of the primary condi-
tion is obtainable. All is obscured, either by the drug symptoms
superimposed or the exhaustion produced in the nervous and
muscular apparatus of the intestinal wall by the purgatives con-
stantly used.
In such cases it is often very hard to work out the totality of
symptoms of a case under one drug, simply because the condition
lias been often hopelessly confused by artificial over stimulation.
Frequently this confusion of symptoms will appear in making
thorough examinations of cases of old standing constipation, and
a combination often noticeable is a Natrum nnir. headache,
grafted, as it were, upon a Silica constipation ; this may be found
in young anaemic girls frequently ; and then again the position of
representative symptoms may be reversed or constitutionally
"borne out more markedly in favor of one or other drug, yet there
remains in some cases a confusion of the two drugs to a greater
or less extent.
Having one or two cases of this kind in hand, one usually
chooses the most strongly represented drug to commence with fol-
34 Silica Mariana in Constipation.
lowing with the other also indicated, using them separately. Ac-
cidentally I happened upon the notes of Silica marina in Clarke's
Dictionary, which at once gave the strong suggestion to try this
natural mixture of Sil. and Nairn m mar. for those cases in which
nature or artificial dosage appeared to have so confused their
symptomatic pictures.
The following are notes of five cases in which I think Sil.
mar. was indicated, and in which a long period of constipation
yielded to a comparatively short exhibition of the drug.
Case i. — Mrs. M. P., aged 36. Constipation for years, usually
going three or for days without defecation ; has taken numerous
purgative pills, now takes mostly cascara "tabloids," two or three
every third night. Motion is hard, lumpy, difficult, usually light
colored, bringing down piles which rarely bleed, but accompanied
by burning left-sided pain. Rather sallow lax skin, with morning
headache lasting on into afternoon. Very nervous disposition.
Sil. mar. 3X was commenced night and morning. The first week
made no progress, cascara- being used twice. At the end of
second week two unaided motions had occurred ; case, used only
once, powders taken at nights only. End of third week, case.
once used, motion so far easier, no piles protrude, headache much
better. End of fifth week, powders taken every other night,,
bowels act by themselves about every other day ; easy motion, on
straining. End of eighth week, powders taken twice weekly ; still
keeps free from constipation ; has forgotten powders once or
twice.
Case 2. — Miss L. T., aged 22. A mill hand. Two fingers of
one hand became septic through injury at work, and have re-
mained so chronically some weeks. Very anaemic, with a good
deal of gastralgia, flatulency, palpitation, morning headache,,
haemorrhagia. Chronic constipation for several years, with the
usual history of numerous purgatives tried. Sil. mar. 3X given
every night. The first week gave very little result; the favorite
purgative was allowed, if necessary, but the motion was reported
easier, softer, and less painful. After six weeks of patient per-
sistence with the nightly powders, which were repeated less fre-
quently during the last week, it was found that no purgative had
been used for three weeks, and that the motions were easy and of
daily occurence, and the general tone greatly improved. Four
weeks later, reported doing excellently.
Silica Mariana in Constipation. 35
Case 3. — Mrs. A. R., aged 38. Old troublesome constipation,
with hard, difficult stool, often partially evacuated and then reced-
ing, accompanied with piles, acne facialis, and sallow complexion,
profuse menstrual period, and constant morning beating head-
ache. Sil. mar. 3.x was given, and as in the other cases, no purga-
tive was used, but the occasional use of a warm soap-and-water
enema was found necessary on four occasions during the first
three weeks, and after nine weeks' course of Sil. mar. 3X, decreas-
ing in frequency from once daily at first to once weekly, she re-
ports a daily evacuation of a normally formed motion with no
discomfort. Her acne and headache gone, and general tone im-
proved.
Case 4. — Mrs. M. R.. aged 41. Constantly goes five days
without motion ; acute flatulence < directly after meals, great
distress and lassitude in arms, with occipital headache rising for-
ward over head to eyes. Lycopod. 30 o. m. was given. Next
week: flatulence >, constipation same. Lycopod. 30 rep. End
of second week : no improvement. 5*7. mar. 3X given om. noct.
End of third week: stomach much >, constipation not altered.
End of fourth week: one natural motion during the week, purga-
tives used twice. End of sixth week a fairly easy motion almost
every other day. 5*7. mar. 3X every other night. Since then
she has not been seen, so one cannot say whether she continues
to be relieved.
Case 5. — Bessie B., aged 3. A backward child, with adenoids
and enlarged tonsils and exceptionally bad constipation — going a
whole week without motion, and needing manual assistance.
Motion very hard, broken, and light-colored. A thin, pale child,
sweating at night, and poor appetite. She had Calc. plws., Sil.
snl ph.. Nux vom.j Bryon.. Graph.. Phos-. in high and low potencies,
but without any relief during a period of two or three months.
5*7. mar. 3X om. nocit. was then given, and after ten weeks she
is now much improved. Other medicines have been given for
passing conditions, as colds, etc. [The adenoids were removed,
but before the 5*7. mar. was commenced.]
In none of the cases have any aggravating or peculiar symp-
toms been noticed, and personally I am satisfied with the remedy
as far as it goes, prescribing it as far as possible in cases showing
same combination of Silica and Nat. mur. symptoms, and im-
36 Adonis V emails Proving.
pressing on the patients not to expect to give up their regular
purgatives, etc., under a fortnight at least, and to be prepared to
continue the regular use of Sil. mar. for two or three months.
Many cases have failed, but these are those in which one pre-
scribed empirically, and thereby ignored or missed some leading
symptom for another remedy. — British Homoeopathic Review,
December.
(Dr. Lowe gives the drug in 5 grain doses of the trituration. —
Ed. H. R.)
GIBES AND WISDOM.
"I could consume many pages." — Heated One.
"If these operations are unwarranted, what is the explana-
tion?"— Sarcastic One.
"The practice of medicine will be very much as you make it.""
— Cryptic Osier Aphorism.
"Editorials in which the mantle of dignity conceals vast in-
tellectual abysses." — Dr. Lydston.
"100,000,000,000,000,000 ions can be placed on the point of the
very finest needle." — Exchange.
"To men who work in the open air the chemistry of food is an
unnecessary nuisance." — Critic and Guide.
"Whoever writes the full story of the sharp curettte will open
a chamber of horrors that has few, if any, equals in the annals of
surgical blundering." — Dr. Coleman.
ADONIS VERNALIS PROVING.
The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, have undertaken the
proving of this drug. The drug was employed from the 12th to
mother tincture. Reports from two provers, students, are given
in last issue of The Observer. One of them developed no special
symptoms ; the other, Prover Mudge, reports some marked symp-
toms, as will be seen in the following abstract from his note book :
"The first symptom which I could record as such, came on
after I had been taking the drug for about two weeks (this was
after he commenced with ten drops of the tincture), was an
irregularity of the pulse.
Tuberculosis Apparently Cured. 37
"It also showed a marked irregularity, the rate being much ac-
celerated, upon the slightest exertion. By the exercise of running
up stairs, I once observed that the rate was increased from
seventy-two to ninety-six. On Sundays, after singing in church,
that is, immediately after singing, my heart beat against my
chest like a sledge-hammer, and there was slight tinnitus aurium,
something I never had experienced before in my life. Late in the
course of the proving (when the dosage had been increased to
from thirty-five to forty drops), I experienced a vertigo, which
seemed to be especially noticeable upon rising in the morning, and
was especially manifest upon turning the head quickly. During
the last month of the proving I experienced a precordial uneasi-
ness, which could not be described as a pain, but might appro-
priately be called a 'consciousness of the heart.' Along with this
there was a feeling as of a weight on the chest with a frequent
desire to take a long breath.
"Later, the vertigo became more marked, and was noticed
upon lying down also. In fact, it was produced by any sudden
motion or change of position. I developed an abnormal appetite,
which wTas especially noticeable toward ten o'clock in the even-
ing ; with this there was an obstinate constipation and a great
amount of flatulence. I also noticed a decided lack of thirst, not
taking upon the average more than one glass of water a day,
whereas I usually drink four times that amount.
"Another symptom which might be accounted for by the fact
that I was doing considerable amount of desk work at the time,
was a tendency for my back to become tired easily, and upon sev-
eral times upon lying down there was a dull ache in the small of
the back."
TUBERCULOSIS APPARENTLY CURED BY ACCI
DENTAL INHALATIONS OF LIME DUST.
"Mr. A., negro, first consulted me three years ago with marked
symptoms of second stage of tuberculosis; considerable emacia-
tion, night-sweats, haemorrhages, cough, muco-purulent expectora-
tion, etc. I made an unfavorable prognosis of his case in a very
few minutes, and put him on the ordinary routine of treatment,
plenty of pure air, milk, eggs, etc., cod liver oil, pulmonary seda-
tives, and stimulants, never expecting to see patient again, as I
did not think that he would last more than three months.
38 Therapeutic Pointers.
"In April last a colored man called at my office and complained
of an attack of grippe. I prescribed for the man and started to
open the door to let him out, when he said to me, 'I guess, doctor,
you don't remember me, do you?' I told him that I did not, he
then mentioned his name and the previous call at the office. I
was very much surprised, in fact, could hardly believe him. He
was much stouter, and from a general inspection showed none of
the previous tuberculous symptoms. Becoming interested I got
a history from him, which is as follows :
"After leaving me, he got gradually worse, and becoming dis-
couraged went to Wilmington and consulted several physicians.
They all advised him to return to the country. He took the
advice and got a job hauling lime. Two weeks after beginning
work he stated that he felt better, cough and haemorrhages grew
less, and in six months disappeared and he rapidly took on weight.
He stated that his employer's attention was attracted to the ab-
sence of cough and haemorrhage, and thought that they had stop-
ped too quickly, and advised him to see his physician about it.
He did so, and was told that the lime had cured him. Patient
went further to say that when he was working in the lime his
mouth, nostrils, hair, skin, clothes, etc., were always full of lime
dust. This man is still living in this vicinity, and I see him every
day or so, and he certainly shows little if any evidence of tuber-
culosis.
"Now the part that interested me was the fact that he has not
had a haemorrahge or been troubled to any extent with cough
since working in the lime. The change of condition of patient is
so marked that, while I simply have his word for his history, yet
it bears so many marks of truthfulness and probability that it is
apt to interest one at least." — Dr. S. C. Boston, West Grove, Pa.,
in American.
THERAPEUTIC POINTERS.
Dr. W. H. Morse (Med. World) finds that 15 to 20 drops of
Gclsoniuni 6 in one dose at bed time will abort the average cold.
Dr. J. C. Overall (Med. World) claims that touching a wart
with undiluted nitric acid will cause it to turn brown and scale off,
leaving no scar.
Book Notices. 39
If any reader ever comes in contact with a case of the famous
and dreaded "sleeping sickness" of Africa he ought to try the
effects of potentized Nux moschata on it, as suggested by Dr.
Edmund Carleton, of New York, in the July Recorder (1908).
So far as known that drug, homceopathically, covers the symp-
toms.
King's old American Dispensary, a rather crude book full of
possibly good matter, says that Geranium niaculatum is most
efficacious in cases of ulceration of the stomach.
Dr. P. C. Majumdar writes of a typhoid case that had gone on
to delirium with haemorrhage of dark blood that was arrested
and sent on to recoverv bv La diesis 200.
BOOK NOTICES.
The Cure of Tumors by Medicine, With Especial Reference
to the Cancer Nosodes. By John H. Clarke. M. D. 195 pages.
London : James Epps & Co., Limited. 1908.
This book treats of the therapeutic uses of the nosodes of the
various forms of cancer, or as the men in the other camp call them
"vaccines." Dr. Clarke writes : "That cancer is a disease easily
cured by medicine I should be sorry to assert, but that it is easily
influenced by them is most certain. In a very large number of
cases it has been actually cured, in many others it has been ar-
rested when taken in the formative stage." The nosodes are : Scir-
rhinuni, Carcinosiuum, Durum, Mamittiuum, Eptheliomenum and
Sarcominuni. Seventeen illustrative cases are scattered through
the book. The nosodes are used as Burnett used them, in connec-
tion with the indicated remedy, and if any one uses nosodes he
cannot well ignore this book, which opens new fields.
KENT'S REPERTORY— SECOND EDITION.
The question has been asked: What is the difference between
the first and the second editon? In brief, the difference is :
1. Numerous cross references have been added.
2. Numerous additions have been made to rubrics.
3. Numerous rubrics have been added.
40 The Chronic Diseases.
4. Errors have been corrected.
5. An index to the sections has been added.
6. Forty-two pages have been added.
In the Materia Medica Pura and in the Chronic Diseases the
theory of the mode of action is given, and afterwards there is
given the symptoms of the many medicines proved by Hahne-
mann and his disciples. All these provings are worth the study
of the physician, but in Kent's Repertory they are all presented
in a manner easily referred to. In the teachings of Hahnemann
as given in his works, the Organon, Chronic Diseases, Materia
Medica Pura, we have presented to us the foundations of scientific
therapeutics. — David Rid path, M. D., in British Homoeopathic
Review.
Essentials of Homceopathic Materia Medica and Homoeo-
pathic Pharmacy, Being a Quiz Compend Upon the Principles
of Homoeopathy, Homoeopathic Pharmacy, and Homoeopathic
Materia Medica, arranged and compiled especially for the use
of students of medicine by W. A. Dewey, M. D. Fourth re-
vised edition, 372 pages. Cloth, $1.75. Flexible leather, $2.00,
net. Postage, 11 cents. Philadelphia: Boericke & Tafel. 1908.
When four large editions of a book are required to supply the
demand the fact is proof positive that the book is needed, and
wanted. In Dewey's Essentials of Homoeopathic Materia Medica
we have the easiest, simplest and most accurate road to a com-
prehension of the great homceopathic symptomatology ever pub-
lished, a boon to all students and an unequalled memory jogger to
the man in practice. It accurately gives the ground plan of prac-
tically all the remedies in use, and from this the practitioner can
work to more complicated cases. It covers the need of the every
day run of cases. Mechanically, this edition is a fine specimen.
THE CHRONIC DISEASES.
The following is clipped from a paper by Dr. James Krause,
Boston, read at A. I. H., Kansas City (N. A. J. Horn.), and
is respectfully referred to the individual reader:
The Chronic Diseases. 41
"He (Hahnemann) considered diseases as immaterial dynamic
alterations or disturbances of life, not implying thereby a hyper-
phvsical explanation of the nature of disease (13). All that we
can really perceive are the signs, the symptoms of disease, never
the disease itself. All so-called objective diseases, pathological
conditions, eruptions, tumors, are merely objective symptoms and
are called diseases by synthesis merely as a matter of convenience.
If we go on with analysis to the last discoverable moment, we are
still this side the veil of sensible elements, because the human
mind recognizes only phenomena and only postulates noumena.
Hahnemann, under the spell of the Kanitan philosophy, knew that
things, per se, are unknowable. Thus his psora, for which he
has been unmercifully assailed, is just as intelligible as our toxins.
His psoric diseases are just as intelligible as our cachexias and
diatheses and toxemias. He was imbued with the overwhelming
importance that infection occupies in the causation of disease, and
he traced the symptoms of chronic, recurrent, miasmatic diseases
with such unerring power of observation that to-day, to speak in
the medical parlance of the twentieth century, his description may
be recognized as the best presentation extant of the many and
varied subjective and objective symptoms of the chronic exoge-
nous and endogenous intoxications (14). It is perfectly patent
that he advocated the removal of the cause when manifest (15) ;
that he advocated palliative treatment in emergencies, in great dis-
comfort, and in great danger to life (16) ; that he adjusted the
hygienic elements to normal physiological requirements (17);
that he used psychic treatment in non-somatic mental and moral
diseases (18) ; that he advocated surgery for primary local dis-
eases (19), and that he employed dynamic, internal treatment for
constitutional diseases with or without secondary lesions (20) ;
that he hardly differed in the circumscription of the use of the
various physical, psychical, surgical and medicinal measures from
the best practice of our day.
"Hahnemann gave us no abstract system of medicine. Those
that declare he did are in error. Systems of medicine are born to
die. Hahnemann gave us a scientific method of treatment (21),
and thereby assured the permanence of Homoeopathy."
Homceopathic Recorder.
PUBLISHED MONTHLY AT LANCASTER, PA.
By BOERICKE & TAFEL.
SUBSCRIPTION, Si.oo.TO FOREIGN COUNTRIES $1.24 PER ANNUM
Address communications , books for review, exchanges, etc., for the editor , to
E. P. ANSHUTZ, P. O. Box 921, Philadelphia, Pa
EDITORIAL BREVITIES.
A Recommendation. — The following story came to us from
an old-time doctor who said it is true. Probably it has appeared
before : Years ago a certain specialist in "nerves" whose reputa-
tion is more than national, had an attack of the enemy he com-
bats, "nervous prostration." He gave up work and traveled in
Europe, but did not get better. In Paris he consulted the man
who in France occupied the position he did in his own country.
The case was evidently too much for the French doctor, who, not
knowing his patient, advised him to go to a city in the United
States and consult Dr. , that is, to say, himself. We re-
gret that we cannot relate what happened when the advice was
given. Probably it pleased the American doctor so much that he
got well, for he afterwards resumed his practice of treating nerv-
ous breakdowns. As there are many great nerve specialists in
this country the anecdote of our old friend cannot be regarded as
personal.
"Twisted Thoughts/' — One of the editorial corps of our
esteemed and excellent contemporary Progress, of Denver, \Y.
D. B., gives the world a well written and thought-provoking essay
on "Twisted Thoughts" — a good and original heading. Here is
the opening :
"There are few of us who have not one or more friends who, in
their thinking, show twists that are surprising and confusing to
us. To argue with them is a painful luxury, and likewise a most
barren one ; for there can never be a change of opinion produced
in either party to the discussion and frequently there arises much
anger and an ever remaining sense of injury which are decidedly
Editorial Brevities. 43
bad in their effects on the feeling of friendship. For instance, I
have a friend who, among other unusual twists, has no faith in
vaccination and looks on it as a full-blooded invention of the devil,
believing it to be the potent parent of half the ills the race now
suffers from.''
That friend is, according to W. D. B., an example of a good
man with "twisted thoughts." What a world opens up before the
thoughtful mind, and an opportunity to one with a facile pen, on
reading the above ! Since the old serpent in Eden demonstrated
to Eve the twisted thought of Adam man has been engaged in a
similar occupation, and occasionally has twisted the neck of his
opponent in his effort to be convincing, and show his brother the
error of his ways. Sometimes when a man is tangled as well as
twisted if he will go to Holy Writ he receives a singular ray of
illumination, so singular indeed that man clings to the Book even
though scientists rage and say vain things : their light, for some
reason, does not possess the peculiar power that comes from the
other and men turn to the old Book. Somewhere in the Book is
found a passage that, in a manner, gives the peculiar light —
though, in sooth, each side may take it to themselves ; it is some-
thing about casting out a beam. At the present we cannot recall
it entire, but doubtless the reader will remember it. ?
Changing Views on Vaccination. — The following is taken
from "Editorial Notes" of the December number of the British
Homoeopathic Review. It shows that even the old school men
realize that there may be advances in vaccination as well as in
other departments of medicine : "There is no standing still in
medical views, and it seems that so cherished a dogma as the
necessity for compulsory vaccination is in danger. A preparation
for a change of view with regard to it must be going on when Sir
Douglas Powell can make the following remarks (an address on
"A Just Perspective in Medicine," delivered before the Guy's
Hospital Physical Society on October 8, 1908) : 'We have learned
much since the first days of inoculation for small-pox, and Jenner-
ian vaccination as an institution is only defensible in perspective
with the facts of the time, the positive facts of the appalling viru-
lence and loathsome and fatal effects of the disease, and the nega-
tive fact of its actual cause not being then, nor even now, known
to us. It was instituted in hygienic darkness ; in the light of pre-
44 Editorial Brevities. *
ventive science, and with the efficacy of police sanitation and the
certainty sooner or later of the true nature of the disease being
discovered, we may foresee the time when vaccination employed
in contact areas alone may be adequate for the protection of the
community.'
"In connection with this subject we may mention that in at
least one of the States of the American Union the homoeopaths
have so convincingly demonstrated the efficacy of high dilutions
of vaccines given by the mouth that this method of vaccination by
internal medication is recognized by the laws of the State."
Tuberculin and the Cost of Living. — The December num-
ber of the Hahncniannian Monthly has a good editorial on the
subject of "the therapeutic administration of tuberculin'' based
on an article by Dr. Arthur Latham that recently appeared in The
Lancet. This is a quotation from the editorial: "After condemn-
ing the dosage of tuberculin originally recommended by Koch,
Latham goes on to state that the proper dose varies with indi-
viduals, and that in some patients as little as i/ioo,ooo,oooth of a
gramme will cause a rise of temperature." When one considers
that the dose injected into cows in the foolish "tuberculin test"
might make an elephant "react," and that the "reaction" is the
poor cow's death warrant and the taxpayer foots the bill directly
in the cost of the animal and indirectly in the increased price of
beef, butter, etc., one can realize what a very expensive luxury
these gentlemen are, especially as cows continue to respond to their
"test," and always will as long as a healthy cow is subjected to it.
Opsonins. — Professor N. Gildersleeve. of the University of
Pennsylvania, in a paper published in the November number of
the Monthly Cyclopedia and Medical Bulletin, makes the follow-
ing comments on the opsonins: "Regarding the exact nature of
the opsonins we know but little. Some investigators have directed
their energies toward the determination of their character ; but,
as is true of certain other immune bodies, their endeavors have
been almost fruitless. We know that they are present normally in
the tissues ; decreased in certain infections ; can be increased by
immunization ; they disappear quite rapidly from the serum on
standing; they are thermo-labile, being destroyed in fifteen min-
utes at 6o° C. ; they apparently act best in a neutral media ; they
Editorial Brevities. 45
are not, according to some investigators, dializable. In certain
respects they resemble enzymes ; in others they do not. In what
part of the economy they are formed is at present time purely a
matter of speculation."
Probably the most noteworthy point in this is the statement that
"they disappear quite rapidly from the serum on standing," which
indicates that serum as an immunizing agent has its defects. The
homoeopathic prophylactics are still the most effective.
Legal Lunacy. — In November an osteopath was fined $25 no
and costs for "practicing medicine without a license" in the State
of Connecticut. In Texas one of his cult, or trade, sits on the ex-
amining board that was brought into existence to protect the
public from the quacks. It may be that the Texas man is a class-
mate of the man who was fined. Whether the fine was just or un-
just, or whether the Texas man has any business on the examin-
ing board or not, are questions that need not be considered here,
the lunaness of the medical laws in thus absurdly conflicting is
the point.
Science — Truth. — The editor of American Medicine in dis-
clussing Koch's stand on the communicability of bovine tuber-
culosis makes the curious assertion : "But it should be remember-
ed that there is no harmony in science and divergent opinions are
the only sure means of arrving at ultimate truths." From this it
may be inferred that science and truth are different. That which
is scientific may be true or may be false, but in either case, it
seems, it remains scientific. It is all right, no doubt, but at first
reading it strikes one as being somewhat odd, as if many learned
men had been more scientific than truthful.
Aconite and Belladonna. — The British Medical Journal
tells of a man, aged 48, who swallowed by mistake half an ounce
of Aconite, Belladonna, and chloroform liniment. After a short
time he began to display his symptoms. The physiological action
of the Belladonna was most clearly observed. His pupils became
so dilated that only the wide rim of the iris was visible. He was
restless and acted like a maniac, followed by fits of unrestrained
mirth. The patient had to be supported, as he was unable to
stand, owing to muscular weakness due to the action of the
Aconite. The pulse wras rapid, small and thready. However,
46 Editorial Brevities.
the patient recovered in spite of the enormous overdose of both
these drugs.
Good Advice in Skin Cases. — An anonymous writer in a cur-
rent allopathic journal advises his readers not to make his appli-
cations of external remedies too strong because, generally, the
lesions "are sufficiently destructive and need no factitious help in
this direction."
Heart "Tonics" and Drug Combinations. — The following is
taken from The Medical Times, X. Y., December:
"He (Dr. Janeway) considers combinations of heart tonics,
usually with nitroglycerine, to be a deplorable development in the
therapeutics of to-day. The practitioner who allows himself to
give powerful drugs in this way fails to learn the action of any
one of them. Such experiences as then result to him make him
a skeptic regarding their efficacy. Mayhap he then starts in on
the road toward therapeutic nihilism, before which his patient will,
no doubt, be well on the way toward Christian Science or some
like bane to humanity. Polypharmacy and shot-gun prescriptions
are a mistake ; one cannot thus gauge the value of any remedy.
Drugs should be used, in so far as possible, singly ; and when we
make combinations we ought to know precisely what the condi-
tions are for which we make them."
Medicines and Those in Authority. — Professor John Uri
Lloyd rides a tilt at the "authorities" in the December number of
the Eclectic Medical Journal. His contention is that all discov-
eries concerning the virtues of valuable drugs come from physi-
cians who are not ranked as authorities, or from men outside the
medical profession. For instance, all the authorities fulminated
against "Jesuit's bark" — cinchona, quinine — when it was intro-
duced and continued to do for years. G else mi um received the
cold shoulder, and Hamamelis is still an outcast. Hydrastis was
another. To these we may add that prince of natural antiseptics
and healer of hurt flesh, Calendula. A recent surgeon pooh-
pooh's it from good company. Judging from the past this fact is
evidence of its exceptional value. Perhaps in time authorities
may learn that the clinical experience of intelligent men is a better
criterion for judging drugs and their uses and also diseases than
are laboratory methods and the microscope. What a different
world the world would be if all its authorities were men who
know.
News Items. 47
NEWS ITEMS.
An Opinion of Homoeopaths. — There is a paper by Dr.
Henry Reed Hopkins, of Buffalo, N. Y., on Dietetics, in the Jan-
uary Buffalo Medical Journal that contains a paragraph showing
in what esteem the "regular" profession holds Homoeopathy and
what would become of it if the plan of amalgamation succeeds.
Dr. Reed writes : ,
"In addition to its primary importance, the knowledge of die-
tetics is interesting from the fact that it is sought and used by all
•classes of doctors, — by physicians, by Homoeopaths, by eclectics,
and by the osteopaths. The Quimby-Eddyites are the only med-
ical cult of any considerable number that openly flaunt the im-
portance of right ideas and practices in dietetics ; on the other
hand, their predecessors and introducers, the Homceoaths have
won the most substantial of their confidence by strict attention to
these matters.'''
It is said that "moving picture" photographs of surgical opera-
tions are becoming very popular, and objections to them by hos-
pital authorities are fast disappearing. Wonder if accouchment
cases will follow ? They would certainly prove a drawing card.
Attention! Dr. V. H. Hallman, Hot Springs, Ark., and Dr.
Edward Harper, Xew Orleans, write us that "the Southern Ho-
moeopathic Association is not dead." It will meet this year at
New Orleans, La., February 24th, 25th and 26th, with head-
quarters at the St. Charles Hotel. If you could get there a day or
two earlier so much the better, for on February 22d, at 2 P. M.,
King Rex will land at the foot of Canal street, and the keys of the
city will be turned over to him ; at 7 130 Proteus and his crew will
appear on the streets ; on Tuesday, February 23d, King Rex, as he
is doubly named, will parade, and at 7 130 the gorgeous pageant of
Comus comes off, and all is over. Next day, February 24th, the
meeting of the Southern Homoeopathic Association will be called
to order. Reduced fares. Think of our cold weather in February
and write to the secretary, Dr. Harper, 718 Macheta Building,
New Orleans, La., for full particulars.
The Pacific Coast Journal of Homoeopathy has removed its
office to 310 Galen Building, Sutter and Stockton streets, San
Francisco, Cal.
PERSONAL.
"One lung gone? Good! I'll have no more trouble with it," said the
tuberculous optimist.
''Can we have a spoon?'* asked the young man, who. with his girl, were
privately dining. "Certainly," replied the waiter, leaving the room.
The native servant was tola to send the telegram and he wrote : ''Come
quick. Father dangerously dead."
"The bicycle certainly brings down the fat," remarked the stout man as
he landed on the pike.
"Why are the Quakers dwindling?*' asked the Earnest Seeker of Truth.
"Bonnets," replied the married man.
Strange that the world is not better governed when every man you meet
knows how it should be done.
If Roosevelt is a Republican, what is Foraker? and if Bryan is a Demo-
crat, what is Hearst?
The nation that habitually takes the "rest cure" is dubbed "unprogress-
ive."
If "the people rule." what are the opposition?
The laying on of hands is a cure especially adapted to little boys.
Cutting off his allowance sometimes cures the youth.
A professor, U. of C, of course, enlightens the world on "Why Women
are Intellectually Inferior to Men." Wait until the fresh guy gets married.
"Every girl has the world at her feet, who has to walk," remarked Miss
Acidie.
Gin is the only currency in parts of Africa, and there is a chronic
stringency, and the people, as elsewhere, want more of it.
When the small boy heard of the electric switch he seriously considered
the reform problem.
When John D. tells us how to succeed we wonder what would happen if
all followed his advice.
Man may dislike change, as Carlyle says, but he wants no shortage in it,
nevertheless.
Little by little the sports of the Anglo-Saxon race are prohibited by law.
Bad boys, our forefathers!
They say Kermit Roosevelt's favorite air is : "Everybody Works but
Father."
A smoking auto is like a smoking lamp chimney — a sign of slovenliness
or ignorance, and in each case, vile.
If you don't like a man his troubles are "retribution," otherwise they are
"adversity."
When a man can wear out of date things without knowing it. or car-
ing, if he does, he is beginning to be emancipated.
THE
Homeopathic Recorder.
Vol. XXIV Lancaster, Pa., February, 1909 No. 2
SHEARING THE LAMBS.
Did you ever "take a flier" in Wall Street? Do you ever con-
template "operating" there? Do you ever "watch" or "study"
"financial operations" with a view to increasing your modest
store of money? A good many of your brother men have done so,
and many of them, who, from "unexpected" events, have been
"cleaned out" now "know all about it," and if they had another
pile to buy more "chips" (or stocks, as in this game they are pro-
fessionally termed) could" beat the game." All who have "been
there," and all who are "studying the market" with a view to
"getting in the game," ought to buy a copy of Everybody's for
February. This "tip" will cost you 15 cents, and though you
can get plenty of "tips" for the asking, is possibly worth the
money.
Have you ever thought of the meaning of the curious fact that
you can buy, or sell, anywhere from 50 to 50,000 shares of any
""active" stock as soon as you have produced the "margin?" And
that any number of lambs can do the same? The greater the
number the richer the fleece. Have you ever noticed how "the
market" for a certain "group" will take a "slump" and the vera-
cious "market report" will tell you that since "weak holdings" (the
lambs) are "shaken out" and many "stop loss orders uncovered"
the market is now "safe" and in "strong hands?" How the stocks
that have slumped quickly regain their normal market level with-
out any fuss? How the man who sends out "market letters" will
give you sure things? — he knows no more than you do, though
he is always "watching the market." If you have "operated" buy
that Everybody's and see how it was done, if you only think of
"operating" buy and see how you may be.
You buy 100 shares of X. and D. The bill and memorandums
50 Shearing the Lambs.
show that you owe the broker $10,000 for the stock he has bought
from Boom & Co. You put up a margin of $1,000, and the broker
"carries" you for the remaining $9,000, i. e., you pay him 6 per
cent, compound interest on that amount. He may get a bank to
carry it on "call" at 3 or 4 per cent., but he may sell it on his next
order from a lamb who is "shrewd" and "goes short" on "the
market." The interest on a few thousand shares carried in this
manner makes a very nice income — and all is straight, for you can
get the 100 shares of X. and D. any day you have the money to
pay for it, or can close out at a profit or loss whenever you can or
must. But suppose one lamb buys 1,000 shares at a price and puts
in a "stop loss" order ; other "knowing" lambs put in "buying
orders on a decline." The traders bide their time, and when it
comes there is an "unexplained slump" in X. and D., the orders on
a "decline" are filled from the "stop loss" and that lamb is
sheared. A few hundred actual shares may form the basis for
a many, many thousand share day's "trading" — that last is good
English, rightly used.
When there is a "killing," which takes place in the ever recurring
"panics," the methods are similar, but then the "big men of the
street" take an active hand and woe unto the broker or even con-
siderable banker who refuses to obey orders — the only safe man
then is the man who has his securities paid for and his certificates
in his strong box. These are the times for men with a little
money to "go into the market" via a safe house and buy — out-
right, for you cannot buy otherwise while the lambs are being
made into chops. But few will do it at such times — the slaughter
scares them. A peculiarity of such times, as many have noticed,
is that "gilt edged" securities "break" worse than those that arc
not so gilt edged. The reason is that these are not dealt in on
margins and there must be actual buying with the cash for them.
The reason for their sales at such times is, generally, that some
one has taken a "flier" and, being "well heeled," is compelled to
"make good."
Standard dividend paying stocks are good investments, pro-
vided they are bought outright, for the day of the wrecker seems
to have passed.
All this is not Homoeopathy, but, you see, the Recorder wants
its subscribers to continue paying their subscriptions, hence this
discursion.
Concerning Christian Science.
CONCERNING THE PRODIGIOUS POSSIBILITIES
IN CHRISTIAN SCIENCE.
Mr. Gilbert K. Chesterton has been forecasting "the future of
America" (Hamptons, January), and, if his forecast is correct,
Christian Science is to be the religion, or superstition, of what our
President, Mr. Roosevelt, terms "predatory wealth ;" in other
words, it is to be the cult of the coming, or arrived, American
aristocracy, the enormously rich class that has sprung up almost
over night. "Aristocracy," you know, means "the best." It
wouldn't do to use our simple English words "the best" for the
class, for the reason it would cause endless wrangling by the
plebeians, "the common people," so we go to the Greeks for a word
for the very rich and to the Latin for the others ; not being
mother tongue words, or the tongue of the vulgar, i. e., the com-
mon citizen, they do not take violent offense at it and so the
peace of the community is preserved. Whether our newly creat-
ed American aristocracy are so in the true sense of the Greek or
are only so in our hazy sense of the term, meaning the fellow on
top, remains to be seen. On the first round they have shown
themselves to be "the best" money getters. That is an established
fact. Whether they will develop into "the best," the aristocracy,
in other ways remains to be seen.
The most, perhaps all, of our so-called "new movements" are
but revivals of ideas from the "wornout" East, "exploded ideas."
But really ideas do not wear out or explode. They are the gods,
ever young to those who first see them, yesterday, to-day and for-
ever. The rule of the people, the demos of the Greeks, and the
democracy of the West, are one with these ideas. Another from
the old East came to our own State, Utah. And another, the
mysticism of the old, old East, is among us known as "Christian
Science," though in reality it is essentially pagan, or heathen, by
which is meant no disrespect, but merely that it is not Christian,
but of that which lived and flourished before Christianity was
historically known, though Christianity has always existed, al-
ways will, for it is the Law and the Prophets, the doing unto
others as you would have them do to you, the saving salt in all
religions — though not often wanted in any or partaken of.
But to go back to Mr. Chesterton. He sees in the future of
52 Some Notes on Professional Courtesy.
America a dividing line, and, broadly speaking, on one side the
Catholic Church with the poor, on the other Christian Science
with our new aristocracy. Yes, of course, there will be, as there
are to-day, many other tongues, but the two great forces, accord-
ing to our essayist, will center in these two. As Mr. Chesterton's
posing of the future race of Americans is purely speculative, so
are the probable results, but he intimates that it will be a return to
the despotism of the East, or — an unpleasant smash. He says
Christian aristocracy (perhaps he means absolute power) was
broken when it was believed that "every man was of enough im-
portance to be damned." To-day in the Christian Science temples
the messages of their goddess are written along side of those of
the Christian God. It is an easy step to paint out the letters on
the wall.
Christian Science is essentially heathen because it is essentially
cruel. Disease and pain are but the state of disordered minds-
ignore them, in yourself and others! An ideal cult for the abso-
lute despot — God is all. God is good. What is evil is a disor-
dered mind, and discontent rebellion against God. And as Mr.
Dooley would say, "There ye are," with the most powerful weapon
a ruling class ever wielded.
So, you see, good doctor, there is more in Christian Science
than merely cases of foolish neglect of the sick and suffering
against which you fulminate.
Xow all this may be but a farrago of nonsense. Still it is
rather interesting:.
SOME NOTES ON PROFESSIONAL COURTESY.
By Isaac W. Heysinger, M. A , M. D.
We all recognize the noble nature of our God-given profession ;
that the physician's first and most dominating object is to do
good, and we all know the grand oath of Hippocrates, that we
should jea-lously keep the knowledge of our art and science from
unauthorized interlopers, in order that there might be more of it
left for the comity of our own brotherhood. It is true, indeed,
that Hippocrates also inculcated lofty ideals by which the older
initiates into the arcana of medicine should deal erently and
Seme Notes on Professional Courtesy. 53
long-sufferingly with those just entering into its mysteries, and
see to it that these also were properly fed at the professional
manger.
And so we work along to-day with our classic collegiate prin-
ciple that the freshman newly incoming to the gates of knowl-
edge, shall, as a newcomer, be thereby hazed, but shall anon be-
come the sophomore of to-morrow, to, in turn, manipulate the
cane, the stove-pipe hat, the kicks and cuffs, and the ducking
bath, against other new hosts as yet in embryo or just born. It is
this that makes the otherwise unhappy life of the neophyte so full
unceremoniously and impartially administered to him to-day he
of joy and promise, mostly promise, for every knock and kick so
will vicariously transmit with compounded interest to his hapless
successors later on. And, therefore, the tongue rolleth, the eye
broghteneth, and the corrugated lines of pain expand into the
broad and anticipatory expanses of hilarious joy —
''There's a good time coming, boys.
Wait a little longer!"
But when this hazing continues for long, mortal years, and the
hazer's hair grows white or absconds, and the nazee's hair grows
gray and sparse, while yet the knocks and kicks do not disappear
or diminish, but only become more sly and surreptitious, and are
administered laterally and to the rear, instead of rectangularly
and to the front, then the hapless one may despairingly look about
for new victims ; and it is by no means certain that he can hence-
forth find them ; for, often, entrenched within the battlements of
hospitals and dispensaries, and wattled and coddled under the vol-
uminous skirtage of the elders, he can see them protrude their
fuzzy and self-sufficient heads, and hear them cry, "Peep, peep,"
but they are quite inaccessible to the healthy discipline so long and
so vigorously, or at least so effectively, administered to himself.
His legitimate game has in such wise achieved security at the ex-
pense of his individuality — has found a patron, and all of good
and bad — and especially bad, that the word implies. Meantime
the professional mature one, incubating and absorbing, waxes
fat in the delicate grains scattered about, and pecks and scratches,
and disparages with qualified remarks, damns with faint praise
54 Some Notes on Professional Courtesy.
his not yet so gray colleague, and often, with a secret joy is en-
abled to even seize the savory morsels and golden grains from
between the very mandibles of this most unhappy colleague, while
crying, ''Well done," or, perhaps, "Not so badly done," or still,
perhaps, "I ought to have been there," as the sole syllabub to his
colleague's bereft soul, or bereft pocket-book, or maw, for these
are in such cases, and with such ones for the most part, all the
same.
And we have our specialists. Some afflicted ones have lice and
fleas ; some have impecuniosity, some have nerves, and hunger,
and thirst, while others have specialists; and it sometimes occurs
that the specialists have them, in turn, and badly so. Of course,
no one has any moral, legal, or professional claim to be a special-
ist unless he is first of all an all-around medical man. It is a
gross libel to say, as some do, that a specialist does not know that
a living organism is a composite and correlated mechanism in
such wise that every thing is general and nothing at all local : or
that he has taken up a part of these operations, for example, the
southeast quarter of the revolution of a wheel, from narrowness
of vision, making him incapable of seeing the whole movement, or
from an un-Hippocratic fancy that the hours are easier and the
fees are larger, or the responsibility lessened and the dignity
greatened.
I was once asked if I were a specialist or a general practitioner,
and replied that I was a specialist. ''And what is your specialty,
may I inquire?" Certainly, I replied, the human body.
Therefore, we may know that if we send a patient to an oculist
we should then have him find a man fully equal to ourselves in all
that constitutes an all-around physician, and, in addition thereto,
one that has a special range of knowledge and experience far
transcending our own, in that particular line, so that he must be
a far better man, necessarily, than we are. And therein sometimes
lies danger to our hapless selves, for once in a while such a
magnificently gifted paragon feels the stirrings of the
"Good old plan.
That they may take, who have the power,
And they may keep who can."
It is on account of this peril that it has been wisely suggested
Some Nofcs on Professional Courtesy. 55
that a specialist should thereby abandon all general practice, and
advertise himself as a specialist in a certain line, and then be
compelled to stick to that specialty, making it prima facie evidence
of mal-practice for him to undertake any case outside his own
specialty ; for it is certain that one who has altogether abandoned
the practice of medicine for years is not qualified to sporadically
take up a serious case and carry it through, and it is equally true
that a specialist who confines himself to one specialty only, on the
ground that the field of medicine is so vast, nowadays, that no one
mind can grasp, and no one hand execute its intricacies (which is
the only possible valid ground on which specialism can have a
locus standi at all), must have abandoned his knowledge and ex-
perience of general practice, and thereby disqualified himself from
its pursuit.
Of course, there is room for specialists ; I couldn't cut a first
class sirloin beefsteak even if I had the ox and the ax, and tried ;
so I abandon that to a specialist, but I do not thereby agree that
the butcher shall treat my cases of typhoid fever.
I suppose we have all had our ups and downs with specialists.
I know that I have, and I propose to cite a few instances in my
own personal experience, that have often produced placid amuse-
ment, because they couldn't, and sometimes vigorous malediction
because they did. The only balm for my lacerated feelings and
impoverished wallet, in these latter cases, has been the observation
that I have been compelled to make, that nearly all the cases taken
away from me, all unworthy, and thus transferred to their own
more gracious preserves, sooner or later, and mostly sooner, havi
turned out badly, so that I have been able, with some professional
satisfaction, though often with considerable personal sorrow, to
read their "titles clear" on those crystalline calcium carbonate
structures, duly marked and dated, in their appropriate ceme-
teries, wherein they were foredoomed to shortly repose ; or, if not
themselves, then others, hapless others, gathered into the insatiate
maw of professional avarice, from these same families. And 1
have sorrowfully said, "You would buck the tiger, would you?"
I have thought, perchance, that it might be of passing interest t )
some of your readers to recite the details and present the mechan-
ism of a few of such involuntary transfers which chanced in my
own experience, and also to say a word or two about the far more
56 Some Notes on Professional Courtesy.
numerous cases in which I was able to place the end of my thumb
against the tip of my nasal organ, and expanding the digits
widely, vigorously oscillate them in the forefront of the baffled
moloch who had shot from his cage and missed.
I have often met these carnivorous professionals, both the
hitters and the missers, afterwards, and always with courtesy, for
I reflected that God, for some reason of His own, had "made of
one blood all the nations of the earth," although the parties under
consideration had exhibited in their dealings a remarkable sort of
cold blood, which, I feel quite sure, was batrachian, and not like
any circulating in my own anatomy. Still we must expect some-
thing like that among the amphibious races, those which have a
double habitat, and can emerge from their own environment into
ours, and impartially forage in both. If providence had directed
their trail of slime forwards, instead of sideways or backwards,
we might all feel safer, but, as it is, perhaps a little of my own
hindsight may serve as a slight forecast for some of those who
chance to fall upon these pages.
During the small-pox epidemic of 1872-3, among hundreds of
others, I had two particular cases, two boys, and the only chil-
dren in a family which I had long attended. The cases were mild
but pronounced, and there were many severe cases in the same
block, of which I had a number. The mother and her old maid
sister desired to visit some of the friends in New Jersey for the
Christmas holidays, and, as the boys were beginning to be about
again, concluded, or wrere induced, to call in for judgment an
eminent homoeopathic physician, who spoke and pronounced my
name with a strong Teutonic accent. This, all unbeknownst to
me. On my next visit I was informed that this eminent example
had come and looked over me and over the cases, and pronounced
them chicken-pox. As I had more than a hundred families with
small-pox in that season to look after, I didn't think so. But the
old doctor told the family that they made a mistake in employing
a young physician, and suggested himself as one of about the right
age.
I didn't wait to learn my own fate definitely, because I at once
preached a short sermon on professional courtesy and Christian
charity, and walked out serene and happy, leaving my rival cor-
rupt and content. The only consolation I got out of this case was
Some Notes on Professional Courtesy. 57
my bill, and the knowledge that my rival (cautions not to be self-
reversed) had advised the family to stay at home, and to send
their Christmas presents, first disinfected in the kitchen range
oven. As the principal of these consisted of an elaborate outfit
of sealskin furs, these emerged from the fiery ordeal as stiff,
brittle and disreputable as fire can make gelatine, even in the hide
of an old Dutch doctor, so that I felt that in this case the wind
had been appropriately tempered to the shorn sealskins, and to
me, the shorn lamb, as well.
I had a case of metrorrhagia in a young married woman, and
called in consultation a very eminent elderly homoeopathic physi-
cian,, because, I thought, as he talked so much about such things,
he ought to know something about them. I helped him up stairs,
as he said he was exhausted with hard work, and fie looked at
the case super-clinically (that is, across the bed), and gravely told
me that he thought that if the case "was treated adroitly," it
would come out all right. And it did, for the whole mucous lin-
ing of the uterus came out with it shortly afterwards. However,
the eminent and over-worked colleague dropped in at times, I was
told, in person, and privately, to see if I was treating the case
adroitly, but he never told me what that was. I am not sure that
I was, but I know that he wTas, for I never saw the family pro-
fessionally after the woman recovered, while he became the medi-
cal director of that establishment. HowTever, it was not for very
long, for they all concluded that my successor was nothing but "an
old woman in disguise," and fired him out ; and then it was my
turn, for practice in that family, so far as I was concerned, only
rotated once.
I was called to a family outside the city, professionally, on an-
other occasion, and after consultation with the family, engaged
another very eminent homoeopathic physician to take a confine-
ment case for me. The professor did so, so successfully that he
kept the family by persuading them that one of the sons was ad-
mirably adapted for a physician, and that he was the very one
to put him through. Shortly afterwards the mother lost her life
by pneumonia, between the professor and the student, and his
career then came to an untimely end in that establishment.
I recall another case in which a little girl, a patient of mine, was
visiting her grandmother, out of the city. A very eminent special-
58 Some Notes on Professional Courtesy.
ist of our branch of medicine saw her there, and took such an
interest in the child, which he had never seen before, that he sug-
gested an operation at once, which matter had already been care-
fully but unfavorably gone over by me. The grandmother
brought her daughter into the ring of conspirators, but the hus-
band was kept entirely out, and the operation was performed by
another eminent collaborator. Secondary symptoms followed,
death almost supervened, the husband fled to me in horror, the
wife telephoned, the grandmother implored, and I went to see the
•shipwreck myself. The eminent specialist wrote a letter to the
family suggesting that he call, which was turned over to me, and
I answered that letter, and it took the man an hour to apologize
to me personally and to try to set himself right in the matter ; it
took all winter to set the girl right.
I had another very serious case in which I engaged my own
professional consultant. But an eminent specialist was called in
in my absence by an aunt, and he came with alacrity, and took
charge of the case with alacrity also. But the grandmother, who
was in charge, took the eminent specialist in hand, led him to the
door, and told him to depart and never come back again, which
he likewise did with alacrity.
In another case I myself called in an osteopath, thinking that
he might work a little bit .mechanically, on a traumatic rotary
curvature of the spine in an elderly patient whom I had attended,
with his family, for many years. I left the osteopath in the front
room manipulating the backbone while I put up some medicines,
as usual, in the adjoining room. He came in, and cried out,
"What are you doing, sir?" I explained. ''Don't you know
better," he cried, "than to prescribe medicines while I am treating
a case?"
I went into the other room, where I found my patient groaning
in body and his wife in spirit, and who told me that my osteopath
had placed his knee against my patient's back, and straightened
him up, as they do jumping jacks when they get awry; had
broken his back, as he believed, in fact.
I returned and explained to the osteopath that he was de irop
in that case ; also, that he was what in vulgar parlance would be
stigmatized as a canine monstrosity, and that I would give him
just two minutes to clear the front steps. The wife came in and
Same Xotes on Professional Courtesy. 59
insisted that one was sufficient, and the colored man suggested
that he throw him out "right now." His bill was $14.00 ; it ought
to have been twenty for the amount of work he did.
Another osteopath once crossed my path, and took away my
patient, who was comparatively a new one. But he didn't keep
her, for she died a little while afterwards and I didn't get my bill ;
I suppose that neither of us did. But these, and another experi-
ence with osteopaths, have taught me that whatever benefit by
manipulation could ever be derived from their treatment, other
manipulators will answer the purpose under the physician's eye,
while a physician subjects himself to real danger in having any-
thing whatever to do with them unless he makes a careful selec-
tion with a previous understanding. He is otherwise likely to be
injured, either openly or surreptitiously, and, if successful, the
osteopath will receive the credit; if unsuccessful, the physician
must bear the blame.
Another of my difficulties with an eminent physician and sur-
geon of our school was a case in which I called one in in a matter
of purulent degeneration of the testicle of long standing, in an old
man. He operated skilfully for me, and the patient was made
very comfortable. But I never saw him afterwards, and my
friend attended the family. All I got out of that case, besides my
bill, was how to put three homoeopathic drugs (one of them sul-
phate of morphia) into a single tumbler, and let the disease pick
out what best suited its taste.
In another case I called in an eminent homoeopathic surgeon to
operate in a case of strangulated hernia, in a maiden lady of un-
certain age, and which operation was successful. After I had
finished the after-treatment I saw no more of these people, but
about ten months later, when I called on the same surgeon about
another operation, as I ascended the steps, to my surprise T found
my former patient emerging from the vestibule with the eminent
surgeon at her heels bowing and saying, "'Then I shall see you
next week again?" As he rose erect and confronted me, I
thought I beheld one of those magnificent crimson sunsets which
we sometimes see in Mexico, but he stammered or strangulated
out that it was only a friendly call, or something of the same sort.
Though there was no rupture between us at this particular time, as
there had been at the first, I contented myself with asking how he
60 Sonic Xotcs on Professional Courtesy.
was getting along, and did my surgical consulting elsewhere on
that and other subsequent occasions.
I once stood in solemn conclave at a consultation of seven of us.
It was my patient, but no observer would ever have thought
I don't know which of these anointed ones got the case, but I
know that some one did, for the death was advertised in the news-
papers shortly afterwards.
A friend of mine who would scorn to steal a patient was asked
by a well known homoeopathic physician who was about to take a
vacation, to look after his patients for him as an accommodation.
My friend did so and made no charge whatever ; but before the
physician left, after asking for this courtesy, he hesitated at the
door, and then returned to stammeringly say : "Doctor, I — I hope
that any of my patients — ahem ! — you will not — continue to treat
afterwards."
My friend was indignant, but I told him that this was one of
the only instances of high intelligence that I had ever seen mani-
fested in such a case, and that it was decidedly to the physician's
credit. He had probably been there before.
I could multiply these cases, not so many perhaps of those work-
ed on me successfully, as those attempted, and which sometimes
were partially successful, too; but 1 have always told my pa-
tients that ?t the first sign of dissatisfaction I would at once
resign the case, and that, as a matter of fact, I had discharged
five for every one who had ever discharged me, so that such
sleight-of-hand performances, outside the personal sense of their
own meanness and injury, and of their meanness and injury t<>
the profession, have not come to me as personal losses, but only as
valuable personal experiences.
Many older physicians may not have had such fights while they
were neophytes in the profession ; but most of my medical col-
leagues, when they go over their old experiences, will recall some.
I have mentioned nearly all, but not quite all, which occurred
to me, and the annual average for thirty-five years or more is not
considerable. But if these few will recall to many the dangers
which they have escaped, and to some others the wrong to pr< -
fessioilal and personal ethics, not to speak of that rule of life
higher than all ethics because it came from the Highest, which
they may have attempted to perpetrate and failed, I hope that
some good may result on both sides.
A Typical Pyrogen Case. 61
And above all I hold the honor of die noblest oi all professions ;
it it is to have its power and vogue ; if it is to preserve its prin-
ciples, and if it is to serve mankind as it can and should, then this
tor must be held intact and kept immaculate.
1521 Poplar St.. Philadelphia. Pa. ■
A TYPICAL PYROGEN CASE WITH COMMENTS
ON THE REMEDY.
By Royal E. S. Hayes, M. D.
Mrs. L.. ret. 26, being advanced three month- with her third
pregnancy "took a long walk up the mountains," which was fol-
lowed by serious consequences. I was called soon after an abor-
tion had taken place. Pulsatilla quickly relieved the haemorrhage
and pains. All went well for two days, when the woman complain-
ed of severe pains in the back extending to the pubes. greatly ag-
gravated by a change of position. She was unable to move with-
out bringing on copious gushes of bright colored blood mixed with
clots. Sabina was given, with the result that I found her so much
improved that I said I would not call again for a few days unless
sent for. I was sent for just a week later. I found that during
the week she had been passing putrid shreds and pieces of mem-
brane, together with an acrid, offensive lochial discharge. The
-tench which rilled the house was simply horrible. Even the
curiosity of the neighbors could not withstand it : they could not
stay in the house. On the day on which I was called she had a
shaking chill in the forenoon, which lasted over an hour and was
followed by repeated lighter ones. The temperature at 2 P. M.
was 102.4. The pulse was small and rapid. She complained of
headache, vomiting and frequent weak ''sinking spells." The ab-
domen was distended, the pelvic organs and bowels quite tender.
She was constantly walking about the room to relieve the bruised
aching and soreness.
Xot a very pleasant state of things for either patient or physi-
cian. Such a state needs a remedy that has the power to go to
the root of the condition and establish reaction in short order or
there will be a dangerous illness from which there may never be
62 A Typical Pyrogen Case.
reaction. Pyrogen is just such a remedy in these conditions and
was prescribed at this time. Next morning I prepared my instru-
ments for curetting. When I called, however, I found that a
change had taken place. The temperature had dropped to 99.5^
there was almost no pain, the discharge had improved in appear-
ance and odor. This went on a few days to perfect recovery.
Pyrogen is a morbific product. The keynote of its sphere of
usefulness is sepsis. The most frequent use for it is found in
sapraemia and septicaemia, especially puerperal, from an unknown
cause or from a local source and in the chronic effects of such a
sickness. But it is just as useful in typhoid fever, diphtheria,
ptomaine poisoning, poisoning from sewer gas, abscess, malignant
pustule or any septic process when those conditions present the
characteristic indications of the remedy. I have the best results
with it in poisoned or septic wounds where the case had been
neglected or had been dallying with surgical fussing so long that
the whole organism had become impressed by the effect of pus in
the system.
In a case of suppurative peritonitis from which a large quantity
of pus had been evacuated, slow improvement continued for a
few weeks, after which the boy persistently remained at a stand-
still both in general condition and locally. Repeated efforts at
discovery of symptomatic indications for a remedy were made in
vain. Then a dose of Pyrogen was given on the theory that long
continued exposure to pus had made the impression which was
retarding progress. The Pyrogen was followed by a sharp rise of
fever, which lasted about a day, after which the improvement was
truly remarkable.
Sometime after abortion the infection pursues a local track and
extends up the urinary tract, causing large quantities of pus in
the urine. The characteristic indications for Pyrogen will usually
be found in these cases.
When, after labor, in addition to offensive and putrid lochia
the woman develops an insidious fever and complains of bruised
pains in the body and that the bed feels hard, necessitating oc-
casional change of position, the Pyprogen bottle had better be
taken out, for it is then more valuable than all the antiseptics and
curetting instruments in the world. There is only a bare possi-
bility that these will have to be used, too.
A Typical Pyrogen Case. 63
Never forget the possibility of Pyrogen being needed in diph-
theria for if it is needed but not used the case may as well be
turned over to the undertaker. The case is malignant. There is
great swelling of the parts, which are dark red and bluish, bleed-
ing easily, and suppurating, or even gangrenous. When the little
patient coughs blood and pus is discharged. A horrible odor fills
the house. There are great noises in breathing and the chest or-
gans seem about to be invaded by the septic process. There is
great restlessness and bodily soreness, abdominal soreness and
pain. If the case is late the pulse is rapid and cardiac paralysis
threatens.
Who would expect Antitoxin to cure such a case ? Everybody
who has observed the effects of Antitoxin with an unprejudiced
mind and knows how to distinguish between the effects of drugs
and disease knows that it would be exceedingly dangerous. Pyro-
gen has cured even then and will often if properly managed. But
when the case has gone quite far the physician must be satisfied
with a little improvement each day for two or three days before
decided change may take place.
A friend of mine relates his experience in an epidemic of real
diphtheria some years ago. His allopathic neighbors, with their
Antitoxin swelled the population of the graveyards in large num-
bers. My friend had some twenty cases which he treated with
Pyrogen 6th and cured every case. Some of the "Regulars" came
to him and asked him what it was that he used. He wrote a paper
about the whole matter, Antitoxin and all, and read it to his con-
ferees, but, of course, they would not believe any such nonsense
as that.
In every case of acute disease that I have cured with Pyrogen
the acute action has been followed by a long continued action as
a general alterative, better health following than was present be-
fore. Pyrogen not only removes the acute symptoms, but digs out
old constitutional tendencies which the patient had before the
local infection was present.
Some of the keynote indications of Pyrogen are :
"Soreness of the flesh ; the parts lain upon feel sore and
bruised. Patient complains that 'the bed feels hard/
"Restlessness, must move constantly to relieve the sore, bruised
and aching pains. Sometimes motion does not relieve.
6$ A Typical Pyrogen Case.
''Confusion as to different parts of the body. For instance, in
a case of slow fever the man thought that a neighbor's leg had
taken the place of one of his own and that his leg was doing
service out in the field with the neighbor.
"Tongue clean, smooth, glazed, fiery red.
"Sweetish, fetid, pus-like taste in the mouth as from an abscess.
"Vomiting-, persistent, coffee ground or stercoraceous.
"Diarrhoea, horribly offensive, putrid, brown or black, involun-
tary, or there may be constipation with large black stools of
carrion odor.
"Lochia thin, acrid, brown, fetid or suppressed and followed by
chills, fever and profuse fetid perspiration.
"Chills severe, general, marking onset of septic fever; pulse
small, wiry, rapid, out of proportion to temperature ; cold sweat.
"Rapid decubitus.
"Threatened cardiac paralysis from septic conditions."
These symptoms give a picture of dangerous malignant pro-
cesses which tax the resources of the physician to the utmost, un-
less he has made the acquaintance of Pyrogen.
I have never seen Pyrogen indicated in those cases of puerperal
fever of violent onset which begin with a severe chill twenty-four
hours after confinement. These are of different character than
those due to sapraemia.
I prefer to use Pyrogen in a single dose of the higher potencies.
But if, through lack of experience, one's courage is weak, it may
be used in the 30th and repeated until improvement begins. It
must then be discontinued lest the malignant forces blaze up anew.
( )n account of its malignant nature it is not sold in a lower
potency than the 6th, I believe.
A full account of Pyrogen may be found in Clarke's Dictionary.
If anyone's homoeopathic enthusiasm has become a bit wearied
(which seems impossible) let him get Clarke's Dictionary and he
will become refreshed. How could we get along without it now!
Farmington, Conn.
Nux Vomica. 65
REPERTORIES.
Milton Powell, M. D.
Apropos of the teaching in some quarters that it is absolutely
necessary to know how to use repertories and that some cases
cannot be cured unless we do use them, here is a statement from
"Chronic Diseases :"
"He may avail himself of the existing repertories with a view
of becoming approximately acquainted with the true remedy. But
inasmuch as those repertories only contain general indications, it
is necessary that the remedies which the physician finds indicated
in those works should be afterwards carefully studied out in the
materia medica.
"A physician who is not willing to take this trouble, but who
contents himself with the general indications furnished by the
repertories, and who by means of these general indications dis-
patches one patient after the other, deserves not the name of a
true homoeopathist. He is a mere 'quack,' changing his reme-
dies every moment until the poor patient loses his temper and is
obliged to leave this homicidal dabbler. It is by such levity as
this that true Homoeopathy is injured/'
A physician can learn how to use a repertory only after he has
learned how to study materia medica, and he can learn the use of
repertories himself. Otherwise we might as well say that we can
best learn the good that a book contains by reading the index.
These wise men rail at keynotes in one breath, while in the next
talk learnedly about generals and particulars as if they had dis-
covered something new. They seem to know a hellovalot that
isn't so. Membership in an Ananias club is too good for them.
163 West 76th St., New York City.
NUX VOMICA.
By Dr. W. O. Cheeseman, Chicago.
Strychnos Nux Vomica. Active Principle Strychnine.
Duration of action, 15 to 21 days.
Antidotes Bell, Camph., Cham., Coc, Coif., Op., Puis., Strain.
It antidotes the bad effects of coffee, tobacco, alcoholic stimu-
lants and patent medicines. One of the best remedies to begin
66 Nux Vomica.
the treatment of cases that have been drugged. Complaint arising
from a cold. Chagrin, anger, mental exertion. It is suitable to
lively, choleric temperaments, also to individuals of a malicious,
artful character. Also to venous constitutions disposed to haemor-
rhoids. Hahnemann speaks of the type : "Nux is chiefly success-
ful with persons of an ardent character, of an irritable, impatient
temperament, disposed to anger, spite or deception." Under-
score in your note books hypochondria, melancholia and hysteria.
In rheumatic affections, especially those of the large muscles of
the back, lumbago and those of the lower chest.
It has congestion of blood to head, chest and abdomen. Sick
feeling in all the limbs. Bruised feeling in all the limbs. Pa-
ralysis particularly of the lower limbs. Trembling of the lower
limbs. Trembling of drunkards.
For the treatment of alcoholism it stands in the first rank.
Compare Sulph. ac, convulsions and spasms, epileptic spasms
with cries, bending the head backward.
St. Vitus' dance in boys and girls, with a sensation of numbness.
It is the analogue of Bell, and Lac, fainting fits, fainting after
walking in the open air. Languor in all the limbs, great weariness
even after the least motion. Laziness and dread of motion, sud-
den failing of strength. Great nervous weakness, with excessive
irritation of all the organs of sense, particularly of hearing and
sight. Excessive sensitiveness to the open air, great liability to
take cold. Many of the symptoms are aggravated by coffee, wine,
smoking, watching and mental exertion. The general keynote
as to the time of aggravation is 3 A. M. The patient sleeps until
3 A. M., and then awakes and is overwhelmed with ideas ; falls
again into a heavy sleep full of dreams, from which he wakens
more weary than he was on lying down.
The pains which come on by keeping oneself in the room are
relieved by a walk in the open air.
There is one other grand keynote which is found in the stool
symptoms. Frequent and ineffectual desire to defecate, or passing
but small quantities of faeces at each attempt. Now Nux v. and
Bry. are both remedies for constipation. The Nux v. constipa-
tion is caused by an irregular peristaltic action of the intestines.
The Bry. constipation is caused by a lack of secretion in the in-
testines. There is no desire for stool under Bry., and the stools
are drv and hard as if burned.
Nux Vomica. 67
The symptom I have mentioned under Nux v. in reference to
the stool in constipation is also found in dysentery and diarrhoea.
You will find there is relief from the stool, be it ever so small, even
when blood is passed there is relief. Now under Mercury there-
is no relief from the stool. On the contrary there is a never get
done sensation. Now take the general agg., worse in the morning-
after mental exertion, after eating and in the cold air.
The menstrual symptoms are menses too early and rather too
copious ; if they have other complaints which begin with the
menses they will remain until the flow is over.
The characteristic symptom in the digestive tract is worse an
hour or two after eating.
There is a symptom under the rubric of ''sleep" which you will
do well to remember. Violent starting on going to sleep.
There is also irresistible drowsiness after a meal.
In disorders of the circulation, coldness at night, not even yield-
ing to the warmth of the bed.
In the mental state they are solicitous about their health, ap-
prehend death, excessive sensitiveness to external impressions,
noise, talk, strong odors and bright light are intolerable, dis-
posed to quarrel and feel vexed. No desire to do any kind of
work. Incapable of thinking correctly. He frequently makes
mistakes in speaking.
The region of the stomach is sensitive to pressure, and you will
find this quite characteristic when Nux v. is indicated. Pressure
in the stomach as from a stone.
Burning in the region of the pylorus. Burning in the pit of the
stomach ; cancer of the stomach ; dyspepsia ; indigestion ; feeling
of fulness in the stomach, particularly after a meal.
No remedy more important in the treatment of disorders of the
digestive tract. Diarrhoea, dysentery, haemorrhoids. The region
of the liver is sensitive to contact, and Nux v. is a fine liver rem-
edy with the proper indications.
Prolapsus of the uterus from straining or lifting. Here Nux
vomica fits in perfectly. Suppression if the lochia, puerperal
fever, nausea and vomiting in pregnant women. Remember Nux
vomica in all nervous troubles.
Sudden sensation of loss of strength in the arms early in the
morning, this is characteristic.
4856 Evans Ave., Chicago, III.
68 Scutellaria Lateriflora.
CONCERNING FOREIGN MEMBERSHIP OF THE
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF HOMCEOPATHY.
Baltimore, Md.3 Jan. 7, 1909.
Messrs. Boericke & Tafel,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Gentlemen: Your letter of October 26, 1908, to Dr. J. Richey
Horner, enclosing a letter from Dr. , of India, has been
referred to me for disposal by Dr. Horner.
I suggest that the proper way in which to have this gentleman's
name introduced to the Board of Censors is through the usual
application for membership. If, however, he does not wish to be-
come an active member of the Institute, but would like to be-
come a corresponding member, the proper course would be to
submit his name to the Board of Censors for consideration, to-
gether with evidence of his having a medical degree. In either
case the applicant must be endorsed by three members of the In-
stitute in good standing who know his credentials to be bona fida.
When such a course is pursued the censors will take pleasure in
considering the application.
Yours very truly,
Eldridge C. Price.
(Dr. E. C. Price, the writer of the foregoing letter, is Chair-
man of the Board of Censors, to whom all letters in the matter
should be sent. His address is: No. 1012 Madison Ave., Balti-
more, Md., U. S. A. We publish the letter on account of the
general information on the subject it contains. — Editor of the
Homoeopathic Recorder.)
SCUTELLARIA LATERIFLORA.
Dr. Edw. Fancher, Middletown, N. Y., recommends Scutellaria
tincture for sleeplessness, and says that it is better than Sulphonal.
In the Blackwood's Materia Medica you will rind under this drug:
"This remedy is indicated when there is a nervous fear that pre-
dominates everything. The patient fears some calamity. It
should be remembered in chorea, irregular muscular twitching
and paralysis agitans ; also in insomnia and night terrors of chil-
dren and nervous palpitation of the heart."
The Original Sherlock Holmes. 69
THE ORIGINAL SHERLOCK HOLMES.
Dr. H. Lyons Hunt, of New York, contributes a very interest-
ing paper on "Physiognomy as an Aid in Diagnosis," a most in-
teresting but neglected subject, from which the following is
•clipped — the journal is the December issue of American Journal
of Dermatology, St. Louis :
"Sir A. Conan Doyle, the author of 'Sherlock Holmes,' was a
medical student in Edinburgh. He graduated before my time
(1881). 'Sherlock Holmes' was and is Professor Joseph Bell,
an eminent physician of Edinburgh. Dr. Bell is one of the most
loved and respected teachers, students of the University and
Royal Colleges have ever had as an example to follow.
"It was Professor Bell's keen perceptions and invariable correct
and marvelous deductions that caused Doyle to make him 1he
principal of his interesting detective works.
"Dr. Bell, however, rarely lent his abilities to making medical
deductions, but was rather inclined to solve the occupation, habits
and character of his patients, than their maladies, from his obser-
vations. An incident that I recall very vividly occurred while I
was preparing for one of my examinations. There is in the Royal
College of Surgeons Museum a fractured femur, which has united
at almost a right angle. Being handed the bone I was asked to
state the occupation of the individual who at one time was un-
forunate enough to be the possessor of such a badly fractured
femur. I deduced the fact that it belonged to a man who was
unable to procure the services of a surgeon, but Dr. Bell added
much more. 'The possessor of this bone was a small muscular
man and a sailor on a sailing vessel," said Dr. Bell, 'and how do I
know this,' he added, 'for this reason, he was a sailor because this
bone has united at such an angle as would only be produced in a
man whose bed was a hammock or bunk, he was on a sailing
vessel because most large steamships either carry a physician on
board or reach land so quickly that the possessor would have been
enabled to procure the services of a land surgeon before faulty
union had taken place, and judgment from the length of the bone
and its development the man was short and muscular.' "
yo Against Chloral in Alcoholism.
THE DISCOVERY OF THE MEDICINAL SPHERE
OF GELSEMIUM.
"The value of Gelsemium was an accidental discovery. About
sixty years ago, in the South, a negro was sent to gather a certain
herb which had the reputation of being valuable in cases of bilious
fever. By mistake he gathered Gelsemium, and administered a
decoction of it to his master, who had resisted all ordinary treat-
ment. The result was great prostration. There was loss of mus-
cular power ; he was unable to move a limb and could not raise his
eyelids, and it was thought that he would expire. But after a
few hours he revived and had no return of the fever. Some enter-
prising doctor, knowing of the case, prepared a medicine from
Gelsemium and disguised it with wintergreen. He called the
nostrum 'Electrical Febrifuge.' After a time it became known to
the profession." — C. E. Witham, M. D., Lazvrence, Kans., in
Medical World.
AGAINST CHLORAL IN ALCOHOLISM.
Dr. W. S. House, Portland, Ore., in a paper on "Alcoholism"
(Therap. Gazette, Jan.), writes:
"Let us urge against the use of chloral. This paper would not
have been written were it not to insist that chloral in the treat-
ment of alcoholism has no place and is a dangerous drug.
"These patients are already poisoned, and their delirium is the
result of disturbed cerebral circulation. Chloral may produce
sleep, but more often it serves only to intensify the delirium, in-
creasing especially the hallucinations. Xowhere can one see such
vivid hallucinations as result from the use of chloral in alcoholics.
The increase of these sensory phenomena, especially of sight, is
often looked upon as additional indication for more chloral, and
before the physician is aware of it his patient has become cyanotic,
the strenuous activity has given place to a low form of muttering
delirium, the sensorium is clouded and full of ghostly forms, the
pulse rapid and weak, the respiration shallow, the pupils dilated,
and unless stimulation is freely used the patient is likely to pass
into the great beyond. I am sure that I have seen two such cases,
and probably three, in which chloral was the cause of death. I
Chronic Cerebral Hyperemia. ~i
am equally certain that I can recognize in any alcoholic the pres-
ence of chloral if it has been used in any save the most modest
dose, by the peculiarly vivid character it lends to the hallucina-
tions in the early stage., by the circulatory disturbance and cloud-
ed sensorium of the later stages."
THE STORY OF CRATAEGUS.
A twice told tale. Dr. E. B. Doan, of West Carrollton, O., con-
tributes a paper to the January number of Ellingwood's Thera-
peutist in what he says "the eclectives have done much to intro-
duce this remedy to the profession in America." which is quite
true; also that Dr. Jennings and the New York Medical Journal
make no "reference to Dr. Greene (the original Cratcegus man)
as a homoeopath," which again is true. Also that "Dr. Homedes,
of Barcelona. Spain, is responsible for the statement concerning
the homoeopathic origin of the drug;" of this we know nothing.
The simple facts concerning the drug are these : Dr. Jennings
wrote to the N. Y. Medical Journal a communication to the effect
that the late Dr. Greene, of Ireland, had used a secret drug with
great success in heart disease. After his death his widow, Mrs.
Greene, revealed the fact that the drug was a tincture of the
Cratcegus oxyacantha. The editor of the Homoeopathic Re-
corder read Dr. Jennings's communications, but did not at once
reprint it because none of the drug could be had at the time.
After nature had grown a new crop of the berries and a tincture
had been made of them, Dr. Jennings's paper was reprinted in
this journal, whence it spread all over the civilized world, and
many learned articles have been written concerning it — and some
tinctures made of it from the "whole fresh plant:'' We have
printed these simple facts before, but, unfortunately, and strange-
ly, it seems that there be some who do not read the Homoeopathic
Recorder.
CHRONIC CEREBRAL HYPEREMIA FOLLOWING
CONCUSSION OF THE BRAIN: CURED
BY MELILOTUS.
By Stanley Wilde, L. R. C. P., L. R. C. S., Edin.
Mrs. P., age 40, was standing on a chair to reach up to a high
shelf when she became giddy, fell backwards, and struck the back
J2 Chronic Cerebral Hyperemia.
of her head against the edge of a table. She was rendered un-
conscious, and when I saw her presented all the symptoms of
brain concussion. The fact that the blow was received on the
head where the hair is gathered into a coil mitigated its seventy.
for there was no scalp wound, and no manifestation of contusion.
The patient was a delicate woman, always more or less anaemic,
with a weak heart and a tendency to syncopal attacks.
Arnica ix was prescribed, with an Arnica compress to i\<e
head, and hot bottles to the feet. She recovered consciousness in
the course of half an hour, and complained much of headache.
This headache became more or less persistent and chronic, and
was of a violent, throbbing, bursting character, chiefly occipital,
but felt all over the head, and making her feel at times as if she
would go out of her mind. The remedies given during a perioq
of several months were Aeon., Bell., Glonoine, Gelscm., Silica,
Acid picric, Calc. carb. These gave only partial and temporary
relief, Glonoine being particularly helpful as a palliative during the
severe paroxysms, but the head symptoms continued, and ren-
dered her quite unfit for her domestic duties, besides causing her
to show signs of much irritability of temper, especially with her
children. She could not bear noise, and was unable to read or
write without considerable aggravation of her symptoms. She
slept i5aclly, and at times I feared that her mind would give way.
Very hot fomentations to the occiput would give relief, and
counter-irritation at the nape of the neck by means of sponging
with Coutt's Acetic acid produced temporary benefit. But no
marked improvement occurred until I prescribed Mclilotus ix.
This drug, Sweet clover, produces symptoms denoting great
engorgement of the cerebral vessels, with terrible throbbing head-
ache as if the head would burst, a very red face, and a tendency
to epistaxis.
This reminds one of Bel!., but Clarke, in his Materia Medica,
differentiates the two remedies in headache in that Mclilotus, has
> from lying down and from the application of vinegar, whilst
Bell, has < from these. My patient certainly found relief from
the Acetic acid, and the head was better lying down than sitting
up. The face also got flushed during the paroxysms of severe
headache. From the time she commenced taking Mclilotus the
headaches became less severe and less frequent, and in a few
weeks entirely ceased. The effects of the fall had lasted nearly
eighteen months. — British Homoeopathic Review.
Phaseolus Nana. 7$
PHASEOLUS NANA.
A. M. Cushing, M. D., Springfield, Mass.
Mr. Editor, as you have sent me a copy of your journal con-
taining an article, "Phaseolus vulgaris'1 you may be interested in
my experience with the bean :
When a boy, I stuck the tine of a hayfork forcibly into the top
of my bare foot, and it was thought it would either make me a
cripple for life or lame all summer. A "herb doctor" split open a
common white bean, Phaseolus nana, and bound the flat, split side
•dry on to the wound. The pain was so severe I became delirious,
but went to sleep and woke well.
During the fifty-two years I have practiced, I have tried it
many times in punctures by rusty nails, etc., and never a failure,
■cured in a few hours, but painful. A number of years ago I had
a patient badly bloated from uterine cancer. I steeped some dry
pods of Phaseolus nana and gave it pretty fully. It greatly re-
lieved the dropsy, but after a few days she screamed, "O, my
head," and was dead. I had no idea then that the bean water pro-
duced the result, but now I fear it did, for not long after in an-
other case of a middle-aged man, he said, "You must do some-
thing for my head, as I shall go wild." I stopped the bean water
and the headache ceased. Xow if the Vulgaris has the power Qf
the Nana (and I don't believe it has), I don't see how Dr. Romm
can give it in such large and repeated doses, without disastrous
results. I think the resinoid of the bean is a deadly poison similar
to atropine.
Physicians in your own building will tell you I have tried to
practice "Homoeopathy" for fifty-two years, and during that time
I have probably proved more remedies upon myself than any
other one living, and one of them was "Phaseolus nana." I had
taken it a few days, watching the action of the kidneys, when my
heart almost stopped, only a little feeble pulse. That stopped the
proving, but I think that was all the scientific proving that has
been made of the remedy.
Soon after I was called by an old school doctor to a case of con-
finement. The patient was 25 years old, with her first child, was
^badlv bloated, the urine was loaded with albumen, there were vio-
74 Phascolns Xana.
lent convulsions and heart failure, which did not yield to the usual
remedies. We gave a dose of that preparation from the vial. In
five minutes the action of the heart was improved, in ten minutes
it was normal, and the doctor was happy and wanted the vial.
Soon after I was called to see a gentleman, 44 years of age, so
badly bloated that he could not wear his pants, he had to sleep on
his knees, with his head on a bed or on a lounge, the urine was full
of pus and albumen, hyaline and glandular casts. The pulse was
but 28. In one week he was out of the city visiting friends, three
months later he was working six days in the week. I gave him
Phascolns nana, the 15th attenuation, once in two hours. The
next day he had such a violent headache that I had to omit the
remedy. He took but little other medicine.
Some five years ago, a lady of 55 years came to me, with a re-
port from an expert chemist, that she had Bright's disease. Her
objective symptoms certainly pointed to it. There was general
anasarca, with sacks under the eyes. I gave her Phascolns 25X,
once in two hours (I knew no better then). The next day I had
to omit it on account of a violent headache. For two years she
did not have a symptom of the trouble. Then she lost an only
brother, and grieving over that brought on the symptoms again.
I then gave her one dose of the 200 attenuation. The next day she
said she had a busy night with her kidneys and bowels. She had
no more trouble with her kidneys. Recently she has had a severe
attack of pneumonia, and has recovered wTith no sign of the
former disease.
A returned soldier has reported to me, whose pulse had been
from 120 to 150 for thirty years; he was cured in a month. A
prominent clergyman, given up to die from fatty degeneration of
the heart, took the 25, and in three months he wrote me from
Toronto, "I am all right." Two months ago, a minister, who had
retired from active work several years ago, suffering from heart
and nervous trouble, came to me. For two years he had been
under the constant care of the homoeopathic physician, and was
suffering from constant burning pain, in the upper left arm. He
was said to have neurasthenia. I gave him Phascolns 200. In
three days the pain was all gone, and there has not been any pain
since. I report these cases to show how much better this is than
to give it daily. — Ellingzcood's Therapeutist.
Hyoscyamus and Mental Derangement. 75
SEVERAL OPINIONS ON TUBERCULOSIS.
You will never get rid of tuberculosis until you fumigate houses,
"hotels, cabs, cars, etc.
You will never get rid of tuberculosis until you make patients
stop spitting.
You will never get rid of tuberculosis until you make people
live in the open air.
You will never get rid of tuberculosis until you make people
work less, eat wholesome food and live in bright, sunshiny rooms.
You will never get rid of tuberculosis until you stop vaccinat-
ing.
You will never get rid of tuberculosis until you free the milk
and beef from it.
You will never get rid of tuberculosis until the social millenium
• dawns.
You will never get rid of tuberculosis.
HYOSCYAMUS AND MENTAL DERANGEMENT.
By Dr. R. Haehl, Stuttgart.
Translated for the Homoeopathic Recorder from Horn. Monatsblactcr,
January. 1909.
Almost the only case in which Hyoscyamus is used in Ho-
moeopathy is in coughs, and, indeed, in a dry nocturnal cough,
worse from lying down, and alleviated by sitting up, attended
with titillation in the windpipe. For such cases it was recom-
mended as far back as Hahnemann, and his successors have fully
confirmed the efficacy of henbane in nocturnal titillating cough.
But Hyoscyamus deserves consideration also in other cases, and
especially in nervous disorders, as may appear from the cases of
disease that follow :
I. On September 20. 1904, a woman was brought to my office
accompanied by her husband and her father, and she at once gave
the impression of mental derangement. She fumbled about in the
air with her hands, made signs with her fingers, as if she was giv-
ing orders, and spoke almost uninterruptedly on all possible sub-
jects, as if she was constantly conversing with several persons.
j6 Hyoscyamus and Mental Derangement.
She had had her first child in March of this year. Everything"
seemed to be in perfect order both before and after her delivery.
She nursed her baby more than two months, when suddenly symp-
toms of mental derangement appeared, setting in with insomnia
and with states of excitement, followed by states of stupid brood-
ing lasting for weeks. According to the directions of the family
physician, she was taken to an asylum, but when no noticeable
improvement appeared after several months, her husband on
his own responsibility took her home, to have her treated ho-
mceopathically.
In addition to the symptoms noted above, there had appeared a
morbid increase of sexual desire, attended with groundless jeal-
ousy, and this continued to the present time, though not in a strik-
ing manner.
I prescribed Hyoseyamus 4. and this was followed by results
which were strikingly favorable. In a few days there were signs
of improvement, and on October 1st her husband reported that
she had become much more quiet and "rational," was not talking
so confusedly and had a better sleep. On the 2d of November
she had taken up again her house work, and from that period she
remained free from any such ailment up to the end of the year
1908, when there was a relapse after another delivery ; and for
this she is being treated at the present time.
II. The second case is that of a girl fifteen years of age, who
has been suffering for several years from occasional attacks of ex-
citement. In her imagination she sees various persons and
regions, demands in a dictatorial manner to have light, she cries
out and abuses persons, while at other times she was wont to be
modest and quiet. These attacks appeared mostly during her
monthly period, which otherwise took a normal course. After
these attacks the patient for several days is weak and frail. When
a child she had frequently complained of headache, and her body
was easily tired out ; she has also for years suffered occasionally
from palpitation of the heart, as also from constipation attended
with futile urging'.
I must confess that for a few minutes I was in doubt as to the
choice of the remedy, as several of her symptoms pointed as much
to Stramonium as to Hyoseyamus, especially the fact that her at-
tacks were not attended with any rush of blood, but were merely
Hyoscyamus and Mental Derangement. yy
nervous. But the fact that her states of excitation came in at-
tacks, then the prostration after her attacks, as also the attendant
constipation pointed to Hyoscyamus, which I accordingly pre-
scribed in the sixth attenuation. The effect was surprisingly
favorable, as the next monthly period — for the first time in two
years — passed without any sign of excitation.
To these cases from my own practice I would add a few from
the older homoeopathic journals:
III. In volume thirty-four of the AUgemeine Horn. Zeitung
(p. 323), Surgeon Haustein reports the following case: A man,
forty-eight years of age, had the misfortune of becoming de-
ranged. He had been treated allopathically for three weeks with-
out any relief, so they resorted to Homoeopathy for help. The
mania was so acute that the patient had to be tied to his bed, both
as to his hands and his feet, as his relatives could not master him
during his attacks. His sallow face had a strange wild ex-
pression ; his tousled hair covered his forehead down to his eyes.
He spoke continuously and chiefly on religious subjects; he
thought he had been poisoned, or that his mouth breathed forth a
fetid exhalation. At times he would scold and weep, and said that
he was always hearing noises. After eighteen doses of Hyoscya-
mus 2, one dose in the morning and in the evening, he again be-
came rational and could return to his work. The bodily symptoms
that remained were cured with Sulphur.
IV. In the same journal. Vol. 44. page 122, Dr. Ganwerky
reports the following interesting case :
The son of a merchant, twenty-four years of age, had been
raving for ten days, and as the allopathic treatment brought no
relief, he was to be taken to an asylum. His uncle also and the
brother of his father were both insane. His mother had been
terrified during her pregnancy by seeing the insane uncle. The
patient had practiced onany from his fifteenth year, had always
shown a great inclination for the female sex, and had earlv de-
veloped an inclination to marry. In the last year and a half he
had shown capriciousness and irritability, and his memory, which
had formerly been good, was enfeebled. His mental derangement
in its full force first showed itself on July 8th, after he had under-
gone venesection on the previous evening. At first he was secre-
tive, and wrote secretly about his love affairs. His speech became
78 Facial Neuralgia.
confused, rcstlessless and insomnia continued to increase, there
were attacks of raving with violent perspiration and violent, quick
conversation, one idea overtaking the other. Love affairs also
now again formed the center of his talks, he practices onany
whenever practicable, and speaks obscenely. He continually talks
and walks about, breaking up whatever he can, and spits in his
nurse's face. At times there are intervals of a quarter of an hour
during which he talks rationally, sees his vice and repents of it.
His face is pale, distorted and sunk in, his gaze is penetrating and
unsteady, his eyes shine. Having a vigorous constitution and a
normal digestion, the patient has a good appetite. In the be-
ginning of the disease as well as during its progress, the patient
complains of severe pains in the neck and in the small of the
back.
On the 1 8th of July he received Hyoscyamus in the 6. and in
the 200 potency, six drops of each mixed together in sixty grams
of water ; every three hours a teaspoonful. In two days there was
an improvement, and by the end of July the patient had recovered.
FACIAL NEURALGIA.
By Dr. Martens, Lueneburg.
Translated for the Homoeopathic Recorder from the Leipz. Pop. Z. f.
Hom.} Dec. I, 1908.
From a lengthy article on this subject we excerpt the following
concrete cases :
I. A young man, twenty-four years old. who. with the excep-
tion of some children's diseases, has always been in good health,
has for the last three years been suffering with frequently recur-
ring attacks of neuralgia. After sleeping well at night he awakes
in the morning with slight pains in the face, or these appear soon
after rising. Soon there is heat in the face, frequently also a
burning redness. The pains start in the occiput and extend thence
into the left side of the forehead, and even into the pupil of the left
eye. At first the pain is as yet bearable, but the nearer it ap-
proaches to noon the more violent it becomes, and only gradually
decreases toward evening. Stooping causes an increase in the
pain. It more frequently appears during bad weather. There is
ill humor from the long duration of the disease and the violent
Facial Neuralgia. 79
attacks. He has received quite a variety of allopathic remedies,
such as Antifebrin, Antipyrin, Phenacetin, also Morphin and vari-
ous external applications. I first gave him Belladonna 4 to re-
move the heat, and succeeded in about two weeks ; the attacks then
were not any more quite so violent. Now I gave Spigelia 4, and
in six weeks this long continued obstinate disease was perfectly
cured.
II. B., a slim, lank man, forty-two years of age, in a clerical
position, complains of constant tearing pains in the face ; he is in-
clined to f retfulness and violence ; there is aggravation from work
and from every exertion. The pains generally have their seat
above one or the other of the eyes ; in the height of the attack there
is often a sour taste in the mouth. B. has been suffering for two
years from these attacks. Nux vom. 6, cured the case in eight
weeks, one dose being given every other day, in conjunction with
a proper diet.
III. Miss F., thirty-eight years of age, has been suffering for
four years every week, generally on two successive days, from
benumbing pain above the left eye, darting thence downward into
the cheek bone and remaining there deeply in-rooted. After the
cessation of the attack, there is a sensation of numbness and of
going to sleep in all the left half of the face. At the time of the
appearance of the menses, which otherwise are normal, there is
always a herpetic eruption on the lips. I first prescribed
Mezercum 3 D., five or six drops, two or three times a day. But
the pains in the next attack were so much more severe that I was
at once called in. Firmly believing that I had found the simile,
but that there was a first effect of an aggravating nature. I now
gave the same remedy in a high potency (30 D.). In the follow-
ing week the attacks decreased in severity, and in five weeks they
disappeared entirely, and they have not so far (three years after
the cure) returned.
IV. A young girl, seventeen years of age, has been suffering
for almost a year from boring and burning pains in the left side
of the face, aggravated especially about midnight. When she
rises and walks about the pains are eased ; cold compresses, which
have been frequently tried, aggravate the pains. There were no
other symptoms. Arsenicum album 10 D. cured the case in a
short time.
8o Masked Intermittent Fever.
V '. Mr. F., a traveling salesman, forty-three years of age, has
been suffering for a year and a half from neuralgia of the head.
The pains draw from the vertex to the forehead, accompanied
with pressure on the vertex. Sensation of constriction about the
forehead, as if a tight band was laid about it. Besides this F.
suffers with the heart, palpitations with anxiety and fear, there is
no organic disease of the heart. Relief by pressure and by tying a
cloth firmly about the forehead. He has noticed that the pains
appear especially when he cannot take his meals at the right time,
or if he has to omit one. I first gave him Argcntum nitricum, to
which several of the symptoms, such as relief by a tight bandage
and the nervous symptoms, pointed. This somewhat diminished
the number of the attacks and their severity, but there was no
cure. This was only reached by the use of Cactus grandffiorus.
In Bcenninghausen's Manual of Therapeutics I found the symp-
tom of 'lack of the usual meals" with Cactus grand, alone as the
remedy. In further study of the case I found in Farrington's Ma-
teria Medica under Cactus grandiflorus neuralgic and other pains
which appear when the patient misses his usual meals. There
were also other symptoms pointing to this remedy, such as the
sensation of constriction, the pressure on the vertex, and espe-
cially also the heart symptoms. These have also much improved
since from the use of Cactus.
VI. In conclusion, I would also mention a case communicated
to me at the last meeting of the North German Homoeopathic
Physicians by Dr. Mueller, of Itzehoe. a case which occurred in
his own family, and was cured with Thuja. The pains were on
one side, extremely violent and unendurable, beginning in the
cheek bone and extending thence to the occiput.
INTERESTING CASES OF MASKED INTERMIT-
TENT FEVER.
By Dr. Wirz, in Durlach.
Translated for the Homceopathic Recorder from the Lcipc. Pop. 7. f.
Horn., Oct. i, 1908.
We are often called on in cases, the obscure, deeply hidden
causes of which are only discovered by lengthy observation and
diligent study. Such cases are never cured unless we discover
Masked Intermittent Fever. .81
their cause. This explains the fact that such cases may have been
treated for years by three or four different physicians, before they
come to us. In such cases a thorough-going examination of the
original cause is necessary. When this has been discovered and
removed, almost all diseases are amenable to a successful therapy.
Our opponents are unable to discover some of these causes or to
relieve them, e. g., poisoning by vaccination, psora with the varied
constitutional treatment ; for they simply deny their existence. A
frequently occurring cause of the most varied diseases is inter-
mittent fever, especially when it appears under other symptoms.
It is a monster which assumes a great variety of forms, and my
late father, a physician of fifty years' practice, was wont to say :
"If we are not able to tell what kind of a disease we have before
us, it is usually intermittent fever."
I. So I was called to see a woman in An who had most vio-
lent pains in the stomach. Pulsatilla in alternation with Dioscorea
3, presently gave some relief. But after a few days I found the
pains in the stomach somewhat improved, but on the right side
there appear the symptoms of a dry pleurisy, the liver was in-
flamed and there was jaundice. I prescribed Kali carb. 30 and
Carduus marianus in the tincture to be taken two or three times a
day in water. At the next visit I found that the pleurisy had dis-
appeared, as also the inflammation of the liver and the jaundice,
but the pains in the stomach continued with the old violence, and
she complained of thirst and burning in the stomach. There was
evidently an ulcer in the stomach, from which the patient had
now suffered for years, but the peculiar symptom was that every
evening about nine o'clock the pains reached an unusual degree
of violence, while in the pauses between they almost vanished.
The patient at the same time had a pronounced hydrogenoid con-
stitution ; for years her symptoms had been worse during wet
weather, and the patient was very much emaciated and worn
clown. She had been treated in various ways without effect. The
intermittent, unusually violent, pains in the stomach reappearing
at the same hour always in the evening, led me to think of masked
intermittent fever, which founded on the above described constittt
tion, ultimated itself in these paroxysms of pain ; but the unusual
fact in the case was that it appeared conjoined with ulceration of
.the stomach. I might here add, that when attacks appear in con-
82 Masked Intermittent Fever.
junction with intermittent fever, they always appear with unusual
violence. I gave her Arsenic 4 D. every two hours, five drops,
and Aranea diadema 2 D. twice a day, five drops. Later when
there was a decided improvement I gave her Chinin. sulph. I, with
the direction that she should take as much as would lie on the
point of a knife, for two hours, always before an attack. Soon I
found the patient sitting up out of bed, and in a few weeks this
woman who had been so severely sick, and of whom hardly sry
one believed that she could recover, was quite well. I had chosen
Arsenicum owing to the severe burning pain and the violent
thirst, and also because it is the best remedy in ulceration of the
stomach, and is also a great remedy in intermittent fever. Aranea
diadema was given to improve the constitution ; it is also indicate'!
in intermittent fever, and has the following marked symptom^ :
Colicky pains with rolling and gargling in the abdomen, the hands
go to sleep, as also the legs, the symptoms recurring always at the
same hour, violent convulsive pains in the stomach, with anxiety
and depression in the chest. In Southern Germany a spider
caught in the cellar and administered in cooked prunes, without
the patient being aware of it, is a popular remedy in intermittent
fever. At times cures are thereby effected of cases in which no
other remedy has proved effective. With the patient the left lobe
of the liver was particularly inflamed, and I found that Dr.
Burnett assigns the left lobe of the liver in particular as the field
of action to Chclone glabra. In Puhlmann I found that this rem-
edy is frequently given by eclectic physicians in America in ma-
larial cachexy. Surely a striking agreement in the views of differ-
ent authors with my own observations and the relation between
the remedy and the disease. For in malaria the spleen and the
liver are very apt to sufTer, but a liver thus diseased will not be
cured by Carduus m aria nits, which only acts on the right lobe of
the liver, but Chelone glabra will have to be called in to aid.
II. To take another case. This was the case of a woman in
Durlach, 45 years of age, who was somewhat corpulent but had
otherwise been always well. Two months ago she had influenza ;
I was called to see her a few days ago and find her in a state of
acute failure of the heart; the heart beats are intermittent, and she
complains of severe pains in the region of the spleen and of the
back. This vielded in a few hours to the doses of tincture oi Nux
Masked Intermittent Fever. 83
and of Spigelia, which I prescribed fur her. She had a sensation
as if her heart was seized with the hand, then also violent pains
drawing up the whole of the left side and down from the left side
of the neck to the sigmoid plexus of the colon. Next morning
exactly at seven the attack returned with extraordinary violence.
I had to work for three hours before the heart returned to its
normal activity. I laid an ice bag on the heart and used all
imaginable means, but they all refused; but as sooti as 1 gave her
tincture of Asafcetida, she improved. Since the attack had now
for three mornings commenced at seven o'clock, I was compelled
to think of masked malaria. So I gave her for several hours be-
fore the attack as much of Chinin. sulph. 1 as would lie on the
point of a knife, every fifteen minutes. And sure enough, at the
same time the attack returned, beginning with palpitation of the
heart, and punctually at seven the pulse again became inter-
mittent; but the attack was not as violent by far. Also this time
Asafoctida and the ice bag did good service. The next day the
attack was still more moderate, and soon stopped entirely. Later
I recommended her to take Eucalyptus 1. This patient had a
liydrogenoid constitution. As to the rational of the case: The
patient had had influenza two months before, but being treated
allopathically, she had not received anything to counteract the
poison of influenza, and this poison, therefore, remained, and
circulating in the system, it greatly weakened the heart. ( hi
Pentecost she had taken a bath, for which her constitution was
not strong enough, and then these peculiar paroxysms developed,
which, without doubt, were only the ultimation of a masked in-
termittent fever. I consider the bacillus of influenza as similar
to that of malaria; as is well known Eucalyptus acts as well in in-
fluenza as in malaria. Every one may see how important it was
to discover the cause of the disease, as the attacks on the heart
would have become more violent every da}', unless the malaria
"had been treated, and this would have doubtless1,}' ended in the
death of the patient. It is noteworthy that if we desire to abort
such an attack we must for several hours previously continue giv-
ing the medicine. China, which otherwise is a remedy which is
not well endured in collapse of the heart, is in such cases well
home. But my practice has indicated to me Asafoctida as the
best tonic for the heart, and it is a remedy which seems indispens-
84 Cases From My Practice.
able to every practitioner. The interesting part of this case would
seem to be the peculiar violence of malarial paroxysms, as they
will hardly be otherwise met with, and then in the remarkably
favorable action of Asafoctida.
CASES FROM MY PRACTICE.
By Dr. Martens, Lueneburg.
Translated for the Homoeopathic Recorder from the Leipz. Pop. Z. f.
Horn., Oct. i, 1908.
Chronic Catarrh.
I. Shoemaker, N., thirty-six years of age, small of stature,
feeble from birth.- In his fifth year he had itch, which was sup-
pressed in the usual manner with ointments. From his seventh
year on he had always suffered every time he took cold, from
bronchial cramps. In spite of the physicians these cramps kept
recurring up to his fifteenth year, and at longer intervals up to
his twentieth year. In this year, owing to a violent cold, he was
taken with inflammation of the tonsils and catarrh of the fauces.
The physicians used for some time internal and external remedies :
there was at times an 'improvement, but no full cure. Next year
he was seized with a more violent attack. The glands of the neck
were much swollen; he could not swallow anything. After the
application of warm and hot compresses for several days small
abscesses on the tonsils opened, when he felt relieved, all but
great weakness. But these catarrhs of the tonsils and of the
fauces frequently recurred ; the}- always left behind them an irri-
tated state of the larynx, and of the bronchia, which compelled
him to cough, by which a thick yellow mucus and also at times
some blood were expectorated. In spite of the treatment by phy-
sicians he became continually weaker and worse. In this state,
now thirty-three years of age, he came under my treatment. ( )n
examination I found : An emaciated man of pale complexion with
hoarse voice : loud speaking was impossible except by extreme
exertion; loss of appetite; frequent thirst; stools slightly consti-
pated ; frequently feverish in the evenings ; the pulse small and
irregular. The objective examination by means of the laryngeal
Cases From My Practice. 8
speculum showed a slight inflammation of the mucous membrane
and a discoloration, mostly grayish white: the vocal cords have a
dirty grayish-red appearance. Subjectively he has a sensation ot
scratching, burning and cutting in the larynx, and jn the bronchia ;
these sensations are aggravated by pressure on the larynx by
speaking and by coughing.
When coughing there is an expectoration of yellow, puriform
fetid mucus, at times streaked with blood. In spite of the dubious
and bad prognosis, trusting to the specific remedies of Homoeop-
athy, I undertook the treatment, and began with Sulphur as the
antipsoric. Of course, I expected a lengthy case. As there was
no alteration from four weeks' use of Sulphur 10, T gave Arseni-
cum album 30. In a week after this there appeared an improve-
ment, as the feverish state in the evening diminished, and the
painful symptoms in the larynx and the bronchia from coughing
diminished. After using Arsenicum I passed from it to Hepar
sulpli. calcar. in the decimal trituration, from which I had before
obtained good results in diseases of the larynx, especially as
Hepar has supersensitiveness when the diseased parts are touched.
The result was favorable ; in a few days there was a diminution
of the cough and of the hoarseness. The expectoration became
grayish-white ; the pains diminished more and more, the sleep
improved, also the appetite, so that the state in general was mani-
festly improved. The treatment with Hepar was continued for
two months. I had hoped that Hepar would quite remove the
local trouble. On a further examination I now gave Nitric acid.
in high potency, as an antipsoric at intervals of three to four days.
The cough as well as the expectoration now diminished, as well
as the subjective symptoms in the larynx and the bronchia. After
using this remedy, there was no more irritation in the larynx or
the bronchia, except during prolonged speaking, and when breath-
ing in the cold air. The mucus expectorated now was clear and
white. The general condition was improved, and also the
strength. As Nitric acid had not removed the last symptoms of
the disease, I tried Phosphorus, Carbo veg. and Causticum. I
tried Iodum, which has a pronounced relation to the organs of the
throat, and this did not prove in vain. For Iodum in the 10 deci-
mal potency used for five or six weeks, two or three drops given
three times a day, removed the last local symptom. The general
86 Cases From My Practice.
weakness which was still present somewhat was removed by
China in a low potency. Since his cure he has now for two years
enjoyed such good health that he has been able to resume his
business and to support his family.
II. The son of a farmer, twenty-four years of age, tall and
thin, has now for five or six years been suffering from a chronic
catarrh of the lungs. He was first treated with domestic reme-
dies, later by a physician. But as there was no improvement, he
determined at the advice of a teacher to call in my aid. When
•examining him he told me that he had caught the itch from one
of the laborers, which had been removed in the hospital within
two days. There was a sensation of tension of the whole of the
•chest, also of dyspnoea. There was cough, worse every time after
meals, as also after lying down in the evening, when he gets warm.
The expectoration when coughing is yellowish-white, often of
"bluish color ; the mucus is tough and stringy, the appetite is poor ;
the stool slightly constipated. The strength is moderate ; for some
time he has noticed a steady though only slight diminution of
weight. Supposing that the suppressed itch was at the bottom of
his morbid state, I gave him at first Sulphur 3 D. three times a
day, as much as would lie on the point of a small knife. By this
the two symptoms mentioned above, the tension over the chest and
the dyspnoea were improved, but otherwise his state remained the
same. Owing to the weakness of his stomach and his constipation
I gave him, after three weeks of Sulphur, every day, four doses of
Nux vomica 3 D. In three days this caused an improvement of
the appetite and of the constipation. The cough also improved,
though only a little. I now did not hesitate, in order to remove it
entirely, to give him Kali bichrom., after which the cough and ex-
pectoration disappeared in four weeks. This remedy has the
tough, stringy, often bluish expectoration as also aggravation
after eatino- and bv warmth.
The man of one book is dangerous, especially if he be a physi-
cian ; the man of a hundred books may be useful ; but the medical
man becomes better the more medical journals he reads. — Ameri-
can Journal of Dermatology.
• Book Notices. 87
BOOK NOTICES.
Diseases of the Nervous System. By John Eastman Wil-
son, A. B., M. D., Professor Diseases of the Nervous Sys-
tem in the New York Homoeopathic College and Hospital for
Women, etc. 499 pages. Cloth, $3.50; half morocco, $4.50.
New York: Boericke & Runyon. 1909.
Dr. Wilson writes in his preface : "The original purpose of this
book was to furnish to the students under the writer's instruction
a group of lectures upon nervous diseases which would be within
their powers of comprehension, and at the same time, in moderate
space, proved them not only with a somewhat dogmatic statement
of neurological facts, but would also, so far as might be possible,
give the reason for those statements. Having worked out the
scheme, it has seemed that the general practitioner might be in a
position to use such a collation to advantage, and so it is pre-
sented to the profession as an attempt to state existing facts more
clearly rather than to make any sensible addition to them/' The
aim of the author has been to avoid the exhaustive and somewhat
exhausting technical works on the subject and also the skeleton-
like compends. The book contains a number of anatomical line
drawings and a very excellent index.
FARRINGTON'S CLINICAL MATERIA MEDICA.
The following is an extract from a letter from the professor
of materia medica in the Hahnemann Medical College, Kansas
City, Mo., concerning the last, 4th, edition of 'Tarrington :"
"Farrington's Clinical Materia Medica seems never to grow old.
Although I have had a copy now for over sixteen years, I am
continually discovering something new in it. It is one of the
works I refer to very often.
"The work of the printer and binder on this volume has cer-
tainly been good. I will continue to take pride in further rec-
ommending 'Farrington.' Accept my thanks.
"Very truly.
"A. II. Starcke. M. D."
Hornoeopathic Recorder.
PUBLISHED MONTHLY AT LANCASTER, PA.
By BOERICKE & TAFEL.
SUBSCRIPTION, $i.oo,TO FOREIGN COUNTRIES $1.24 PER ANNUM
Address communications, books for review, exchanges, etc., for the editor, to
E. P. ANSHUTZ, P. O. Box 921, Philadelphia, Pa.
EDITORIAL BREVITIES.
"'Making Us Ridiculous/' — Ever and anon some contributor
to or editor of a homoeopathic journal gets indignant at the con-
tributions of a brother worker who claims to do things with medi-
cines that "in the light of modern medical science" are "im-
possible," and thereby holds up the homoeopathic profession to
ridicule, etc., etc. It is quite likely that homoeopaths sometimes
make assertions and report cases that might not bear close investi-
gation, or even make palpable blunders in pathology, as that
science is understood to-day, but why should this be holding up
Homoeopathy to "ridicule?" And, indeed, does it0 The Re-
corder has a pretty big allopathic exchange list but fails to find
any evidence of it. They occasionally hold up Homoeopathy itself
in the old style way but mostly are silent on the subject. And then
if it ever comes to holding up individual mistakes and pathological
and other errors, the result might be a veritable Donnybrook
affair in which the heads of even the elect might be cracked. And
if homoeopaths are to limit the reports of their cases to those that
square with allopathic or "modern methods," they would have to
cease reporting them for the very good reason that those authori-
ties very decidedly assert that the sole curative power in Ho-
moeopathy lies in "suggestion."
The other day (and this incident is literally true) two physi-
cians, strangers, were standing at the counter of a homoeopathic
pharmacy making purchases. One of them was buying tinctures
and ix triturations, and the other 30th and 200th potencies. When
the one who was buying the tinctures saw what the other was get-
ting he remarked in a pleasant manner: "I see you stick to the
high potencies ; I've got out of that, and use the stronger forms."
Editorial. 89
The other replied : "Well, I use these because I get very much
better results from them in my practice than I ever could get be-
fore. You know I'm what they call an 'allopathic' doctor." and
with that he closed his grip and said, "Good day.''
There is considerable that might be said, pro and con. on the
subject of being, or being made, "ridiculous." The best treat-
ment for the condition is the suggestion. "Don't be too sensitive."
Homoeopathy and Typhoid. — The British Homoeopathic R '-
view for January contains an item to the effect that the Launce-
ston Homoeopathic Hospital, Tasmania, has. since its foundation.
treated seventy cases of typhoid with but one death, and this case
was "admitted in a moribund condition from perforation of the
intestine." This seems to demonstrate that the homoeopathic treat-
ment of typhoid is considerably superior to the modern methods,
which in London have an average mortality in that disease of i6.< 1
per cent. To be sure the results at the Launceston Hospital are
exceptional, but still the averages everywhere show a very marked
difference in favor of Homoeopathy in the percentage of deaths,
while, when it comes to the sequela? of the disease, the difference
is still more marked.
Fresh Air for Pneumonia. — Dr. G. W. Morris reports in the
Am. Jour. Med. Sciences his observations on the treatment of 445
cases of pneumonia in the Philadelphia General Hospital. There
was no special change in the treatment except the innovation of
constantly opened windows, and Dr. Norris is of the opinion that
those who try the fresh air treatment will never abandon it. The
great German philosopher. Emmanuel Kant, being a weakling,
arrived at the conclusion that the breath is life, and when voting
put his belief in practice by walking a certain length of time everv
day in the open air and breathing deeply through his nose. His
friends did not expect him to live to reach adult age, but he lived
to be 83 years old. Dr. Morris's hint may be a most valuable one.
Olive Oil and "the Cue." — An English journal after stating
that if a man drinks a quart of champagne and finds it getting the
better of him will eat a pint of peanuts all will be well with him so
far as a ''jag" is concerned — though it did not use that word.
90 Editorial.
Then it adds that "a wineglassful of olive oil has the same effect ;"
better, we should say, for peanuts certainly give you a breath.
This recipe, however, is not new. Some years ago a man in a
service where there was plenty of drinking on festal occasions yet
where it was regarded as very bad form to show it, told us that
the knowing ones held themselves steady by drinking olive oil
when the effects were felt to be getting too strong. Some time
ago an item went the rounds to the effect that a good drink of
vinegar would put "a drunk" on his feet quicker than anything
else. Never heard of any verification of either of these methods.
An "Exploded" Idea. — A number of esteemed exchanges have
been printing papers about the "bursting of the bubble" of the
heredity of disease, the "explosion" of it and the like. Who
pricked the bubble, or fired the mine is not very clear, as one
quotes from another and the trail becomes mixed, crossed, or
whatever happens to a trail not easy to follow. In the past, "from
time immemorial," men, learned and unlearned, have observed or
thought they observed, that certain mental and physical traits
seemed to run, like veins of ore, now appearing and then disap-
pearing, in certain families, and they called it "heredity," and
some form of it "atavism." Breeders have even thought they saw
it in animals and have paid money for it when they thought it
good. But the idea is, or is said to be, "exploded," because dis-
ease is not the result of heredity, bolstered up by acquired traits,
but is caused "solely and only" by the bacillus of each particular
disease entering the system from without. This, the scientific
view, is in full accord with the modern medical science and with
our own Declaration of Independence which declares that "all
men are born free and equal." To be sure Jefferson should have
added to his words, "in Altruria."
The Nature of the Bacillus of Tuberculosis. — In the
Southern California Practitioner, January, is to be found a re-
print of a leaflet by Dr. Geo. H. Kress, of Los Angeles, Calif.,
that at the International Tuberculosis Congress, Washington, was
"awarded the silver medal." This fact gives it a certain authori-
tative standing. Concerning the bacillus said to be responsible
for tuberculosis, it savs : "Like other bacteria, it is a member of
Editorial. 91
the plant kingdom. This particular germ belongs to the class of
parasitic plants. In common with other plants it grows best in
soils adapted to its needs. The soil it seems to prefer above all
others is the lung tissue of a person whose health or resistance is
below par." Hereafter the ribald will do well to refrain from
alluding to bacteria as "bugs," for they are not bugs but "plants."
An X-ray Caution. — J. F. W. writes as follows to The Eclec-
tic Review, January : ''The fact that those who are constantly ex-
posed to the influence of X-rays should exercise much caution is
not infrequently brought to the attention of the reader of medical
literature. The recent death of one of the leading manufacturers
of the Roentgen ray tubes furnishes still further evidence of the
wisdom of employing every possible means of protection against
a force which, although of great usefulness, possesses destructive
power of great magnitude. The victim here referred to about
eight years ago contracted the disease sometimes called X-ray can-
cer, and for the last two years has been under treatment in the
hospitals of this city. Three weeks previous to his death his left
arm was amputated, and a few days later the fingers of his right
hand were removed."
It Is Up to the Pathologists. — "The pathologists will tell
you that certain drugs and chemical substances have the power of
producing fatty degeneration or fatty agglutinization ; such sub-
stances as phosphorus, arsenic, lead, mercury and pancreatic
juice out of its normal channels will do this. Yet the same pa-
thologists will ridicule the idea that drugs can change certain pa-
thological conditions after they once exist." — Dr. J. D. Robertson,
Chicago Med. Times.
Death From Antitoxin.— The following is taken from the
Journal of the American Medical Association, January 16th :
"The remarkable series of cases of sudden death after injection of
antitoxin recorded in The Journal during the present year were
without parallel in Great Britain until the following case, which
has just occurred. A girl, aged 18, had a sister suffering from
diphtheria, and the physician in attendance advised the injection
of antitoxin in order to avoid the risk of her catchinq- the disease
92 Editorial
from which she had previously suffered. When the antitoxin was
injected she c6mplained of smarting pain, and added that she was
suffocating. She became worse, and in a few minutes fell from
her chair and died. For several years she had suffered from
asthma, and the doctor thought death was due to asphyxia from
an acute attack of asthma. Dr. Collier, of Oxford, ex-president
of the British Meclical Association, made a post mortem examina-
tion and found the lungs and cavities of the heart in such a condi-
tion as could only be brought about by sudden and extreme spasm,
such as might be accounted for by an acute attack of asthma. In
his opinion the injection of antitoxin started such an attack. He
did not think that any one could have possibly anticipated such a
result. As far as he knew no similar case had ever been recorded.
In view of the great importance of the inquiry, he invited Dr.
Dreyer, professor of pathology in the University of Oxford, to be
present at the examination. The latter agreed with his conclu-
sions. At the inquest which was held the jury returned a verdict
that death was due to an acute attack of asthma started by an in-
jection of diphtheria antitoxin which had been administered with
proper care."
Cancer vs. Tuberculosis. — "At present. I believe the best
part of the facts established or made probable by these investiga-
tions, relate to the antagonism or incompatibility of cancer and
certain other specific diseases. I think we cannot doubt that, as a
general rule, cancerous and tuberculous diseases do not make
active progress at the same time ; and that, in this sense, they ex-
clude one another, and are incompatible. ... I believe, also,
that I have seen at least one instance in which active tuberculous
disease of the lungs was arrested immediately before the appear-
ance of a scirrhous cancer in the breast; and we find, in so many
•of those who die with cancer, the remnants of tubercular dis-
ease from which they have suffered in earlier life, that we may
believe that the recovery from the one has been in some manner
connected with the supervention of the other. So, on the other
side, the rarity of progressive tuberculous disease in those that are
cancerous may be because . . . the cancerous diathesis ex-
cludes that condition of the blood in which tuberculous disease
has its rise." — From Clark's, The Cure of Tumors by Medicine.
Editorial. 93
Aconite and Aconitine. — "The active principle of Aconite is
the alkaloid Aconitine, and as with other alkaloids, so with this,
has been preferred by the orthodox school as being of more cer-
tain composition and constant strength. Homoeopaths have, how-
ever, found the use of alkaloids rather disappointing, as they do
not cover the whole activity of the drug, and, moreover, the prov-
ings were all made with the tinctures, and very few of the alka-
loids have been at all adequately proved." — Dr. B. D. Wheeler.
The Latest Word on Variola. — Two South American physi-
cians, Prowazek and Beaurepaire, contribute an article to the
Muenchener Medizinische Wochenschrift (Nov. 3), which the
Jour. A. M. thus summarizes : "This communication from Rio de
Janeiro reports research which seems to indicate that the causal
agent of small-pox is a symbiosis with a streptococcus, plus the
presence of a certain complement. The scarcity of the virus in
the circulation and the lack of antibodies in the blood seem to
demonstrate that small-pox is predominantly an ectodermal affec-
tion of the tissues, and that the immunity is an immunization of
the skin/' Possibly some of our readers may not on the instant
recall the word "symbiosis;" it is defined: "Coexistence of indi-
viduals or organisms1' and "symbion" from which it comes : "The
living together of two animals or plants in harmony." "Ecto-
derm," needless to state, is the outer skin. If this be true then a
bath will do more to prevent small-pox than anything else, and
general cleanliness will abolish it. Clean body, clothing, food and
air will make small-pox an impossibility.
About Editors. — Our estimable contemporary, the New York
State Journal of Medicine, discussing "Medical Journalism,"
writes — and the italics are his: "The office should not be cheap-
ened. Above all, the editor should be the editor in every sense of
the word. There has never been a medical journal that had en-
during qualities that was edited by more than one man. A corps
of figure heads, collaborators, and assistants, do no harm pro-
vided the actual editorial responsibility is vested in one individual.
I have no hesitancy in predictng that State journals which- are
edited by committees will always lack bowels."
German Medical Journalism. — The Berlin Letter of the
94 Editorial.
Jour. A. M. A., December 26th, says that in 1903 there were 240
medical journals in Germany, and since then "dozens of new-
organs have been founded," one of them being a journal on gyne-
cologic urology. One of the favorite methods of the promoters
is to get the consent of well known men to allow their names on
the title page editorial staff. "Mere vanity causes even scientists
of wide reputation'' to do this. Two years ago a journal was
started with high sounding title, and on the title page were the
names of Czerny, Erb, von Leyden, von Noorden, and von
Strumpell. It seems that the journal was backed by the manu-
facturers of a "malt coffee," and its mission was to show up the
"evils" of genuine coffee. The names of the title page were a
quasi endorsement. There is some scandal over the affair, and the
editor, a Dr. Zindal, is trying "to exculpate himself." A journal
that will sell its reading matter pages to an advertiser is not like
Caesar's wife, or worth much to the subscriber.
Parasitic Skin Diseases. — The following item is from the
December number of the American Journal of Dermatology. It
is rather interesting: "The treatment of vegetable parasitic dis-
eases is constitutional with many of the disciples of Hahnemann.
It is a fact that scabies is, at times, the cause of albuminuria,
possibly by way of producing an intoxication through the ab-
sorption of pus."
The Synthetic Drugs. — Ellingwood has the following to say
of the laboratory syntheticals, most of which are made in Ger-
many :
"When looked at from a rational, unprejudiced standpoint, a
standpoint not influenced by the prestige of foreign authority, I
believe I am safe in saying there has been presented to the profes-
sion, at no time, anything that has had so few grounds for prac-
tical general adoption, or that has been so clearly dominated by
commercialism, as the synthetic remedies. The general accept-
ance of these on the mere suggestion of the name of a new rem-
edy is really in itself a shame to the profession."
"I have decried against this time and time again. No physi-
cian was more willing to look into the character of these remedies
than I was in the early eighties, when we were getting some of
News Items. 95
the best of them. A careless, superficial observer, even at that
time, could easily see that a class of remedies with so little to
recommend them, with so few fixed or permanent qualities ex-
hibited in their influence on disease, could never have a fixed place
in therapeutics."
NEWS ITEMS.
Dr. and Surgeon, Newman T. B. Nobles, is now the editor of
the Cleveland Medical and Surgical Reporter. Dr. Nobles is
author of that excellent work, Minor Surgery, one of the B. &
T. publications. If Dr. Nobles will show the same deftness with
the editorial quill that he does with the surgical instruments, the
Reporter will be heard from.
Dr. F. A. Dudley has removed from Cerro Gordo to Decatur,
111.
Dr. Chas. I. Newton has removed from Geneseo to Olean, N.
Y., No. in Laurens St.
"The First Negro Congress on Tuberculosis" recently met at
Tuskegee, Ala.
Dr. J. Anfiga has removed from Mexico City to Havana, Cuba,
P. O. box, 1052. Dr. Antiga is editor of La Propaganda Ho-
ni-osopatica.
Dr. F. W. Winter has removed from Liberty to Wymer, Neb.
Dr. F. V. Bryant is located at Thomas. Okla.. having removed
from Goya, of same State.
Dr. Chas. E. Holmes is mayor of Railway, N. J. Dr. Holmes
is a homoeopathic physician.
Judge Thurmond says that the Missouri Statutes for the regu-
lation of the practice of medicine do not apply to healing as per-
formed by Christian Scientists, or prohibit the practice.
There are over 250 medical journals in Germany and more
coming. One was recently started on gynsecologic urology.
This specialty might be again split up into the married and un-
married.
Just as the copy is being sent to the compositor, the news of the
death of Dr. H. C. Allen reaches us, but with no particulars.
PERSONAL.
"Don't pour hot oil into the car to relieve pain.*' — American Journal of
Surgery. Sure not !
Once not to curette was to be a back number. Now to curette is to be a
Httle passe.
The man who can use other people's brains is the man who gets rich,
vide Andrew C
''Do we know anything for sure?'' asks a ''regular" editor. Doesn't
look so.
And he follows it with "What is a dose?''
"Is tuberculosis communicable?" ask the N. Y. Med. Exams. Gee whiz!
thought that was "science."
One of the head men of a sure-cure-for-consumption outfit recently died
of that disease.
Death-hell, may be like an unpleasant dream from which we do not
awake with relief but which continues without end.
"The seats of the mighty" are sometimes patched.
John D. says he got rich by "saving his pennies." And John D. teaches
in Sunday School !
When a woman is indifferent man gets curious to know what manner of
creature she is to resist him. Result — a diamond ring.
The boot-toe is often a great up lift.
An able medical editor writes of the dangers of "indiscriminate kissing."
Engaged and married men especially should beware.
"When I don't know a thing I acknowledge it," said one man. "How
monotonous," remarked the other.
Dr. Johnson intimates that it is pleasanter to josh a book than to try to
understand it, which means work. The doctor didn't write "josh/' of
course.
When the Psychical Society begins to weigh souls the chief interest will
be in the comparative weight of different ones.
Bad English is not altogether the result of ignorance, character shows
in it.
The poor working girl in the toils of a rich man of other days is now
generally reversed.
When a man proclaims "medicines are of little use, ' he should add "in
my hands."
Remember that if you marry a widow you do not marry a miss; yet wed-
ding Mrs. is sometimes risky though not bigamous.
A man rather likes being called "battle-scarred," but it" you drop an "r"
in the last word he gets grumpy.
Historical or contemporary greatness depends largely on the press agent.
"Philadelphia chauffeur arrested for blocking traffic." 0 Life! venerable
one!
The tramp is the man who won't work, and we all struggle for the time
when we mav do the same.
THE
Homeopathic Recorder.
Vol. XXIV Lancaster, Pa., March, 1909 No. 3
FASHIONS AND HOMCEOPATHY.
Fashion is something we all joke about, but follow to the best
of our ability. Some men, unlike the serious minded youth, are
unable to keep up with the forefront, the vanguard, of fashion,
to be strictly up-to-date, and we lag, halting a year or two in the
rear, but we bravely hobble after the ever advancing and circling
army. If we keep our garments and things long enough there is
always the possibility that the advance guard may circle around
and pick us up, thus placing us temporarily in the front.
Fashion, though often made light of by wise men, or men who
think they are wise, which answers every purpose with the most
of us, is a very serious thing. It requires a bold man to be open-
ly, defiantly, unfashionable. Martyrs were unfashionable men;
some of them were put to death for it, justly it may be in some
cases. We all know, especially the feminine half of the race,
what it means to be unfashionable in our personal trappings ; if
small potatoes we are "out of it ;" if a large potato we are — ex-
centric, not as other men, interesting, like the other freaks, but
not to be followed.
Fashion is domineering enough to be unpleasant in the matter
of clothes though not physically dangerous, but when it comes to
politics, religion, medicine, etc., it is another matter and the
average good citizen, churchman or doctor will think twice, or
oftener, before he becomes unfashionable. It is no longer, as it
once was, dangerous to life to be unfashionable in these matters,
but otherwise there is very little difference. All of these unfash-
ionables are relegated to the mob of "cranks," where, indeed, the
most of them belong. The greater part of the crank mob soon
tires and creeps back into the great mass of the fashionables (re-
98 Fashions and Homoeopathy.
ferring here to opinions), and are swallowed up there and for-
gotten. But a few sturdily hold to their unfashionable principles
of pure gold ; these are generally stoned ; if this does not dislodge
them, cajolery is tried, the "we are brothers" act. If this fails to
work, the great, honest, stupid crowd of fashionables rub their
eyes and begin to range behind the stubborn ones and adopt their
fashion — for a mass of men must have a fashion or degenerate
into primitive anarchy where the strongest arm was the fashion —
and ruled.
In the matter of personal trappings fashion is in its most fluid
state, ever changing. Those who have the means follow its dic-
tates to the best of their ability, while those who have not the
money wear the cast oft garments of the others and are thus
marked as being of the tramps, unemployed and the proletariat
generally. But fashionable man unconsciously recognizes the
necessity of having something fixed ; hence the court dress and
the "dress-suit" which changeth not.
All this leads up to remarks so frequently heard, or read to the
effect that Homoeopathy, to live, must "progress," "keep up with
the times," "keep abreast with modern ideas" and others of simi-
lar tenor. But, to revert the simile of fashion : Is not this like
urging those who wear the court dress to "keep up with the
fashions ?" Can the courtier, the man of the army, the man who
goes where the dress-suit is required, change its fashion? Can
a man of science change a law of nature and bring "it up to
date ?" You may improve the texture of your cloth and the fine-
ness of its make-up, as did the O., O. and L. Society, when they
re-proved a remedy, but you cannot change its fashion for that
is fixed. Those who urge Homoeopathy to "keep up with mod-
ern medicine" it would seem, fail to realize that it is court dress
in its realm.
THE SINGLE REMEDY.
By Dr. Eduardo Fornias.
("In the treatment of disease only one simple medical sub-
stance should be used at a tijne." — Hah., Section 2J2 of the Or-
ganon.)
All our remedies have been individually proven on the healthy
The Single Remedy. 99
human organism, and the local, somatic or systemic effects of
each one of them noted and conveniently arranged in order to
study them with precision and profit, according to our methods.
It is imperative that each remedy should be given alone, as or-
dained by Hahnemann. Drug-proving and clinical observation
have amply demonstrated the individuality of each remedy. Each
drug that we have proven has its own specific sphere of action, its
special affinity for certain organs and tissues of the body, its dis-
tinctive features, its peculiar characteristics, and its modalities.
Attributes all by which they can be distinguished and compared.
True enough, some drugs may agree with each other in more
than one respect, and resemble each other in manner of action and
effects, but not two of them are alike or identical, or can take the
place of the other. Hence to alternate them under the supposition
that certain syndromes are too complex to be met by the single
remedy, is, as Carroll Dunham said, an unsound and irrational
expedient.
The single remedy is and will continue to be a binding funda- '
mental precept, for it springs from pure experimentation, which
ordains the remedy should be given in its purest form and alone.
The symptomatic variations of pathological processes, from hour
to hour, or from day to day, must be met on the spot by a cor-
responding similar, and with great care not to make the essential
subservient to the contingent.
Under our law any a priori suggestion is inadmissible ; in fact,
illogical. The elements of decision in the selection or rejection
.of a remedy are found in its own pathogenesis and nowhere else,
but individualization here is a task which requires knowledge
and discernment. Because one cannot cover satisfactorily every
essential feature of a case, or does not know how to cover them
with the single remedy, to jump at the conclusion that two rem-
edies will better than one meet the difficulty, is, I think, an inex-
cusable tendency to introduce polypharmacy in our practice, which
at once reveals a scanty knowledge of Materia Medica. And how
much more fallacious and reprehensible still when alternation is
undertaking with utter disregard to the mutual relation existing
between drugs.
Remedies may follow each other well, may agree or disagree
ioo The Single Remedy.
with each other, or may be complementary or antidotal; but
similarity in any case, can only be partial, demanding always an
accurate study of their resemblances and differences. This is one
of the tasks imposed on us by the Lazu of Similars, and whoever
chooses to study the degree of concordance or discordance exist-
ing between remedies is in a better position to understand the
fallacy of alternation.
If some of our remedies follow each other well, and others dis-
agree and even repel each other, it is evident that a previous
knowledge of these various effects is indispensable. This is a
knowledge not only valuable to confute alternation, but to guide
sequence to a favorable issue. Suppose there is an inimical or
antagonistic relation between two drugs given in alternation and
we should ignore this fact, what would be the result? The issue,
I am sure, could not be a favorable one, for the incompatible drugs
would repel each other.
Such certainly would be the outcome if we give in alternation:
Sepia and Lachesis. Mercurius and Silica.
Rhus tox. and Apis. Cantharis and Coffea.
Phosphorus and Causticum. Nitric ac. and Lachesis.
Cinchona and Selenium. Zinc and Chamomilla.
Zincum and Nux vom. Amm. carb. and Lachesis.
Ran. bulb, and Staphysagria. Ran. bulb, and Sulphur, etc.
But worse still when the relation of the two drugs given in
alternation is antido'tal, as is the case between :
Lycopodium and Cinchona. Hepar and Mercurius.
Aurum and Mercurius. Nat. mur. and Arc nit.
Camphora and Cuprum. Arsenicum and Ferrum.
Aconitum and Nux vom. Rhus tox. and Sulphur, etc.
When the relation is concordant or complementary, drugs
are given in succession, which is not alternation. In sequence,
every time a change is made to meet a new symptomatic de-
velopment, a complication, etc., the symptoms of the patient
should be studied anew, in order to replace the one that has
ceased to do good, or that has been insufficient to accomplish the
desired effects. "But alternation, as generally understood and
The Single Remedy. 101
practiced, does not contemplate this new study of the case before
a second remedy is administered, or before every change of rem-
edy ; and herein it fails to come up to the requirements of a true
homoeopathic prescription." This is, says Dunham, the kernel of
the whole controversy. Even when drugs follow each other well
or come to remove remaining symptoms, every change should be
studied on its individual merits and as if it were a new case.
The following groups are examples of concordant drugs and
of complementary drugs. Those that follow each other well are:
Mercurius and Aconite. Sulph. ac. and Arnica.
Mur. acid and Rhus tox. Bryonia and Aconite.
Bryonia and Rhus tox. Spongia and Aconite.
Spongia and Hepar. Zincum and Ignatia.
Arsenic and Phosph. Phosph. and Kali carb.
Therid. and Calc. ost. Therid. and Lycopod.
Thuja and Mercurius. Nit. acid and Thuja, etc.
Some of the leading complementary remedies are :
Rhus tox. and Bryonia. Pulsat. and Lycop.
Silica and Thuja. Phosph. and Cepa.
Phosph. and Arsenic. Nux vom. and Sulphur.
Nat. mur. and Apis. Lycop. and Jodium.
Sulph. acid and Pulsat. Sulph. acid and Lycop.
Mag. carb. and Rheum. Stann. and Pulsat.
Sulphur and Aloes. Sulph. ac. and Arnica, etc.
In view of the above illustrations it seems advisable to bear al-
ways in mind those various degrees of relationship existing be-
tween our drugs, as the non-observance of this rule may bring
about negative results, and explain, in some measure at least, the
cause of some of our unexpected failures.
Under false premises, the advocates of alternation prescribe
after a single examination of the patient, and of one single com-
parison of the symptoms with the Materia Medica, presuming,
then, to cover better the totality with two remedies than with one,
and often without stopping to consider the conflicting action of in-
imical drugs and the undetermined effects of intermixtures.
The supporters of the single remedy, on the other hand,
102 The Single Remed\
whether the remedies follow well each other or not ; whether
they are given to relieve remaining symptoms, whether they
are called as intercurrents or antidotes, they make a careful,
new study of the case every time a change is required, and in do-
ing so do not overlook drugs mutually repellant. Any unexpect-
ed contingency, any morbid variation or aggravation, any com-
plication or unfavorable issue is always met on the spot with the
single indicated remedy, as enjoin by pure experimentation.
In heart disease, for instance, Spigelia follows well Aconite
{endocarditis), and may be followed well by Digitalis, Kali
carb., and Arsenic. Cactus may become complementary to
Aconite, and Digitalis, Strophanthus, and Crataegus may be
rivals in asystolic conditions, but only an sciolist would alternate
them to obtain better results.
In respiratory troubles, especially croup, Spongia follows well
Aconite and Hepar, and is often followed well by Bromium
and Hepar. Jodium follows well after Mercurius, and is fol-
lowed by Kali bich. Given in succession, after careful study of
the case and according to morbid changes, is admissible, for their
action is nearly extinguished when replaced, and the new-comer,
as elsewhere, will not conflict with them, at least, if one knows
how to select a concordant or complementary remedy.
We may start to treat a case of acute indigestion with
Ipecac, on account of the gastric disturbance and its persistent
nausea, and follow it with Colocyntii. if severe colicky pains
develop about the umbilicus, compelling the patient to bend double
to obtain relief ; or with Verat. alb., if vomiting become copious,
with exhausting purging, cold sweat and extreme debility. But
suppose, while Colocynth is acting, the offending matter creates
a severe inflammatory condition of the intestinal mucosa, in which
the stools are mucous and scanty, with Prolonged and distressing
tenesmus, would not Mercurius be the proper remedy to super-
cede Colocynth, instead of giving them in alternation ?
A febrile state of the simple, continued type, with great vas-
cular disturbance, but without qualitative changes in the blood,
without especial localizations and without periodical manifesta-
tions, will invariably call for Aconite. But if the febrile parox-
ysm assumes the remittent type, the motor power becomes ex-
The Single Remedy. 103
tremely lowered and the intellect blunted ; the body feels sore and
exhausted, and both brain and muscles refuse to do their work,
no other remedy better than Gelsemium would suggest itself to
us to replace Aconite ; and the consideration of Arsenic, Ipecac,
Cinchona. Xat. mur., Cedrox, Eupatorium, and even Gelse-
mium, would be in place, if the intermittent type of fever would
develop. Sulphur, however, may be used after Aconite, when
despite the use of this remedy, the dry, hot skin remains and
there is no reaction or critical sweat leading us to suspect the
approach of the typhoid state. But in either of these cases we
anust study and select the remedies on their individual merits,
singly, and not on hypothetical ideas of combined effect or alter-
nation.
A tvfhoid state, again, may call for Bryonia, if there is con-
stipation, or for Baptisia, if there is early diarrhcea, but from the
moment the red-tipped tongue, the critical stools (pea-soup-like) ,
and the tympanitis, announce the increasing toxcumia, no remedy
deserves better our consideration than Rhus tox., especially
when difficult ratiocination with incoherent talk indicates that
the mind is already in an extreme stage of depression. There is
no room here, for such an absurd proposition as the alternation of
Rhus tox. and Bryonia. Each of these remedies has its special
sphere of action, its individuality, and if interchanged will inter-
fere with each' other, for there is a marked antidotal relation be-
tween the two. Rhus tox., however, is complementary to Bry-
onia, and if indicated, will follow this remedy well. But if the
toxcemic state proceeds unabated under Rhus tox., and the stupor
of muttering delirium deepens into coma, very probably
Muriatic acid will supercede this remedy, and invariably so, if
the patient, overwhelmed by the poison, lies in dorsal decubitus,
with the head dropped forward, the chin resting on the sternum,
and the body fixed at the foot of the bed, all indicating the pro-
found prostration of the nervous system. It does not only modi-
fy the evacuations, quantitatively but qualitatively, and I have
seen it to correct putridity much better than Baptisia and Lache-
sis.
Should the condition, however, take still a worse turn, and the
patient be brought to the last extreme by the ravages of the dis-
104 The Single Remedy.
ease, we have to resort to Carbo veg. as the only remedy left then
to combat those desperate states of putridity, adynamia and col-
lapse, in which Phos. acid, Phosph., Arsenic, and even Mur.
acid have been of no avail, and which so clearly point to impend-
ing dissolution. It is that stage of the disease in which the cere-
bral cortex, with all its functions of perception, motion and sen-
sation, is lowered and blunted, sometimes nearly to abolition.
What an ample field for study and individualization does not the
typhoid state present. An evolutive disease with so many vicis-
situdes and complications, running so many different courses,
with so many new tendencies and variations, and with so many
final events or issues. And yet, a self-limited disease, when un-
complicated, characterized anatomically chiefly by infiltration,
ulceration, and cicatrization of the glands of the intestines, mor-
bid processes which coincide with the ascending, stationary and
descending thermometrical fluctuations.
Who, acquainted with the outset, the ascent, the climax, the de-
cline, the complications and sequelae, the varieties, the relapses,
and the duration and termination of this disease, would suggest
alternation, without studying carefully the varying aspects of
those stages and meeting them individually and opportunely.
Alternation, it seems to me. is a practice becoming only to a man
unacquainted with disease and drug effects and only versed in
shot-gun therapeutics.
The above examples, I hope, will suffice to show that every
morbid state, whether enduring or fleeting, is an individuality,
which, according to Homoeopathy, must be met with another
individuality of medicamental origin, rendered unique by our
provings on the healthy human organism.
The selection of a remedy in Homoeopathy is an important
matter, for our success hinges on that, and Hahnemann pre-
scribed the single remedy not only for proving, but for treatment.
There is no rule or principle in our school to determine the ad-
ministration of remedies in any other way.
Homoeopathy teaches to observe and consider all, or any symp-
tomatic element, no matter how trivial, that may enter into the
syntexis of the syndrome, and it does this with the object of
individualizing those drugs which may appear to fit a given case,
The Single Remedy. 105
but Homoeopathy does not enjoin, as said before, the necessity
of making the essential subservient to the incidental, and much
less to cover series of phenomena in a complex case by the alter-
nation of remedies. To select the similimum properly and ef-
fectually, all that is required is knowledge of Materia Medica and
of Pathology, as only so can we appreciate what is essential and
what is contingent in disease.
Any morbid condition unaffected by a previously given rem-
edy, calls for a change of remedy, just as any symptomatic varia-
tion during the course of a malady requires a change of remedy.
But suppose two alternated remedies have given no result, or an
unfavorable one, are we then to study the case anew, and pre-
scribe correctly the indicated single remedy, or are we to fall into
error again and give two other alternating remedies ; and, if so,
what shall be our guide for this alternation? I do not know,
I am sure, but I surmise it is derived from a wrong conception
of the combined action of drugs having similar effects. Or is
there any concerted power in drugs, only known to the advocates
of alternation, which urges them to this inconsistent %and ground-
less practice? Or, is it on pathological bases that such prescrip-
tions are made?
I am aware there are well-read, scholastic men in our school,
who claim to have effected wonderful cures by means of alterna-
tion, and very probably they have, for this privilege is common to
all sectarian schools, whether the cure be made by the single rem-
edy, by a combination of remedies, or by no remedy at all. But
who is the man in our day who can point out with precision the
origin and means of a cure by internal medication ? Can any one
deny the reactive influence of the organic cell, its power of selec-
tion and rejection, and its natural defences; or determine if every
favorable issue is a cure, obtained by the administration of drugs
prescribed under so many different notions, convictions and dif-
ficulties ?
Do not human beings in savage countries thrive, develop, reach
maturity become ill, get well, and die of old age, without ever
having any medical assistance? Has not our mother school ob-
tained cures and more cures, centuries before we came into ex-
istence? Do not our enthusiastic friends, the osteopaths, with a
io6 The Single Remedy.
respectable following" already, claim to cure all kinds of diseases,
even infectious, without any internal remedy? And do not the
eclectic school, hydrotherapy, serotherapy, electro-therapy, men-
tal-therapy, even mind-cure and Christian science, demand a share
of recognition in the general success of therapeutics ?
Homoeopathy has never claimed the absolute privilege of cur-
ing diseases. What we have maintained, and shall continue to
maintain, is, that we cure our cases more swiftly, more pleasantly,
and with better results than any other therapeutic system known.
The prerogative of curing disease, then, belongs to all but we
should not consider every case that gets well cured, for very fre-
quently our intervention is useless. The organism can react and
does react under the most serious circumstances, even when un-
protected and unattended, but we cannot afford to wrait for this
reaction, and must aid it, even when we can predict a favorable
issue, for there are in every human organism a body and soul to
treat, and the latter especially demands always our care and solici-
tude. The mind is the spark of brilliant light which guides a
tottering bocty through the darkness of life ; and only symptomatic
therapeutics can meet its aberrations and concern itself with its
activity and depression. The materialist, whether an allopath or
osteopath, is never at best as wThen a limb, an organ, a tumor, or
a fluid, is the subject of his attempts and aims. He can then un-
fold his views, as to his old teacher's opinion, and apply his
theories ; regimen, and the natural defences of the organisms do
the rest.
The mind seldom enters into his speculations and schemes.
The opinion of those who have led him through the stormy path
of pretention and empiricism, must be maintained and protected.
The alma mater shall prevail, the old preceptor said so; and in-
ferior intelligences will always find extreme difficulty in emanci-
pating themselves from the old, enticing dictates, and bearable
fetters, of a dreaming and fickle therapeutics, upheld only by
those whose personal interests demand it, and which keeps on pro-
longing its existence under the protection of antiquated laws and
official prerogatives, detrimental to progress, and in contrast with
modern science.
But we are all making progress in this direction. We do not
The Single Remedy. 107
find the tyro now so willing to be the speaking-trumpet of his
preceptors. He has already commenced to think for himself, and
his absolute emancipation seems to be approaching. Longstand-
ing rust is difficult of removal, but deeply rooted routine is losing
its hold, and ere long, we will all meet on common ground for the
good of humanity.
To keep on the right track, however, and finally gather a good
harvest, we must define our position correctly. We must adhere
to principle and discard pernicious ideas and erroneous habits,
which have nothing to do with Homoeopathy. A bright future
confronts us now, and under the best auspices for our vindication
and apology. To reach these desiderata, Homoeopathy must not
be misunderstood; its basic principles should be known and dis-
cussed, and we should stick to them, if we wish to command re-
spect. We are not worth existing if we do not throw open to the
gaze of men the arts and practices by which we claim to work.
Homoeopathy can challenge the inspection of the world with con-
fidence, its secret of power in Similia, and to this centre of action
many opposite rays are converging now. It 'has nothing to keep
back, and it never fears to submit to the fullest examination and
to the severest test. It has ceased to be experimental long ago,
and is to-day a fact, a reality, known all over the world; but to
keep pace with progress, and attain its merited position, it must
be purged of many false premises, the outgrowth of ignorance.
How unfortunate to contemplate those who lean towards poly-
pharmacy trying to justify and uphold, a spurious practice in-
capable of defense. And, how censurable to break an essential
precept of the school they have embraced and are engaged in
supporting !
The alternation of remedies, I do not hesitate to say, is an
anomaly, continually conflicting with experimental pathogenesis,
and with the specific effects of the single remedy. It can be well
called an abuse, which effectually thwarts our best directed efforts
and deprives us of the only means we have to verify the individual
and independent value of our remedies.
The ground upon which the advocates of alternation stand is
so uncertain, that to support their contentions they have had
no scruple to evoke the name and practice of Hahnemann, but
io8 The Single Remedy.
neither Hahnemann nor his disciples ever upheld the practice of
alternation. They have misrepresented Hahnemann, and invoked
his name, when there is really not a single remark in the Organon
that could be taken up by these gentlemen to justify their claims.
The only allusion to the subject I have been able to find in this
remarkable book of the Master is in condemnation of this
unhomceopathic practice, and reads as follows :
"Some homoeopathic physicians have tried the plan of ad-
ministering two medicines at a time, or nearly so, in cases where
one of the remedies seemed to be homoeopathic to one portion of
the symptoms of the disease, and where a second remedy appear-
ed adapted to the other portion; but I must seriously warn my
readers against such an attempt, which will never be necessary
even if in some instances it should seem proper." (Paragraph
2/2. Page 221, of the Appendix.)
And Hahnemann is still more explicit in regard to the single
remedy. In paragraph 272 of the Organon he expresses himself
as follows : — "In no instance is it requisite to employ more than
one simple medicine at a time!' In paragraph 169, we read:
"It may easily occur, on examining a disease for the first time,
and also in selecting for the first time the remedy that is to com-
bat it, that the totality of the symptoms of tlie disease is found
not to be sufficiently covered by the morbific symptoms of a
single medicine, and that two remedies dispute the preference as
to eligibility in the present instance, the one being honuvopathic
to one part of the disease, and the other still more so to another.
It is, then, by no means advisable after using the preferable of
the two remedies, to take the other without examination, because
the medicine given as the inferior of the two, under the change
of circumstances, may not be proper for the remaining symp-
toms; in which case, it follows, that a suitable honuvopathic rem-
edy for the neiv set of symptoms should be selected in its stead."
In paragraphs, 257-273 and 274 of the same Organon, Hahne-
mann further extols the absolute value of the single remedy. In
the first of these paragraphs he asserts that, the physician "should
never lose sight of this great truth, that of all known remedies
there is but one that merits a preference before all others, viz.:
that whose symptoms bear the closest resemblance to the totality
The Single Remedy. 109
of those which characterise the malady." In paragraph 273, he
admonishes the breakers of his precept, as follows : "It is impos-
sible to conceive why there should be the least doubt as to whether
it is more natural and rational to prescribe a single well-known
medicine at a time for a disease, or to give a mixture composed
of several different drugs." And certainly, he is no less positive
about the subject in paragraph 274, which reads as follows:
"Perfectly simple, unmixed, and single remedies afford the phy-
sician all the advantages he could possibly desire. He is well
cuabt'ed to cure natural diseases safely and permanently through
the homoeopathic affinity of these artificial morbific potencies;
and in obedience to the wise maxim that — fit is useless to apply
a multiplicity of means, where simplicity will accomplish the end/
— he will never think of giving more than one simple remedy at
a time." . . . "It is equally certain, on the other hand, that
a simple medicine, well selected, will by itself, be quite sufficient
to give relief in diseases whereof the totality of symptoms is ac-
curately known." . . .
Hahnemann even warns us, that the test or proving of drugs
should be so conducted as to result in the acquisition of accurate
knowledge of remedies, as well as to avoid mistake in using them
in diseases; for, he says, "the unerring selection of remedies is
the only condition for the speedy and permanent return of health
of body and mind/' (Section 120.)
Wherefrom then comes the encouragement for those engaged
in alternation to insist upon this irregular practice? What is the
excuse they offer for their conduct? What is the fundamental
principle of this method? Let them come out and explain. Dis-
cussion, brings light and I am open to conviction.
But before I close this paper it may be pertinent to inform the
advocates of alternation that our opponents, aroused by recent
researches, have already commenced, not only to extol Similia
and the minimum dose, but to advise pure experimentation and the
single remedy ; and were it not that I have already trespassed the
limits of my appeal, I would give in extenso the corroboration of
my statements. As it is, I confine myself to the report of a few
conclusions from inimical origin, viz. :
Dr. Henri Barbier, in his inaugural address before the Societe
no The Single Remedy.
de Therapeutique, of Paris, in its session of the 13th of January-
last, among other things asserted, that "when the phenomena of
disease are more complex and their interpretation more delicate,
as in infectious maladies, we should be able to demonstrate that
the therapeutic agent given, favors the local organic defences,
presses the general antitoxic and bacterial reactions, protects the
glandular functions, removes the danger of complications and
shortens the duration of the disease; and that only a single,
specific remedy is capable of such a work." He frankly con-
fessed that "experimental medicine has already supplied us with
some of these remedies, and has allowed us to foresee others of
the kind."
Prof. Hugo Schultz, of the University of Griefswald, in one of
his lectures, also maintained that "before a drug can be used at the
bedside at the fullest advantage, it is absolutely necessary previ-
ously to interpose the experimental use of it, on healthy indi-
viduals;" and that "the medicine must be rightly chosen, and be
the one to arouse from the diseased organ the most definite re-
action possible under all existing circumstances. (Hahnemann-
ian Monthly. Jan., 1909, p. 7.)
But Dr. M. Howard Fussell, of Philadelphia, in his address on
''Simplicity in Prescribing" before the Section on Pharmacology
and Therapeutics of the American Medical Association, publish-
ed in The Journal of the Association (Sep. 19, 1908), is the one
who has most pertinently touched on various points of extreme
interest to Homoeopathy and related to the subject of my paper.
He upholds the individual knowledge of drug action, the single
remedy, and the treatment of the patient rather than the dis-
ease, that is symptomatic treatment, and he does it so explicitly
as to put to shame some of our men. He claims, and justly, that
a physician acts wisely when he uses only a single drug, and that
no one can have the slightest idea of the effect of mixture of
drugs when he is ignorant of the effect of any one of the in-
gredients of the mixture. The following axiom is worthy of re-
production : "The sooner our young men are taught and come to
realize what the master minds for ages have always taught, that
the practice of treating a disease according to the name, without
minutely examining into each particular case and adapting the
Then and Now — Simmons. Ill
appropriate remedies to the several indications which present
themselves, can not be too strongly reprobated."
Does not this sound familiar to our ears, and does it not seem as
if our detractors are now engaged in giving us lessons on subjects
some of our men have been neglecting and forgetting ?
706 West York St., Philadelphia.
THEN AND NOW— SIMMONS.
The February number of the Chicago Medical Times prints a
paper by Dr. G. Frank Lydston, which opens by reprinting a
letter written by Dr. G. H. Simmons, now editor of the Journal
of the American Medical Association, that was printed in the
Medical Brief of April, 1883. Dr. Simmons wrote in this letter,
among other things :
"Now, I am a homoeopath."
''Those who run Homoeopathy down most know least about
it."
"Why should not allopaths counsel with homoeopaths and
eclectics?"
"We believe in giving the smallest particle of medicine that
will have an effect to cure. The practice of an allopath is to give
as much as the patient will stand."
"Is there any objection to that" (calling on a homoeopath)
"O. ye infallible allopaths?"
"Bah! I claim that the average homoeopath or eclectic is just
as honest, just as truthful, just as intelligent, is just as well
versed in anatomy, physiology, diagnosis, pathology, surgery, or
obstetrics as the average 'regular.' "
"I believe in Homoeopathy "
"Why has the old school been so bitter against homoeopaths
and eclectics ? If it is not because you want to kill us out what is
the reason?"
"We ring the front door-bell of the avenue and boulevards,
and number among our patrons the educated, intelligent and
wealthy."
All this, and much more to the same effect, was written by Dr.
Simmons, editor of The Journal A. M. A., when he was thirty-
H2 Three Clinical Cases.
one years old. Perhaps the allopaths have found the homoeopaths
who come to them so unusually capable (they must, to have made
one of their officials editor and secretary of their great American
Medical Association) that they want more of them, hence the
brotherly invitations so numerous of late. The chief objection to
accepting the invitations to "be one of us" is that it means the
tacit acknowledgment on your part that you have strayed into
error, that you now acknowledge your youthful error and are
willing to accept the amnesty graciously extended to you. It
must be said, however, that Dr. Lydston does not regard Dr.
Simmons as a capable man, in fact, his words concerning him are
rather vitriolic, as, for instance, questioning his degree with
"Say, Simmons, what were the names of those journals you
'took' anyhow? In what 'regular' college did you take that
'course?' and of what did you 'take' a 'course?'' "And what a
stigma he tried to put on the honest, conscientious homoeopath !"
There are columns of the like and worse. It looks like war to
the knife and the knife to the hilt, "turned around."
One thing stands out clear, namely, that the man with a de-
gree from a homoeopathic college had better stand flat-footed in
the homoeopathic ranks where he has his rightful place. Let him
follow Uucle Joe Cannon and stand pat.
THREE CLINICAL CASES.
By K. L. Gupta.
"A Case of Enlarged Prostate."
On the evening of 30th July, 1906, I was asked by my maid
servant (she being the concubine of the patient), to see an adult
named J , who was almost dying of retention of urine. On
asking her what the matter was with the man, my maid servant
actually burst into tears and said that unless I took the case the
man would die helpless. She said that the man all of a sudden
could not urinate. During the first attack a native private allo-
pathic practitioner was summoned and he immediately partially
relieved the man of his suffering by passing a catheter. But
soon after there was again retention, and the man this time was
Three Clinical Cases. 113
taken to a private, charitable dispensary, the charge of which was
in the hands of an assistant surgeon. The medical man in charge
tried, as usual, to give the patient relief by passing a catheter.
But this time, instead of urine, blood came out in gushes and in
this skilful process the poor patient lost a large quantity of blood,
without getting the least relief from his sufferings. The man
was then brought back to his house and the native doctor who
had relieved him during his previous attack was again called in,
but, unfortunately for the patient, this doctor, too, failed to give
him the slightest relief. He was then taken to the public hospital
of the locality. The assistant surgeon thereby having failed, the
civil surgeon came in to play his part, which he did most admir-
ably. In his attempt to make the man urinate by means of a
catheter, he made him bleed more than a seer of blood (so my
maid servant said). A tube was inserted into the urethra through
which the man made water every now and then only in drops.
In this condition he was kept in the hospital for two or three
days, after which he was discharged from the hospital (this be-
ing the version of my maid servant).
I took pity on the poor fellow and consented to try my so-called
sweet medicines where heroic mancevures proved quite futile.
His present symptoms were : He had constant urging to urinate,
passing only a few drops of bloody urine at one time, at another
time none at all. There was violent cutting pain in the neck of
the bladder. The pain was almost maddening when there was
the urging to urinate. His previous history told nothing of
gonorrhoea. The man was fifty-two years old, of a mild disposi-
tion. I suspected it to be a case of enlarged prostate. The
symptoms stated above having clearly pointed out to Cantharis
to be the present remedy, I at once decided to try it first, al-
though Boenninghausen's Therapeutic Pocket Bool: told nothing
about its action on the prostate gland.
After prescribing Nux vom. 6x to destroy the bad effect of al-
lopathic drugs he had taken in the hospital, I gave Cantharis 6x,
to be taken every two hours. After taking only two doses of the
latter medicine the man began making water, though only a few
drops at a time, the blood having quite disappeared from urine.
The quantity of urine passed at a time went on increasing as
time passed on.
H4 Three Clinical Cases.
The following morning, I went to see the patient and, on ex-
amination, I found the bladder quite hard, and distended with
urine, although he had been passing urine (in drops) every ten
minutes for the last four or five hours. The bladder was also
painful to the touch.
This being the condition of the bladder, I ordered an applica-
tion of a piece of folded rag, moistened with Cantharis solution,
on the bladder and continued Cantharis 6x, internally, every two
hours.
At about I p. M. the sister of the patient rushed into my office
almost out of breath and besought me to go and see the man, as
he had suddenly fainted. I went to the patient and found nothing
serious about him, the cause of his sudden fainting I guessed to
be the passage of a comparatively large quantity of urine, which
gave the man a sudden respite from his almost unbearable suffer-
ing. The distension and hardness of the bladder having much
lessened, I ordered the application of Cantharis solution to be
discontinued. In the evening at 10 p. m. the man passed one stool
after three or four days attended with comparatively easy flow of
urine.
After this evacuation, he felt quite at ease, took some halua
and went to bed. At 2 a. m. in the morning the urine was again
retained. The next morning I was again summoned. I found the
man on all fours, he being quite unable to rest in any other posi-
tion. There was again violent urging to urinate, attended with
severe cutting pain in the neck of the bladder. I again ordered the
application of the Cantharis solution on the bladder and continu-
ed the Cantharis 6x, internally. I also ordered the attendants to
hold the urine in a vessel and keep it for my examination. At
about 8 a. m. in the morning the man passed about a chatak of
bloody pus, after which the flow of urine started. This time the
flow of urine, though in drops, was almost continuous. There
was some pain in the neck of bladder. I gave three doses of
Clematis 30 to be taken every three hours. The night following
he had had continuous dribbling of urine, although he passed
now and then larger quantities. The next morning I was con-
sulted for the constant dribbling of urine which soiled all the
clothes he wore and the bed lain on. I was also informed that the
Three Clinical Cases. 115
urine was smelling like horse urine. A few doses of Benzoic
acid 3X removed the bad smell, but the dribbling continued. The
present complaint of the man being profuse urination and con-
stant dribbling of urine, he got Pulsatilla 30 thrice daily. Under
the action of which the man recovered perfectly within a fort-
night. The man is quite hale and hearty now and is regularly
attending his calling as a porter.
Cholera.
On the 20th of September, 1907, I went to see a boy, aged about
three years, who had had an attack of cholera since three days.
When I saw the boy he was in the following condition : Tem-
perature of the body, 1010 F. The whole of the abdomen was
hard and distended. He lay on the bed covered from head to
foot, with his eyes firmly closed. The boy was in a semi-con-
scious state. The tongue was nearly clean, but dry. He had
little or no thirst and had wanted nothing to eat or drink -fort the
last thirty-six hours. Alvine discharges per rectum were still go-
ing on, though in small quantities. There was much gurgling
in the abdomen. The boy, at first, got Phos. acid 3X every two
hours. Six doses of the remedy having brought no change in
his condition I prescribed Opium 6x, which removed the stupor
as well as the abdominal distension. The boy then having no ap-
petite, got Nux vom. 30, three doses of which cured him com-
pletely. On the 23d he was discharged as cured.
Another Cholera Case.
On the 20th of September, 1907, I went to see a boy aged about
ten years, at 7:30 a. m., who had had three purgings and three
vomitings from the very sunrise. During my visit the boy pass-
ed a large quantity of colorless, watery stool, and along with the
stool vomited clear water in a large quantity. There was no urine
since the appearance of the first choleraic stool. The boy had
cold perspiration on his forehead. His widely opened eyes seem-
ed to clearly indicate some anxiety within, although he was not
at all restless. He had much thirst and was only satisfied with
large quantities of water. On asking the patient if he had any
pain in the abdomen, he answered in the negative. The total
n6 A Possible Resort for Consumptives.
absence of pain accompanied with the other symptoms set me
to much thinking. At last I decided to try Veratrum album,
which was prescribed in the sixth decimal potency after each
purging and vomiting.
At 12 a. m. I was informed by the father of the boy that the
boy had had no purging since the administration of the first dose
of the medicine, but had vomited thrice and was troubled with in-
tense thirst. I was told that the boy had still some cold per-
spiration on the forehead. The pain in the abdomen was still
absent. I again prescribed the same medicine, but in the 30th
centesimal potency, to be used after each vomiting, so long as the
vomiting would persist and every two hours after the cessation of
the vomitings, provided, of course, the thirst would continue. The
next morning I found the extremities of the boy to be much cold-
er than the rest of the body, although the vomiting and thirst
had subsided under the action of Veratrum 30c. He also did
not like to have his coverings on. There were no cramps. The
boy had not urinated as yet, although he had neither purged nor
vomited since last evening. Secale was prescribed in the 30th
centesimal attenuation to be given every hour so long as the nor-
mal heat of the extremities would not return. The tempera-
ture of the extremities improved under the action of Secale and
the boy urinated after the exhibition of only two doses of it. On
the 23d of September the boy was discharged as cured.
Veratrum album, according to Farrington and other author-
ities, is "useless in painless cholera."
But much benefit has been and is being derived from the drug
in this country, where the abdominal pains are marked by their
absence, provided, of course, the discharges both from the mouth
and per rectum are almost simultaneous and profuse, and there
is cold sweat on the forehead.
Sakrigali, Bengal, India.
A POSSIBLE RESORT FOR CONSUMPTIVES.
Some years ago, to be exact, October, 1894, the Recorder pub-
lished a paper by Dr. G. Hering, of London, one of a series en-
titled "Miscellaneous Notes on Medicine," and a most excellent
series thev were, in which he wrote :
A Possible Resort for Consumptives. 117
"What curious discoveries are made by the observant ! Wit-
ness the following remarks of Dr. Casanova, as recorded in the
Homoeopathic Review of over thirty years ago: "I know of sev-
eral localities in South America, Africa and Spain where the
marsh miasma has unquestionably arrested and cured that fatal
scourge of the human race, phthisis pulmonalis. without any
other treatment or restriction in food or drink.''
To this Dr. Hering adds : "Now that I think of it, I can find
some support to this statement of Dr. Casanova. I was once on
board a Liverpool steamer which put into Aspinwall, on the
swampy Isthmus of Panama, for nine days. Upon our return
home several of the sailors, otherwise healthy fellows, were
prostrated by what was called Panama fever, whilst I myself,
who had formerly suffered from tubercular disease of the lungs,
was totally unaffected/'
In 1895 (December) the Recorder published some notes on a
curious drug with which that old homoeopathic veteran, Dr. G.
W. Bowen, of Fort Wayne, Ind.. had been experimenting
which he named Malaria off., something about as near
an approach to the poisonous miasma of a tropical swamp
as is possible for man to produce. One patient, a woman, the
last of five, the other four having died of tuberculosis, was given-
some of this tincture. It developed in her a severe chill and the
fever succeeding lasted over six hours. To summarize : "She
was cured of her tendency and the certainty of dying with con-
sumption. She remained well for twelve years, when she was
lost to my calls/'
Xow the re-hash of all this old matter, which, by the way, had'
been allowed to drop out of sight apparently, was caused by a
paper by Dr. Walter V. Brem, Chief of the Clinic. Colon Hos-
pital, Christobel, Canal Zone, in the Journal of the American
Medical Association, January 30. The paper goes into minute
details, but a concluding paragraph summarizes it. and the point
we seek to make :
"In conclusion, from my study of tuberculosis at autopsy, I
can not avoid the opinion that climatic and hygienic conditions
in Panama are quite favorable for the arrest or cure of tubercu-
lous infections, and my clinical experience also has supported this-
view."
n8 A Rejected Letter Concerning Vaccination.
Here are four observers, and there may be others, who prac-
tically agree in their observations of the effect of the tropical
swamp miasm on tuberculosis. Since the timid, germ scared peo-
ple of some of our western States have almost forbidden the visits
of the unfortunates why might not they find a far better refuge
in some of the regions where other persons fear to go and where
the inhabitants are not educated up to the germ-terror point? It
really seems worth looking into.
A REJECTED LETTER CONCERNING VACCINA-
TION.
To the Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder:
Please find inclosed copy of a letter from Dr. Montague R.
Leverson to the editor of the New York Medical Journal.
In a post-script to this letter Dr. Leverson wrote : "If you do
not publish the above, please return my letter, for which purpose
I inclose a 2c. postage stamp."
The letter was refused insertion by the journal to which it
was addressed; and Dr. Leverson. believing that the "conspiracy
of silence" in matters vaccinal is dangerous to the public weal,
submits the letter to me with the request that I forward a copy
of it to you, asking you to publish it. if possible, in The Homceo-
pathic Recorder.
Trusting that you may be able to comply with Dr. Leverson's
request, I am, with kindest regards.
Very truly yours,
Porter F. Cope, Secretary.
Office of the Anti-Vaccination League of America, 518 Crozer
Building, Philadelphia, Pa., January 30. 1909.
To* the Editor of the New York Medical Journal.
Dear Sir:
As one of the persons whose names were introduced by Dr. M.
Clayton Thrush in the course of the love-feast of those who are
partly supported by, and who not unnaturally support, the prac-
tice of inoculating poison into human beings, I hope you will have
a sufficient sense of right to publish this protest against the ac-
Hahnemann Vindicated By the Old School in Spain.
curacy of Dr. Thrush's report of the proceedings of the conven-
tion of Anti- Vaccinators held in Philadelphia last October.
Such protest is needed lest silence should be hereafter
strued into acceptance of the statements of the learned doctor as
true. But there is more important reason in that (inadvertently,
I hope), the learned gentleman has allowed himself to be misled
(by some defect, probably, of his auditory apparatus), into a
statement which is the reverse of true; in that he stated (as re-
ported in your journal) that "the majority argued that vaccine
was not a poison to the blood." The truth is that we unanimously
agreed that vaccine matter is a poison to the blood, if it gets into
the blood. I was almost alone in arguing that until it got into
the life stream it could not be asserted that it was "without ex-
ception, poisonous to the blood."
Those who differed from me, however, can cite the two pro-
nounced vaccinal authorities. Sir John Simon and Sir James
Paget, on their side : as both of* those learned physicians main-
tained that vaccination produces a "permanent morbid condition'*
of the blood.
I have the honor to be, dear sir.
Yours respectfully,
M. R. Leversox.
917 Grant Ave., Bronx, N. Y., January 2~. 1909.
HAHNEMANN VINDICATED BY THE OLI>
SCHOOL OF SPAIN.
Editor of the Homceopathic Recorder:
It is with pride and satisfaction that I wish to call your atten-
tion to a transcendental vindication of Hahnemann by the Pro-
fessor of Therapeutics of the Medical Faculty of Madrid and
Ex-Minister of Public Instruction. The eventful acknowledg-
ment was reported by my esteemed friends, Drs. Comet Fargas
and Pinart, of Barcelona, in the "Revista de Medicina Pura, un-
der the direction of the former physician. This chivalrous and
fearless recognition took place during the National Congress of
Tuberculosis, held in Zarasora, Spain, in October last, when Dr.
Amalio Gimeno was developing his theme on "New Orientations
120 Hahnemann Vindicated By the Old School in Spain.
of Anti-Tuberculous Therapeutics." Among other things, this
eminent professor said :
"The problem of life is a problem of adaptation ; to live is to
adapt oneself to what is going on within and without us. It is to
be refractory, insensible to the action of a multitude of surround-
ing agents. Notwithstanding our apparent weakness we live by
adaptation, and the beings which attack us with most rage are the
living beings, against which we are not capable of being adapted.
A casual event gave us the key to an empiric measure, Vaccina-
tion. Which do you think would be more efficacious against
small-pox? Isolation, disinfection or vaccination? Undoubtedly
the last. The natural forces create these and prevent us from get-
ting sick."
"It is for this reason that the prudent physician limits himself
to watch and aid nature when the resources of this are insuf-
ficient."
"Life is no more than a problem of digestion. To live is to di-
gest and prevail over the continual conflict of executioners and
victims."
"For failing to understand this, therapeutics in general has fol-
lowed misleading tracks, and that of tuberculosis, in particular,
gave negative results, until the efficacy of tuberculine was demon-
strated and its action graduated by means of the opsonic index,
thus avoiding the accidents of anaphylaxis."
"We have entered, he said, into a new era, where we will ob-
tain, thanks to the new routes taken by medicine, the cure of this
terrible malady."
He pointed out the convenience of riveting the attention on the
excelling merit of Samuel Hahnemann, whom he called "a genius,
and, who, at the beginning of the nineteenth century, foretold the
modern routes which science would take." He praised, likewise,
the efficacy of certain infinitesimal substances, "for infinitesimal
are the anti-corps created by the very individual affected, ori-
gin of the sera, tuberculines and other antitoxics evidently cura-
tive."
And he said more still. "What I have stated is so certain, that
I, the author of a work on therapeutics, published in Valencia
twenty-five years ago and a text-book in the Universities of
The Eric State Medical College. 121
>s '
Spain, highly deplore to have had devoted in said work some de-
pressive pages to Hahnemann and his followers, a wrong which
modern discoveries are now committed to mend ; pages I wish I
were able to tear from my book."
"In regard to tuberculosis, we draw out from the patient the
bacillus origin of his malady, it is cultivated, then killed, and the
residue, previously filtered and prepared, is injected de novo into
the blood, if possible, of the same patient, and in this manner
we obtain true cures. So is a creature immunized, so is humanity
prepared to defend itself against aggression, not only of the
tubercular bacillus, but of many other pathogenic agents, con-
tinually in wait to attack us,"
"We find all these elements in a state of molecular division,
which we can call infinitesimal, and consequently we owe venera-
tion to the founder of Homoeopathy, who anticipated what the
course of events has come to sanction."
"The metallic ferments, whose action is undeniable, are also
prepared in a similar manner, and so it is that they act on col-
loidal substances, which are the limit of organized matter with
the mineral kingdom."
>!< *';'• >k
It is really a source of gratification to be enabled, through the
alertness of the Editors of The Revista de Medicina Pura, to add
another valuable name to the list of just, sincere men, who, like
Koch, Behring, Lombrosa, Huchard, and Ferran, have fearlessly
admitted the value of similitude and the efficacy of infinitesimals.
Honor to the new-comer, Professor Gimeno, of Madrid !
Eduardo Fornias, M. D.
706 IK. York St., Philadelphia.
THE ERIE STATE MEDICAL COLLEGE,
1848- 1849.
Such is the title of a pamphlet sent the Recorder, it being the
"Annual Address delivered before the Cleveland Medical Library
Association, December, 1908," by Dr. D. H. Beckwith. Like all
reminiscences, it is interesting, as witness the following, clipped
from it :
An Old Treatment of Tuberculosis.
' her seventy years ago, my father, while cradling wheat on
liis farm, was bitten above the top of the bootleg. For a few
minutes he felt a stinging pain in the leg. Retracing his steps,
he soon found a large rattlesnake, coiled, his eyes sparkling and
his rattles sounding the alarm to tell my father he was ready for
the battle. The snake was soon dispatched, the leg ligated above
the wound and suction applied to remove the virus."
"Hastening home, my father sent for Moses C. Sanders, the
"\ding physician and surgeon in the county. Meantime the leg
became exceedingly painful and enormously swollen. The doctor
was soon at his bedside but all his skill and treatment were of
no avail. He finally told my father that there was no help for
him and bade him farewell."
"With a wife and small children about him and dependent
upon him, my father did not propose to leave this world if he
could help it. He sent a messenger on his swiftest horse to bring
an Indian doctor who lived two miles distant. >The Indian soon
arrived, riding behind the messenger, and went to work."
"A decoction of the Cimicifitga was administered internally.
Poultices of the whole plant were made and applied freely to the
limb and to other parts of the body. The effect was marvelous.
My father recovered and lived many years after that eventful
day."
AN OLD TREATMENT OF TUBERCULOSIS.
Dr. Geo. R. Simpson, of Parkersburg, West Ya.. writes to the
Medical Brief (Feb.) on "The Tuberculosis Question." After
noting the meagre results, as far as anything practical is con-
cerned, that came from the late Congress, he add^ :
"A few years ago Engelhart published a small book by Dr.
W^augh upon 'Diseases of the Respiratory Organs.' In this the
application of drugs was discussed in detail. In the chapter on
■pulmonary tuberculosis I noticed the suggestion to empty the
bowels and then disinfect them by giving sulphocarbolate of lime
in full doses. The results then claimed seemed to be exaggerated.
The anorexia, diarrhoea, indigestion and other gastric and intes-
tinal symptoms vanished, the fever declined, and the general im-
provement was so marked that the author placed this one measure
Cratcegus O.vxacantha. 12;
&
at the top of his list, as affording more benefit than any other
remedy at his disposal.''
"Much of this I set down to the author's own optimism; but
soon after I had occasion to put the suggestion into practice."
"Lime in some form is generally needed. by these patients, and
the sulphocarbolate might be as good as any other calcic salt.
The patient said languidly, 'that if he had an appetite he would
put it under a glass case and preserve it as a curiosity.' ':
"But when his bowels had been emptied by the use of calomel
and podophyllin, followed by salines, aided by colonic flush of
normal saline solution, he declared he would believe anything pos-
sible in the way of evil being caused by the 'terrible stuff' he
evacuated. The improvement following the use of lime was more
if anything than had been predicted in the work mentioned. The
patient's appetite was almost wolfish, the fever dropped, and the
result was such as to justify a recommendation. The patient has
considered himself a well man for years."
"As I intimated, .these things may be so well known to every
doctor that any mention of them here is superfluous. But, then,
again, they may possibly be new to some of your readers, at least,
and possibly the others may listen to the old tale for their sake."
CRATAEGUS OXYACANTHA.
The Eclectics have caught on to Cratcrgus oxyacantha and at
the last meeting of their Ohio State Association a member read a
paper on the subject that was discussed at some length. Nothing
new was developed unless it might be found in the following
from the discussion, reported in the Eclectic Medical Journal,
February :
Dr. S. Schiller : I would like to say a word about Cratcegus.
It is one of the newer remedies, or, at least to me, it was unknown
until within the last two years. The last year or eighteen months
I have been using a good deal of Cratcrgus, and I confess that I
have been experimenting, because in many of those cases of irri-
table heart action there is not a great deal of suffering, and we
can experiment. I have been conscientiously trying to learn, if
possible, what particular kind of nervous or functional heart
124 Local Use of Calendula.
trouble is better adapted to it. I have arrived at a negative con-
clusion as to its value in the line of compensation, where compen-
sation is given out in organic heart disease, and I have not been
able to get any results ; but in functional heart trouble, where the
heart may drop a beat every second or third or ten beats, or in
the tumultuous action of the heart due to various causes, in some
cases I had exceedingly gratifying results.
I have been trying to reach some conclusion as to the particular
indication for Cratcegus. I am certain] it will do good in certain
cases, but I am not so sure of the case. In some I would give it
for a week and then withhold it for a week and try to determine,
with some degree of certainty, whether the improvement in the
case could be due to the Cratcegus or not, and I have been able
to satisfy myself that it is a heart remedy and that, some day we
will learn how to use it, and when we do I think we will have
•gotten something that will be a positive benefit to us as an addi-
tion to our heart remedies.
Dr. Dwire : I agree with Schiller. I do not believe we know
exactly what cases will be benefitted by Cratcegus, but I am sure
of one thing, there are cases many times that will be benefitted
by Cratcegus. In regard to the quantity given, I think the mini-
mum dose is one drop ; I don't believe a smaller dose than that
will do much good. As far as the alcohol being a test in the use
of five drops given by way of the mouth, I do not believe that five
drops of alcohol would arouse a man's heart to action whatever in
very many instances, unless he was very susceptible to alcohol.
I have come to use Cratcegus more than I have any other remedy,
especially in functional heart troubles.
LOCAL USE OF CALENDULA.
In an instructive paper presented to the National Eclectic Medi-
cal Association. Dr. R. D. Hamsher in part says :
As you are aware, some drugs are of common and extensive
use, others are used occasionally, while others are used and call-
ed for rarely. Calendula is the most in demand in my office.
Wonderful claims have been made for it, time and again, but
book writers, as a rule, give little credence to the reports except,
Local Use of Calendula. 125
perhaps, the homoeopaths, who use it quite extensively, and the
Eclectics, who say more about it than any other class.
Dr. O. L. Potter's Materia Medica, Pharmacy and Therapeu-
tics, ninth edition, London, says this of it : 'The tincture 20 per
cent, alcohol, is also official, and is exclusively used as a local ap-
plication to promote the healing process in wounds, ulcers, burns
and other breaches of tissue. Extravagant views of its powers
as a vulnerary are promulgated by the so-called homoeopathic sur-
geons, and serve as one of their excuses for proficiency, an ex-
clusive position in surgery." That is all he says about it.
King's American Dispensatory, 10th edition, says of marigold:
''Slightly stimulant, a diaphoretic. Used for similar purposes
with saffron, but less active. Has been reputed useful in spas-
modic affections, strenuous maladies, icterus, suppressed men-
truation, typhoid febrile conditions, cancer, etc. Used in infusion,
in form of an extract, from four to six grains, three or four times
a day ; also applied locally to cancerous and other ulcers."
Dr. J. W. Clary, of Monroeville, Ohio, writes me as follows in
relation to this plant : "As a local remedy after surgical operation
it has no equal in the materia medica. Its forte is its influence on
lacerated wounds, without regard to the general health of the pa-
tient, or the weather. If applied constantly, gangrene will not
follow, and I might say, there will be but little, if any, danger of
tetanus. "When applied to a wound it is seldom that any suppura-
tion follows, the wound healing by first intention. It has been
tested by several practitioners, and by one is used after every
operation with the happiest effect. You need not fear to use it in
wounds, and I would not be without it for a hundred times its
cost. It is to be made into a saturated tincture with whisky di-
luted with one-third quantity of water. Lint is saturated with
this, applied to the parts and renewed as often as it becomes dry."
As arnica is applied to bruises and sprains, this agent is also
applicable ; and in addition it is of much service applied to recent
wounds, cuts and open sores. It is antiseptic, preventing the for-
mation of pus. It causes the scar of cicatrix to form with-
out contraction of tissues, and in the simplest possible man*
ner. It hastens the healing of wounds, and materially favors
union of coated surfaces by first intention. It relieves the pain
126 Local Use of Calendula.
in wounds, and if there are bad bruises it quickly relieves the
soreness and favors the healing process. It is also applicable to
catarrhal mucous surfaces, to festering sores, local swellings,
glandular inflammations and to epithelioma and carcinoma, to
correct the fetor. It is especially applicable to severe burns, to
promote healing and to prevent the formation of a contracting
scar.
Calendula is a hemostatic of pronounced efficiency in all those
cases involving a division or exposure of the integrity of the
capillaries. If you use a dram or two to the pint of cleansing
water, you will find the bleeding checked by the time the wound
is cleaned, and have in addition a healthy condition, without the
toxic effects you get from carbolic acid or bichloride solutions,
when improperly used. This last effect is much desired and
pleasant to contemplate. If the wound bleeds from a depth you
can inject the tincture or dilution by any small or properly pro-
portioned syringe into the deep cavity, always assured you will
do no harm, but on the contrary will most always, if not always,
get what you want and end the blood flow.
Calendula as a local anodyne is as positive as opium, if not
more effectual. It apparently does not affect the sympathetic
like opium. In this respect it resembles aconite, the most power-
ful local anodyne we have of that class. It also resembles bella-
donna in relieving pain, local congestion and inflammation, but is
not so dangerous.
One nice and quickly prepared cerate is made by incorporating
one dram tincture calendula in one ounce of vaseline, thoroughly
mixing the two. This is useful for sores and painful conditions
where lotions would not be so handy. In painful piles it is prompt,
relieving pain and removing the piles in many cases. It is also
ideal in rectal ulcers, relieving and curing them. In burns, if you
will add a little boric acid you will find it satisfactory. Or by
adding a dram or two of tincture calendula to four ounces of car-
ron oil, you have a lotion for burns that cannot be excelled. The
scars will be soft if you have scars at all. Calendula covers all
the demands for hamamelis, except the color. But it more than
makes up for this as an antiseptic. It guards against infection
and suppuration, besides relieving the pain of bruises, cuts,
Local Use of Calendula. 127
sprains, contusions, extraction of teeth, and surgical operations.
More than once have I relieved the bleeding and stopped the in-
fection in a tooth cavity with tincture of calendula. Bleeding
and painful gums it has always relieved promptly. I have used
it in all painful conditions from a bruise to articular rheumatism,
with good effect. It always helps. For gonorrhceal rheumatism
try tincture calendula, salicylate of soda and water and you will be
surprised at the result. It is scientific. Try the same for bro-
midrosis of the feet with soreness of the joints, or seat disease and
you will be equally pleased. As a collyrium for an injured con-
junctiva from a mote or scratch, what is handier and better than
five to ten gtts. of tincture of calendula to the ounce of water?
Nothing that I know of is better or safer.
As a catarrhal remedy for mucous membranes, reached by hand
or swab, or nebulizer, it is a most appreciated remedy.
In a three branched fractured cornea, discharging pus, lachry-
mal fluid, aqueous humor, all the contents of orbicular cavity in-
flamed and the mass bulging beyond the orbit, pronounced irre-
mediable, and enucleation advised, calendula removed the un-
pleasant train of symptoms, healed the cornea, restored some
vision and saved the eyeball. It proved to me the antiseptic local
anodyne and healing virtues of calendula. Calendula is an anti-
septic of great efficiency, working in such harmony with the nat-
ural laws of life, that one is constrained to call it a physiological
antiseptic so compounded by the Almighty that given a proper
vehicle and timely application, it seems complete. No suppura-
tion occurs when promptly used. The drawback to the tincture
is the rapid evaporation and this alone may account for its neg-
lect. The wound would soon be unprotected. The addition of
glycerine overcomes this objection so thoroughly that I predict
calendula will become a very common and favorite drug. As
soon as the inflammatory tendency was reduced or controlled,
the glycerin was reduced one-half and water substituted, because
I find at certain stages glycerin becomes as unsuitable as boracic
acid, that is irritatinof. — Eclectic Reviezv.
128 Wild Oats.
WILD OATS.
(The following is clipped from an article by Dr. G. Frank
Lydston, on "The Social Evil" in the February issue of the
American Journal of Clinical Medicine and every one can see that
his picture gallery is but a sample of what is possible.)
Some Familiar Pictures.
Picture I. A certain health-resort — the sink-hole into which
a large part of the immorality, crime and disease of America is
dumped — has a hundred-thousand visitors annually. Of these a
large proportion go there to harvest their wild-oats crop. Visit
one of the government "rale-holes," defender of wild-oatism, and
tell me how you like the "harvest."
Picture 2. A hospital. Here is a group of locomotor ataxics;
there is a group of deformed children ; yonder a girl in her teens
is nursing a child who is not wise, for it knoweth not and ne'er
will know its father. More wild oats.
Picture 3. An asylum. Here is a case of general paresis ; there
a melancholic ; in the next room a maniac can be heard shrieking.
Wild oats a-plenty !
Picture 4. A jail, full of drunks, criminals, bums. Wild oats
again !
Picture 5. Another jail. Here are wild oats of the striped,
short-haired variety in abundance !
Picture 6. A foundlings' asylum full of children, cursed, be-
fore they were born, by society's cruel term, "bastard." Poor
little wild oats !
Picture 7. A doctor's office, full of anxious men, and still more
anxious women, who do not gossip much about ailments, even
among their intimates, save where the women are told by the
doctor a euphonious fairy-tale for home use. Wild oats growing
in the dark !
Picture 8. A brothel. Around the "reception room" sits a
collection of poor devils, many of whom were originally sacri-
ficed in aiding our youth to sow its wild oats. They are now get-
ting poetic revenge, as the doctor knows !
Picture 9. A beautiful girl found dead in the river one fine
Sundry Cases From Practice. 129
morning. What was she doing there? Washing the wild oats
out of her life !
Picture 10. A pistol shot rings out in a gambling hell — a man
falls dead. The gun was loaded with wild oats !
Picture 11. A bank cashier flees to Canada. He is looking for
a market for his wild oats !
Picture 12. A series of deserted babies are found in the snow.
Who planted them there ? Wild oats grow in the snow ?
Picture 13. A wife, surrounded by hungry children, is sitting
weeping, eating her heart out. John is on a drunk, he has whip-
ped her, is in jail, or has deserted her. Wild oats are not a
poultice for a broken heart ; they are not food for babies ; they
do not buv coal nor cover nakedness !
SUNDRY CASES FROM PRACTICE.
By Dr. G. Sieffert, Paris.
Translated for the Homceopathic Recorder from the Lcipz. Pop. Z. f.
Horn., Oct. 1, 1908.
I. Chronic Congestion of the Liver.
"I have just come back from a long journey to the west coast
of North America, and I have brought back from that or some
other place an obstinate liver disease/'
I was thus addressed by a patient about fifty years old, whom
I had not seen for about two years. She also looked as if she
had jaundice. A further examination showed she had congestion
of the liver ; the lower rim of the liver was swollen hard, and the
patient had subjective symptoms sufficient to show there could be
no error in the diagnosis.
"But," the patient continued, "I have, at the same time, brought
back with me the remedy for my cure. The dwellers in the far
west use it in all diseases of the liver fare well from it. They use
it as a simple decoction. I might have done the same, but I
thought it best to let you manage the cure under your direction."
The patient then showed me a lot of dried up roots, which I
did not immediately recognize. As I do not like to use unknown
remedies, I asked the patient to return next day during my office
130 Sundry Cases From Practice.
hours, to which she willingly agreed. By that time I had found
out that the roots were those of Asclepias tuberosa, and, as this
remedy, according to our provings, is not indicated in conges-
tion of the liver, I advised the patient against using it. But she
was not to be deterred from her intention. "I am perfectly con-
vinced of the efficacy of the remedy. Get a homoeopathic prep-
aration made of it, and try it on me. If the experiment does not
succeed, I shall not blame you for it." A pharmaceutist of this
place made a tincture of the dried roots ; and I made from this
the first decimal dilution and the patient took two drops of it
in the morning and evening. The result was surprising. In three
weeks all the symptoms had disappeared, and the patient was per-
fectly cured.
I will enter on the procedure in this case. It was not executed
according to the pure homoeopathic method, but proved, at the
sick-bed, or, as we are accustomed to call it, ab usu in morbis.
But it might be worth while to further examine the matter.
II. Concussion of the Spine.
An old lady, eighty years of age, who was not suffering from
disease, but only from the debility due to age, had fallen on her
buttocks. There was no lesion, only a slight contusion of the
left buttock. Without calling in the doctor, she had contented
herself with making compresses of Arnica on the part affected.
But on the following day there were symptoms which, in an older
person, were rather serious : photophobia, numbness, and dis-
turbances in the motory organs and the kidneys. I was called
in and prescribed Hypericum perforatum 6, and in four days
everything was again in order.
IV. Nocturnal Enuresis.
This took place again in the family of my janitor, who has now
given me his full confidence. The boy and the girl were both
seized with it at the same time. At first the parent merely scolded
them or gave them a more or less severe punishment. They were
also waked up at night to urinate. But as all this proved of no
effect, I was consulted. I prescribed Belladonna 6. and Nux
vomica 6. in alternation, twice two pellets dry on the tongue. In
a week the trouble was removed and has not since returned.
Provings of Cratcegus Oxyacantha. 131
Dipsomania.
A man, fifty years of age, had gradually become a drunkard,
and without really becoming entirely intoxicated, was, neverthe-
less, continually inclined to drinking wine, because, as he said,
he was always thirsty. His wife, alarmed at this, consulted
me privately. As this constant thirst seemed to me to be suspi-
cious, I suspected diabetes mellifica, and I therefore had his urine
examined. But there was not the least trace of sugar ; nor were
there any foreign constituents in the urine. A special treatment
was not to be thought of, as the man would never have confessed
his vice. In the meatime he continued drinking, until there were
symptoms of digestive trouble. So he came to my office and com-
plained of heartburn, which was very troublesome. Of course,
I advised him to limit his consumption of wine, which he did
more or less. With Nux vomica and Graphites I soon succeeded
in checking the heartburn. As I had thus gained his confidence,
I advised him in order to prevent a relapse, to take morning and
evening, a dose of PassiHora incamata in the tincture, twenty
drops for a dose. He did not note my fraud and willingly agreed.
The treatment, according to my advice, was to be continued for
two weeks. In two weeks he returned and said : "I feel myself
radically cured, and what is strange, I do not feel any more thirst ;
but have really a distaste to wine."
"I hope the cure will be lasting," I replied. As his wife report-
ed to me, he has entirely overcome his vice.
PROVINGS OF CRATAEGUS OXYACANTHA.
Cratcegus oxyacantha is the latest drug proved by the men of
the University of Michigan, who are doing,good work in that di-
rection. The following concerning the Cratccgus proving is taken
from the University Homoeopathic Observer of January:
"Cratcegus oxyacantha is of the natural order — Rosacea? — com-
mon name, Hawthorn, and is found in Europe and North Amer-
ica. The tincture is prepared from the fruit."
'The dru^ was started on December 1st, and continued for
fourteen days. For the first four days the 3X preparation was
administered, two discs every hour, then 2x! in the same way for
132 Provings of Cratcegus Oxyacantha.
two days, and for the remainder of the proving the tincture was
given. For two days five discs every hour of the tincture were
given, then increased to every one-half hour ; the drug was then
administered in liquid form in water. Thirty drops, of the tinct-
ure in water were given four times a day, and finally forty drops
for four doses, two hours, apart were administered."
"Under the administration of the 3.x and 2x preparations no
symptoms appeared. The pulse tracings were taken daily with no
evidence of change in character or rate. The effect of the drug
became apparent when the tincture was given. On the second
evening of the administration of the tincture in five drop doses,
every hour, prover Xo. II noticed attacks of dizziness, which
came on only to remain for a few minutes and then pass off, and
at the same time the pulse rate became lower with no apparent
change in the character of the pulse, as shown by the tracing.
Prover No. I experienced no dizziness, but the pulse became
slower and firm."
"It seemed advisable to increase the size of the dose and allow
a longer period to intervene between administrations of the drug.
A marked decrease in the rate of the pulse was noted by both
provers. This symptom came on in the evening, and provers suf-
fered from lack of air so much as to make it necessary to open
the windows. The pulse rate became as low as 56 per minute
and much weakened. A pulse tracing could not be taken at that
time, but undoubtedly would have been of value."
"Examination of the urine showed no deviation from the nor-
mal, and the blood examination was normal."
"From the two provings made it would seem that the action of
Cratargus oxyacantha is exerted almost entirely on the heart mus-
cle, and may be compared with Digitalis, Strophanthus and
Adonis vcrnalis (the last named was proved in hospital last year).
The action of Cratccgus is less powerful than Digitalis or Stro-
phanthus, and is much more prolonged in its effects than Adonis
vemalis, which exerts its action through the nerves. It would
seem to be best indicated in subacute or chronic heart cases where
the effect upon the heart muscle is desired. The dangers attend-
ing its administration, as a palliative, do not appear great."
Claude A. Burrett, Ph. B., M. D.
Book Xoticcs. 133
OBITUARY.
Henry C. Allen.
Dr. H. C. Allen departed this life on January 22. He came of
the family that produced Ethan Allen, the commander of the
"Green Mountain Boys" of the American Revolution. He was
born at Brantford, Ontario, Canada, in 1836, and was in his J2(\
year when his death occurred at his late home in Chicago. The
best obituary he, or any physician could have, is contained in the
following lines, taken from a letter by Dr. Stuart Close, read at
the Memorial Meeting held February 2:
"Xever was there a man more free from petty professional
jealousy ; never a man more quick and generous in his recognition
of the merits and attainments of his colleagues."
BOOK NOTICES.
Taber's Pocket Encyclopaedic Medical Dictionary. Edited
by Clarence W. Taber, Associate Editor Nicholas Senn,
M. D. 418 pages. Gilt edges. Flexible. C. W. Taber, Pub-
lisher, Chicago.
A book of the standard "pocket size," and about one inch in
thickness, compact with medical lore. The first part is the diction-
ary proper, in which the word is given, its pronunciation spelled
phonetically, the Greek or Latin word from which it is derived
with their definition, thus :
Sarcoma (sar-ko-mah) Gr. Sark, flesh -\- oma, tumor.
Following the dictionary proper are fourteen sections covering
Electro-medical, Operations, Instruments, Poisons, Dislocations,
etc.. Wounds, etc.. Emergencies, Diagnosis, Examinations, and
other similar things. The words defined are numbered, the last
one is 3,750. The chief criticism of the book is that there is no
running heading: this is especially missed in the second part of
the book. The book is a handy one and well arranged, though
''treatment" appended to the definition of a word may seem out
of place to some readers, especially as doctors sometimes dis-
agree on the subject.
Homoeopathic Recorder.
PUBLISHED MONTHLY AT LANCASTER, PA.
By BOERICKE & TAFEL,
SUBSCRIPTION, $i.oo,TO FOREIGN COUNTRIES $1.24 PER ANNUM
Address communications , books for review, exchanges, etc., for the editor, to
E. P. ANSHUTZ, P. O. Box 921, Philadelphia, Pr .
EDITORIAL BREVITIES.
Only Gossip. — This is only gossip so thin and unsubstantial
that a breath of virtuous indignation would blow it away. It
was at a medical meeting not long ago where the weighty men
read papers and the others of heft discussed them. One of these
men had read his paper and resumed his seat, when his friend in
the next seat remarked — gossip doesn't pretend to quote the ex-
act words, only the substance — "that was perilously near Homoe-
opathy wasn't it?" The other man indulged in as near an ap-
proach to a wink as a weighty man may indulge in, as he re-
plied, "Yes, but you know we are going to appropriate it, we've
got to, but we will not recognize Homoeopathy, never !" At this
point our medical Pepy's account of what was heard ceases.
r
Homoeopathy as it Appears to the Scientific. — Dr.
Charles Wallis Edmunds, Professor of Materia Medica and
Therapeutics in the University of Michigan, delivered an address
on "Therapeutic Progress" at the opening session of that Uni-
versity that is reprinted in the J. A. M. A. (Feb. 13th). Sweeping
down the ages he came to Homoeopathy and said, "There can
be no doubt but that this school performed a great service to
medicine in clearly demonstrating of what recuperative powers
Nature is capable, if she is not meddled with" and with this
recognition of service rendered marches on to other and more
important things. Sad for the would-be amalgamators, isn't it?
But how much sadder to the shades of the "fathers of medicine,"
for it justifies Addison's wish that the doctors would give the
people a rest for a few years so that the nation might be re-peo-
Editorial 135
pled. The practice of that day was quite as scientific in the eyes
of its practitioners as are the methods that hold the centre of the
stage for the passing moment. Homoeopathy remains unchange-
able, harming none, helping many.
Infectious and Contagious. — Some one who signs himself
"Student" asks the editor of the J. A. M. A. "What is the dif-
ference in meaning between 'infectious' and 'contagious?'' The
learned editor gives over half a column of fine type in reply that
may make "student" rub his head if he be a student or chortle if
he be a wag. The editor tells him that dictionaries are "behind
the times regarding these words," which is one on the dictionary
makers. Also, that usage among "leading" doctors must be the
"lexicographers authority." Goodness, what an opening for a
scrap ! Also, "infectious" is applied to diseases caused by "bac-
teria, certain fungi and the protozoa." What's left but the "peach
with an emerald hue ?" Also, "A contagious disease is one which
is transmitted with greater or less ease from the patient to an-
other person." Also, " 'Infection is also used synonymously with
infectious disease.' ' Now, if you don't know the difference you
can go to. some other authority, Noah Webster, for instance.
"Contagion" comes from the same root as "contact." "Infection"
in its Latin root is "to stain" to "dip into." Therefore, bedding
may be infected by a small-pox patient and the contagion spread
to others who afterwards sleep in that bed. Next !
Opium Smoking. — Some years ago a British Commissioner re-
ported on the effect of opium on the inhabitants of India. Their
Report was not regarded favorably by many persons at the time,
as it was so contrary to the preconceived notions of the Western
races. In effect, as we recall it, the opium smokers enjoyed better
health, were freer from disease and better workers, than those
who did not use the drug. Now comes Dr. A. S. Rochester (J.
A. M. A., Jan. 30), Medical Inspector, Philippine Islands, writing
of the treatment of opium fiends, at the institution established by
the Government at San Lazaro for that purpose. He writes : "One
of the most interesting and surprising facts discovered in examin-
ing the new patients as admitted was the good physical condi-
136 Editorial.
tion of those who took the drug by the smoking method. Many
of them, although giving the history of having been opium smok-
ers for from five to ten years, were really of almost robust phy-
sique and had been doing hard manual labor every day up to their
entrance into the hospital." Those who adopted the Western
method of the hypodermic syringe were wrecks, a ''decidedly dif-
ferent class," physically. Well, there are the facts, from British
and from American sources, but what is to be done with them ?
One fact, though, seems to come near home and that is, the ad-
ministration of a drug by the easy, quick acting hypodermic
syringe is one to which the human body does not take kindly.
Perhaps it holds true in the administration of medicine to the pa-
tient.
The Demand Exceeds the Supply. — There are many places
in the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom that are
asking for homoeopathic physicians ; there are, probably, ten
thousand or more comfortable towns in those countries where a
good man could easily build up a very satisfactory practice and
a respected place in the community. At the same time the coun-
try has a super-abundance of scientific physicians, indeed, our
esteemed British Honuropathic Review writes on this point, "we
are told, that in Chicago the average income of allopaths is less
than 100 dols. a month." One hundred dollars a month to pay
rent, expenses and living charges in Chicago is about rock bottom
for a physician. It looks as though it would be good business policy
for young men to cease vying with the scientific young graduate,
who, it seems has largely over-stocked the market, and come out
as homoeopathic physician with his little pills, cleanliness, sunshine
and air in the bed-room, and simple diet, with the gratifying suc-
cess that always attends such practice. Pure Homoeopathy is
not an abstruse science or one difficult to learn. To be sure the
Examining P>oard stands in the road with its host of practically
useless questions, but once past this barrier the path to a simple,
useful and respected career is assured to an honest man endowed
with common sense. It is evident that the world is surfeited with
what is known as scientific medicine and would welcome plain
Homoeopathy if it could get it. There may be more money in
scientific practice (though fewer cures) than in plain Homoe-
opathy, but there are not enough rich patients to go around.
Editorial. 137
"Daud." — The snake at the Academy of Natural Sciences,
Philadelphia, labeled by Hering "Lachesis mutus — Daud —
Surinam — Hering" is the one whose venom was proved. Some
inquiry has been made as to the meaning of the two middle words
on the label. This, the official journal of the Brazilian homoeo-
paths, "Anna de Medicine" answers in its last issue, January.
Lachesis mutus is the name given the snake by Dr. Daudin. a
French physician. That particular snake was caught in Surinam,
W. Dutch Guyana, or as we write it Dutch Guinea, where the
snake is found at its best — or worst, if you prefer.
The Difference Between Lachesis M. and Bothrops Lax.
— In a letter to the Homoeopathic World (February) Dr. Xilo
Cairo, editor of the Brazilian Homoeopathic Review, makes a
very clear cut distinction between the action of the Lachesis
lanceolatus or Bothrops, whose venom was recently extracted at
the Bronx Park, and the Lachesis mutus of Hering. "The venom
of the Lachesis lanceolatus," he writes, "as it has been verified
in Brazil in poisoning" (it has never been proved), "is like the
Crotalus horridus — that is, it is a hemorrhagic one" — "while the
venom of the Lachesis mutus of Hering. our old Lachesis, is, as
we know, not a hemorrhagic one, but a neurotoxic one. There-
fore the new drug — will not respond to the indications of the
old Lachesis of our materia medica : it would respond better to
the indications of the Crotalus horridus." This, also, disproves
the idea held by man}- that all snake venoms are essentially the
same.
Quarantine. — Writing on "Yellow Fever and the Mosquito,''
Dr. J. H. White. Surgeon, U. S. Marine Service, New Orleans,
says. (Jour. A. M. A., Dec. 26) 1 "Broadly speaking, however,
what we have as yet done to prevent yellow fever is little, save to
quarantine our borders, a performance which, looked at logically,
is on a parity with shutting up all honest people to protect them
from thieves instead of eliminating the thieves." That goes right
to the heart of quarantine as it is practiced to-day. Dr. White
would clear away yellow fever and other malarious diseases, by
exterminating the mosquito and this can be done only by clear-
ing away all stagnant water, even to that contained in old cans
138 Editorial.
and in Other refuse found on vacant lots. This procedure would
do away with the mosquitos and the disease, but whether the con-
ditions that breed the mosquitoes do not also breed the disease is
one that need not bother humanity. It is as it is with tuberculosis
— do away with the conditions and the bacilli will cease from
troubling.
Mercury and Tuberculosis. — Dr. R. Hayden, U. S. X., con-
tributes a paper to the October number of the U. S. X. Xaval
Med. Bulletin, Washington, D. C, on the treatment of three pul-
monary, and one pulmonary and glandular, cases of tuberculosis
by mercurial injection. In one case there were advanced tuber-
culous lesions of both lungs when the mecurial treatment was
begun. The patient had been given up, not only by his relatives
and friends, but also by the hospital staff. He was bedridden,
and the attending physician expected his death within a month;
yet within two months all his symptoms had disappeared, he was
able to walk around by himself, although eighty-three years of
age, and had gained thirty-three pounds. He is now presumably
well and Hayden expects him so to continue. [Mercury seems
to be coming into vogue again, for Dr. J. B. Nufield. Indian
Medical Gazette, Calcutta, October, relates that the striking re-
semblance between secondary syphilis and small-pox induced him
to give Hydrargyrum, cum creta, mercury, in ten grain doses with
marked benefit.
Causes of Tuberculosis. — Dr. F. A. Pineles-Montague, of
Drury. N. D.. has never heard of the bacilli of tuberculosis, or
of the late Congress of Tuberculosis, or, if he has. ignores them,
for he writes to his editor, Ellingwood : "Sedentary habits, mas-
turbation, sexual excesses, intemperance, want of proper ventila-
tion and fresh air, breathing impure air, materially assist in the
production of phthisis. Dampness of the soil, a sudden change
of climate from heat to cold, excessive moisture in the atmos-
phere, are predisposing causes to phthisis. Severe mental de-
pression from worry, grief, anxiety, or over-studying predispose
to phthisis." According to the gentlemen who are urging the war
against the Great White Plague "the sputum" of the tuberculous
is the "one sole and only cause." Now, who is right?
Editorial. 139
The "Invasion." — Hon. J. Sloan Fassett is quoted by the ex-
cellent Monthly Bulletin, Xezv York State Department of Health,
one of the few really readable Health Board publications (prob-
ably because our Dr. E. H. Porter has a hand in its get-up), on
the "Suppression of a National Disease — Tuberculosis." He first
pictures what would be done if the country were threatened by a
foreign foe, and then continues, in the following blood-stirring,
not to say, curdling, words :
"But we have such a foe, which has already made his lodgment
in our midst, intangible in a way, invisible to be sure, but the
ravages of his hostility are manifest everywhere. His battalions
are massed in our slums ; his masked batteries are parked in our
theatres, our factories, our public thoroughfares ; his videttes are
on all our hills ; his outposts are in all our meadows ; his scouts
and skirmishers are in every household. While there are no
gleaming bayonets, while there are no flashing swords, while
there is no roar of artillery nor rattle of musketry, the moans of
the wounded, the groans of the dying, the mourning for the dead,
are everywhere in evidence."
Pure air, plenty of good, nourishing food, pure water, sunshine
and not too confining work, it is said, is needed for a cure and
presumably for prevention. How may the country arrive at this
state, Mr. Fassett?
Straight from the Shoulder. — The Hahnemannian Insti-
tute (January), published by the undergraduates of Hahnemann
College, contains an address delivered to that body by Dr. Ralph
Bernstein that is good reading. Here is a clipping from it : "I
believe there are some of you who would possibly like to enter
the allopathic school after finishing your course here, why, I do
not know, I cannot possibly understand, but I do know that you
might possibly think that you are nothing, cannot ever be any-
thing, that you have no scientific standing, and that you are in the
minority. Gentlemen, — there are some of us who fear to be in
the minority even if they are in the right, but we are not in the
minority, we are in the majority, because we are in the right, and
'Right is Might,' and 'Alight' wins every time. If any of you
wish to enter the old school after leaving here, you may do so,
that is your privilege, but do not forget if you do that, that you
140 Editorial.
are retrograding, that you are taking up an old science instead of
following the new. the tried and true."
Dr. Bernstein is a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania ;
no old school medical degree stands higher. Good for "old
Hahnemann !"
About Curiosities in Medical Literature. — You tackle a
very long, very learned and very dignified article in a medical
journal that will only mention Homoeopathy with a pitying shrug
of the shoulders (a journalistic shrug, O, literal reader) ; you
wander on and ever and anon you run across bits of science like
"calcium phosphate," otherwise Calcarca phos.. as being "useful
in the case of wasting of bone, as rarefying ostitis" and similar
things. Now one's curiosity is aroused as to whether this is bor-
rowed plumage without credit, or have the feathers been culti-
vated and grown by the aid of gray matter and the midnight oil ?
That virtue nvCalc. phos. is very old in homoeopathic practice and
the man who would gravely give it to his brethren as something
new would be curiously regarded. Why cannot these men fairly
acknowledge the source of so much that is therapeutically good
instead of these undignified and absolutely unscientific methods?
Drug Strength. — The experience and methods of the Eclectic
pharmacists do not agree with the rules that are laid down in our
new Institute Homoeopathic Plianuacopa-ia which prescribes a
uniform 1-10 drug strength. Eclectic pharmacy inclines to the
Hahnemannian pharmacy which in a manner individualizes plants
and treats them accordingly. On this point Dr. Finley Elling-
wood (Am. Jour. Clin. Med.), writes:
"The manufacturers long ago discovered that the use of an
arbitrary amount of alcohol to a fixed proportion of water with
which to extract the properties of all medicinal plants, was an
error ; that the menstruum must vary very materially with differ-
ent plants, and with the same plant in different stages of its
growth, and whether green or dry."
Too Much Antisepsis. — Dr. Maynard A. Austin thinks that
there may be an "excess of surgical cleanliness" (Clin. Med.) :
Editorial. 141
"I can look back," he writes, "and see many cases which I believe
to have been infected directly by excessive cleanliness ; that is,
the excessive scrubbing produced a locus minoris resistentice and
the digging in the skin opened up and stimulated to growth
pockets of bacteria that would have been innocuous under other
circumstances. It requires several minutes' contact for alcohol,
ether or carbolic acid to affect certain pathogenic bacteria, and the
time will undoubtedly come when our extraordinary manipula-
tions will seem as crude as the application of iodoform. If we
have an infected wound a little powder on the skin is not going
to kill the infection. If we have an infected area on the outside
a little ether or a little alcohol is not going to kill the germs in
the time it is usually allowed to remain ; that is, it is commonly
poured on and immediately wiped off."
The Two Classes oe the World. — In his address to the medi-
cal graduates at the Middlesex Hospital, London, Rudyard Kip-
ling began as follows : "It may not have escaped your profes-
sional observation that there are only two classes of mankind in
the world — doctors and patients. I have had some delicacy in
confessing that I have belonged to the patient class ever since a
doctor told me that all patients were phenomenal liars where their
own symptoms were concerned."
To "Stamp (Jut" Consumption. — Xew York has a glittering
possibility of getting a windfall of twelve million dollars from
some wicked corporation. The money is not yet collected but sev-
eral eminent physicians of that State and City have suggested that
it be turned over to some one to use in the war now waeinsf
against the coma bacillus of tuberculosis, because they believe "it
would stamp out consumption in this country in a few years."
They are very optimistic but then anyone could be so with the
prospect of such a sum to handle. It would be a juicy peach but
then it is not ripened yet and some pesky bug may eat into its
vitals before it does, so what's the use of speculating about it?
The "Early Disappearance" of Tuberculosis. — Comment-
ing' on the prediction of "a distinguished physician" that "tuber-
culosis as a scourge of humanity" will soon disappear, our es-
142 Editorial.
teemed contemporary The Journal of the American Medical As-
sociation remarks that the present outlook hardly "warrants the
confident expectation" in view of the fact that the whole civilized
world is more or less infected, to say nothing of the animals.
"The universal extinction of tuberculosis will evidently prove a
gigantic task ; but the limitation of its ravages by every possible
means is none the less an imperative and profitable duty." The
task bids fair to be something like that to which Sisyphus was set,
which, at last accounts, was still unaccomplished. But then it is
"imperative," etc. The danger it may be deduced from the bul-
letins of the generals who are conducting the campaign will not
have passed until the very last bacillus has received its lethal
bath, for one little coma would soon repopulate the world and the
stone would roll ('own hill again. Right in the same issue of the
J. A. M. A. is an abstract from the big English medical journal,
the British Medical Journal, in which the following statement is
made : "It is estimated that over 20,000 persons died in the
United Kingdom last year of consumption caused by catarrh."
Well, well ! so catarrh is also a cause. Perhaps further investiga-
tion will show still other causes, poverty, for instance.
Black Tongue. — The Lancet says that "the pathological con-
dition known as 'black tongue' " has been discovered by a French
doctor, M. L. Bizard, to be due chiefly to the use of hydrogen
peroxide, as a mouth wash. "As hydrogen peroxide has now come
into general use as a mouth wash these observations are of great
interest and value. Apart from the blackening of the tongue
which may result from too free use of this preparation the ques-
tion arises whether the general employment of antiseptic mouth
washes and dentifrices is advisable in healthy persons."
The Proprietory Medicine Problem. — One esteemed ex-
change recently "exploded" several proprietory "cures," the in-
gredients of which resembled some of our "regular" friends' pre-
scriptions, all save one "Catarrh Cure," which "consisted of
sugar" only. Another exchange related the details of a meeting
of physicians and pharmacists to squelch the proprietaries. Then
comes a discouraged or cynical druggist who tells of the pre-
scriptions calling for "proprietories." one he mentioned called
News Items. 143
for four different ones. Surely our "regular" friends have their
hands full in "putting down quackery." The troubles in Homoe-
opathy, like the gentle "pharmacopoeia question," are as zephyrs
to tornadoes compared to those that rage among the good men of
the old school.
NEWS ITEMS.
The members of the Board of Health, of Arland, Wis., have
been fined $25.00 each by the State Board of Health "in regard
to communicable disease." Kind o' funny !
An English physician, Dr. H. B. Dickinson, of Hereford, was
prosecuted by the National Health Authorities for not at once re-
porting a case of scarlet fever. He suspected the disease, took the
needful precautions, but did not report it until certain of its na-
ture. He "barely escaped with an acquittal." It is bad for the
plain doctor when the medical high-ups get to feeling their oats
too much.
Dr. Howard Powell has removed from Glenside, Pa., to 121
S. 51st St., Philadelphia.
Dr. Harvey Farrington has assumed charge of the practice of
the late Dr. H. C. Allen, Chicago. He was associated with Dr.
Allen for some time before Dr. Allen's death.
A bill has been introduced in the Illinois Legislature giving
health boards unlimited power in the matter of vaccination, to
vaccinate everybody whenever they please ; also another into the
Pennsylvania Legislature to forbid the marriage of consumptives.
Let us hope they will receive decent and Christian burial in a deep
grave.
The Medical Councillor and The American Physician have
consolidated with Dr. Dale M. King as editor and publisher. The
first number puts up a fine front and the Recorder wishes it suc-
cess and prosperity.
As everyone knows, the Medical Century has evolved into
the Journal of the American Institute of Homoeopathy, with the
Medical Century Publishing Company as publishers and Dr. W.
A. Dewey, editor. It is an improvement in shape and gen-
eral get-up over its predecessor, a very handsome journal, indeed.
Congratulations ! Commodore.
PERSONAL.
''Pat. here's a dollar for a real big lie,'* said Mr. Fresh. "'Sure, 'tis the
line gentleman ye arc;" replied Pat, reaching for the money.
'"Did the prisoner hit you with malicious intent?" "No, sir. he hit me
wid a brick."
The sensible are ever ready to be amused, the others seek amusement.
Anyone can heave a brick-bat at Congress and feel virtuous — so, many
do it.
"When woman is educated she is less inclined to marry," remarks Mr.
Wiseman. Well?
You cannot eat your cake and keep it when you are sea-sick.
.The X. Y. Sun sues Life for libel. GosJi! Or is it josh.
The philosopher thinks that a skeleton in the closet is better than one in
the open.
"A place for everything and everything in its place." Enforcement of
last clause would disturb things.
The Latin takes himself seriously, the Saxon doesn't — show it.
It is honest to smoke stogies but not to say "they are just as good." etc.,
etc.
"A ready flow of words is needed to be a successful palmist." Inside
directions in the art.
"After you." remarked the Mephistopheles to Cupid in Life.
Cohen remarked that marriage to a rich girl is almost as good as a
failure.
Many a business man who cannot hear the music in "Break, break, break,
on thy cold gray stones, oh, sea!" could appreciate it if spelled "broke."
The Scotch widow chose for her second one who was not of the kirk, so
she would not "ha' twa in heaven."
Which is right. "Talking through your hat." or "into your hat?" An
English journal puts it the last way.
You will get more replies from a "Wanted, one to enlighten the world,"
than for "one to shovel ashes."
French Laisscc fairc. English, "Let 'er rip."
"I have the pleasure of bringing to your notice a rare disease."
The world has great respect for the man. high or low. who really knows
something.
Life says that the soul cannot be cut by the surgeon, dosed by the doctor
or buried by the undertaker, but may be jollied by the preacher.
If doubtful whether the paint be dry touch it with your finger.
"After life's fitful fever he sleeps well." Sure?
The Homoeopathic Recorder is only $1.00 a year. Why not send in
your subscription ?
THE
Homeopathic Recorder.
Vol. XXIV Lancaster, Pa., April, 1909 No. 4
THE MAKING OF THE SMALL DOSE.
If one starts to consider the question of the infinitesimal dose
from the point of view of the mathematician he soon arrives at
the "Lake Superior" or the "Pacific Ocean" stage, or worse,
which, while mathematically correct, is erroneous ; a stage where
figures tell the truth yet lie, a stage that would have delighted the
old trickster* of logic.
Take that prince of remedies for the "rheumatism" that origi-
nates from damp conditions, Rhus toxicodendron, for illustra-
tion. The fresh leaves are collected when most poisonous, pound-
ed to a pulp, and then, "two parts by weight of alcohol are added"
and allowed to macerate for eight days, then poured off, filtered
and you have Rhus tox. 0, of i/6 drug strength.
Of this tincture one drop is put into a small vial and ninety-nine
drops of alcohol added, the cork put in, and the vial held in the
fist, which is then pounded with "twelve powerful successive
strokes" on a hard cushion. This pounding has done for the
drop of Rhus tox. 6 what the prolonged trituration with milk
sugar does for an "insoluble," "potentized" it — made it into Rhus
tox. i. One drop of this is put into another vial (you may start
with more than one drop of the 0, in which case you increase pro-
portionately amount of alcohol), and ninety-nine drops of alcohol
added, and the pounding, or "potentizing," process again repeat-
ed, and you have Rhus tox. 2. And so on up to the 30th or as
"high" as you want to go. This is the process directed by Hahne-
mann. The whole process to the 6th potency has required one
drop of the 6 to 599 drops of alcohol.
If the matter be considered mathematically, and after the
methods of the "Lake Superior" and "Pacific Ocean" reasoners,
146 The Making of the Small Dose.
the first decimal has required 100 drops, the second 10,000. the
third 1,000,000 drops, and so on until in a very short time we are
at their favorite reductio ad absurdum. To potentize every drop
of a first decimal up to the 6th in the manner described above,
allowing one-half a minute to each potency, and working twenty-
four hours a day, including Sundays, would require the work of
one man for about 9,610 years. This style of argument, while as
accurate in figures as is the "Pacific Ocean," etc., style, is really
no argument, though quite as valid as the silly attempt to dis-
credit the homoeopathic potency by arithmetical progression. The
6th can be made and made accurately in a few minutes.
But in their minds they see nothing but "dilution," and ignore
the vital element in the matter, "potentization," the process by
which the molecules, or ions, or whatever they are, of the one
drop are absolutely united with those of the ninety-nine added
drops, and the whole made homogeneous. When you reach the
6th you are in the trillions, an amount that the human mind can-
not comprehend, and when you reach the 12th human language
has no word for the amount, to say nothing of the 30th. Yet
science has discovered the presence of the drug in the potency
termed the 30th, and in some instances in the 50th.
If it were possible to find a reservoir big enough to hold the
alcohol that would be required to potentize one drop of Rhus tox.
0 to the 30th on the rule of those who use the "Lake Superior,,
method of reasoning, and were to drop the one drop of the Rhus
into it, you would have what the reasoners say, namely, alcohol.
In this reasoning they have left out the potentizing process and
confined their attention solely to dilution by arithmetical pro-
gression, a process that mathematically leads to error even as it
did Malthus. Hence, it is that "potency" is an exact term, and
"dilution" an "inexact" term, as used in Homoeopathy, though
mistaken custom has made them synonymous.
The same line of reasoning applies to drugs prepared by tritura-
tion save that what may be done in a few minutes with liquids re-
quires hours when the matter treated is an insoluble drug — hours
and hours of careful grinding to make the molecules mingle as
they should in a true trituration for prescription in homoeopathic
practice.
Another favorite line of the "Lake Superior" variety is the one
The Making of the Small Dose. 147
that asserts that a whole bottle of potentized homoeopathic medi-
cine may be taken at one time with no effect, or that children
have eaten several vials from the family stock without any notice-
able effect. This argument is quite as fallacious as the other. A
man or child can experience no ill effects if you were to pour sev-
eral buckets of water over the head, but if the same amount of
water were suspended over the head and allowed to drop, drop,
drop in one spot on the head, the "water torture" would drive the
victim to insanity or death long before the water ceased to drop.
Certain well potentized drugs would do the same if taken at regu-
lar periods for a sufficient length of time. And this is why the
provings of the potentized drug are truer than those from the
crude. Von Grauvog], wasn't it, took Arsenicum 30th in this
manner, and for a time couldn't account for the strange arsenic
symptoms that beset him, until he recalled the little vial of pellets
he had been constantly taking; the 30th is a veritable "Pacific
ocean" in the lexicon of the men who treat Homoeopathy from the
arithmetical progression point of view.
A man may live through a sand storm unless the dose becomes
big enough to bury him, but how long could he stand a teaspoonful
from a sand-blast? It is like Natrum mur.; what a man shakes
over his dinner would, potentized, make enough to supply the
world and the planets for ages and ages. The "Austrian provers"
did not believe that Natrum mur. had the sand-blast properties
but an experiment proved that it had.
Again, a man picks up, say, the Chronic Diseases, and opening
at random falls to reading a list of "symptoms" all set down to
the action of one drug. He will find "gloominess," "melancholy,"
"anguish," "fear," "indifference," "equanimity," "calmness,"
"cheerfulness," "gaiety," "laughter," and many other contra-
dictory things all attributed to the action of one drug, and he
honestly exclaims "nonsense."
But has he never seen an average, quiet, well-ordered man take
a drink of whiskey, and then another and another, and mount
from cheerfulness, to hilarity, to boisterousness, to a desire to
"lick" any and every one, to pathos, tears, wretchedness and
gloom ? One drug did it all, and the effect of that drug, owing to
daily provings, are quite well known, notwithstanding the ap-
parently wide divergence of the symptoms it produces. An ex-
148 Diabetes Mellitus.
pert may even differentiate between a proving of whiskey, beer, or
wine, though at first glance the effects seem the same. So with
symptoms-lists as they are written. At first they look mon-
strously similar and contradictory, but to the expert they soon
stand forth as distinct as two men, each of whom may laugh or
wail, fret or boast, in apparently the same manner.
It is well sometimes to go over the A, B, C's, of Homoeopathy
to freshen us up — to do the "lest we forget" act, for sometimes
we do forget.
DIABETES MELLITUS.
By Dr. Agostina Mattioli.
Mr. P. D., tenor opera singer, 52 years old, came to me for the
first time April 14, 1906, with the following history :
There was diabetes in his family ; he himself began to have the
first symptoms of the disease some years before, and as he was
then travelling through the principal cities of the world, he had
consulted the best regular school specialists wherever he went, but
with no improvement in his condition. He wished to try Ho-
moeopathy, though doubting that he could be helped at all. I say
this because some of our regular school colleagues declare when a
difficult case given up by them has been cured by Homoeopathy
that the case was cured by faith, and not by medication.
The patient looked very bad. Skin a dirty yellow color. He
felt very weak and discouraged. There was thirst and polyuria.
Urine frothy, pale in color, uric acid slightly increased, albumen
present, but only in traces, sugar in proportion of 3.27 per cent.
After a thorough study of all the symptoms I prescribed Sul-
phur 200 (a dose every other day), and under its action he im-
proved gradually, until February 7, 1907. At that time I found
the indicated remedy to be Phosphoric acid, which I gave him
(3d) morning and night. On the first of March he reported him-
self as feeling perfectly well. Urine examination, normal.
Since that time a complete urine examination has been made
once a month, and it has been always normal.
May we speak of a cure in this case about fifteen months after
the disappearance of sugar in the urine? I am inclined to think
Diphtheria. 149
so, considering that the patient has been working hard all this
time without suffering any discomfort whatever, and considering
that he has not confined himself to the usual menu of diabetic
people, but has eaten also some starchy and saccharine articles of
food, such as bread and potatoes, etc.
Rome, Italy, Jan. 20, 1909.
DIPHTHERIA.
By Dr. Martin Baltzer, Stettin.
The following: is a summary of the whole of our literature
*&
treating of our homoeopathic treatment in opposition to the use of
the diphtheritic serum, with a resume of a similar article which
appeared in Volume XXVII, of the Zeitschrift of the Berlin So-
ciety of Homoeopathic Physicians. I have summarized it under
the following heads :
I. (a) The antitoxin serum is not a specific remedy in diph-
theria ; it fails to act in many cases.
(b) The serum not only acts injuriously with many patients
that have diphtheria, but has directly caused the death of child-
dren where it was used as a prophylactic when the children were
not sick.
II. (a) Many allopathic physicians are opposed to the use of
the serum, and do not use it in their practice, not only because
they do not believe it to be of any use, but because they believe
that the serum inflicts severe injury on the living organs.
(b) The homoeopathic curative method excels in its effect the
serum therapy.
III. The allopathic methods of treatment of physicians who
do not use the serum.
The whole system of Behring rests on the supposition that
the Loefrler bacillus is the cause of human diphtheria. This sup-
position rests on the following assertions :
1. That the bacillus is present in every case of diphtheria.
2. That all cases of diphtheria where the bacillus is not found
are altogether harmless and are not to be considered as real diph-
theria.
3. That the cases of bacillary diphtheria in which the serum
1 50 Diphtheria.
fails to act, rest on a mixed infection of streptococcus against
which the serum is ineffective.
4. That the bacillus is only found in the genuine diphtheria
and in no other disease.
5. That only on the basis of a positive or negative declaration as
to the presence of the bacillus are we in position to distinguish
between the genuine diphtheria and the so-called scarlatina diph-
theria.
All these theses have already been refuted and have been rec-
ognized as erroneous, and this by no means by intriguing oppo-
nents of the serum therapy, but by adherents of the same who are
above all suspicion.
As to No. 1, Lceffler himself has not succeeded in finding the
bacillus in all cases of clinically diagnosed diphtheria ; he has not
reached more than the assertion of the possibility that the bacilli
represent the poison of diphtheria. The bacillus of Lceffler could
not be found in 32.5 per cent, of the New York cases investi-
gated by Roux and Yersin ; nor in 36.2 per cent, of those investi-
gated by Martin ; nor in 23.2 per cent, of those by Baginsky ; nor
in 25 per Cent, of those investigated by Lceffler and Struebing.
The official report of the sanitary bureau of Prussia in the year
1902 had to admit that, according to the report of the Hygienic
Institute in Koenigsberg, Prussia, out of 1,789 examinations only
864, thus not even 50 per cent, gave a positive result. All the
reports which go into the sanitary surveillance of diphtheria with
any minuteness, agree that the use of Behring's serum as a
prophylactic or as a remedy is in no way able to overcome the
disease ; on the contrary, it is necessary to insist with all emphasis
on segregation, disinfection and the other requisite protective
measures.
As to No. 2. According to the report of the German investiga-
tion of cases, out of 1,059 cases of diphtheria where there were
no bacilli, no less than 159 cases, equal to 15.7 per cent., resulted
fatally, while the mortality in the bacilli cases amounted to 14. 1
per cent.
As to No. 3. The other assertion of Behring that the putre-
faction, gangrene and the septic character of diphtheria is not
caused by the Lceffler bacillus, but by the joint action of the
streptococci has been proved erroneous by the investigations of
Heubner, Ranke, Riese and others.
Diphtheria. 151
As to No. 4. Loeffler's bacillus has not only been discovered in
any number of diseases, but also with persons who were perfectly
healthy.
As to Xo. 5. The investigations of Ranke, Stoose and others
have shown that Loeffler's bacillus is found in scarlatina with a
varying frequency, by Ranke in 55 per cent, of all cases, while its
presence did not call out any of the clinic symptoms of diphtheria.
How, then, is it now about those statistics which should show
the value of the curative serum?
Prof. Stoerensen declared in the year 1898 on the basis of his
experience, "The serum is certainly not a miracle-worker which
will entirely transform the course and the scope of diphtheria."
Prof. Koths (Strasburg) on the basis of his statistics came to
the cautious conclusion, "The curative results from the use of the
serum in the first two days of the disease show no difference from
the results obtained without it."
The statistics from the Blegdam Hospital in Copenhagen show
that there could not be found any statistical proof of the efficacy
of the serum.
Prof. Baerget, of Lausanne, from the year 1899 till 1905 treat-
ed 547 cases of diphtheria in which the diagnosis was ascertained
by bacteriology, and 365 cases were treated without the serum
with two deaths, and 166 cases with serum giving fourteen fatali-
ties. He does not consider the serum to be a specific.
Dr. Neumann, of Potsdam, has come to this result, that he has
voluntarily more and more given up the injection of the serum,
because he has plainly seen that there is no difference in the cura-
tive results obtained by the serum as compared with the results by
the old methods, while numerous more or less unfavorable result-
ing symptoms had to be accepted with the use of it. He gives a
detailed account of a case treated with serum, ending fatally, and
says, "The application of this so-called thorough treatment with
serum was not able to save this case."
Prof. Lahs, of Marburg, writes that since he has given up the
use of the serum therapy he has not had to lament any more
deaths from diphtheria.
Jessen introduced in the society at Hamburg a patient who for
the last four months had been suffering from a chronic diph-
theria. The clinical diagnosis was confirmed by the proof of the
152 Diphtheria.
presence of the bacilli. The serum had given no results or had
even aggravated his state.
In Trieste the absolute mortality from diphtheria in 1888 was
89 cases ; in 1889, 93 cases ; in 1890, 118 cases ; in 1891. 182 cases ;
in 1892, 182 cases; in 1893, 222 cases, and in spite of the serum
treatment in 1894 it mounted to 394 cases, and returned under the
same treatment in 1895 to 271 cases of mortality. In spite of the
generally prevailing use of the serum therapy during the last three
months of 1894, more persons had died of diphtheria than during
the whole year.
The total mortality in St. Petersburg in the years 1892-1893 had
always been below 400, but in the year 1894 it amounted to 1,027
while in the year 1895 with the beginning of serum therapy it re-
ceded to 807, but in the next year it mounted up to 1,118, and in
1897 even to the enormous number of 1,949, thus almost double
the number attained before the serum. From this there was some
recession to 1,096 cases in 1899, but followed immediately with an
increase to 1,434 cases in the year 1901.
Dr. Ziegelroth, of Berlin, gives the following statistics: With-
out serum we note a recession from 2,400 cases of mortality from
diphtheria in the year 1884 to about 800 cases in the year 1888.
Such a recession, such an improvement in the statistics of mortal-
ity has never been witnessed in the period of serum, as happened
before its use. In the full serum year 1895 the mortality from
diphtheria was higher than in the year 1888 before the introduc-
tion of the serum. The statistics of the hospitals in Berlin also
give throughout an unfavorable result, the mortality being 16.4
and 16. 1 per cent, of mortality.
While these facts thoroughly disprove the claim of the diph-
theria serum as a universal specific, we will now consider a little
more closely the claims made by its inventor and his friends of the
harmlessness of the remedy. Hansemann in his address before
the Medical Society of Berlin in 1894 came to the conclusion that
the diphtheria serum might under certain circumstances act in-
juriously, as it exerts a decomposing action on the blood and in-
juriously affects the kidneys. In the year 1896 there appeared
from the "summary of the Imperial Sanitary Bureau" an account
of the injuries which had been noticed after the use of the serum.
There were noticed 267 cases of exanthemas, 75 cases resembling
Diphtheria. 153
urticaria. 103 cases of exanthema similar to scarlatina, as also
erythema multiforme, two cases of pemphigus, 24 cases of pains
in the limbs and the joints. 22 cases of nephritis, 16 cases of pa-
ralysis, 5 cases of heart disease, and 6 cases of high fever lasting
for several days after its injection.
We also find four cases of death which are without any doubt
to be imputed to the serum, as the injection of the serum was
made with healthy children as a prophylactic. There are also to
be found in literature numerous cases of severe injury and occa-
sional fatalities from the use of the curative serum. Of the
numerous cases that I have introduced in my more lengthy article
on the subject I will only adduce two: Bernheim, of Berlin, re-
ports about a girl, nine years old, who was sick from a pretty
severe case of diphtheria, who had injections of the serum made
at once in the first day. The child did not get over its attack any
sooner than her three sisters and brothers, who were taken severe-
ly sick immediately after her, and did not receive the injections.
But with the child that had received the injections there appeared
immediately after this sickness a very painful inflammation of the
hip joint, at first on the right side, then also on the left side, so
that the child had to keep her bed six weeks more, and for almost
three months she could not walk without pains.
Krueckmann. of Xeukloster, reports the following experience
on himself: In making an injection a patient sick with diphtheria
coughed in his face, on which account he at once injected about
one-sixth part cf the close that he had been injecting, into his own
body. About half an hour later he was seized with a furious itch-
ing on the hairy scalp. Half an hour later there was oppression
at the heart, vertigo, humming in the ears, and such a prostration
that he could merely seize on a few simple words and had great
difficulty in undressing himself. Temperature 390, while the arm
injected swelled up considerably, but without pains; there was a
sort of paralysis, so that he could not stretch his finger. After this
there was a purple swelling of the face, and lastly all over the skin
a thickly studded exanthem as of urticaria, with lively itching and
pricking. The skin was dry, the pulse could not be felt. The
abdomen was full and oppressed, only occasionally relieved by
vomiting and the discharge of inconsiderable quantities of stool.
His prostration was so great that he himself feared that the end
154 Diphtheria.
was approaching. Towards evening there was an improvement,
a quiet sleep. The temperature next morning was still 39 °, about
noon the fever left. About twenty-four hours after the injection
urine was discharged for the first time, being of a dark color and
free from albumen.
Dr. Lee writes in his journal, North Amer. Journ. of Horn.,
1905 : The assertion that cases which were promptly treated with
antitoxin were cured, prove to be unauthenticated. The further
assertion that cases treated with antitoxin heal more rapidly than
those not so treated has proved to be erroneous. The assertion of
the harmlessness of antitoxin is false, very many very severe
cases prove the contrary. The human organism which undergoes
such an attack needs much more a remedy to strengthen its resist-
ing power than one that causes injury.
Prof. Braun (London) in his experiments came to the absolute
rejection of antitoxin. Dr. Walch (Philadelphia) advises against
the use of the serum, as also Dr. Winter, of New York.
These examples, of course, do not claim to be in any way ex-
haustive, yet they give sufficient proof that the harmlessness
claimed for the remedy by its friends ought not at this day to find
any credence.
From all this 1 have come to the conclusion that it is not a base-
less and thoughtless following of routine or principle which has led
me and many another of my colleagues to take a position antago-
nistic to the use of the serum, but it is the result of experience
and study and the criticism of our own observations and those of
others, and I conclude with a little variation of the dictum pro-
nounced already in the year 1895 by Gottstein : That from my
own experience I cannot satisfy my medical conscience in using
with my patients a remedy of which after fourteen years' ex-
perience it has at least not been clearly proved that it is of any
practical use, while acute injuries of the most severe nature have
been proved against it, and while we are not even most remotely
able to estimate its chronic toxical effects.
The Homoeopathic Treatment of Diphtheria.
Dr. Grubemann, of St. Gallen, says in an article about diph-
theria : Before the application of the serum the reigning school of
medicine had a mortality of 40 to 50 per cent. ; it lost all severe
Diphtheria. 155
and moderately severe cases, while I and many others of my ho-
moeopathic colleagues' had no more than four per cent, of mor-
tality. Dr. Grubemann adduces a number of severe diphtheria
cases of which he had not lost one. (Allg. Horn. Zeit., Vol. 150,
page 149.) In the North American Journal of Homeopathy
(1898), Dr. Deschere writes: The serum which in the beginning
was so enthusiastically praised already finds its opponents, and the
assertion that it is a wrong to one's patients not to use it has al-
ready become obsolete. We Homoeopaths have remedies which
diminish the disposition of the body to receive the bacillus, and
with respect to the weakness of the heart which attends the dis-
ease Mercurius cyanatus stands immeasureably above antitoxin.
Dr. Dermitzel (Charlottenburg) has as he reports in the Ber-
liner Zeitschrift (1905) treated between forty and fifty cases of
diphtheria, of which he has given an injection only in one case,
and that was a severe septical diphtheria, which he took up under
the image of a severe typhoid fever. The patient showed no
traces of an effect, from the injection, though the patient out-
lived it for three days. Since that case he has not made any use
of the injections, and in spite of very severe cases he has had only
one to end fatally, and that one had first been treated allopathic-
ally.
Our statistics of diphtheria as found in the Zeitschrift of the
Berlin Society of Homoeopathic Physicians, contains striking
proofs of the better results of our treatment. The results ob-
tained even before the introduction of the Serum are far more
favorable than those of the allopaths since the introduction of the
Serum. So also since the time of the Serum it is found that the
mortality among the diphtheritic cases treated homceopathically
is less than of those treated with the Serum, so that we have no
reason to give up our long proved method. I will add one more
statistic, as given by Kroener: He has treated seventy cases of
diphtheria, with a mortality of 8.6 per cent. He has treated a
few cases with Serum, namely eight, four of whom died. Kroener
says in conclusion : "First of all, I think that we have no cause
to be ashamed of our successes in diphtheria, or to place the
Serum above our well tried remedies."
156 Diphtheria.
Allopathic Methods of Treatment of Physicians Who Do
Not Use the Serum.
As the method of treatment of our allopathic colleagues who
do not use the Serum is of little interest to the readers of this
journal, I will only state in brief, that there are many allopathic
physicians who do not use the Serum, but use other treatments.
In my longer treatment of this subject I have given fourteen
other methods of treatment. Here I would only briefly state
that I have written to some of the opponents of the Serum, and
requested them to communicate to me whether they still occupy
the same position as when they published their articles. On this
I received the following answers :
Professor Dr. Kassowitz writes in his answer of December 14,
1907 : "I occupy exactly the same position with respect to the
curative Serum as when I wrote the article referred to ; since all
that has been so far made known as to the Serum, when viewed
merely objectively, proves the complete inefficiency of this
therapy." Prof. Dr. Bourget answers December 15, 1907: "I
am convinced that the Serum is not the specific remedy. I use
it neither in my hospital nor in my private practice. The last
statistics (December, 1907) of the Cantonnes Lausanne gives the
following: Cases, 660; treated with Serum, 186; of which 16
died, equal to 8.6 per cent. : treated without Serum 474, of which
number there died two, equal to 0.42 per cent. "Dr. Ziegelroth
writes : "I am a decided opponent of the Serum and never use it.
In Berlin there died this year 800 children of diphtheria who
were treated with the Serum."
Dr. Neumann writes under date of January 1, 1908: "I still
stand today in the same position I have occupied in my articles
on diphtheria, and am not convinced that the Serum is the cure-
all. I am convinced that our remedies used locally or internally
(especially Merc, cyan.), have an excellent action." — Leipziger
pop. Z. f. Horn., March 1, 1909.
An Old Experience With Gelsemium. 157
AN OLD EXPERIENCE WITH GELSEMIUM.
In the year 1875 an English physician named Parsons was driv-
ing homeward when he concluded, for some reason, to learn the
taste of Gelsemium. He took his bottle of the remedy and ap-
plied it to his tongue ; as he did so his carriage hit a bad place in
the road with the result that instead of tasting the drug he swal-
lowed "about a drachm." He was not alarmed, thinking he had
taken an ordinary dose, but a few minutes after reaching home he
found that he was up against the drug good and proper. Here
are his symptoms :
"I felt giddy and drowsy," but was able to eat a little of a
sandwich.
"During this time strabismus gradually came on, with paralysis
of muscles of mouth and throat, muffled speech, and drooping of
eyelids, especially the left. These symptoms gradually increased,
until the power of deglutition became impossible, and I had to
remove the last morsel with my fingers, the voluntary muscles at
this time being perfectly unimpaired, together with sensation
of consciousness."
Naturally he now became "somewhat alarmed;" brandy and
coffee were called for and a doctor sent for. This doctor tried to
give an emetic, but the power to swallow was gone.
"I now stated with difficulty, that I thought the paralysis of the
face, was subsiding, but feared it was extending to the muscles
of respiration."
"Difficulty of breathing now came on, with oppression in the
precordial region."
The difficulty in breathing increased, a few short inspirations
and gasping expiration, then respiration ceased, he became livid
and in agony rolled from the sofa to the floor.
"Consciousness had not so far left me by this time as to pre-
vent my feeling myself becoming rigid, and trying to say 'Over/ "
Then he became unconscious, the pulse was a mere flutter.
During this time all sorts of things were being done by the at-
tendant doctor. In about four minutes he began to see light
again and was shortly able to sit up and speak.
The difficulty in breathing went first, then the paralysis of
158 Profit Sharing.
throat. The pulse up to becoming unconscious had remained
regular and full.
"Any movement," after this partial recovery, "or touch of head
(which seemed greatly enlarged), most intensely aggravated all
the distressing symptoms, as did also the application of any
fluid to the lips, the dread of which was nearly equal to that
evidenced in hydrophobia."
During all this there was no vomiting, pasages of feces or
urine and little impairment of voluntary muscular action, or loss
of sight, hearing or touch up to the moment of being uncon-
scious. The left side seemed more affected than the right.
"Two hours and a half elapsed in this experience. The paraly-
sis of the mouth and lid continued until the next day. During
most of the time there was frequent struggling, and the face was
flushed until lividness commenced, and during the latter action
there was profuse perspiration ; but the most marked symptom
was a persistent numbness in occipital region, which lasted some
hours after consciousness returned."
The foregoing heroic proving is an abstract of what was pub-
lished in Lancet, June, 1878, written by Dr. Parsons, and we
found it in a monograph by the Hughes Medical Club, of Mas-
sachusetts, published in 1883.
Among other points found in the Monograph — Gelsemium
Sempervirens — concerning the drug, aside from the provings, are
the following:
It produces but little effect on the temperature, blood press-
ure, pulse or mind.
In one death from it the blood was found to be dark, fluid
with no tendency to coagulation even after two hours' exposure,
while in another it was clotted.
Artificial respiration is called for in cases of poisoning from
the drug.
PROFIT SHARING.
Among the many schemes worked to "get the doctors inter-
ested" and at the same time to secure a slice of their money there
is none more plausible than the "profit sharing" company. The
representative of the would-be company, or its printed matter,
Profit Sharing. 159
sets forth the claim that the promoters have a "good thing/' a
"safe thing," and they propose, as a special favor, to let the medi-
cal profession have a "limited number of shares." Often they
limit the amount for which one doctor may subscribe so as not to
let a few monopolize the "good thing." "Now, doctor, this arti-
cle is something you can conscientiously prescribe and recom-
mend. Look at the testimonials ! See the names of the eminent
physicians who have testified to its merits ! You subscribe for
this stock and prescribe our goods and you will be helping us,
benefiting the public, and yourself sharing in the profits. We
don't want to take all the profits like some houses, but are willing
to share with our friends," and so on, and so on. Probably you
know the patter.
You very likely go into it and take some of the stock. Next
you get a circular letter reminding you to "work" for the Com-
pany. You get another stating that the Company has not re-
ceived any orders from you lately, and others and yet others
reminding you of your duty to the Company. And so things go
but the dividends come not or else, if they have come, they stop,
the stockholders growl a little and then charge the "investment"
up to profit and loss and forget it. No one of them has enough
money to justify a personal investigation and if a number com-
bine to employ a lawyer they are up against an unknown ex-
penditure. The wise stockholder pockets his loss philosophically
and considers it a tuition fee.
The "Sanitol" is one of these companies. This is part of what
recently appeared in the Ledger, of Philadephia, concerning it:
"What we would like to know." said a stockholder, "is where the as-
sets of the last ten years are and what has become of thdm?"
'An audit of the books is now being conducted, and I cannot discuss
the subject further until I learn the result.' "
"The company was organized about 12 years ago. Its stock was then
sold at $10 a share. Since then the market price of the stock has dropped
below $2 a share. The decline in the market price of stock puzzled one
of the local stockholders, who started an investigation into the company's
affairs."
'This led to the alleged discovery that the corporation has assets of
$3I3,377< from which must be deducted liabilities of $125,847. leaving a
balance of $187,530. It should have assets, according to the ^ay the
stockholders figure, of at least $1,372,838, this total resulting from a sale
160 Profit Sharing.
of $1,000,000 treasury stock in April, 1908, and the net earnings after
dividends of $372,838 from the last two years' operation."
"The curious stockholder wanted to know who got the $1,000,000 in
cash for stock and $372,838 in profits. It appears that he was unable to
obtain satisfaction from the company, so he notified the other stockholders
of this city of the result of his investigation."
We know nothing concerning this company further than what
is contained in the newspaper article from which the above is
quoted. The stockholders seem to be chiefly dentists and the
product of the Company is, we believe, dentifrices of various
kinds. The dentists seem to have worked hard recommending the
products of the company in which they were individually small
stockholders, but their stock has gone down to "less than $2.00 a
share," which means that there is no very extensive market for
it at any price.
A million dollars is a pretty big capital for a tooth powder com-
pany. Probably the unsold and unpaid for shares figure as pro-
motors' shares. They generally do. They generally share in the
profits and draw the liberal salaries of the various officers which
are based on the receipts. The small stockholder in such cases,
as a rule, furnishes the money for everything. It may be that
the alleged "melon, " to use a stock market phrase, of $1,372,838
is but a dream of the stock holder and it can be shown that it was
all required for "expenses and salaries."
Be the, case as it may we have merely quoted this newspaper
report as a specimen of what doctors may expect who become
stockholders in companies manufacturing things they prescribe
or use. It isn't ethical and what is still worse it is rotten poor
business. We do not mean to say that these schemes are de-
liberate swindles ; on the contrary, we believe that many of them
are started in good faith, but from their very nature they are
foredoomed to failure. They may pay a few dividends, but fail-
ure is their fate. These companies, like private firms are gen-
erally dependent on the efforts of one man ; when he dies, or quits,
that is the end.
The Recorder once took some stock in a square and legiti-
mate company of this sort in payment for advertising. A few
dividends were paid and then the Company vanished as com-
pletely as a burst soap bubble.
The Books By Dr. H. C. Allen. 161
Put your money in standard stocks or bonds that can always be
turned into cash and will pay you 4 or 5 per cent. Don't try to
get rich quick, for in doing so you are playing against profession-
als at their own game, and in a game of which you know nothing.
THE BOOKS BY DR. H. C. ALLEN.
The following by Dr. E. B. Beckwith, editor of the Hering
Quarterly, is taken from that journal. It relates to the books
written by the late Dr. H. C. Allen :
"Dr. Allen was daily at his desk at 4. a. m., and spent his early
morning hours in writing. Probably his greatest book is 'Inter-
mittent Fevers." which is a classical, and invaluable to every true
homoeopath. This was followed by 'Therapeutics of Fevers/
and 'Therapeutics of Consumption,' both exhaustive works ; and
'Key Notes of Leading Remedies,' which has just been placed
on the 'Council List of Books' for use in the Canadian Medical
Colleges. He has lately revised 'Boenninghausen's Repertory,'
which he brought up to date and arranged for rapid and practical
work."
"When Dr. Allen proposed to his publisher, Mr. Forrest, that
they bring out the 'Boenninghausen's Repertory,' Mr. Forrest re-
monstrated. Why, Dr. Allen,' said he, 'that would be a life
work for a younger man than you. You would never finish the
work.' Whereupon Dr. Allen answered : T promise you, Mr.
Forrest, that I will live to complete the work.' "
"The work was actually finished only a short time before
Christmas."
"Dr. Allen's very latest literary work was on the 'Symptomatol-
ogy of the Nosodes,' the final proofs of which he corrected just
a few days before his active work ceased. For twenty-five years,
he told me. he had been proving and conforming the symptoma-
tology of some of the nosodes, and his observations are there pub-
lished for the first time. He probably put more thought and real
work into this book than into any of the others."
To the foregoing it may be added that when the work. Inter-
mittent Fevers was sold out the second edition was changed to
the Therapeutics of Fevers and made to embrace all fevers, from
intermittent to typhoid.
1 62 Wants the Similimum.
The Therapeutics of Tuberculosis forms the second part of
Gregg's Consumption, "after the plan of Bell's Diarrhoea and
Allen's Intermittent Fever." It was published in 1879.
Dr. Allen had concluded the final revision of the manuscript
of the work on the Nosodes, but had received no proof of same,
save samples for type and arrangement, on which he passed.
The publishers of the work, which is now in press, promise
to faithfully follow the manuscript left by Dr. Allen. The manu-
script bears evidence of careful and frequent revision.
The books enumerated by Dr. Beckwith embrace all ever writ-
ten by Dr. Allen, his chief literary work being confined to the
Medical Advance.
THE ORGANON.
Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder:
An allopathic confrere, whom I had the pleasure of meeting
at a family reunion not long ago, asked me to inform him what
Hahnemann meant by Organon, as a name applied to one of his
works. I politely told the physician that I only would answer
doctrinal questions by print. This practice I follow so as not
to be misquoted. And here it is :
Organon, or Organum, (Gr. and Lat.) (Philos.) is a term of
nearly the same signification as method, and implying a code of
rules and canons for the guidance of the scientific faculty, either
in general or in reference to some particular branch thereof ; thus
we have the "Organon of The Art of Healing/' of the illustrious
Hahnemann.
E. Fornias, M. D.
Philadelphia, Pa., Feb. 25, 1909.
WANTS THE SIMILIMUM.
Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder:
I should be pleased to have you or some one of your readers
give me the similimum to the following cases :
(1) The sole of the foot is perfectly smooth, and yet the pa-
tient feels as if walking on a gravel, and the further he goes the
extent of the sensation is enlarged to the size of a walnut.
Ficus Religiosa. 163
(2) The patient never had any skin disease, and yet whenever
he rubs his finger or fingers across his face or any part of his
body, a large wheal is raised, which is followed by an intense
burning. Rubbing the face with a towel causes the skin to get
red and thickend, with burning. The swelling and burning con-
tinue for some time. Inquirer.
FICUS RELIGIOSA.
To the Editor of the Homceopathic Recorder:
I have read your editorial article entitled "Ficus Religiosa, Is
It a Fraud?" published in your Recorder of November, 1908,
with great astonishment and concern and in reply I hasten to
write the following lines which. I hope, will be published by you
in your much-esteemed journal.
I don't know why Drs. A. Mattoli. of Rome, and J. B. S. King
found the tincture of Ficus Religiosa to be a lifeless drug.
It is to be borne in mind that the tincture of Ficus Religiosa is
prepared only from the fresh leaves of the plant. The tincture
loses its healing properties and so becomes life-less if it be pre-
pared from dry leaves. Perhaps you will remember aright if I
say that you asked Messrs. King & Co., of Calcutta., to send you
some leaves of this plant, so that you could prepare the tincture
yourselves. And accordingly the leaves were sent to you by King
& Co. Possibly the tincture was prepared by you from dry leaves.
Dr. Clarke's opinion can not but be respected. Dr. Clarke and
some other renowned homoeopaths found Ficus Religiosa to be
efficacious — highly efficacious in the ailments mentioned in Dr.
Clarke's Materia Medica. Had the tincture been prepared from
fresh leaves, there would have been gratifying results both at
the time of proving and of clinical verifications. I know very
well that Ficus Religiosa is not a fraud, but a genuine homceo-
pathic remedy. It can stand upon its own strong feet and can
bide its time. I shall be pleased if you will kindly diye deep into
the bottom of the affair and make a sifting inquiry.
Those of your readers who are willing to try and prove Ficus
Religiosa are requested to communicate their desire to me, so that
I may send a supply of the same to them for their investigation
164 Ficus Religiosa.
free of cost. If the tincture supplied by me be lifeless, they can
publish their failures and then they can pass their unfavorable ver-
dict.
Yours cordially,
Sarat A. Ghose, M. D.,
Editor Indian Homoeopathic Reporter,
1 Kidar Bais Lane,
Bhowanipore, Calcutta.
Reply.
The Recorder published Dr. Ghose's original paper introduc-
ing Ficus Religiosa to the western world. Later wThen Drs. Mat-
tiolo and King published in other journals their experience with the
drug, each having taken quite a large quantity of the drug with-
out any effect, this journal also published their reports and asked
the question to which Dr. Ghose objects. Later still, in January
of this year, Dr. Yingling's communication was published, strong-
ly defending the drug, asserting that it, like Lycopodium, must be
potentized to get the curative effect. So the matter stands. As
with all new drugs, we neither condemn, nor uphold them, but
print the facts concerning them.
Dr. Ghose confuses the editorial management of the Recorder
with the firm of Boericke & Tafel. They are two different propo-
sitions. We sent the letter published above to the New York
house of that firm and asked for the facts in the matter. Copies
of the correspondence in the matter were returned showing that
tinctures were imported from Calcutta and were made, pre-
sumably, by Dr. Ghose. Nothing but the imported tinctures or
potencies made from them, were sold. Some dried leaves were
received as stated by Dr. Ghose, but nothing was ever done with
them ; no tincture, or fluid extract was made from them and they
were thrown away.
We are not surprised that Dr. Ghose became indignant when
the results of his provings of the leaves of the tree of Buddha
were questioned, but he should not blame this journal for giving
both sides and thereby raising the question to which he objects.
The Choice of the Remedy. 165
POINTERS.
The indications (Senecio aur.) may be summed up as
follows : Atony and relaxation * of the pelvic contents, with
dragging, painful sensations; uterine enlargement, with
uterine or cervical leucorrhcea and impairment of function;
atonic amenorrhcea; vaginal prolapse; slight uterine prolapse;
pelvic weight and vascular engorgement ; increased flow of mucus
or muco-pus from weakness ; suppressed menstruation ; pain, sore-
ness, and bearing-down of the uterus; vicarious menstruation;
difficult and tardy urination in both sexes. In the male tenesmic
micturition, testicular dragging, and pelvic weight. In both
sexes, dyspepsia, with flatulence after meals ; cardialgia, associated
with sour stomach and increased flow of gastric juice. — Gleaner.
Singultus. In this trouble Magnesia phos. has done more for
me than all other remedies together. In a very old and infirm
patient, almost in extremis, good results were at once seen. In
one case of typhoid, with malignant conditions, the hiccough was
most distressing, night and day, asleep or awake. All my tried
remedies failed. I was only beginning the study of these rem-
edies then. As a last resort, I turned to Magnesia phos. 3X,
but with little hope of help. On my next visit the patient looked
at me and said : "Oh, Doctor ! Why did you not give me that
medicine before?" When the spasmodic difficulty or pain is se-
vere, I give in hot water. — Fearn, Cal. Ec. Med. Jour.
THE CHOICE OF THE REMEDY ACCORDING TO
THE SENSATIONS OF THE PATIENT.
By Dr. Jules Gallavardin, of Lyon, France.
Dr. Jules Gallavardin, always lucid and opportune, has given
us in "Le Propagateur de U Homoeopathic" a short, but interest-
ing article about the choice of the remedy according to sensa-
tions. After paying a just tribute of praise to the memory of
Drs. Simon, grandfather and father, turns to the son, who, in his
inaugural address before the Societe francaise d' Homceopathie,
1 66 The Choice of the Remedy.
among other things stated that in our studies of remedies and
their application to the treatment of diseases, it is not sufficient
to observe the temperature, to analyze the urine and to note other
analogous objective signs, but we must attach great importance,
as it was done by the early homoeopaths, to the sensations felt
by the patients.
And then Dr. Gallavardin in his exquisite manner, successfully
shows how a morbid sensation may often decide the selection of
the remedy, and the utility of having an intelligent patient to ex-
press his feelings. Some one may object that a sensitive or sub-
jective symptom hardly can be enrolled after the actual scientific
methods, and that a true savant should not depend upon a symp-
tom, the value of which he cannot register. To this my answer is
that if a patient goes to consult a physician, it is because he feels
he is sick, and it is this first sensation what leads, we may say, the
examination of physician. It is the same with pain localized in
any part of the body. If homoeopaths have popularized Aconite
in the treatment of fever provoked by a cold, it is not because
the first experimenters did experience an elevation of their tem-
perature ; up to that time the use of the medical thermometer was
not known ; but because the provers noted a sensation of fever.
The same may be reasoned about Cantharis in albuminuria. It
is because the objective symptoms of one suffering from albu-
minuria indicate Cantharis as a remedy for his trouble that ho-
moeopathic physicians prescribe this drug, but not because al-
bumin was found in the urine, for in old times no one knew how
to reveal it
Certainly it will not do to scorn new complementary indica-
tions, particularly if they disclose a verification of the happy
choice of any of our old remedies, for< these facts plainly demon-
strate the necessity of not rejecting remedies, which have not yet
had a scientific confirmation, only because to select them our only
guide has been the sensations of the patient.
Thus Arnica, which, even before the discovery of Homoe-
opathy, enjoyed the reputation of being an excellent remedy
against contusions, blows and falls, and was empirically employ-
ed, has been brought under the control of Homoeopathy by pure
experimentation on the healthy human organism. By its proving
we have ascertained that it produces a sensation as if bruised all
The Choice of the Remedy. 167
over, a lassitude so extreme as to be unable to rest while lying
down for everything upon which the patient lies feels too hard.
Now, all these sensations indicate that the sensitive nerves per-
ceive some trouble taking place in the muscles, and this while
there may not be any circulatory disorders as pronounced as those
seen in contusions, in lesions of the blood vessels, or even during
a fatiguing walk. These divers sensations constitute subjective
symptoms which allow the application of the Law of Similars.
Now, what can Arnica do for the patient? If Arnica is well
selected in cases of contusion or injury, it will relieve, first of all,
the morbid sensation or pain, and the patient will sometimes ex-
press a rapid feeling of comfort, even when the objective lesion is
not healed yet. If the patient believes himself cured, we may say,
before being really so, it is not the work of the imagination, as
our opponents have so often suggested, but because, in reality,
he feels the approaching recovery, just as a hungry person feels
the hunger disappear after he has eaten, or even before the food
has been assimilated and converted into blood.
The first successes a homoeopath can obtain with Arnica in in-
juries from falling, bruises and contusions naturally lead him to
look for other indications of this remedy in other morbid states,
and here are frequently again the sensations which become his
guide. After a forced march Arnica may contribute, in a high
degree, to make the sensation of fatigue disappear and also facili-
tate the return to the normal state. Let us imagine, for instance,
a patient, suffering from heart disease, who, after the least effort,
feels fatigued and exhausted, especially in the evening after walk-
ing, Arnica will certainly bring some relief to these cases. If Dr.
Huchard should continue to borrow indications from homoeo-
pathic books, which he cannot find in the old volumes of poly-
pharmacy, I would point him out Arnica, as the remedy he could
frequently employ in heart disease, for a remedy able to
relieve the sensation of lassitude of the fatigued muscles can also
give very good results in alleviating the over-taxed cardiac mus-
cle. It is also by the property of Arnica to reabsorb sanguineous
extravasations that homoeopaths have been led to administer this
remedy in cerebral haemorrhage, a condition the results of which
resemble so well the effects of a bldw, that the medical ex-
1 68 Cases From My Practice.
pression ictus apoplecticus is given as the Latin translation of the
word blow. Arnica, moreover, responds to many other indica-
tions.
All these examples show plainly the very important role of
sensation in the choice of the remedy. Even sensations which ap-
pear to be odd to the patient may guide the homoeopathic phy-
sician in his treatment. An uninformed physician, to reject the
subjective indications given by the patient, may say: "This is
nervous," or, "it is the nerves," but in reality, if he does not con-
cede any importance to these sensations, it is because he does not
wish to confess his impotence in this direction. If the sensitive
nerves are diseased, why not treat them? Should we not treat
in the same manner the sensations of burning, of pricking or of
swelling in a malady when there is no evidence of a burn, of a
prick or of a swelling?
To treat any morbid condition, it is then necessary to individual-
ize them ; one should not treat the disease, but the patient, and as
Huf eland used to say : "For a treatment to be correct, the phy-
sician should not copy or imitate, but invent anew." This was
the conduct followed by Hahnemann, and if homoeopaths wish to
follow his precepts, they will not be routine-homoeopaths, but will
become creating homoeopaths. Dr. Jules Gallavardin, Lyon (Le
Propagateur de L'Homoeopathie).
Translation by E. Fornias, M. D.
CASES FROM MY PRACTICE.
By Dr. G. Sieffert, Paris.
Translated for the Homoeopathic Recorder from the Pop. Z. f. Homoe-
opathic, February I, 1909.
I. Chronic Inflammation of the Fauces.
Since our porter has given me his confidence, he has become
a good customer — at least, with respect to the employment he
gives me.
Thus a while ago, his wife came to me in great alarm and said :
"Please, Doctor, examine my husband carefully. • He coughs
Cases From My Practice. 169
every night so wretchedly, that I am afraid he is consumptive, the
more so, as every fit of coughing is followed by copious expectora-
tion.''
So I had the patient come into my office, and according to the
wish of his wife, I examined him carefully from top to bottom.
He is a well built man, thirty-seven years of age. There is no
headache, no fever, no lack of appetite, a normal stool, no weari-
ness, and his life is quite regular. The man complains of nothing
except his severe spells of coughing, which also, he says, occur
during the day-time.
An examination of his chest, to my great astonishment, show-
ed no results. But when I examined his buccal cavity I found on
the posterior walls of the fauces very numerous puriform granu-
lations extending downwards, which, of course, had caused a pro-
nounced inflammation of the fauces.
I questioned the patient more at length and he confessed, that
he thought the matter of no importance, and that in secret he is a
smoker of cigars, and in order to satisfy his pleasure in smoking
he was accustomed to swallow the smoke.
Now the whole matter became clear. It was an inflammation
of the fauces caused by smoking. First of all I forbade smoking
cigars. As treatment I prescribed atomizing the wall of the
fauces with mineral sulphur water, and internally I prescribed
twice a day four drops of Arsenicum album 6., to be taken in a
tablespoonful of water. With this I prescribed a pretty strict
diet. No salt-water fish, no pork, neither fresh nor smoked, no
sharp cheese, no sausage, no alcohol.
The patient faithfully followed my prescription and in four
weeks all symptoms had disappeared.
II. Treatment of Syphilis.
Lately I read in the "Therapeutical Review" an account of the
treatment of syphilis by Dr. Winkler (Bad Nenndorf). The
author emphasized especially the ill effects of alcoholic beverages
and this reminded me of a case which I had treated some years
before. The patient was a young wife who had been syphilitically
infected by her husband, and in whom the morbid symptoms had
developed with extreme rapidity and severity. I had especially
170 Cases From My Practice.
marked the presence of a deep seated ulcer on the left leg. The
poor woman was in despair, she was afraid that she would never
be freed from the infection. An appropriate treatment, however,
removed all the symptoms so quickly that I could hardly believe
it mvself. When I examined the case more closely, the patient
told me, that she had never in her life tasted a drop of wine or
alcohol ; and this explained why the cure had proceeded so rapidly.
Nor has she had any syphilitic symptoms since. I have, therefore,
come to believe with Dr. Winkler, that abstinence essentially re-
lieves the prognosis. With all such patients I from the first for-
bid the use of all alcoholic beverages, and I would recommend all
who are in this sad predicament, to follow this advice.
III. Abscesses on the Labiae of the Pudendae.
Whatever may be their origin, such abscesses are, as a rule,
very obstinate, i. e., hardly is one abscess healed up, before an-
other appears, and the series is often a long one. Thus I was
called in last spring to see a woman forty years of age, who had
every year a recurrence of such abscesses. Domestic remedies,
poultices, as also surgical incisions, had given no relief, and the
patient then decided to call in a homoeopathic physician.
There was a tumor the size of hen-egg on the right labia, at-
tended with much fever, violent pains and complete failure of
appetite. The tumor was near bursting open, and I prescribed
cold water compresses, moistened with a solution of Corrosive
sublimate 3. D. Internally I prescribed Silicea 6., two drops in
a tablespoonful of water, morning and evening.
"I am quite sure that the tumor will burst open," said the pa-
tient. "But as soon as it is healed up another will follow, and
what can your drops help me?"
"Just be patient and wait," was my answer.
The tumor actually burst open next day, and soon healed up
under treatment ; but that Silicea proved effective may appear
from the fact that no other tumor has appeared since. The pa-
tient continued using Silicea for some time, and there does not
now seem to be any likelihood of a return of these tumors. The
cure caused her to become a warm adherent of Homoeopathy.
Cases From My Practice. 171
IV. Psoriasis Linguae.
There is one ailment in which therapy has not usually been
able to do anything, except where lues are the cause of the dis-
ease. Though I gladly give an account of the following case, I
would not assert that the remedy used by me will in all cases
prove effective. Nevertheless the case is too astonishing not to
be reported.
A man. thirty years of age, consulted me on account of a con-
gestion of the liver, which was readily removed. But on examin-
ing his tongue, I had found that there was psoriasis of that mem-
ber.
There were numberless hills and valleys on this morbid mem-
ber, so that I urgently requested the patient to tell me, if he had
ever suffered from syphilis. But he denied almost formally my
question, and added :
"You would do me the greatest service in the world, if you
could free me from this ailment. I have had it now for many
years, and have tried everything imaginable for it. I am ready
for any remedial measure, but I do not want any caustics used,
as these have in every case aggravated my ailment."
"After curing the liver we shall pass over to the tongue, with-
out using any caustics," was my answer.
Immediately after the cure of the congestion of the liver, the
patient asked me to treat his tongue.
But in vain I prescribed one after the other, Arsenicum. Nitri
acidum. Thuja, Lyco podium. Kali bichromicum, Kali phosphori-
cum, and still other remedies, when I finally bethought me of
Castor equi, since this remedy acts in a general way on the thick-
ening of the skin and of the epithelium.
So I first of all prescribed Castor equi 3.. one-fifth of a gram
dissolved in two hundred grams of water, giving one tablespoon-
ful every morning and evening. Although the patient showed
impatience. I quietly waited two weeks. Finally, to our surprise,
there appeared a slight improvement, and in two more weeks the
right side of the tongue was quite free.
But now it seemed as if all progress in the case was at an end.
So I made use of higher potencies, proceeding gradually to the
6.. 12., and the 18. potencies, and gradually the hills and vallevs
172 From My Practice.
disappeared, so that there is not now anything of psoriasis left.
The treatment from beginning to end lasted for four months, and
there has been no appearance of a relapse during the last three
months.
Of course, strict diet was observed ; smoking, alcoholic bever-
ages and irritating food were strictly prohibited.
FROM MY PRACTICE.
By Dr. Strohmeyer, Frankfort a. M.
Translated for the Homoeopathic Recorder from the Leipz. Z. f. Horn.
February 1, 1909.
I. Scrofulous Inflammation of the Glands.
About five weeks ago the wife of one of the higher officials ot
the railroad here came to my office with her boy, three years of
age, and asked me to treat him for a glandular swelling in the
corner of the left jaw, about the size of a hen Qgg, and to en-
deavor to master the case without the knife, of which he was
afraid.
The child had been under treatment from the first beginning
of the swelling until a few days before it was brought to me ;
the Eclectic physician was acknowledged to be a good doctor;
but in spite of the compresses, packings, teas, vegetarian diet, and
the occasional prescription of cod liver oil, the symptoms had
been aggravated, until they caused great anxiety to the parents.
According to the opinion of the father the child had been perfectly
sound and well up to the day when it was vaccinated ; but some
time after that it had been attacked with various eruptions, which
at a later period were followed by frequent, very small glandular
swellings.
I could still notice that besides the greatest swelling, there
were, at least, ten small glandular nodules on both sides of the
throat and in the region of the neck. On account of the hard
swelling on the corner of the jaw, the boy was compelled to hold
his head crooked, quite a depressing position for a boy fond of
games and sports. I assured the mother that she need to have
no fear as to any eventual disfigurement by an ugly cicatrice
From My Practice. 173
from the swelling ; I omitted all external applications, only order-
ing it covered with raw cotton and rubbing it with warm lard
ever}'' evening: I continued the vegetarian diet and open air, and
prescribed internally the never failing X at nun phos. in the 6
decimal trituration, a small quantity every three hours. In about
three weeks the swelling was reduced to the size of a walnut and
is now of the same size as the other nodules which showed no
change from the use of the Natrum phos. But I am sure they
will not long be able to resist the effects of Kali chlorat., in al-
ternation with C ale are a phosphor. From this simple cure it may
be seen that it is no great thing to master certain diseases — if we
have the specific remedies and do not depend on water alone.
II. Chronic Articular Rheumatism.
The cases of rheumatism which frequently come under our
care, whether this be simple muscular rheumatism in its acute
form, or the case has become constitutional, or the very severe
form of chronic articular rheumatism, with the various forms of
disease resulting from the so-called uric diathesis, requires great
powers of observation and an extensive knowledge of remedies.
Even an exact diagnosis in such cases at times offers difficulties
and much more the treatment which at times is extremely com-
plicated. . . .
The particular case in question was that of a lady from the
neighboring city A. She came about a year ago to be treated for
her chronic articular rheumatism, which had lasted already five
years. She had tried pretty much everything, beginning with the
simple baths in water containing Nauheim Salt, massage, moor-
baths, packings with fango : she had been twice in Wiesbaden ;
then she had tried pills of Colchicin, baths in light, baths in vapor,
Kneipp's tea for gout, and also the extremely painful injections
of some unknown solution into the parts surrounding the dis-
eased joints, as introduced lately by an authority in Wiesbaden.
The symptoms were, as usual, pains and stiffness in the joints
affected, especially in the joints of the feet and knees, slight
swellings of some of these, cracking during motion, improvement
while at rest and in warmth, aggravation when the weather be-
comes cold and wet.
174 From My Practice.
The anamnesis showed some noticeable points : The father had
been healthy, but the mother had cicatrices from glandular swell-
ings ; her two brothers were healthy. As a child, she frequently
had eruptions on the mouth and behind the ears ; her eyes also
had been affected ; her swollen glands had been painted with
Iodine. The menses were regular. She was married and had
three healthy children. When thirty-four years of age, she, for
the first time, had rheumatic wandering pains lasting for some
time, caused by a damp, cold dwelling. There is also obstinate
constipation without any urging, a considerable formation of
piles, occasional heart-burn and sour eructation, sensation of ful-
ness in the stomach, much accumulation of flatus, sensation of
heat in the soles of the feet with burning at night in bed, lively
itching and pricking of the skin everywhere, at times buzzing in
the ears, acrid urine causing erosions, after the menses, sharp,
itching leucorrhcea. The patient has taken laxatives and her
stomach contained a small allopathic drug shop. . . .
The patient received Sulphur, in the form of Hahnemann's
tincture, with the direction to take one drop in a tablespoonful
of fresh water, morning and evening, for a week, then stop a
week. The diet very simple, abstaining as much as possible from
meat, and altogether from alcohol, tea, coffee and other irritating
substances ; frequent use of whole-wheat bread ; every week two
hot baths with the decoction of hay-flowers. Laxatives were
forbidden with the exception of clysters.
After two weeks she had to acknowledge that the symptoms in
her abdomen were somewhat alleviated, that the sensation of ten-
sion was diminished, as considerable flatus was discharged. But
she stated that the stool still required clysters. There had been
no change in the joints and the rheumatic symptoms. Prescrip-
tion : Sulphur 30 D., every third evening seven pellets dry on
the tongue, for three weeks. This prescription had a very decided
effect, for after the second dose there was for the first time an
urging to stool, and although this was unsatisfactory and hard,
it made the use of further clysters superfluous. The sensation of
heat in the soles of the feet had vanished, she feels easier in gen-
eral, but sees no noticeable improvement in her joints. Pre-
scription : Sulphur 200., one dose a week for four weeks. Her
From My Practice. 175
condition after this time was as follows: The joints were about
the same, the stools are regular even* other day, appetite and sleep
are good. There is still an aggravation of the pain in the joints
during cold, wet weather ; she is generally sensitive to wet
weather, feels chilly and her body is cold. Prescription : Cal-
carea carb. 30.. ten pellets every eight days for four weeks. At
my next visit I was very much astonished to see the lady come
into my office without the support of her friend, on whose arm she
formerly had rested. She assured me that there was quite a no-
ticeable progress in her condition, as she felt much lighter when
rising from her seat, and generally more active ; she could walk
quite well for a while without help and did not suiter from the
cold near as much as before. This was in the middle of January,
the treatment having been begun in October. Prescription : Cal-
carea carb. 200., four powders, each containing ten pellets, moist-
ened with the dilution prepared by myself. Her condition after
four weeks was somewhat better, but, on the whole, the same : but
the patient is satisfied. Now, finally. I gave her Lyco podium, a
remedy above all praise. She received the 12. centesimal dilution.
three drops in a tablespoonful of water every third evening ; be-
sides this I gave her four powders of Lycopodium 200., one
powder dry every ten days. Five weeks later there properly was
no more articular rheumatism, for the patient made an excursion
into the mountains a few days before, walking over five miles.
Lycopodium had acted not only on the joints, but also on the
functions of the intestinal canal, as there is now a sufficient stool
every day without any exertion. Such effects can be, however,
only expected from Lycopodium. when other suitable remedies
have preceded, and it is no accident that we read in almost every
work on Materia Medica that Lycopodium unfolds its blessed
and universal effects especially when it follows Calcarea.
' I now prescribed a cautious advance from hot baths to cool
sponging; no medicines, since the joints were free of pain,
and only a slight occasional roving pain reminded of the former
ailment. After a pause of six weeks the condition was the same.
Prescription : For eight days every evening before going to bed
Natrum phosphor. 6.. as much as will lie on the point of a knife,
then a pause of a week, then, again, medicine for another week
176 From My Practice.
and so on. By this treatment the last traces of the disease van-
ished and she reported a short time ago by letter, that even the
return of cold weather had not caused any return of the symp-
toms.
III. Chronic Bronchial Catarrh.
The little boy of a butcher here has been suffering since the
third year of his life — he is now five years old — from bronchial
catarrh. This, at first, consisted of detached attacks followed by
periods when there was a considerable improvement; but within
a year it has become stationary, and the little boy has been most
of the time confined to the house. When he was examined, there
were rattling noises all over the different lobes of the lungs, and
these in most cases completely cover the natural sounds due to
respiration. Occasionally there is some dyspnoea, the appetite is
bad, the complexion pale, sallow, and he looks bloated. When
undressing the boy, I perceived a disagreeable, musty smell, and
this became somewhat intelligible when I saw that the whole
skin of the body was in an unhealthy condition and showed a
number of places where it had been scratched open. Being asked
whether there was a severe itching with aggravation in the
warmth of the bed, the mother affirmed this, and I naturally first
thought of itch, but became of a different opinion when I heard
that the other three children of the family, one of whom even
slept in the same bed with the patient, had never been troubled
with the eruption. But the matter was cleared up when, on
further examination I found that the child had had in his second
year an eczema all over the hairy scalp, also behind the ears,
on the cheeks, and in the corners of the mouth ; this moist eczema
had been driven away violently by means of Zinc ointment and
other salves. "It took the physician a long time before he had
cured it all," said the mother. I had my own thought about it,
and was glad that thoughts are still untaxed, and the "physician"
could not look into the pigeon-holes of my mind. Prescription :
Psorinum 30. C. in pellets ; directing the mother to give him one
for three days in succession every evening before he went to bed.
After two weeks I again called on the child, and heard that there
was much less of the irritating itching, and that the skin was
Book Notices. 177
much cleaner ; I could see this myself when I looked at the chest
and the legs of the boy ; I could also hear by auscultation, that
the normal vesicular respiration could again be heard, and that
the many painful, whistling noises had diminished in intensity.
No medicine was given this time. In two weeks more, the skin
was healthy, and the respiration had improved some more. Pre-
scription : Psorinum 200., four powders, each with ten pellets, to
be taken every two weeks dry. In the course of nine weeks the
disease had disappeared, all but some minimal remains, and I
advised the parents to let the boy go to the Soden Springs in
springtime, and to, take the treatment there, so as to confirm his
health.
BOOK NOTICES.
Rademacher's Universal and Organ Remedies. (Erfah-
rungsheillehre). Abridged and Translated by A. A. Ramseyer.
104 pages. Cloth, $1.00. Postage, 6 cents. Philadelphia.
Boericke & Tafel. 1909.
This is one of the few books on therapeutics — perhaps the only
one — by an author outside of the homceopathic ranks, that lives.
Rademacher was a contemporary of Hahnemann and his book
was published in 1841. Some one has said that he was the
pioneer homoeopath ; he certainly was distinguished by the fact
that he favored the one remedy and did little mixing. His idea
was that there are "organ remedies" for diseases peculiar to cer-
tain organs like the liver, "epidemic remedies" that change with
the recurring epidemics and "universal remedies" that might be
described as constitutional remedies. The success Rademacher
met with in practice was very marked, his book went through
four editions and made quite a sensation in its day. Very many
of the peculiar remedies that Burnett used he got from Rade-
macher and, like the true physician he was, gave credit to the
older author. Dr. John M. Scudder, the great Eclectic physi-
cian was a student of this writer. In his turn, Rademacher was
greatly influenced by Paracelsus, that bull in the medical china
shop in his day. He was a plain, unpretentious country doctor
178 Book Notices.
with no pretence at great learning, who wrote of his own ex-
perience and did not pad his book with matter that could be
found in other works. What' he wrote was original, matter that
deserves to live and does live. The student who loves to go to
original sources will delight in this book, and the man with brains
will find in it, as did Burnett, a rich therapeutic mine that may
repay the working in a practical manner. It is a book worthy
of a place in any medical library.
The exploits of a Physician Detective. By Geo. F. But-
ler, M. D. 322 pages. Cloth. Chicago. Clinic Publishing
Co., 1410 E. Ravenswood Park. 1908.
Dr. Butler has struck a new lead in literature, one with great
possibilities in it. The various crimes, accidents and curious
events that the hero doctor works are sufficiently interesting
in themselves to hold the attention of the average reader, while
the medical aspects of the various cases are of unusual interest
to the physician. The book demonstrates very clearly of what
exceeding value one highly trained in disease mentality would
be in unraveling many of the details of what is known as crime.
Insanity in some form enters into nearly every premeditated or
unpremeditated crime, for it is doubtful if any sane and normal
person was ever a criminal. But be that as it may, Dr. Butler has
given the world a most readable book, one in which the doctor de-
tective, when possessed of a few facts, works out the case often
by his knowledge of the workings of the human mind.
700 Surgical Suggestions : Practical Brevities in Diagnosis
and Treatment. By Drs. Walter M. Brickner, Eli Mosch-
gowitz and Harold M. Hays. Third series. 150 pages. Cloth,
$1.00. New York. Surgery Publishing Company, 92 Will-
iams St. 1909.
Seven hundred short and clear hints on surgery that ought to
be of value to any one who does surgical work.
Homoeopathic Recorder.
PUBLISHED MONTHLY AT LANCASTER, PA.
By BOERICKE & TAFEL.
SUBSCRIPTION, Si.oo,TO FOREIGN COUNTRIES $1.24 PER ANNUM
Address communications , books for review, exchanges, etc., for the editor, to
E. P. ANSHUTZ, P. O. Box 921, Philadelphia, Pa.
EDITORIAL BREVITIES.
Making Mad. — Festus remarked on an occasion, "Paul, thou
art beside thyself, much learning doth make thee mad." Of a
verity that often happens to the "earnest seeker after truth" who
tries to ride on the crest of the flood of modern medical learning
as she is taught by the contributors to the Journal A. M. A.
Some will become hopping mad at it and others bug-house. In
the March 6 issue Dr. W. J. Johnson, of Toronto, Ont., con-
tributes to the flood by a remarkable article on the treatment of
erysipelas by injections of its own dead, or, as he euphemistically
puts it, "devitalized" bacilli. To make a long story short, if the
case is a mild one they inject 20,000,000, if the case be rather se-
vere, 10,000,000, while if it be very severe, 5,000,000. The rule
is, he says : "The more severe the case and the less satisfactory
the clinical response the smaller the dose." Why? Also why re-
verse the rule in diphtheria and preach ever larger injections?
Echo answers "Why" and the reader rages.
Perhaps, though, all is explained in the opening paragraph of
the leading editorial of the same issue. "One of the most fasci-
nating features of the study of medicine is the constantly occur-
ring changes."
One More Stride. — For a short time men wrote learnedly of
"antibodies," but now they bid fair to become, in base ball par-
lance, "has beens," for a leading journal editorially commenting
on the latest discoveries announces that "substances that cause
antibodies to form are called atigens." It is no use to look in
the dictionary, "atigen" is not there. Hard lines for dictionary
180 Editorial.
makers ! Whether the man who knows about this new creature
will be better able to take charge of a case than he who does not
is uncertain, like so much else in life and science as it is in medi-
cine, but he can write more learnedly and wave the other aside,
which is no little thing. "Opsonins" are altogether too common
today to longer attract attention. The next arrival will be eager-
ly awaited by the learned, especially if it reveals to us who is the
sire of the atigen.
Metchnikoff. — This gentleman, who is so much in the public
eye, who is "the successor of the great Pasteur," is, at least,
original in his ideas, though whether those ideas are anything
more than original is open to discussion. His favorite hobby, or
discovery — according to your point of view — is that nature, or
the Creator — again, according to your point of view — made a
mistake in the matter of the "large bowel," which it is the duty
of men of his class to correct. This large bowel is a source of
danger, and the cause of that disease (which an ignorant world
has hitherto foolishly regarded as an inevitable condition) known
as "old age." This bowel is the habitat of a numerous horde of
microbes which "excrete poisons which are taken up by the cir-
culation" and thereby produce arterial changes, alias, "old age."
It is a brilliant specimen of what, with many, passes current for
science. But nature has the whip-hand, for the present, and holds
to her "mistakes." A disciple of Metchnikoff, a man of Indiana,
U. S. A., recently determined to prove nature's error and in-
cidentally circumvent old age, had his large bowel cut out. The
operation was successful, but the man, who was a doctor, died.
He escaped old age, however, and thus far proved the truth of
his master's discovery.
"One Aim." — Every now and then some one reads a paper
deploring the hostility that exists between the schools, condemn-
ing the "pathies" and urging brotherly love, and so on, because
"all are animated by one aim," that of curing humanity. All
that they say is true, in a general way, the sentiments expressed
are Christian, but can hardly be termed scientific. In olden
times the mariner steered by his knowledge of the coast line and
largely by guess work when he got out of sight of land. Then
Editorial. 181
some one discovered the compass. It always pointed to the
north, no matter who used it. It revealed a law of nature and
revolutionized navigation. Probably the majority of the mariners
at first refused to believe in it or even use it. They were honest
old salts, as honesty went in those days, but the man who un-
derstands the compass would hardly let their conservatism in-
fluence him in navigating his vessel. He might meet with dis-
asters even as did the mariners who stuck to the coast line, but
this did not prevent the needle, always, in all hands, on all lands
and seas, pointing to the north. A pirate might use it skillfully
er a good man go on the rocks while using it, but always the
needle pointed to the north. Hahnemann stumbled on, or dis-
covered the compass of the drug law, and brotherly love, charity,
oneness of aim and all that sort of thing bear on it just as they
do on the sailors' compass. Neither has any one ever "improv-
ed" the power that points the needle.
The Inoculation Test for Tuberculosis. — Dr. Clemens
von Pirquet, Vienna, Austria, was led to it by the fact that
when a person is vaccinated for the first time "the effect is pro-
duced only on the third to fourth day," while the effect of a
second vaccination "appears within twenty-four hours." There-
fore, "from this early reaction we can diagnose a previous inocu-
lation." Further on, he writes, "I tried the same method in
tuberculosis and found that only individuals who had been in-
fected previously with tuberculosis showed within twenty-four
hours a local inflammation after inoculation with Koch's old
tuberculin." The chief point of general interest here is the fact
that an inoculation with vaccine so changes the system that a
second inoculation will reveal the fact of the first to the operator
even "if we are not informed of the history." Thus it is scien-
tifically demonstrated that vaccine works a permanent change
in the human system as also does an inoculation with tuberculin.
This fact. has been proved by Dr. Pirquet. By analogy we may
conclude that all other inoculations do the same. From this it
may be concluded that once inoculated the human system never
regains its previous physical state. If the change wrought from
the natural condition is beneficial the inoculations are beneficial
1 82 Editorial.
to the human race ; if evil, then the ultimate state of a much in-
oculated, and hypodermically syringed race will not be enviable.
It is worthy of the deepest investigations, for the effects are very
deep and far-reaching. Dr. Pirquet's paper will be found in
J oar. A. M. A., February 27.
The World Moves Forward Occasionally. — Apropos of
something the editor of the Iowa Homoeopathic Journal had writ-
ten deprecating the reopening of the vaccination subject, Dr. E.
N. Bywater replies that on the contrary it is well to discuss it
further, as nearly all the homoeopathic physicians are now per-
forming internal vaccination wherever the matter is left to their
judgment, and also says that many allopathic physicians have
adopted it. Recently, in a lecture, Professor Henry Albert,
Bacteriologist to the State Board of Health, stated that there are
two methods of vaccination, the old method and internal vaccina-
tion. He concluded, "I believe that it will be but a question of
time until there will be but one method and that the internal
method." If the allopathic medical powers would be willing to
allow the people the option of external, or internal vaccination, all
their troubles in this matter would vanish. Wise rulers do not
drive the people any more than is absolutely necessary. In this
matter of vaccination a little liberty would be of as much benefit
to the medical powers as it would be to the people. Further-
more, it would give better protection against small-pox with none
of the dangers that attend the use of the crude vaccine virus. The
universal adoption of the Iowa law would be a good thing for
everybody but the vaccine farmers.
Another Heretic. — Dr. Amos Sawyer, of Hillsboro. 111.,
writes to The Medical Times, N. Y., like one who knew some-
thing about disease and its treatment, yet he says : "Understand,
I do not deny the presence of microbes, differing with the various
diseases, but claim that their presence is merely an effect, but not
the cause. However, I may be like the colored student when he
asked the negro superintendent : 'Fessor, when de tide come in
dars mo water in all de oceans dan when de tide goes out. Now,
when de tide goes out what comes of all de water in de oceans ?'
Editorial. 183
'Urn, ah, O. E., well, honey, dat's a question dat can only be an-
swered in Latin : 'Humptus, dumptus, dixus digitus, riproarabus.
Now dars whar all de water goes, but chile you'se not educated
to de point whar you can understand dis kind of language.'
There is too much humptus dumptus about many of these answers ;
there are too many physiological prevaricators." He also asserts
that "The claim that pulmonary tuberculosis originates from the
consumption of milk, taken from tuberculous cows, is a city con-
ceived fancy ; as a rule, milk drinkers are not tuberculous." Also
he thinks that open air work is what is required, and not open
air treatment. "I protest against exposing the patients in cots
to extreme cold, or using this plan, under any circumstances, as
they will derive more benefit by outdoor objective exercise; at-
tending to a garden of some kind, raising poultry, etc., work suit-
able for both sexes."
Very heretical !
Not "Properly Up to Date." — Our very conscientious and
generally excellent Homoeopathic Eye, Ear and Throat Journal
in reviewing Dewey's 4th edition of the Essentials of Homoeo-
pathic Materia Medica, etc., says : 'There is no reference to the
Institute's 'Homoeopathic Pharmacopoeia of the United States,'
with its uniform drug strength (i/ioth) of tinctures, hence the
book cannot fairly be considered properly up to date." Oh, that
term, "up to date!" No wonder some of our English friends
balked at it a little. Dewey, it seems, started out to give the stu-
dents the fundamentals, or the "essentials," of homoeopathic
materia medica and pharmacy, which he did in a masterly man-
ner, giving as nearly as possible the preparation of the drugs as
they were prepared by those who proved them. To have done
otherwise would have been — well, let us say, unfortunate. Now
to do so is to be not "up to date." Wonder if the provings of
those drugs are no longer "up to date ?" The old world is world-
ly wise and has seen so many bubbles arise that it instinctively
holds fast to that which is tried and true even at the risk of being
stigmatized as being not "up to date." The world is ever be-
labored by reformers from all sides, never more so than at the
present day, so some allowance must be made for it, and some
184 Editorial.
charity exercised, for, indeed, the reformers pull and haul and
belabor it from all directions and it gets confused at times.
Dewey is evidently a worldly man so the world holds on to him
as to one it understands. The world has proved the old pharmacy
and now follows St. Paul's advice and "holds fast."
\
A Great Programme. — Dr. J. W. Kerr, of the U. S. Health
and Marine Hospital Service, in an address at the Municipal Con-
vention, Charlotte, N. C, outlined a grand campaign against
death and disease. In brief, consumptives must be made to stop
spitting, their sputum must be destroyed, unsanitary buildings
must be pulled down, "soil pollution" must be stopped, mosquitoes
must be eradicated, rats and fleas must be exterminated, all ty-
phoid dejecta must be disinfected, all persons with "communica-
ble" diseases must be isolated, everybody must be vaccinated
and a number of other things must be done. All should be done
by "trained" officials. If all this is done we will have enough
officials to make Russia resemble 30 cents, and a pay-roll that
will make effete monarchies of the world sit up and take notice.
Wouldn't it be just as well — better — to quote the Scriptures to
the people, "Wash and make ye clean !"
But then the end sought is State medicine under the allopaths
and so, perhaps, this is the best way to work it.
An Old Bunco Game. — A correspondent of the Medical
World who signs himself C. J. S. and hails from "W Va.," tells
the following story on himself :
" Weekly has a set of smooth young men working the
doctors. One came to my office some time ago and said, 'Doctor,
can I make you a present of a set of three beautiful books, ab-
solutely free? I use them to advertise our paper and give them
away.' He brought the books and asked me to sign a receipt for
them, 'simply to show where he had left them.' Being in a hurry
I did so, without reading some small printed part of the receipt,
and afterwards learned that I was stuck for $7.80 for the books
and 18 months' subscription."
If you want to subscribe for a journal, buy a book, or any-
thing else, it is better to write to some responsible house rather
than put yourself in the hands of these smooth "agents."
Editorial. 185
An X-Ray Deception. — Dr. Julius Wesselowski, of Jewel,
Kansas (Med. World), had a case of hematuria to treat and
some one advised the patient to get "an X-ray picture taken" to
see if it was not a case of calculi. "He had the picture taken by an
expert, and I know he was a good man, and the picture showed
a dark spot in the kidney, and the diagnosis was made, renal cal-
culus. A surgeon made the operation, and when they got to the
kidney and opened it, the supposed stone was a clot of blood.
So you see, the X-ray does all right, but not as sure as some
think."
Hypodermic and Inoculative Treatment. — The following
is clipped from a letter, by Mr. Arnold Lupton, Member of
British House of Commons, published in the Calcutta Journal of
Medicine:
"The inoculations for diphtheria, instead of reducing the num-
ber of deaths, have increased them. Many sad cases of children
being killed by the anti-toxin inoculations have occurred. In the
town of Hull, where the anti-toxin serum was distributed free of
charge to the medical men, the result was that the number of
deaths attributed to diphtheria increased four-fold. As a matter
of fact, the poor people who are inoculated did not die from diph-
theria at all, but from the poison that wras injected into their
blood. Similar results have followed the use of inoculations
against hydrophobia. The number of deaths has been increased.
There are two thousand recorded cases of death following upon
inoculation for hydrophobia. As an eminent French doctor re-
marked : 'Pasteur does not cure madness : he gives it.' The
anti-plague and anti-typhoid serums have also failed. In India
the plague has been continued for eleven years by the use of anti-
plague inoculations."
Making full allowances for exaggeration in the foregoing there
still remains the hard fact that you cannot continue to inject
animal matter into the human blood without an effect. The
medical scientists responsible for the ever increasing injection of
this matter into human beings say the effect is curative but do
any of them know of the after affect on the race ? May it not be
possible that they are merely changing the form of disease to
one more deep-seated and far worse?
1 86 Editorial.
Stop Making Disease. — Discussing Dr. T. G. McConkey's
paper on Psora, etc., Dr. H. C. Allen asserted that the statements
that nearly all men are more or less tuberculous is but a re-
iteration of what Hahnemann showed years ago in The Chronic
Diseases and then :
"Our friends of other schools are now trying to build and
actually are building a sanitarium for the treatment of cancer,
and are mapping out sanitaria for the treatment of other dis-
eases, for instance, in New York a State sanitarium for the study
of insanity. In Heaven's name, why not stop making people in-
sane? Why not stop making cancers? We keep on punching
vaccine virus into the healthy person to prevent a thing that may
never happen, to, prevent the disease that may never occur. Who
knows what vaccine is ?"
"I believe if we will stop vaccinating people and stop infecting
women with sycotic poison, we shall stop cancer. If we will stop
allowing our patients to eat quinine on every possible pretext we
shall get rid of a large percentage of our cases of insanity very
promptly. The superintendent of an insane asylum in New York,
an allopathic physician of over thirty years experience said : 'If
we could prevent the popular use of quinine we could do away
with one-third of our insane asylums/ What does that mean?
Suppressing diseases ; they have no idea of curing, but suppres-
sion, and our advanced and liberal homoeopaths are trying to fol-
low in their footsteps, suppressing and palliating disease and then
complaining of results."
You will find this in the March Journal of the American In-
stitute of Homoeopathy.
The Return of the Prodigal. — 'The prodigal seems to be
returning — at least we are anxiously waiting for him — and we
must hurry up the fatted calf, so as to be ready when we see him
afar off and run to him. In this case, however, it is not the
anxious, heart-broken father who looks eagerly for him, but the
elder brother, once, in the parable, so envious and sullen. Now
it is that regular, elder brother who gazes down the road with
tearful eyes and watches and listens for the tramping feet of the
returning homceopathist. For this prodigal has, indeed, been
Editorial. 187
a roamer in far lands, where the high dilutions and potencies
dwell, and he has been fain to fill, not his own belly, but the bel-
lies of his clients, with the similia — the husks — indeed, which
the wealthy swine have eaten all too eagerly. But all the time he
is supposed to have longed for his home, and soon we think we
will hear music and singing, and there will be feasts in the county
medical societies. And is there not another prodigal, even many
prodigals, to whose returns we can look forward as remoter joys,
when they have come to themselves ? Just now they may not be
exactly perishing with hunger (for are they not the Eclectic, the
Osteopath, the Vitopath, the Chiropath?), and we must wait a
little till their rations run out." — Edward Willard Watson, M. D.,
in Medical Notes and Queries.
Examining Boards vs. College Faculties. — Dr. W. G.
Tucker, of the Albany Medical Colleges, ventures to say :
"When I observe that candidates fail before some of our State
boards who had recently passed the repeated examinations, and
complied with the other requirements of the faculties of some of
our best schools from which they have been graduated, I am
greatly in doubt which judgment as to fitness is correct — that of
the faculty which has trained and has personal knowledge of the
character and capacity of these graduates, or of the examination
board which has judged them by a single series of exclusively
written examinations, perhaps poorly adapted to the end in view
and possibly with an improper valuation of the papers submitted
by the candidates."
Dr. H. C. Allen and India. — Dr. D. N. Banerjee concludes
his contribution to the Allen Memorial, as follows :
"Thus it may be readily seen that the hold Dr. Allen has on
the homoeopaths of India will be a lasting one, and it will always
be a source of thankfulness to them that they were so fortunate
as to have come under the inspiration of his life and teachings."
This influence can be seen in the contributions published from
time to time by the Recorder during the past years from Indian
practitioners of Homoeopathy.
Echinacea. — A correspondent asks the Jour. A. M. A. about
1 88 Editorial
Echinacea and the editor replies, in substance, that it is no good,
"like many discarded drugs." Was it ever taken up by the
"regulars" and investigated? There are no evidences of it. The
dispensatories mention it as something the eclectics make great
claims for and that is all. But time works wonders.
Be Careful with the X-Ray. — A London letter says that
"Mr. Cox, one of the leading manufacturers of X-ray apparatus
in London" has lost the greater part of his right hand, the thumb
and little finger remaining and part of his left hand is gone
and another operation impending. Another man is mentioned
who lost both hands. All this is the result of the X-ray, or, prob-
ably, the too frequent exposure to its action.
Extracting Sun Beams From Cucumbers. — Dean Swift
tells of a land where one earnest scientist worked for many years
trying to extract sun-beams from cucumbers ; what was to be
done with them after they were found was not clear. Probably
the process would have been named after the man. A French
doctor is trying to graft ovaries in women. One case, as related
in the Archives Genereles de Chirurgie was of a woman of 29
with bilateral salpingitis for three years who had long suffered
from irregular, overfrequent and painful menses. He removed
both tubes and ovaries, leaving the uterus, and implanted an ovary
taken from a woman of 35, who had undergone an operation
half an hour before for uterine fibroma and one ovary had been
removed. The graft was not successful in this case, and the pa-
tient still suffers from the disturbance of the postoperative meno-
pause. In another case he tried to re-establish the circulation
through the implanted ovary by anastomosis of blood vessels,
and he is convinced that success will lie in this direction. In con-
clusion he quotes with approval Franklin Martin's assertions in
regard to the feasibility and promising future of engrafting the
ovaries. Like the question that once agitated the mice, "Who
will bell the cat?" the question that will bother the "promising
future" of this bit of human carpentering is, Who will furnish the
ovaries ?
Salt. — Dr. H. O. Beeson, Calcite, Col., contributes a paper to
Editorial. 189
the Denver Medical Times on the use and abuse of salt in which
the abuse seems to lead, and the taste for it like for Katisha is
"acquired." In excess, he says salt interferes with digestion, in-
hibits glandular action, retards secretion, lays the foundation for
the reaction of succorrhea and secondary infection and taxes the
emunctories, thereby diminishing functional efficiency. He dis-
cusses its influence in delaying or perverting digestion and de-
scribes his experience in obtaining relief within a week from a ten
years' progressive fermentative intestinal indigestion, by cutting
out all supplementary salt. He concludes that the claim that salt
is an aid to digestion is not founded on experiments or observa-
tions, but solely on perverted taste. The taste for salt with food
is acquired. Infants do not get much of it. Wild animals never
take it with food, and only those that eat vegetable food contain-
ing a minimum of salt ever seek it. All the same the world will
go on using salt quite regardless of what faddists or scientists may
say. The point about indigestion may be worth looking into.
Died of Nephritis. — There was a case recently reported by a
physician to illustrate the prophylactic power of antitoxin. A
child was ill with diphtheria, while the mother who was shortly
to be delivered of a child, and another little one of the same family
showed traces of the disease. An immunizing dose of antitoxin
was given ; the mother and the other child escaped and the baby
was born free from the disease. "The first child had a severe
attack and three weeks later died from nephritis." It would be
interesting to know what cause was assigned for the death on the
saved from diphtheria by antitoxin though dying shortly after-
wards from nephritis ?
The Conjunctival Tuberculin Test. — Judging from the
"conclusions" to the article on this subject by Dr. B. R. Bald-
win, Saranac Lake, N. Y. (/. A. M. A., Feb. 20), this diagnostic
method can well be forgotten. He writes that a single instillation
has "some value ;" but has little value when symptoms of tuber-
culosis are only suspicious; in distinguishing active latent from
tuberculosis its value not determined ; repetition has no advan-
tages ; repetition in the other eye not to be recommended ; unre-
liable for prognosis ; used with "precaution" danger is slight.
190 * News and Notes.
test should be restricted to adults. These conclusions are based
on 1,087 instillations made by Dr. Baldwin and others.
Sensational Medicine. — Dr. Ethan H. Smith, a San Fran-
cisco surgeon, writes to the Pacific Med. Jour, concerning the
sensational matter furnished the popular magazines by the men
concerned in the doings of the Rockefeller Institute, N. Y., and
incidentally remarks : "As a real test of the efficiency of the
'New Surgery' at the Rockefeller Institute, we have a suggestion
to make. Now that the Sultan of Turkey is granting reforms
and many concessions, let the eminent research workers, borrow
a eunuch. The Sultan might have one to spare. The eunuch
might be rehabilitated, say from a dog. It would be tough on
the dog, but if successful, would be doubtless highly gratifying
to the eunuch and fill a long felt want."
NEWS AND NOTES.
Dr. Mary Branson has removed to 4504 Locust St., Phila-
delphia.
Dr. S. J. Quinby has removed from Yonkers, N. Y., to 551 S.
26th Ave., Omaha, Neb.
Because, they say, Dr. G. A. Simmons, editor of the Journal
of the American Medical Association, and the Big Boss, was once
an alleged Homoeopath, a water curer, and an advertising
Specialist in men's diseases, the insurgents among the "regulars"
are making fierce faces at him. The Boss, however, seems
capable of taking care of himself. The Boss is determined to
"protect the public against quacks," while the insurgents are bent
proving him to be the arch quack.
The medical great ones of Europe no longer write "Dr. John
Doe," but "Mr. John Doe," or, better still, "Doe." When it is
quoted that "Doe says" it is more effective than "Dr. John Doe
says."
That paper on Diphtheria in this number of The Recorder is
worth the price of admission.
The three "universal remedies" of Rademacher are are salt-
peter (Natrum nitricitm), iron and copper.
News and Notes. 191
Medical Notes and Queries has resumed publication, Dr. H.
W. Catell, Philadelphia, editor. A good journal.
The Court has ruled that unvaccinated children at Sedalia,
Mo., may attend the public schools.
There is said to be a good opening at Swannanoa, N. C. Let-
ters may be addressed to Mr. P. Remmington, for particulars.
Dr. D. C. Jerold, of Oscage, Iowa, died on February 6th. He
was an 1879 graduate of Hahnemann, Chicago. About a year
before his death he retired from active practice owing to failing
eyesight.
Dr. B. A. Washburn, Paducah, Ky., tells of a case of neuralgia
where an incision revaled a hair eight inches long "that had pene-
trated through the lymphatic gland and had coiled itself in the
shape of a washer." The case then recovered.
Many writers append "(fluid extract)" after the name of a
drug. A tincture of the fresh plant is much better. Fluid ex-
tracts from dead, and often decayed, plants are inferior to the
fresh plant tincture in every respect.
Dr. P. E. Triem has removed from Manchester, la., to 6528
Fourth Ave., Seattle, Wash.
The Lord Mayor of London said, in a speech : "My children
have all been homceopathically treated from infancy, and my wife
ascribes their freedom from serious illness to that fact that they
have not been dosed under the old system."
Our estimable friend, Dr. Eugene H. Porter, was reappointed
Health Commissioner of Xew York State by Governor Hughes,
and confirmed by the Senate without opposition or even referring
the matter to the usual committee.
Dr. H. T. Dodge writes (Jour. A. L H.) that some years ago
he located in a Colorado town and let it be known that he prac-
ticed Homoeopathy. "I had all I could attend to at once." That
is an excellent hint for any one who will live up to his claim.
There is too much competition in the other sort of practice.
The next annual meeting of the homoeopathic societies of Ohio
and of Michigan will be held together on May 4th and 5th at
Toledo, O.
PERSONAL.
Many a hardy Senator has perished from exposure.
"Very little progress has been made in dancing," writes an esteemed,
scientific contemporary.
Isn't it about time that the Emanuel Movement men were clamoring for
an Examining Board?
Binks suggests that possibly women wear "rats" and things in their
hair to conceal its scarcity. Naughty B. !
Since the days of Homer men have been cracking up "the giants of
other days."
The keystone of the arch gets lots of credit, but if any other stone were
to fluke it would go with the rest.
Many a young doctor practices more economy than medicine — and that's
no jest.
A firm, long on science, recently advertised a "toxic constructive."
"Young men think old men are fools ; but old men know young men are
fools." All Fools.
"In style," saith Confucius, "all required is that the meaning be con-
veyed."
Doubtless the conservative and solid men of Babylon, Tyre and several
cities told visitors that the town was "bound to grow."
When the jokes are all worn threadbare the world can have a rest.
"I would never use a long word when a short one would answer the
purpose." — O. W. Holmes.
History : A sturdy people. A leader. A successful raid. A conquering
race. An Imperial race. Degenerates and then — nix.
If you want a good dinner make up the menu from things forbidden.
Observe and you will learn that the man in the chair is more prone to
talk than the barber. Another belief shattered!
China is the only nation that has always stayed at home and never
tried to lick all creation.
Keeping the peace among nations is getting to be more expensive than
war used to be.
Every man thinks his own religion is the sole prophylactic against hell
— even the heathen do.
A Captain of Industry is a man who takes all the pie.
To Fletcherize is all right, but they say it makes the kitchen "help"
rage.
A health board has prohibited the use of cracked dishes.
THE
Homieopathic Recorder.
Vol. XXIV Lancaster, Pa., May 1909 No. 5
THE LION AND THE COUNTRY DOCTOR.
A certain estimable gentleman, who dwells at Sandpoint,
Idaho, and signs himself Chas. S. Moody, M. D., recently lower-
ed his visor, couched his lance-pen and rode a doughty tilt
against the perfumed and curled medical knights who dwell in
caves high up in the steel canyons of our large cities. The tilt
is made in the arena of our esteemed, but irregularly regular
Medical Summary. Sir Knight Moody is a country doctor, a
hay-seed, and says so. This is the way he tilts at those in golden
armour and silken hosen :
"The medical publications are stuffed full of 'papers' read by
some ambitious medic at the County Medical Society meeting
held in Podunk Corners. Now, I haven't the slightest objections
to John Henry Smith, A. M.. M. D., impressing the assembled
representatives of the healing art from the back districts with his
wonderful erudition, but I do register a kick against the editors
of journals that we pay our good money for, aiding and abetting
the said John Henry in his nefarious attempt at impressing us
with his superior knowledge. These days it seems the proper
thing for county medical societies to invite some professional
'lion' to address them upon some important topic. The greater
the lion' the better they like it. The 'lion' comes, shedding an
air of importance, like an aura about him. He arises and pomp-
ously details some professional hodge-podge that is the same old
story in a new laid gown, while the bucolic medics sit with mouths
ajar and drink in the words of wisdom as though they were pure
from the Pierian spring. The 'lion' does not say so, of course,
for that would be telling, but the inference very strongly is that
all the brethren from the wood's pasture should send to him all
194 The Lion and the Country Doctor.
such cases as come under the head of the particular paper he
reads. They do it, too. They remark unto themselves, 'What
wisdom! What knowledge. How can one head contain it all?'
In fact, the whole screed is nothing but a rehash, and generally
a very poor one, of some chapter on the subject taken from one
of the standard authorities, and not one of the 'lion's' auditors
but could produce a better one with both hands tied."
He gallantly rides away from the joust with the cry, O tem-
pora ! O mores ! O mama !
The Recorder would suggest to "country doctors," that they
set themselves to writing papers on any topic of professional in-
terest, and send them in to the journals. They may not get into
the pages of the heavy weight class, but there are other journals
which, though of lighter weight, are read.
The "lions" at whom our friend Moody rides are not a bad
sort; in fact, they are, the most of them, very good to meet.
When not thundering from the forum they do not claim to know
it all. They also have their limitations, as shown by a story told
recently. A doctor of the country brand, and a star patient of
his, travelled many weary miles to consult one of these lions.
The consultation was long, thorough and very expensive. At
the dismissing time the country doctor and his patient timidly
asked what should be done to save the patient and the lion roared
"Good Heavens, men! I don't treat disease!" When he had
told what was wrong with the patient, which country doctor knew
before, he had nothing further to do with him ; let the country
doctor do that ! And right there is the suggestion of a golden
nugget hidden for the country doctor.
This reminds us of another story. A friend, a mining en-
gineer, whose duties take him to regions where the "chuck" is
not of the tender and toothsome nature of that served at Sherry's,
or the Bellevue-Stratford, said that his stomach went "back" on
him, "dyspepsia," he termed it. Being of homoeopathic ante-
cedents, he tried the "indicated remedy" faithfully, but with no
relief. Then he went to the "regulars" and took "gallons of
stuff" and was no better ; in fact, was worse. Then some doctor
whose pathy was not mentioned, probably a "lion," told him he
would never get better until he got some teeth — his being decided-
"An Inexcusable Ingratitude." 195
ly "on the bum." The next time he "came east," to get the
money miners are always after to keep things going in their busi-
ness, he went to a high up dentist, a "lion" dentist, and had a "first-
class" set of teeth made : he paid much good Eastern money for
them. On his return to the mines he carried them for six
months, chiefly in his coat pocket, because he could not use them.
On his next Eastward journey he had another set made by an-
other man. The same result — "N. G." Then business took him
to a town in a very remote region of the West. A little tooth-
man was located there. Our friend asked him if he could make
him a set of teeth. The dentist replied (of course), that he could
— and he did. The teeth were a success, the "dyspepsia" was
cured and the mining man is getting fat on camp fare according
to the last reports.
Dentistry is not medicine. Sometimes the little man succeeds
where the big man fails and. with Bunsbian profoundly, it may
be added, that there are times when the little man fails and the
big man succeeds. In fact, there are things that "no fellow can
find out." Even so. Do your best, and don't be too bigoted —
or too biggotty.
"AN INEXCUSABLE INGRATITUDE."
Report of a Case by W. L. Morgan, M. D.
December 3, 1906. Through the influence of a lady that I had
successfully treated for a very distressing chronic morbid condi-
tion a few years before, I was called in to see Mrs. X.. a lady of
affluence and influence, of fine physique and intelligence, who had
been suffering from a large bone excrescence of the right knee
joint, which was flexed so much as to be entirely useless for walk-
ing and very painful when attempting to straighten it or bend it
in an}- way, and at the same time she was suffering with a very
distressing case of La Grippe of a rheumatic character. She
told me of having consulted about eleven of the most eminent
physicians for the condition of the knee and I was the twelfth.
She impressed it upon me that she had little hope for the cure of the
knee condition. The last physician treating her was a Homoeo-
path and had given her Nux vomica tincture in five drop doses,
196 "An Inexcusable Ingratitude."
the lady showing me the vial so marked. This she had been tak-
ing faithfully for a period of several weeks, three times a day, in
dose of five drops, as directed on the bottle. After expressing
great anxiety to get well, and but little hope of saving the leg
from amputation, she wanted to see what I could do for her.
Taking all the symptoms, and especially those last appearing,
with all the modalities I could find, the totality of symptoms point-
ed directly to Arnica, and this I gave her in M. potency, five pow-
ders, one to be taken every four hours, and this to be followed
every four hours by a tonic, so-called, but which was only
Placebo.
December $th. Symptoms much changed, less soreness, more
nervousness and tired feeling — a good picture of Actcea rac. I
gave her Actcea rac, 50 M., 12 powders, one to be taken every
four hours, and again followed by the tonic (Placebo).
December 8th. All Actcea symptoms yet present, but much
milder. Repeated the same, followed by the tonic.
December 12th. All Grippe symptoms disappeared, leaving a
totality of Nux vomica symptoms in full force, such as had ex-
isted before the Grippe took possession of the case — a complete
proving of Nux vomica. She had not taken Nux vomica for
nine days, but the case now presented a most beautiful picture of
the drug. Following the law that requires the selection of the
remedy having the totality of symptoms, I gave her Nux vomica,
C. M., four powders, to be taken every four hours and again
followed by the tonic (Placebo).
December 16th. All symptoms much better — continued Nux
vomica, C. M., five powders, and followed by the tonic.
December 22a1. All Nux vomica symptoms disappeared. But
still some pain in the knee when kept still, and this caused her
to move it often, with much pain, but after movements relief
in the new positions ; with a general restlessness ; must change
position often and with but momentary alleviation — a complete
picture of Rhus tox. Gave her powders of the M., one to be taken
every four hours.
December 28th. Found her much improved, so much so that
she had been going about her room on crutches, with no symp-
toms but in the knee and these were all found in the Materia
"An Inexcusable Ingratitude." 197
Medica, and pointed to Natrum phos. Gave her Xatrum phos.
30, three powders, one a day, and six powders of S. L., one a
day. She then told me that she saw no improvement in her
knee, and that she despaired of being cured by any treatment, and
had decided to go to the mountains a while in the hope that the
air would benefit her and quit all treatment after exhausting my
last prescription.
After three or four months she returned, the knee much im-
proved, but did not come to see me, the information being impart-
ed to me by the lady who introduced the case to me.
I dismissed the case from further observation and soon entirely
lost sight of it, being engrossed in other work.
Toward the fall of 1907 I was agreeably surprised to see my
former patient, Mrs. X., walking the streets without crutches or
cane and in the pink of health. One mutual lady friend informed
me some little time later that Mrs. X.. after exhausting my last
prescription (Nat. phos. 30) took absolutely no medicine of any
description, having lost faith in all doctors now. I being the
twelfth to undertake to cure her of the knee condition.
Mrs. X. will not admit that so little medicine could have caused
so much bone absorption, and attributes her entire cure to the
stay in the mountains. As she puts it. "Why, all the while I was
taking your treatment the knee remained just as large and did
not get one whit smaller until I had been in the mountains a while,
and how could such little treatment of such small medicine pos-
sibly remove such a morbid condition : that I cannot bring myself
to believe." Of course. Mrs. X. cannot understand that, by the
laws of Homoeopathy, the last remedy given her cured the dis-
ease that caused the growth of the knee condition, and that then
the healthy functions of the system caused the absorption of the
morbid product — bone tumor.
As is evident, she knows nothing of the science of true Ho-
moeopathy and, pardon me for saying it, the homoeopathic phy-
sician (so-called) who previously treated her knew or knows less
of the science of true Homoeopathy as given us by Hahnemann
and the late masters. Hence, it is just such people as rtiy de-
scribed patient that are easy victims to the chicanery of interested
advisers, M. D.'s of the old school (and some even of our school)
198 Variolinum in the Treatment of Small-Pox.
to their disadvantage and to the latter's profit. I am impelled
for reasons given, to excuse Mrs. X. for the ingratitude and
injustice to myself and Homoeopathy. The healthy condition she
now enjoys she owes entirely to Homoeopathy, but I will pardon
her for not admitting it.
This was the third case of similar condition that I have com-
pletely cured, and now have the fourth under way of recovery,
and all treated by the same method.
Mrs. X. being the only one that denies Homoeopathy full credit
for the cure. Grave sickness and painful ailments may be cured,
but pride and prejudice never.
Baltimore, Md.
VARIOLINUM IN THE TREATMENT OF SMALL-
POX.
By Dr. Srish Chandra Basa, L. H. M. S.
At the present time small-pox is virulently raging in Calcutta,
and is carrying off three to four hundred every week. Our gov-
ernment, as usual, is only insisting on the people to have them-
selves vaccinated, as if vaccination is the only means of relief
from this dire calamity. But it has been found that persons who
have been vaccinated more than once have not been able to escape
its attack. There are also cases within my professional knowl-
edge, where persons died from the effect of vaccination. Ho-
moeopathy, however, though now widely known throughout the
length and breadth of India as the easiest and the safest means of
combating with many dire diseases, has not been able to make its
way among the small-pox patients, chiefly because there is an
innate belief among a large number of people that all western
mode of treatment rather spoils a good case than does any good.
I have, however, been able to get hold of some cases, brief reports
of which, appended below, will show how our system of treatment
has admirably worked in some cases, even though spoiled by the
administration of purgatives.
Case No. 1.
Patient, Mr. L. C. Datta. bookkeeper; Mercantile Rank, Cal-
cutta ; age, about 40.
Variolinum in the Treatment of Small-Pox. 199
Had a slight attack of fever on the seventh of February, 1909.
As there had been some cases of small-pox in his family, he be-
came afraid and called in a kabiraj (persons who practice native
mode of treatment) for consultation. He gave him a purgative
in the hope that it would cleanse ofT his bowels and remove all his
ailments, but, unfortunately, the purgative acted so violently that
the patient became very bad, and sent for me early next morning.
On my arrival I learned that he had passed eight or ten stools, all
watery, intermixed with mucoid substances. The last stool he
had was bloody. Thirst exceedingly great and nausea very promi-
nent. He was extremely prostrated, and was somewhat chilly. I
prescribed Nux vom. 6, to be taken every three hours. On the
next morning (9th) when I called on him, I learnt he had severe
fever during the night, which was still then lingering in a con-
siderable degree with nausea very prominent. On closely exam-
ining his body I found some spots resembling mosquito bites on
his face and chest. To all appearance it was a case of pox, be it
small or chicken. I gave him Antim. tart. 6, to be taken every
four hours. On the 10th I again visited him and found the crop
had fairly appeared on his body. I put him on Variolinum 30,
which satisfactorily brought the case to a happy termination. I
had, however, occasionally to give him a few doses of Rhus tox.
30, and Merc. sol. 30 to allay intense itching and to promote sup-
puration.
~ I
Case No. 2.
Patient, a girl of six years, granddaughter of Bebu Bhuban
Chandra Chatarji, a government pensioner, residing in Kansari-
purah, Calcutta.
On the 20th of February last, she had an attack of fever. In
considertion of the time, she was left unattended for seventy-two
hours, when it was found that the fever had risen to 1060. The
old gentleman was very much afraid and came to me with tears
in his eyes, almost despairing of the life of his pet grandbaby. I
hurriedly went with him and found the patient in almost delirious
condition ; the fever was high, pulse was thick and rapid ; no
thirst ; incoherent talk at some intervals ; eyes closed ; eyelid some-
what puffy, dull. I gave her Gelsemium 30 every three hours. I
also ordered her to be put on warm foot bath, at least three during
200 Variolinum in the Treatment of Small-Pox.
the day. This was strictly followed, and the result was that the
next morning the fever came down to 1050, while all other symp-
toms remained the same. I followed the same prescription, which
brought down the fever to 1030 in the evening, with the appear-
ance of a crop of mosquito bite-like eruptions all over the body.
Next morning the fever further came down ; it was almost normal,
while the eruptions became very prominent. This patient, like
the previous one, was put on Variolinum 30, and made rapid
progress towards recovery in a few days.
Case No. 3.
Patient, a boy servant of Babu Bhut Noth Banarji, a pay clerk
of the East Indian Railway in Calcutta, age about 18. On the
3d of February, 1909, I was sent for to attend on the above pa-
tient, who was then suffering from high fever with delirium and
violent retching and vomiting. There was severe pain all over his
body, and he was very restless. His thirst was very great, but
drinking water, instead of allaying it, increases it more. All thes^
indications induced me to try Rhus tox., which I gave in the 30th
potency. Next day (4th) when I visited the patient, I found
slight improvement, but the retching and vomiting were as violent
as ever. I prescribed Antim. tart. 6, to be taken every three hours.
This had the effect of controlling the retching, which was very
painful and also of reducing the fever to almost normal point.
With the subsidence of fever there came a crop of eruptions over
the body, which were soon diagnosed as small-pox. As usual with
me, I put him on Variolinum 30, which brought the case to a favor-
able termination. Soon after recover)- he began to have slight
ailments, such as slight fever in the evening, swelling of the in-
guinal glands, and so on. After a dose of Thuja 30, a few doses
of Merc. sol. 30 were given. This arrangement completed the
cure.
Note.
There are other cases in my records which were treated in the
similar way. I, therefore, refrain from giving a detail of them
here as they are needless, but it should be pointed out that Antim.
tart, has played an important part in the beginning, and latter1y
Variolinum, but it was Thuja which in many cases was necessary
to be brought into recognition to complete the cure.
Rademacher. 201
It should further be observed that Variolinum was not only
necessary in the treatment of this fell disease, but also acted as a
prophylactic, and this I have amply verified in this season. In
way of illustration, I may mention that the head of the family in
which the last case occurred, instead of following the usual
method of having his whole family vaccinated, gave a trial of
Variolinum among the members of his family, and the result was
that while in the surrounding houses there were cases after cases of
small-pox, his was entirely free from it, though some got fever. I
have given similar trials of Variolinum in some other families
with the same result.
Calcutta, India, April 2, 1909.
RADEMACHER.
By T. L. Bradford, M. D.
Notable among the figures medical, wTho have walked across
the canvass of the world is Johann Gottfried Rademacher, con-
temporary with our own Hahnemann and heir of Paracelsus.
It has been said that Paracelsus had two interpreters and that
each of them elaborated one of his dogmas. And each formed
the basis of a school of medicine in the nineteenth century.
One of these interpreters is Rademacher. Born in 1772 at
Goch, in the County of Mark, on the lowTer Rhine, a kindly man
and an observing, and who says of himself : "Probably to the
very end of my life I should, also, have been unable to attain the
power of healing — having my understanding partially crippled-
by scholasticism — if a concurrence of circumstances had not de-
termined me to read the works of Paracelsus with attention, and
if he had not lighted for me a candle, which I sought in vain
from other physicians." And the book in which Rademacher
published the results of his experience was not issued until 1841
after he had been for forty-six years in practice. It was pub-
lished in two large volumes each of about 800 pages.
The teachings of Rademacher are based upon a statement of
Paracelsus : the "natural, genuine physician says, this is a mor-
bus helleborinus, terpenthinus, not this is a phlegm, chorryzza,
catarrhus."
202 Rademacher.
Rademacher arranges diseases according to the remedies
proven curative in each. We cannot distinguish the ultimate es-
sence of disease or its origin in the body, but we can, by experi-
ence, learn to use and to understand the remedy that has caused
the cure, and we ought to name the disease after the remedy.
Rademacher taught that there are three universal remedies :
cubic-nitre, copper and iron, and also three primary diseases of
the body, and these are called cubic-nitre disease, copper disease
and iron disease, because, although the character of these dis-
eases is not known, they are certainly cured by these remedies.
These three primary diseases, cubic-nitre, copper and iron dis-
ease, do not remain distinct, but often throw an organ into a
condition of sympathy, and thus it results that an iron disease,
may show itself as a consumption, or a mania a potu ; or a copper
disease may appear as worms, paralysis, jaundice, etc. Besides
the universal disease and remedies there are also diseases of or-
gans, diagnosed by the efficacy of organ remedies and showing as
simply organ-diseases, or as sympathetic organ disease. These
latter may become also primary organ diseases.
There are supposed to be four great groups : abdominal diseases
and the corresponding abdominal remedies ; head diseases and
head remedies ; chest diseases and chest remedies ; diseases of
external organs, the skin with external or skin remedies. There
is also a special remedy for each internal organ or viscus.
Such in a word is the medical system of Rademacher, and for
some years after its promulgation this doctrine had capable fol-
lowers.
Recently an interesting book has been issued, entitled "Uni-
versal and Organ Remedies." This should be of interest to any
one who finds it of interest to trace the development of medical
thought from that great philosopher, and empiric, Paracelsus,
who stands between alchemy and chemistry ; between the old
medical systems and the medical practice of the present. Dr.
Ramseyer has condensed into this book of a hundred pages, a
very readable and complete exposition of the rather curious no-
tions of Rademacher. The organ remedies, each remedy being
adapted to a particular organ, remind us somewhat of that fanci-
ful doctrine of signatures. There is somewhat about this theory
Homoeopathy vs. Toxins. 203
of Rademacher that points to Schuessler and his tissue remedies.
Rademacher used Nux vomica from 1816 to 1819 in diseases of
the liver, he used Chelidoninm for the liver. The book is di-
vided into practically nineteen sections, each one devoted to a
remedy, and the disease or organ calling for that remedy. The
profession owes Dr. Ramseyer thanks for his very careful
presentation of the doctrines of Rademacher and there is little
doubt that these doctrines have served to modify more or less
the practice of medicine during the latter part of the nineteenth
century. It seems self-evident that the modern physician should
devote an hour to this little book, if, with no belief in its dogmas,
yet as a matter of education in the tenets of a notable medical
system.*
1862 Frankford Ave., Phila., Pa.
FOR INQUIRER.
Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder:
"Inquirer" in Recorder of April 15th wants the similimum.
I would suggest that he study Cannabis Indica, under which he
will find similar symptoms.
Very truly yours,
Geo. H. Clark.
Germantown, Pa., 66 W. Walnut Lane, 4/23/09.
HOMOEOPATHY VS. TOXINS.
Dr. E. C. Price, contributes the leading paper to the April is-
sue of the North American Journal of Homoeopathy. The title
is : "Is the Work of Hahnemann, the Great Therapeutist Reform-
er Finished ?" Dr. Price thinks it is not finished, though there are
some followers of Similia who, no doubt, will not agree with him
in what he considers some of the finishing methods. For in-
stance, Dr. Price writes :
"While it is apparently true that in the comparativelv near
*Rademachers Universal and Organ Remedies. (Erfahrungsheillehre.)
Abridged and translated by A. A. Ramseyer. Philadelphia. Boericke &
Tafel. 1909.
204 Homoeopathy vs. Toxins.
future a large class of our most fateful diseases will be treated
and cured by the products accompanying them, yet it is also true
that there are probably many other diseases which are not due to
toxins, and in this last field a knowledge of what drugs other than
toxins will do to the healthy is also necessary."
Inasmuch as toxins are used in the cure of diseases which, at
present, are said to be caused by microbes, and as pretty much
every known disease is (said to be) caused by microbes, it looks
as if there was but little room for Homoeopathy in the lexicon
or those who are carrying forward — or think they are — the re-
form begun by Hahnemann.
As Dr. Price reasons, Homoeopathy was the first step in the
great medical reformation, but there must necessarily be other
steps, which, logically, will leave Homoeopathy behind, even as
a man leaves his own foot-prints behind. This view appeals to
some, but to others it is fallacious, though it is so glittering, and
so in accord with the "Spirit of the Times" as to cause mental
confusion and bewilderment. They realize that man must ad-
vance or retrograde — or stagnate ; hence when there come from
the men who claim to be scientific, things like toxins, or any-
thing else, dubbed as scientific, they see these are not in accord
with Homoeopathy, yet are asserted to be a "step" in the direc-
tion of which Homoeopathy was the primary step, hence Homoe-
opathy must be left behind. The confusion, it would seem, arises
from the comparison with a man advancing towards a given desti-
nation by steps which further involves the necessity of having
the things now called ''steps in advance of Homoeopathy," them-
selves, in turn, left behind by other future steps, and so on in-
definitely— always "progressing," never arriving.
If one believes Homoeopathy to be a Law the fallacy at once
becomes apparent. A natural law is not a "step'" it is a funda-
mental, a foundation on which true science is built. It is some-
thing fixed. The scope of every such Law is so vast that no man
can ever hope to comprehend it all. There is ample room for ex-
panding without leaving Homoeopathy (the foundation) "be-
hind."
In fact, if one thinks he has left it, or can leave it, behind, he
Insufficiency of the Heart and Serum Anguillce. 205
is — well, he is in error. You cannot ignore a natural law, or
supersede it, for it is basic: it remains quite regardless of what
any one thinks or believes. Toxins, or, as the men who discovered
the curative power that resides in a product of disease termed
them, "Nosodes," when they act curatively, act on the basic law
of Homoeopathy. The late Dr. H. C. Allen clearly saw this, and
the danger of using nosodes blindly, hence the closing years of
his life were devoted to preparing a materia medica of these
toxins, or nosodes, made from actual provings on the healthy
just as the other drugs are proved. He had no patience with the
ideas preached, and developed, by the late Dr. Samuel Swan, the
Isopathist, and now adopted, with frills and trimmings, by a part
of the old allopathic school, as something new. Isopathy,
Schuesslerism, and several other things are nothing but evidences
of the great basic Law.
INSUFFICIENCY OF THE HEART AND SERUM
ANGUILL^E TEEL SERUM).
By Dr. Chiron, Paris.
This account is taken from an address delivered before the
Societe franc. d'Homwopathie, as published in the Revue ho-
mocop. franc, Xo. 2. 1909.
I had lately an opportunity of gaining wonderful results with
this excellent remedy in a case that seemed almost hopeless, and
I think it of use to communicate it.
Mr. H.. fifty-nine years of age. came to my office in May. 1908,
on account of nocturnal attacks of dyspnoea, which made sleep
impossible. He was tall, of pale complexion, normal as to cor-
pulency, and produced the impression of weariness and senility.
Formerly he had been in office, but since the last four years he
had left office and did no work. He has been leading a life so
far, free of care : was somewhat full-blooded, a good eater and
drinker and smoker. Xo severe disease had disturbed the even
tenor of his way. until in the year 1905 a congestion of the lungs
confined him for time to his bed, and left some weakness behind.
About a month ago the trouble began, from which he is now
suffering. They appeared unintermittently, increasing in inten-
206 Insufficiency of the Heart and Serum Anguillce.
sity, and now he passes his nights, sitting up in bed, laboring
under a dreadful dyspnoea. In the morning he rests, exhausted
for some moments, but disquieted by a dull and benumbed sleep.
He complains of palpitation of the heart, of a sensation of a bar
across his chest near the pit of the stomach, accompanied with a
severe distention of the abdomen. As soon as he walks a little
fast or goes up stairs, he is out of breath and is compelled to stop
to take breath. His appetite is good, stools normal, and also the
same with his micturition.
On examination, I found that the apex of the heart is in the
sixth intercostal space ; on palpation of the lower part of the
sternal region, pulsations of the aorta were felt. During ausculta-
tion I perceived very clearly a sharpening of the second tick of
the aorta with a metallic sound extending toward the collar bone.
The pulse is full, leaping ; the arteries hard and serpentine. The
lungs do not show anything abnormal except some slight rattling
sounds in the two bases. The liver is enlarged, sensitive, and ex-
tends a finger's breadth below the false ribs. Nothing is noted
in the intestinal canal except that the abdomen is distended with
gases.
My diagnosis was arteriosclerosis and chronic inflammation of
the aortas and I prescribed a suitable diet. Among internal rem-
edies the patient received successively as the symptoms appeared :
Arsenicum album, Crataegus oxyac, Spigelia, Baryta carb., and
Carbo veg.y which produced a progressive amelioration.
This improvement extended the whole summer to the middle of
November. But at this time a slight bronchitis set in, which
rapidly complicated the situation and the condition of the patient
rapidly grew worse. The nocturnal dyspnoea appeared again
with threatening violence. The heart quickly slackened its mo-
tion and the liver again extended down beyond the false ribs.
At the same time the quantity of the urine diminished, while on
the ankles there appeared a dropsical swelling, which increased
from day to day. No prescription was able to stop these morbid
disturbances, and all the remedies, no matter how well they
seemed to be indicated, refused to act. Arsenicum alb., Crataegus,
Apocynum, Spigelia, Apis, Digitalis, produced only a partial im-
provement. Even the Spirit us qucrcum, which I tried for two
days, had quite a negative result.
Insufficiency of the Heart and Serum Anguillcc. 207
During this time the condition of my patient became ever more
aggravated, and hopeless. There was complete insufficiency of
the heart. The pulse mounted up to 120. The heart pulsated
violently and galloping ticks could plainly be heard. The lungs
were congested, with numerous rattling noises at both bases.
The liver was painful and extremely sensitive to all pressure ; it
extended four fingers' breadth beyond the false ribs. Urination
was much diminished, about 100 grams of a reddish, thick fluid of
evil appearance; the analysis showe'd o, 15 per cent, of albumen.
The oedema had finally extended ail over the legs and thighs, and
extended half way up the back. The patient had no rest for even
a minute : he suffered from attacks of suffocation. His nights
were fearful : he was delirious, saw all manner of appearances
and heard voices and outcries. Then I prescribed Serum d'an-
guille, (eel serum) 6. C. twenty drops in 200 grams of distilled
water, every two hours a tablespoonful.
The effect was striking. In twenty-four hours the patient dis-
charged about five quarts of urine and the oedema was much di-
minished. The delirium had disappeared and the night was pretty
quiet. The dyspnoea being less severe had permitted the patient
even to sleep for a few hours. The pulse had gone down to 100.
The pulsation of the heart was less stormy and the galloping
sounds were less perceptible on auscultation. I continued with
the eel scrum. Xext morning it was found that the urine had
again amounted to five quarts, and the oedema was scarcely per-
ceptible on the ankles. The heart had regained its normal rhythm
and the dyspnoea had altogether disappeared. The crisis was not
protracted, and eight days after taking the eel scrum my
patient was up again. I saw him again last week (in the begin-
ning of January. 1909) and his condition is quite satisfactory.
What was peculiarly striking to me in this case was the quick-
ness with which the serum acted. This remedy usually acts more
slowly, and frequently while the discharge of the urine increases
in the first day. it yet only becomes copious after two or three days.
But here the quantity discharged mounted from three hundred
grams to five quarts on the first day. Whence this difference?
It may be that the first trituration generally used is less effective
that the sixth potency which I prescribed ? Or may it have come
208 Vaccination in the School Code.
from the fact that the similarity between the symptoms covered
by the eel serum and those in my patient was more perfect? I
do not know which was the reason and am left to supposition.
For we may readily confess that we are not yet sufficiently ac-
quainted with the significance of this remedy. The great results
secured by Dr. Pierre Jousset in the Hospital of St. James have
given us the chief indications, which have been confirmed in
practice.
But a complete pathogenesis of the remedy is as yet lacking,
which explains a somewhat blind groping in the indications as
well as in the dose to be given. It would, therefore, be very de-
sirable to have provings made of the remedy on healthy persons.
These would give us certain and reliable indications which would
enable us to give to the eel serum its proper place in our materia
medica.
VACCINATION IN THE SCHOOL CODE RECENT-
LY PASSED IN PENNSYLVANIA.
In an analysis of the "school code," over which there was such
a bitter fight in the last session of the Pennsylvania Legislature,
Dr. George M. Phillips, of the Normal School, West Chester,
shows, among other things, its relation to vaccination. He says :
"Enforcement of the compulsory vaccination law will be in
the hands of the medical inspectors, and not in the hands of
teachers. An examination of the vaccination marks on the child's
arm is provided for in case there is no certificate of vaccination.
When children are physically unfit to be vaccinated the medical
inspector may permit them to attend school until their health has
sufficiently recovered to permit of vaccination, and he is required
to vaccinate unvaccinated children free of charge with the con-
sent of their parents."
"In case there is no small-pox in the district, or so near it as
to endanger the community, the school board, by a three-fourths
vote, may permit unvaccinated children to attend the schools, but
if small-pox should appear in the district, or anywhere in danger-
ous proximity to it, the medical inspector must see that the law
is strictly enforced."
This seems to be an improvement over the old rule, as it gives
Three Cures. 209
the physician, and school authorities, some discretionary powers
in the matter. The provision that children physically unfit to be
vaccinated may be exempt until ''their health has sufficiently re-
covered" is in itself a curious commentary on this old practice, so
contrary to all modern ideas of hygiene. It is an admission that
only strong, healthy children can be safely vaccinated ; the thought
is not unreasonable that it would be better to trust to the health
and strength of the child to resist disease rather than to the dis-
ease producing virus from an animal.
The upholders of this practice of vaccinating never dwell upon,
and apparently refuse to consider, its after effects on the one
undergoing it. yet surely this is a question that should receive
careful study by every one who cares for the welfare of human-
ity. Those who claim to have studied it declare that very often
the effect is bad, resulting in life-long ill health. If gonorrhceic
infection is one that can never be wholly eradicated from the sys-
tem, as many learned men affirm, it seems not unreasonable to
believe that the cow-pox infection may remain lurking also, ob-
viously to the great detriment of the race.
This question, when raised heretofore, has been generally met
with silence, which, indeed, is safest, or a contemptuous assertion
that "all this has been settled" to the satisfaction of everyone
save a few "cranks" or "fanatics."
The truth is the question never has been discussed, much less
settled, save by the acts of the legislature passed at the instiga-
tion of men who it is charitable to believe did not understand
that which they advocated.
THREE CURES.
By C. Assem, Prior.
Gelsemium in Insomnia.
When I met my friend, the pastor of K., he complained of a
peculiar ailment of the head with vertigo, anxiety, nervous
twitches and insomnia. The physician called it neurasthenia, but
his remedies and advice have done no good. He is especially in-
convenienced by his nose, which is stopped up and quite dry.
The latter symptom caused me to send him Kali bichrom. 6. in
210 Three Cures.
pellets. I did not hear from him for half a year, when he wrote
me, that the homoeopathic remedy had a very good effect and
cured the stuffed cold in the nose, but the nervous twitching which
prevented him from going to sleep, still continued and he also had
gouty pains in the wrists. He writes : "Often it twitches through
the whole body, as from an electrical stroke ; often it flashes
through the shoulders, the arms, hands and fingers and the feet
and drives away sleep." He cannot find out what causes this
intolerable condition. The patient is not alcoholic, his parish is
not large, he lives without care and in peace, his dwelling is dry
and healthy, though situated near the river, only his gouty pains
raise a doubt as to a gouty diathesis. I tried him successively with
Causficum, Natrum sulphur., Dulcamara, Cuprum, Lachesis, but
all without effect. Now the patient again turned to an allopathic
physician, but all his directions : sweating, ointments, massage,
electricity, etc., proved without effect ; often he succeeds in fall-
ing asleep in the morning when he ought to get up. It may be
supposed that his spirits were very much depressed. Finally he
again came to me for a homoeopathic remedy ; I now gave him
Gelsemium 6. in pellets, and in two weeks he wrote to me that the
painful twitches had diminished and a few weeks later he wrote
that the whole affection had disappeared on the continued use of
Gelsemium, also the gouty trouble in his hands had disappeared.
II. Sulphur As a Peacemaker in the Family.
In the course of the spring a workman's wife came to see me,
and asked me very shyly, that I should help her husband, who
was given to wetting the bed ; for she had heard, that I had not
only helped school children, but also young people, who were
given to wetting the bed. On my replying that I could not see
how anyone could marry a man who had such an ailment, she
replied, that she had not heard of the matter before, else she
would have broken off the marriage, even at the last minute, but
now she could not go back. After examining her somewhat as to
her relations and circumstances, and had found that her husband
was suffering from constant itching of the skin, and this ever
since he had been a child, I gave her for the young, honest and
honorable workman some homoeopathic Sulphur pellets, direct-
Three Cures. 211
ing that he should take three every day. After about six weeks
she reported with many thanks, that her husband was freed from
the horrible ailment and as she hoped for good; for the pellets
had given out some weeks ago and nothing had happened since,
and the itching also had passed off. It may be supposed that the
wetting was put an end to by suggestion, and not by an imponder-
able dose of Sulphur, — but whoever heard of itching being cured
by suggestion.
III. A Rare Case of Hysterics.
An intelligent farmer wrote me that his wife, now forty-nine
years of age, has been troubled now for three months with a
nervous ailment, which, in spite of the physician's medicines
won't get any better. "It began with swooning, and when this
passed off, there was a trembling in all the nerves, perceived only
by herself and not visible without ; with this she has no pains,
but only angina and dyspnoea, so that often she is unable to leave
her bed. The remedies which she had received had always quiet-
ed the insurrection of her nerves only for a little while, but the
trembling was unabated. She can sleep but little, has no appe-
tite, and her strength is visibly diminishing. According to the
physician, this state may continue for some years ; but the patient
says she cannot stand it, as it is intolerable.'''
In this case it seemed to me that Acid, sulphur. 3 trituration was
indicated, and this remedy also proved itself good, as in two
weeks I heard that the vibration of the nerves had ceased and the
woman was now only troubled with the angina : still she had
been able to go to church. A few weeks later the husband wrote
to me that the improvement had not been maintained, as his wife
has of late been suffering from insomnia, loss of appetite, and
even her attacks of swooning had returned, and the trembling of
her nerves had increased so much that she had to keep her bed
constantly. Aciduui sulphuris, of which she still had some pellets
would not help her any more, so I sent her Cimicifuga 6. in pel-
lets. This American remedy which in its proving particularly
showed the nervous trembling, made the whole ailment pass away
in a few weeks, and since the last two years there has not been
any relapse. — Leipmger pop. Zeit. f. Horn., April.
212 Consistency Thou Art a Jewel.
CONSISTENCY THOU ART A JEWEL.
The radical, socialistic legislators of New Zealand, have re-
cently, it seems, passed a law relative to medical advertisements
by which law the publishers of a journal are held financially re-
sponsible for any false statement; he is "deemed to have pub-
lished that statement in breach of this act, and shall be liable for
an offence against this act accordingly."
Henry Labouchere, editor of London Truth highly endorses
this act and our own Journal A. M. A. says that "LabbyV
opinion will "meet with the approval of every physician ;" it also
says that such a law passed and enforced in this country "would
put a large number of periodicals out of business." This, of
course, is a gentle knock at its "esteemed contemporaries" and
the newspapers.
An idle curiosity led to turning to the advertising pages of our
virtuous contemporary to see what the world and the profession
is offered there.
The first thing in the way of medicine offered is an unknown
flrug for "intestinal putrefaction" and "intestinal dyspepsia."
The next is a Mexican drug that strayed into medicine via
the Eclectics. It is "a dependable remedy in acute and chronic
forms of bronchitis, asthma, whooping cough and convalescence
from pneumonia."
Of another unknown preparation "made in Germany," the
reader is told that it "gives quick results in lumbago, rheumatic
joints and sciatica." A "quack" would probably have written
"cure" for the above "quick results."
A big house advertises the reader that "we do not lend the
facilities of our laboratories to the preparation of nostrums" —
the truth of which will hinge on the interpretation of the word
"nostrum."
Powdered "Malted Clams" is offered. Why not sugared
oysters ?
Further on is an unknown preparation "the most efficient rem-
edy for the treatment of gonorrhoea." The therapeutic virtues
of another unknown drug is "vouched for by leading clinicians"
—whose names are not stated. This last preparation will also
Fighting Tuberculosis. 213
give gratifying results in "Peducli Pubis." It knocks Blue Oint-
ment sky high.
Another preparation is "The Rational Treatment of Diabetes
Mellitus," which it does in a strictly scientific manner by "re-
establishing a nutritional balance." Of this feat no further in-
formation is given, but we are told that it "has proven of such
indisputable value in thousands of cases of diabetes mellitus."
It may be suspected that the adsmith who hammered out that
last sentence is from Bonnie Scotland ; indeed, it is almost
"proven."
All the foregoing statements may be true and highly ethical —
indeed, they come from the most ethical of pages — but they read
so much like the "ads" to be found in the unethical Cross Roads
Patriot that one wonders what a grouchy old Xew Zealand prose-
cuting attorney would do if they were brought before him. Sup-
pose Brother Simmons were asked "What is a nutritional bal-
ance and how established?" What would he reply. Indeed, there
are several possible questions that might be difficult to answer.
Very few object to such advertisements; certainly not the Re-
corder, but it makes one feel grouchy to read virtuous diatribes
against other advertisers who are neither better nor worse.
FIGHTING TUBERCULOSIS.
Under the heading "The Tuberculosis Agitation," Dr. Geo. B.
H. Swayze contributes a paper to the April issue of The Medical
Times, in which he reiterates his contention that tuberculosis is
the effect of unsanitary conditions and not a result of "con-
tagion," as is so vehemently declared by the ruling medical pow-
ers. Concerning tuberculosis among cows he writes :
"Animal bodies, the flesh of fowls, suffer as much occasion to
become tuberculous from dirty, densely filthy conditions of en-
vironment by day and by night, as, comparatively, as have human
bodies. This problem is not half so much a matter of contagion
as it is a fact of co-existing and compounding unsanitary eating
and breathing — both of the human and of the flesh food makers.
Because of identity or similarity of habits and environment, entire
families may be crucified by tuberculous infection or degenera-
214 Something About Fruits and Their Juices.
tion, self-developed. The most thoughtless argument that I ever
heard of was advanced by a stranded talker at the late Tuber-
culosis Congress, at Washington, D. C, who proposed the theory
that cattle had contracted tuberculosis from mankind, hence the
disease was alike in both. He would have kissed the hem of
truth if he had asserted, for argument's sake, that tuberculosis is
auto-developed in both the animal and the human through cir-
cumstances of unsanitary or degenerating breathing-air."
Further along, after dwelling on the filthy food and fermenting
mess of garbage that is often fed cattle and hogs, confined in
pens reeking with their filth, he pays the following attention to
the expensive "tuberculin" habit :
"Theorists talk about making cattle immune against developing
tuberculosis. But under conditions that I have repeatedly seen,
the pretentious inoculation of cattle with commercial serums to
render them immune against natural results of unsanitary condi-
tions must ever prove a conventional farce."
The burden of Dr. Swayze's preachments is cleanliness — sani-
tation. Clean up and there will be no call for hysterics about
"germs."
SOMETHING ABOUT FRUITS AND THEIR JUICES.
A man who knows anything thoroughly is always rather in-
teresting if you can get him started on his profession, or trade.
Such an one dropped into the Recorder's shop the other day.
He is a New Jersey farmer, and preserver of fruit juices, and
has been at it for years. What he said has nothing to do with
medicine, or the treatment of disease, but an abstract of it may
not be amiss to some readers.
"Strawberries," he exclaimed, "the people don't know any-
thing about them and won't take good ones, they want big straw-
berries and they get them. We used to raise a small, sweet, rich-
ly flavored berry, but the people wouldn't pay enough for them
to pay us for raising them. They wanted big berries, and now we
raise them, but they are sour, some a little bitter, often hollow in
the center, and poorly flavored compared with the small berries,
but they sell. When I buy strawberries to make fruit syrup I
refuse all the big ones, and buy only the small kind, not because
Something About Fruits and Their Juices. 215
they are cheaper, but because they make a better and more richly
flavored syrup." In making raspberry syrup only the red rasp-
berries are used, because the black ones have less juice and are
not so well flavored. Peach, and red currant? Oh, well, a good
quality; peaches, those that are juicy and sweet; as for red cur-
rants, there did not seem to be any specially marked varieties.
"How do you make these juices?" On the average, fourteen
pounds of granulated sugar is added to each gallon of juice and
simmered in a porcelain lined, steam- jacketed kettle. That amount
of sugar is all a syrup will take ; if more is added a cake of crys-
talized sugar will be formed as a sediment.
"I once went to'' , naming a certain city, "to see if I couldn't
get my fruit syrups introduced as flavoring syrups in soda
water, but they wouldn't go. I could not blame the druggists.
They put certain artificial flavorings in their syrups which will
keep indefinitely, while my fruit syrups will ferment in warm
weather, after the bottle is opened, in a few day unless kept on
ice."
Questioned about grape juice he made the following general
statements : The grape, par excellence, is the "Ives' Seedling,"
sometimes called "Ives' Madeira." This grape was first grown by
Henry Ives, of Cincinnati, O. — wasn't sure, but it was Dr. Henry
Ives. This grape has a rather tough skin and is, therefore, not
a favorite for eating, but its juice is rich, full bodied and has a
lasting, genuine grape flavor. It must be gathered immediately
when ripe else it dries up like a raisin. It has the peculiarity that
it is not subject to rot or very susceptible to the attacks of insects.
"How does it compare with the Concord ?" was asked, and the
reply, boiled down, was that it compared like a full bodied, full
flavored grape juice would with sweetened water to which a
grape flavor had been added. The Concord, he said, is a larger,
handsomer and more juicy grape, better for eating, bears bigger
bunches, is more subject to rot and insects, but when it comes
to making grape juice it, and all other grapes "were not in it"
with the Ives' Seedling, which is pre-eminent for making full
bodied, rich, red wine, or unfermented grape juice. So said our
New Jersey farmer and fruit grower.
216 Acute Indigestion in Horses.
ACUTE INDIGESTION IN HORSES.
The automobile is pushing the horse out of his job of taking
the doctor on his daily rounds, but as the horse is not yet a back
number, perhaps the following may not be without interest. We
condense it from a paper by A. von Rosenberg, D. V. S., Lansing,
Mich., published in The Veterinarian. Dr. von Rosenberg, after
stating that if the horse bolts his food it is well to put the feed
box on the floor so he cannot eat so fast, and that where the ap-
petite is changeable, dung hard and covered with mucus, Nux
vomica is the remedy, he continues :
"If the horse exhibits symptoms of great weakness and is un-
thrifty, eats very little, in fact, almost nothing, coughs after eat-
ing and drinking, especially in those cases where there is a pain-
less, watery evacuation of the bowels Arsenicum album will be
found to be the proper remedy. When I commenced using this
remedy, I gave it in the strength of mother tincture. Although
I got results to a certain extent, it did not seem to give the de-
sired results that I looked for. In relating this incident to one of
our local homoeopathic M. D.'s, he said, 'You give it too low.'
Therefore the very next time that I had occasion to use the drug,
I gave it in the first potency in ten drop doses. I was not only
gratified at the results I obtained, but was surprised that a drug
diluted should work quicker and be more effective than the
drug in mother tincture form. A dose of the remedy should be
given every two-four-six hours until relief is obtained. If, for
some unaccountable reason, however, Arsenicum should not ef-
fect a cure, Ferrum should be given in its place. Where we find
a case with considerable purging, flatulence, distention of stomach
and bowels, ptyalism and cough, Carbo vegetabilis in the second
trituration in (10) ten grain doses every two to six hours will
be found to be all sufficient. If the visible mucous membranes
have a yellow appearance indicating thereby that the liver is de-
ranged to quite an extent, from (5-10) five to ten grains of the
(6) sixth trituration of Mercurius vivus should be given every
three to six hours. For total loss of appetite, in cases where the
patient has an aversion to any kind of food, (10) ten grains of
the (2) second trituration of Antimonium crud. should be given
Organotherapy. 217
every four to six hours. Exposure to cold and wet weather is
sometimes the cause of an attack of acute indigestion and in such
cases I always start the treatment with a few doses of Aconite in
the first dilution there being always more or less fever present.
As the patient quiets down I discontinue the Aconite and give
Bryonia every three-four hours ; especially when there is an al-
ternate constipation and diarrhoea. In some cases Dulcamara
has given very satisfactory results in the latter condition. It is
best to let the animals that are affected with stomach trouble ab-
stain from food as much as possible until cured ; whatever is given
in the way of nourishment should be of easiest digestible kind
and also of the best quality. The drinking water should also be
as pure as can be obatined."
Dr. von Rosenberg, in the terminology of the day, has "no
use" for the traditional cathartics of the "old vets," or their other
"heroic" remedies with which animals were once tortured.
ORGANOTHERAPY.
"J. G. Rademacher, out of Paracelsus's doctrines and his
own, constructed Organopathy, which Burnett praised, and adopt-
ed in his treatment of "Diseases of the Spleen" (published 1887),
where he translates part of Rademacher's work, published in 1841.
'Organopathy is Homoeopathy in the first degree. . . . Or-
ganopathy is included in the wider generalization known as Ho-
moeopathy,' writes Burnett. It is the doctrine of specifics, which
act singly and directly on particular organs of the body, just as,
for instance, Ceanothus Americanus and Cinchona act upon the
spleen.
"Rademacher's disciples in Germany grew in number, and
started a journal of their own which lasted two years, 1847 and
1848. It was discontinued because the homoeopaths, more numer-
ous and energetic, occupied the same field of experimental phar-
macology. Dr. W. Sharp, of Rugby, I remember, in 1867, adopted
a modification of Rademacher's organopathy. but it has passed
away as a separate system." — From address of Dr. J. G. Moore,
Pres. British Homeopathic Convention, 1908.
218 Therapeutic Pointers.
THERAPEUTIC POINTERS.
Dr. T. J. Burrage reports a case of Vincent's angina (J. A. M.
A., March 20) cured by Kali chloratum. Patient complained of
sore throat, difficulty in swallowing, enlarged glands, no fever.
"The ulcer was not affected by local applications or by cleansing
sprays, but promptly improved under the internal administra-
tion of Potassium chlorate." Throat regained normal in two
weeks.
Dr. Owen F. Paget claims that pure olive oil is an excellent
food in typhoid.
Gottheil (/. A. M. A.) in an exhaustive review of the X-ray
leads the reader to the conclusion that, therapeutically, its uses
are very limited since "its dosage is unmeasurable, individual re-
action unknown and its results uncertain in any given case.''
Senecio aureus is an old remedy that merits more attention
than it receives. Where there is a generally relaxed, flabby and
draggy state in the female generative organs, with or without
discharges, this drug given continuously for a few weeks will
often work wonders. It is usually given in five or ten drop doses
of the 0.
Dr. S. H. Blodgett, (Mass. Horn. Hospital) contends that in
pernicious vomiting where there is acetezone and diacetic acid,
but no sugar, in the urine, carbonate of soda in five grain doses
will be followed by a speedy recovery. The treatment by bicar-
bonate of soda is as old as Rademacher, but Dr. Blodgett has
given its definite outline for the first time.
Xanthoxylum — the prickly ash — is lauded as a stimulant for
old age ; for the chilly, sluggish, stiff, rheumatic conditions ; pro-
motes cell activity. Used in material doses. How much truth
there is in this can be ascertained by a trial. It will not hurt
the old people. For the trembling weaklings of old age Avena
sativa in material doses is recommended.
If the syphilitic dosen't improve on the big doses of Mercury or
Potassium iodide, try him for a week or two on a mixture of
Phytolacca and Echinacea tinctures 4 to 1 in water. It has been
found good. Stop the other drugs, of course, while this is being
given. This from the Eclectics.
Therapeutic Pointers. 219
There are many cures for colds. Here is one with friends.
Give patient twenty drops of Avena sat. 0 in hot water every
two hours and the trick is done.
If one is bothered with a case of vomiting of pregnancy, or
morning sickness, remember that Symphoricarpus race., or snow-
berry, brought to notice many years ago by Dr. E. V. Moffat, is
a remedy to be considered. Use tincture, or low dilution.
To get the best results from Apocynum can. in dropsy the de-
coction should be used. It is extracted by heat from the fresh,
green plant and fixed by a percentage of alcohol.
Dr. A. J. Perkins (Med. World) says that "two cents' worth
of Cyanide of Mercury will cure any case of diphtheria." The
doctor should have added "in the 3X trituration," for the pure
drug comes close to being sure death.
"A syphilitic suddenly became deaf and was suffering from a
terrible pain through the cerebrum, must hold his head tightly
between his hands and move rapidly up and down his room."
Sepia 200 gave complete relief, which was permanent (Dr. /. C.
Nottingham in Progress).
"Patient contracts cold in head upon the least exposure ; watery
eyes and watery discharge from the nose. Perspires easily about
head and neck ; feet moist, may be very slightly." "Calc. carb.
200th, one dose, will cure, and render patient with above symp-
toms 'immune.' Try it." (Dr. J. C. Nottingham, Progress.)
Hering's Condensed Materia Medica gives a symptom of Phyto-
lacca. "Urine: Albuminous, scanty," etc. This Alfred J. Pierce
(Horn. World) considers valuable and relates a case of al-
buminuria cured by the drug and adds "I have found Phytolacca
very useful in cases of dropsy following scarlatina."
Dr. W. B. Church says that half an ounce of the tincture of
Digitalis in one dose will rarely fail to cure a case of delirium
tremens at once. Certainly a heroic dose, 30 drops is the maxi-
mum dose in the dose tables.
A contributor to Leip. Pop. Z. f. Horn, tells of a case of ischias
in a man aged sixty-nine years, of long standing that was per-
manently (it was four years ago) cured by Ferrum phos. and
Rhus tox. given in alternation.
22o Book Notices.
BOOK NOTICES.
Leaders in Respiratory Organs. By E. B. Nash.
M. D. Author of "Leaders in Homoeopathic Therapeutics/'
"Leaders in Typhoid," "Leaders in Sulphur" and "How to
Take the Case." Regional Leaders. 188 pages. Cloth, $1.50.
Postage, 8 cents. Philadelphia. Boericke & Tafel. 1909.
Following his custom of the past Dr. Nash devotes little or no
space to anything else concerning the diseases he covers in this
book than their homoeopathic treatment; he is writing for phy-
sicians, and assumes that they know all about diagnosis, prog-
nosis, etiology, etc., etc., of these diseases, and so he goes right
to their homoeopathic treatment, something always welcome to
the most experienced practitioner. Taking the "Table of Con-
tents" we note the following diseases in the order in which they
are considered; catarrh (nasal), laryngitis, croup, bronchitis,
asthma, pertussis, pneumonia, pleuritis, pulmonary tuberculosis
and cough. Now if anyone wants to have at hand the gilt-edged
homoeopathic treatment of any of the foregoing diseases he will
find them compacted in this little book as in no other ; it is com-
pressed to the smallest space, every word counting. Under "Ca-
tarrh" the author includes influenza or grippe, "colds" and
chronic catarrh. Dr. Nash, by some, is considered to be an ex-
clusive "high potentist," but this, like many other things in the
world, is an error. He does sometimes advocate high, very high,
potencies, but not always, as, witness the following: After de-
scribing the Camphor "cold," he advises drop doses of the spirits
of Camphor on a lump of sugar. Generally he leaves the po-
tency to the readers, giving the name of the remedy only. Under
Laryngitis, after the treatment, we read :
"So far as local treatment of this affection is concerned, the
specialist may come in for his share of the work ; but even here
an understanding of homoeopathic therapeutics will enable him
to do infinitely better work than his allopathic neighbor, who de-
pends almost altogether on local measures."
Some casual readers may comment on the absence of a special
section on "diphtheria," but you will find the treatment under
Book Xotices. 221
"croup," which, our author contends, and backs his opinions by
very eminent authorities, is one and the same thing, though of
varying intensity. Some may object to this classification, but as
the treatment is given the rest is of not much moment.
The book is rounded out by a repertory in which not one rem-
edy appears that has not been verified. We think you will find
this to be an unusually useful book.
The Machinations of the American Association. An Expos-
ure and a Warning. By Henry R. Strong, St. Louis, Mo. The
Xational Druggist. 1909.
The writer of this 129 page paper bound book is the editor of
The National Druggist, St. Louis. Mo., and. as no price is given,
or anything said about the matter, presumably it is free for all
who are interested. It is a strong arraignment of the leaders of
the American Medical Association, who seem to be bent on mak-
ing of that body a compact trades-union rather than an association
of learned men working for science and the welfare of the human
race. It is not probable that the association can succeed in their
aims, even if they get the laws passed for which they are striving,
because the American race will not tolerate medical, any more
than they will religious, domination. The book is interesting and
worth reading.
Parcimony in Nutrition. By Sir James Crichton-
Browne. M. D., LL. D., F. R. S., Lord Chancellor's Visitor in
Lunacy, London. 11 1 pages. Goth. 75 cents. London and
New York. Funk & Wagnalls Company. 1909.
"Parcimony," dear reader, is the archaic spelling of "parsi-
mony." meaning in the text "frugality." The man for whose
scalp the book goes is Mr. Horace Fletcher and his numerous
followers. Men who like to eat a full, square meal, will hail Sir
James's book with joy. Reduced to its bare outline : Mr.
Fletcher asserts that if you chew your food sufficiently you can
reduce the amount you eat to half, or less and still be amply
nourished. Sir James says you cannot do it. Fletcher's book
shows you how you can do it : Sir James's book why you cannot.
"Not only by their fruits, but by their follies, shall ye know
222 Book Notices.
them," writes Sir James, "and it is instructive to follow Fletcher-
ism a little way and see how, like FalstafFs rogues in buckram,
it grows and grows, as it rolls on — "becoming smaller and smaller
until, like the Dutchman's horse (though our author does not
use this illustration), a man may come to live almost without
food if he will chew enough — 789 bites on a young onion, for in-
stance : ''Life is really a little too short for Fletcherism." Those
who seek solid information — scientific terms, names, experiments,
dates, and what was proved, or disproved, — will find a fund of
it here. It is certain that if nature needs a certain amount she
will have it or there will be trouble. The whole question, prob-
ably, sifts clown to "individualizing your case ;" there are freaks
enough among men to prove any theory.
A Guide to the Twelve Tissue Remedies of Biochemistry.
The Cell-sats, Biochemic or Schuessler Remedies. By E. P.
Anshutz. 91 pages. Cloth, 75 cents. Postage, 5 cents. Phila-
delphia. Boericke & Tafel. 1909.
In this little book the theory and practice of Schuessler have
been followed faithfully ; he complained during his life-time that
his system was bent to Homoeopathy, whereas it is, he claimed,
distinctively biochemic ; the remedies are not to be prescribed
symptomatically but pathologically. This manual is based on his
Abridged Therapy, and arranged in a much more convenient
form.
The Sex Cycle of the Germ Plasm. The author
of this 40 page pamphlet is Dr. Thomas E. Reed, Middletown,
Ohio, who, some years ago, wrote a little book on the influence of
the tides on disease — for, according to Dr. Reed, the influence of
the tides is quite as potent in the interior of a continent as on the
sea-shore. This pamphlet shows how they influence sex deter-
mination and a boy or girl may be the result of marital union. It
is a reprint from The Medical Times. Probably Dr. Reed can let
you have a copy on request. Beyond the fact that it is interesting
the Recorder must be non-committal.
Horraceopathic Recorder.
PUBLISHED MONTHLY AT LANCASTER, PA.
By BOERICKE Sz TAFEL
SUBSCRIPTION, $i.oo, TO FOREIGN COUNTRIES $1.24 PE^ ANN UK
Addrist C0mmunications , books for review, exchanges, etc., for the editor , u-
E. P. ANSHUTZ, P. O. Box 921, Philadelphia, Pa.
EDITORIAL BREVITIES.
The Real Object of the Bill. — A newspaper editor in com-
menting on the bill that the allopaths seek to have passed by the
Pennsylvania Legislature, says :
"The only intelligible ground of opposition to the medical ex-
aminers' bill, which has been so confusingly handled at Harris-
burg, is to be found in the objection of various practitioners to
the establishment of a high standard of qualification."
This particular editor then proceeds with the usual patter about
"protecting the public" from the "ignorant practitioners" and so
on, and so on. Curious as it may seem, right here is that same
old principle that has racked the world from its beginning ; a few
or many, set up a "standard" which they think is the proper thing
and then seek for power to enforce it. If they obtain the power
they wield it mercilessly. A good standard, such as was given
to Moses, or is embodied in the golden rule, meets with no open
opposition. It is the other kind that seeks power, and therein lies
the secret of the opposition to this, and similar medical bills ad-
vocated by the allopaths. When they say they are seeking to
"protect the public" from "incompetent practitioners" they are
begging the real question by assuming that they are the only
competent practitioners. Are they? That is the real point at
issue.
Vivisection. — A certain emotional woman anti-vivisectionist
is reported to have said that she would rather have a hundred
persons die rather than that animals should be tortured to save
them. This, it seems to us, is blind, but well intentioned gush.
224 Editorial.
The Journal of the American Medical Association thinks so high-
ly of a leading editorial in a daily paper that it quotes it entire in
the issue for March 27. Here is a paragraph from it :
"A hundred weeping mothers ; a hundred children gasping
vainly for breath, the hope of a hundred mourning homes dead
in the cradle — are we to count these nothing beside a rabbit
which has to receive a little blood of a dog into its abdomen ?"
This also is gush, result of that assumption of a "high standard"
made by the allopaths in their endeavor to obtain political-medical
power influencing an otherwise well meaning editor. If the prac-
tice of vivisection resulted in the good to humanity claimed for
it there would be no real opposition to it, but the truth is that
its results are a muddle, or a positive injury to man. They pump
a dog or a rabbit full of poison and then pump in something else ;
if the animal lives, why, then, behold a "discovery," an antitoxin !
If this "science" were put on the world's witness stand and ques-
tioned by a clear headed lawyer how long would it stand? In
practice, even though backed by authority and the "high stand-
ard" it is shrivelling up when put to the test. The fruits of vivi-
section are bad, and that is its real condemnation.
The Middle Aged Men and Their Tastes. — Perhaps — nay,
certainly — that ought to be changed to "some middle aged," etc.
What started it is a paper, by Dr. A. S. Burdick, printed in the
"Proceedings of the American Medical Editors' Association."
Dr. Burdick says he is a frequenter of book auctions and "at
a sale which occurred in this city (Chicago) only week before
last, a little good-for-nothing dictionary of erotic words in all
languages sold for $5.70, while one of the most beautiful sets of
Thackeray, an edition de luxe, brought 30 cents a volume."
"The men who buy these erotic, 'scientific' books are usually
professional men, and in nine cases out of ten past middle life.
Now, mere devotion to scientific study does not impel a man of
this character to pay twenty to fify times as much for a book on
the worship of Priapus as for one on biology. Nor is it true that
the average physician stands in great need of instruction on sexual
perversions and anomalies. He likes this stuff — that's all there is
to it!"
Editorial. 225
Now, will you be good! However, nearly all men have, more
or less, a touch of that tar, so let no one feel superior because he
did not buy that dictionary for, quite likely, he'd take a peep into
its pages if he had the chance.
Allopath and Homoeopath. — In those same Proceedings is
a paper by Dr. Hills Cole (N. A. Jour. Horn.). In the discus-
sion of it Dr. J. J. Taylor {Med. Council) said, among other
things : "When, in our pages we do give credit to a treatment
brought out by a homoeopath, what do they do ? They take it up
and sneer and say 'Ho! the allopaths are coming our way.' " This
seems to be a wee bit twisted. No homoeopath objects to a man
in the other school using his remedies, and, indeed, will generally
tell him all he knows concerning the use of any of them, but what
homoeopaths do object to is for some one to announce an old ho-
moeopathic measure as his own discovery. Such an one gets a
deserved pounding sometimes, though not always.
A Tale Told Twice. — Early in the spring the newspapers told
it. Small-pox in Haddonfield, a town near Philadelphia. Family
sent to small-pox hospital ! "Energetic officials order house
burnt," etc. Later, we met a Haddonfield man, and this is the
gist of the story he told : "Jim," a negro, had been around for
three weeks with a breaking out on his face. One day a com-
panion jokingly remarked, "Jim, you has de small-pox," whereat
there was a laugh. The health officer heard of it, saw Jim and
hustled him and his family off to the pest-house. Then, by orders,
they set fire to his shanty and burned it with its contents. "Jim's
wife," said our informant, "was a washer woman, and he went for
and delivered the clothes every day up to the time they run him
in. He didn't deliver the last wash, for they burnt that with the
house."
"Any one for whom the woman washed take the disease?"
"No, none of them."
False Labels on Medicine. — "In an address before the Ger-
man Pharmaceutical Association, Mr. H. Thomas condemned this
form of dishonesty," writes an editor, or reporter. Mr. Thomas
226 Editorial.
showed that "Arhovin, claimed to be diphenylamin thymyl-
benzoate, is a mixture of diphenylamin, thymol and ethyl ben-
zoate." That "Formurol is a mixture of heramethy lenamin and
sodium, neutral and acid citrate." That "Asperophen' contains
"63 parts of monoacetylphenocoll." As these shameful practices
prevail, it would seem that homoeopathic physicians would do well
to stick to their old remedies, for, no conscientious physician
wants to give an over, or under, dose of monoacetylphenocoll,
when he aims to be scientific, according to the "made in Germany"
plan.
What Would Have Happened If? — The consideration of
what would have happened if something else had been done in a
given event than what was done is, perhaps, a profitless thing but
all men are given to indulging in it sometimes. Here is a case in
point related in /. A. M. A., April 10, by two physicians. A
young man with sore throat was given an injection of 2,000 units
of antitoxin ; he at once became cyanotic, — gasping, — cold sweat
— "the picture of suffocation," until a rash broke out when his
breath again came easily. Then, and later, he received Morphin,
Atropin and Strychnin, hypodermically, besides many other
things, needless to mention. The next day he was injected with
4,000 units of antitoxin and again the dyspnoea, and relief fol-
lowing a rash. The man did not get diphtheria and "completely
recovered." Now you see the opening for speculation on what
might have happened.
"Coming Events Cast Their Shadows Before." — This is
from a book by a "regular" recently published. The author is
Dr. R. W. Allen. "The medicine of the future is the medicine of
vaccines and sera. The empiricism of the past will give way to
methods based on scientific knowledge, and the public will no
longer look on medicine with a skeptical eye, and dose themselves
with ineffectual nostrums." There is an undertone (read it again)
in the foregoing quotation of imitation of the old prophets, but
then "whom the gods would destroy they first make mad," and if
there isn't lunacy in the foregoing, what is it? With one sweep
the whole past of allopathy is condemned as empiricism, "but
Editorial. 227
NOW we are SCIENTIFIC I" Just as always before ! The ultima
thule of medical science is reached (again) and the end of it all
(at present) is the putting of the products of disease into the blood
as a means of restoring health. Curious that these men should
regard these ceaseless turnings about and self contradictions as
"advances/' Whither is such an advance headed ?
War in the A. M. A. — The Homeric row going on in the
Western Babylon, yclept Chicago, between Dr. G. H. Simmons,
the big one of the A. M. A., and "recreant homoeopath ;" Dr. W.
C. Abbott, medicine manufacturer, and "ditto ;" and Dr. G. Frank
Lydston, a "regular" free lance, has become so uproarious as to
attract outside attention. A cartoonist has taken it up and drag-
ged in that slow Philadelphian, Professor Munyon, who calmly
stands in the midst of the fierce warriors, holding up his fore-
finger, and announcing his famous dictum, "There is hope." It
is. hard on the Professor, for all he wants is peace, and that the
public should ask for his medicines "and take no others ;" but
then, in its finality, that is all the others want.
Incomes of Medical Men. — Commenting on the fact that the
income of the average practitioner, from fees, in France, is only
about $500.00 a year, and in England from $900.00 to $1,200.00
a year, and that a letter had been issued by a committee warn-
ing young men of this fact, the British Homoeopathic Review,
April, says :
"We do not believe, however, that homoeopathic practitioners
are suffering to the same extent as others. A conscientious and
capable homoeopath can always work up a practice, in a sufficiently
large locality, in the face of the keenest old school competition.
Good work always pays in the long run. Short illnesses, quick
cures, and especially the curing of other men's failures, cannot re-
main hidden, but bears fruit after a reasonable time. This is es-
pecially the case in working-class districts. The intelligent me-
chanic is far quicker in grasping the value of a treatment than
many in the higher grades of society ; these are frequently blinded
by prejudice against what is at present not 'in fashion.' Whilst
these cries about overcrowding are in our ears is the psycho-
228 Editorial.
logical moment for capturing the discouraged young graduate,
and persuading him to inquire into a method of treatment which
offers not only an honorable stipend, but the still greater dis-
tinction of utilizing to the utmost the curative properties implant-
ed by a beneficent Creator in the products of Nature."
The gentlemen who have a leaning towards abandoning the
name and practice of Homoeopathy would do well to deeply ponder
this, for the day may come when homoeopaths will want ex-
amining boards to protect them from outside physicians who
would assume their distinctive name.
Don't Be a Wobbler. — "A recent writer in Success, says :
'There is one sort of man for whom there is no place in the uni-
verse, and that is the wobbler, the man on the fence, who never
knows where he stands, who is always slipping about, dreaming,
apologizing, never daring to take a firm stand on anything. Every-
body despises him. He is a weakling.' "
"There are some homoeopathic physicians who ought to read,
learn and inwardly digest these words. We mean the men who
are always making excuses for being graduates of homoeopathic
institutions and for their connection with the homoeopathic school.
The fawning and cringing attitude that men of this type adopt
toward the old school is disgusting to any man who has a grain
of self-respect in his make-up. A mere crumb of recognition, an
invitation to an old school medical gathering or an intimation that
he might be received into one of their societies if he renounces his
homoeopathic views, fills the heart of one of these wobblers with
great joy and he almost imagines that it is his superior medical
attainment that has won him this distinction (?). Little does
it occur to him that he is simply used for a 'good thing' and that
he is as much despised by his perverters as he is by all true-
hearted men." — Hahnemannian Monthly.
What We Are Up Against. — There is a man, an officer in an
old financial institution, whom we have known for many years.
He is a typical "solid citizen." He has been doctoring for what
he calls "catarrh" from earliest recollection. He has "tried"
pretty much everything without success. The last time we saw
him he said he was under osteopathic treatment : had already paid
Editorial. 229
$125.00 in fees and expected to pay more, for it was the only
thing that had done him "any good." Now suppose the law is
passed that "protects" this man against the "charlatan !" He is
only one, there are many others, who believes that he has been
benefitted by this manipulation. He believes it and that is enough
for him. This is one reason why it is hard to pass medical bills ;
this man is a voter ; so are others who believe they have been
"cured" by this, or the other, fad.
"Sectarianism/'* — Our estimable "regular' friends, when law
making times come around, grow hot against the outside medical
barbarians, the "sectarians," and they do most fiercely strive to
exterminate them from off the face of the earth. If you inform
the people that you treat those who come to you according to
Similia, so far as drugging goes, you are anathema with the
"regular," but if you get inside his fold you can use any old treat-
ment you please, — be an "electro-therapeutist," a man of "sug-
gestion," or of "serums," calomel, bleeding, anything, and be a
"regular physician." Curious, isn't it? Looks as though the real
thing at issue was the "recognition of the union" rather than the
"welfare of the public." The people do not object to unions but
they do not like monopolies.
Bernard Shaw and the Doctors. — Those who have read
Mr. Shaw know what he is, or think they do, which is quite suf-
ficient ; those who haven't will have to go to his books if they
want to find out what it is all about — we would recommend as a
sample Man and Super-Man. Lately he addressed the London
Medical Legal Society and this is an abstract of a part of his ad-
dress, as given in Medical Notes and Queries:
"Mr. Shaw considered the doctor of the present day to have
been practically driven into the position of a private tradesman
selling his ware for what he can get, and this notwithstanding
that so to do was alien to his own instincts as a professional man.
The average doctor of the present day was appallingly and hu-
miliatingly poor, and a poor man was always dangerous to so-
ciety at large. The doctor's poverty at the present time thus drove
him necessarily into doing things which he would not do if he
were independent. He was — like most men — as honest as he
230 Editorial.
could afford to be. He could not afford to be scientifically honest.
The carrying out of all the various hygiene measures which
doctors knew to be scientifically necessary would be enormously
expensive, and the slightest attempt to enforce them on patients
or to let patients know that the absence of them was dangerous
would cost a man his practice and his livelihood. If they took
the great mass of patients that doctors had at the present time,
what they wanted was not really medicine or operations, but
money. They wanted better food and better clothes and more
frequent changes of the latter. They wanted well-ventilated and
well-drained houses, but what was the use of prescribing those
things to unfortunate people who could hardly keep body and
soul together? The patient, not being able to afford scientific
treatment, demanded cheaper cures, and the result was that the
doctor had to gratify him in a way, and, having no other means
of livelihood, he prescribed cheap cures and thereby became a
swindler."
The Potencies/'— No observing man who has had any ex-
perience with homoeopathic medicines in their potentized form
will deny the remarkable power they possess over many abnormal
physical and mental states that beset man, and are given names
by nosologists. The vehicles containing the potency — power —
of the drug show no evidence of it nor, after a few removes from
the crude state, can chemistry detect it, yet observation shows that
it is there and is potent. What is it? How does it act? Who
knows ! A faulty analogy may be drawn by the death of man.
One we know, full of "life," is stricken dead. There he lies little
changed as to appearance — bloodless, with a certain calmness un-
known before, but otherwise unchanged. You may call to him,
taunt him, torture him, as he lies there, and the profound calm
is unchanged. The man is no longer there, only his shell. That
which has disappeared was what suffered, loved, hated, lived.
May it not have been also that which was really subject to the
attacks of disease? May not Hahnemann be literally and scien-
tifically accurate when he attributes a "spirit-like power" to the
potency of a drug ? Like to like.
Materialism. — If you consider the spirit that has committed
Editorial. 231
this country to the examining board system in all its phases you
will find it to be purely materialistic. It treats man as an animated
machine. It treats him, and tests him, the same as metals, stone
and wood are treated and tested. A certain number of questions
are selected, by the machines that passed the test. Those who
can answer, say. 75 per cent., or more, of the questions, are con-
sidered to be fit machines ; those who can answer but 74 per
cent, or less, are pronounced unfit, and are rejected. It is a test
of memory only. Men at the head of big affairs, where they
are left at liberty, do not employ that test in selecting others to
occupy responsible positions : they look for brains and ability.
A huge majority of the successful men. the men who do things,
would have been heavily thrown down if subjected to the ex-
amining board tests. However, these tests cannot keep men with
brains down, or much exalt those who are deficient. The old
tests still rule — and always will.
The "Bee-Stixg Cure.'' — Our "regular" brethren continue to
be very much interested in what they term "the bee-sting cure,"
even so weighty an authority as the British Medical Journal taking
up this, to them, "new" cure. The case was one of "acute arth-
ritis" of the right hip, "suddenly succeeded by sciatica of the
same side." Burton, who relates the case, was his own patient.
The usual orthodox methods having failed to give relief, he pro-
cured a lot of live honey bees, and, true to his hypodermic train-
ing, he had seven or eight applied to the course of the sciatic
nerve. The next morning he was able to get out of bed, and walk,
for the first time in three months ; again true to his traditions,
he, at once, had half a dozen more bees sting him, and again at
12 o'clock the same day; also another application of the bees was
made the next day, and Burton was well and remained well. If
our "regular" brethren would get some homoeopathic Apis mel.,
or better, perhaps, a trituration of Apium virus, they would have
all the virtues of the bee-sting cure at hand all the year 'round and
could give it without the pain experienced by the sting, to which
many patients object.
Homoeopaths are apt to claim, and rightly, that this is one of
their remedies, but. reader, get down your text-book, or books,
and search under "rheumatism" and you will, perhaps, be sur-
232 Editorial.
prised to find Apis missing, or playing a very subordinate part in
one or two of them. After reading what is said by Burton in the
matter we examined a number of such text-books but could only
find Apis given its place in the treatment of sciatica and rheuma-
tism in one of them, i. e., in Bartlett's Treatment. To be sure
the homoeopathic prescription is guided solely by the patient's
symptoms, but when remedies are grouped under the names of
diseases — well, it seems that Apis should be among them. Father
Lilienthal, needless to say, gives it, in his Homoeopathic Thera-
peutics, as he does everything else.
Germs to Cure Germs. — The March 27th issue of the Journal
A. M. A. contains a long and learned paper by F. M. Pottenger,
A. M., M. D., of Monrovia, Cal., on the "Intertransmissibility of
Bovine and Human Tubercle Bacilli.'' It is largely technical and
therefore of not much interest to the general practitioner, but
there is one point brought out that contains the bacillus of great
possibility for future legislation of a drastic nature. It is this :
Cattle are protected against tuberculosis "by inoculation with hu-
man bacilli" (so the alleged scientists tell us) and it is hinted,
not assured, as having been demonstrated, that the inoculation of
human beings with the germs from the tuberculous cow will pro-
tect the human being from consumption. Indeed, our learned
writer goes a step further and asserts that "immunity can be
and, doubtless, is conferred * * * by children taking in hu-
man bacilli in small numbers." One of the curious things about
this kind of science is its infantile and ingenuous disregard of con-
sistency. Has not the world been worked up into an unpre-
cedented panic over the "danger" from the same bacilli that this
writer now contends will make you "immune?" Let us all earn-
estly hope that these gentlemen will not undertake to stampede
the law makers into passing acts compelling all to be inoculated
with the germs of tuberculosis in order to be protected from
tuberculosis.
The Calmette Reaction. — The 5. Cal. Prac. (March) prints
a paper by Dr. W. Warren Watkins, Phoenix, Ariz., on this test
by tuberculin in the eye as a diagnostic means for detecting tuber-
culosis. His conclusion is that "in the vast majority of cases" it
Editorial. 233
is not needed ; in doubtful cases "a reaction is only presumptive ;"
"a reaction after a second instillation cannot be depended upon ;"
"as general practitioners we cannot safely use the test indis-
criminately," and, finally, "We should be assured of the ab-
sence of any disease of the eye before proceeding." Of what
earthly use, then, is this much talked about "test?"
Benzoate of Soda. — This article, benzoate of soda, has been
holding the center of the stage lately in Legislatures, and with
some sensational newspapers, the latter representing it in car-
toons as Death. It is used in preserving certain canned, or bot-
tled, vegetable foods from "souring," or fermenting. Why it
should have been selected for special attack is a question that no
one, perhaps, can intelligently answer, because salt, nitre and
creosote, and other things, have been used for centuries to pre-
serve meats, and an over-dose of any of these would be more dis-
astrous than one of benzoate of soda. "Cold storage" is also a
red rag to certain reformers, even though every house-holder has
a diminutive, and often none too clean, little cold storage plant
in his house, called his "ice chest ;" but without cold storage, both
in transportation and in warehouse, the question of feeding the
immense multitudes in our cities would be a difficult one, unless
the people would be content with a very plain diet. Something
that would separate true reform from the brummagen article
would be a blessing.
Get Back to First Principles. — The practical workings of
the principle that every disease is a "communicable" one and that
the official doctor must boss the job is beginning to pinch. There
is a row on in Matteawan, N. Y. There was some small-pox
there and "the health officer claimed $10 a day for treating single
cases, and $25 a day when several cases were treated." The
city fathers kicked at the bill and the case is in the courts. What's
the matter with letting the family doctor treat the cases of "com-
municable" diseases, even to the point of saying when quarantine
is necessary and when not, and relegating the health officer to his
proper duties — sanitation ?
234 News and Comments.
NEWS AND COMMENTS.
Dr. Reed, who was the A. M. A. candidate for Senator from
Ohio, failed to even have his name presented. The President, who
had sent in his name for Lieutenant in the Army Reserve Medi-
cal Corps rather emphatically withdrew it, for "good and suffi-
cient reasons." The effort to make a medical body a political one
has, so far, failed. It is best that the effort should fail.
An influential newspaper recently served notice that medical
organizations must let politics alone. Individually doctors may
be as active in politics as any other citizen, but not collectively.
Trades unions have failed in politics ; so, probably, will medical
unions.
Annual Report of Middlesex Hospital shows that since the year
1900 ten pathologists have been "constantly working at cancer re-
search, at a cost of $12,500 per annum." The sum of the nine
years' labor announced is that cancer "is not hereditary." Why
cancer occurs is a question to which "no positive answer has been
given."
An epidemic of typhoid prevails in the army and navy, at Cher-
borg, France, which the authorities are unable to trace, so far.
Have they been using typhoid inoculations ?
An epidemic of cerebro-spinal meningitis prevails among the
troops at Evreux, France, and the disease is spreading in Ger-
many. Death rate 63 per cent. Too much serum?
Pennsylvania Legislature has passed the bill establishing a
board of examiners for the Osteopaths. Now for corn doctors.
King and McClintock, Journal of Infections Diseases, advo-
cate the giving of antitoxin by mouth as a prophylaxis against
diphtheria, and intimate that by mouth may come to be the treat-
ment, "because of the absence of danger."
The dangers of serums are beginning to be appreciated.
Writes a medical editor : "There has been simmering in the
minds of experimentalists a conviction that diabetes should be
included in the list of curable diseases." A wise man of old
wrote "there are no incurable diseases given."
News and Comments. 235
Dr. Geo. W. Dunn has removed from Champaign, 111., to
Palacios, Texas.
According to Public Health Reports (official) there were 6,583
cases of small-pox, with 23 deaths, in the United States during the
year 1908. To April 16, 1909, there were 7,590. Deaths, 27.
Looks as if the fear of the disease was chiefly cosmetic.
The same authority credits Germany for first three months of
1909 with 47 cases of small-pox and Austria with 16. Vaccination
is not compulsory in the latter country.
Dr. E. A. Krusen has removed his offices to Rooms 32, 33 and
34, Boyer Arcade, Norristown, Pa.
In an obituary of the late Dr. A. C. Clifton, of Northampton,
England {British Horn. Review), it is said of him: ''What he
practiced was the art of healing, and to cure was even dearer to
him than to understand." Dr. Clifton was one of the Homceo-
pathic Recorder's oldest subscribers, having been one for 24
years. He was born on December 22, 1825, and departed this
life on February 16, 1909.
The editor of Revista Homooopathica Brazileira is most politely
ironic concerning the "new supply of Lachesis" hailing from the
Bronx, and on that widely published "open letter" concerning it.
However, we have said enough on the subject.
A correspondent of the Jour. A. M. A. says that "Lysol" caused
a severe sloughing of the skin in a case he treated, and the editor
asserts that in Germany this preparation has taken the place of
carbolic acid as a means of suicide. Homoeopaths had better
stick to Calendula, as it is absolutely safe, is cheaper, and far
more efficacious, than any of these old school preparations from
chemicals.
Apropros of the expensive and Herculean efforts of the A. M.
A. to get laws passed to "protect the public," H. R. Strong, in
his pamphlet "Confiscatory Legislation," quotes Lord Halifax :
"It will never be a natural thing for men to take extravagant
pains for the mere sake of doing good to others."
Dr. R. P. Strong, of the Biological Laboratory, Bureau of
Science, Manilla, is quoted to the effect that there "has not been
236 News and Comments.
one death during the past year" from small-pox, this being due to
thorough vaccination." Government, Health Reports, give for
last quarter of 1908, Manilla, "38 deaths" from small-pox. Dr.
Strong's statement is found in Monthly Bulletin, N. Y. S. De-
partment of Health.
The Maritime Medical News, January, cites two cases of se-
vere asthma immediately following the injection of antitoxin, one
proving fatal, autopsy showing "the heart and bronchi in a mark-
ed state of contraction."
The British Medical Journal, December, finds "Mamorek's
Antituberculosis Serum" — well, as it were, you know, "unsatisfac-
tory"— in other words, a fizzle, like the rest.
Dr. Wm. Lawrence Woodruff, Hahnemann, Phila., '82, Long
Beach, Cal., has issued Vol. I., No. 1, of Sunlight. Its message
seems to be that vibration is the beginning and the end — "vibes,"
slangy Elbert Hubbard calls them. The journal is to be published
quarterly.
At Barbadoes the officials, owing to the presence of yellow
fever there, have issued an order making it "a penal offence to
harbor the larvse of the Stegomyia," L e., of the yellow fever
mosquitoes.
Some idea of the virulence of "the plague" may be formed
from the Government Report for the week ending February 20,
in which 3.803 cases of that disease were reported with 3,162
deaths. The report for the whole world for 6 months ending De-
cember 25, 1908, shows 37,282 cases and 29,370 deaths, or a mor-
tality of close to 80 per cent.
In the days of Emperor Justinian it was ordered that syphil-
itics, they called it "the sow disease,'" should be sewed in a bag
and thrown into the river or sea.
The American Pharmaceutical Association propose letting their
members vote by mail. Why should not the A. I. H do the
same?
0
A Havana physician. Dr. Carlos Finlay, according to Dr. W.
C. Gorgas, maintained for 20 years that the Stegouiyia was the
transmitter of yellow fever and really to him is due the dis-
covery.
News and Comments. 237
A Xorth Dakota physician recently received the severe sentence
of 10 years in the penitentiary for "criminal malpractice."
The Chicago Health Board has been "studying the high death
rate from diphtheria'* and are reported as saying that the reason
is that the case is not seen early enough ; the doctor does not give
enough antitoxin and does not repeat it often enough. What
about all those peans of antitoxin once chanted so loudly ?
Once upon a time, when a man died they said he had not been
bled often enough.
When a Philadelphia vet. gave a horse some medicine the horse
expressed his opinion of it by biting the vet. and then giving him
a kick. The vet. was not seriously injured.
The "one board bill" of medical examiners, so strenuously ad-
vocated by the allopaths of Pennsylvania., is dead. '"Reconsider-
ed" we believe was on the death certificate.
The validity of "homoeopathic vaccination." a la Iowa, has
come before a Court in Western Pennsylvania. If the allopaths
would not oppose it their vaccination troubles would largely dis-
appear. The contention is that the State recognizes Homoeopathy
and therefore should not refuse to accept its practices as valid.
A wise regular exchange informs the profession : "All tuber-
culin it must be remembered is poisonous. It is injurious if im-
properly controlled." All which is true, so unless one knows how
to "control" it he had better let it alone.
The riot in the A. M. A. grows fiercer. We have received a
neat circular, list of the "Officers of the American Medical As-
sociation. 1908-1909" and below the list Tin which the name of
Dr. G. H. Simmons, Chicago, appears underlined as '"'General
Secretary' and also as Chairman of the "Council on Pharmacy
and Chemisiry" 1 are reproduced two advertisements from a news-
paper, of different dates : in one "G. H. Simmons. M. D.. stands
out as "Specialist in rectal diseases" — "cure guaranteed" — and in
the other the same physician appears as "Specialist in Disease- of
Women." All this, presumably, is to horrify the orthodox and
turn their votes away from Dr. Simmons. He will probablv win.
for this sort of campaigning is never popular.
238 News and Comments.
Dr. John H. Clarke, writes The Daily Mail, London: "The
mistake made by the British homoeopaths in the past has been in
giving all their attention to efforts to make the predominant al-
lopathic sect reasonable. Dr. Smith's letter shows what a hope-
less task this is." It is altruistic to wish to share a good thing
like Homoeopathy with others, but if they will not the loss is
theirs.
Dr. F. H. Whitney has returned to his old location, La Cres-
cent, Minn.
The New York State Department of Health advises consump-
tives to look for a cure to "the doctor, sunlight, out-door air,
good food and rest." This is good advice to follow — if you
can.
The Indiana Health Board wants a law by which the health
officer shall have power to cancel marriage licenses, or forbid their
issue. Good in theory, but mankind will not stand for it. Pa-
ternal government cannot be revivified. And if the license was
refused — well, the most of them would do without it, most likely.
Dr. A. C. Cowperthwaite has resumed practice, in Chicago, after
a long visit to the far west.
The Cliniquc (April) contains a long "open letter on the In-
stitute Journal" from Dr. C. E. Fisher, which concludes, after a
thorough review of the legislation and contracts concerning that
publication, "And it is this contract that we are to be asked to
make good at Detroit ! Shall it be done ?" Dr. Fisher is opposed
to the whole plan of the Journal ; he says that the other homoeo-
pathic journals would have gladly published the papers and dis-
cussions without charge to the Institute ; that the legislation did
not warrant the contract, and several other things, that concern
the members.
Dr. Clifford Mitchell, author of Urinary Analysis and other
books, has been located at his present office, 70 State St., Chicago,
for over twenty years — and is still there.
The work has begun on the 10th edition of Cowperthwaite's
Materia Medica. It will be out in ample time of the next term
of the colleges.
News and Comments. 239
The Detroit meeting of the American Institute of Homoe-
opathy ought to be a big one. Detroit is a fine old city, easy to
reach, interesting, and can give you first-class hotel accommoda-
tions.
The American Institute of Homoeopathy will hold its sixty-fifth
annual meeting in the Y. M. C. A. building, Detroit, Michigan,
June 21-26, inclusive. Institute headquarters will be at the
Cadillac Hotel ; O., O. and L. at the Tuller. J. Richey Horner,
M. D.. Secretary.
The daily press reports an operation by Dr. Wm. Tod Helmuth,
assisted by Dr. Dieffenbach, for internal malignant tumor, in
which radium was employed, that promises definite results as to
the use of this remarkable substance. Dr. Helmuth, needless, per-
haps to add, is the son of our great homoeopathic surgeon of other
days, whose System of Surgery is still a landmark in surgical
literature.
Only the very rich or the charity patient can afford the opera-
tion for appendicitis. At a trial to collect a fee all the experts
testified that a reasonable fee was from three to five thousand
dollars. One lone general practitioner thought otherwise. Let
mankind pray for a continuation of the high, or even higher fees.
Dr. Biggar in a letter to the Cleveland papers concerning some
troubles in the Cleveland Homoeopathic Hospital, said that Ho-
moeopathy "is one of the most valuable assets of civilization."
That is a good saying worth preserving.
Dr. Jose Congosto has been appointed General Consul for
Spain — Consul General d'Espagne — at Paris, France. Dr. Con-
gosto, when in this country several years ago, took a course at
Hahnemann College, Philadelphia.
Dr. H. C. Leonard announces his removal from Duluth to
Aitkin, Minn.
A Xew York druggist convicted of illegally selling cocain was
sentenced to one year in the penitentiary and to pay a fine of $500.
One of the staff of the Institute of Preventive Medicine, Lon-
don, became infected with the plague and died. Was taken down
with the disease on Februarv 1st, and died three davs later.
PERSONAL.
Mr. Taft is "a safe man," so few citizens read his message. Did you?
The funny man overcomes the law of gravity, and, therefore, the people
regard him as a light weight.
A great man under oath said he thought he was the greatest man. He
was honest.
Some reprobate, afraid to sign his name, asks, "Did anyone ever see a
good looking W. C. T. U.?"
An exchange writes of rats becoming "mutually canabalistic." They
must have caught it from the Kilkenny cats.
"Human nature is pretty much the same everywhere." Well, what is
that "same?"
"Shake, old pard," said the Anophele as he met the Earthquake.
In his heart no man is a hero to himself any more than he is to his valet.
The worst knock yet at the suffragette is the picture of a hen with a
rooster's tail feathers.
Apoplexy is long suffering and only hits where greatly provoked.
The punster is the yokel of humorists.
The most flourishing industry at present is the manufacturing of goods
for "special sales."
When asked what motives moved most men the stolid boy replied,
"Locomotives."
"Helmitol" is the name of a scientific drug. Sounds like a German
cussin'.
Tennyson's Northern Farmer says the virtuous are "Them as has coats
on their backs and takes their regular meals."
After a man has attained every luxury he yawns.
Xo one wants a shady family tree.
"He shrinks from the thought of spending money" is euphonious.
The only successful prescription for a broken heart is a heroic dose of
long green.
A quitter is sometimes preferable to the one who won't let go.
If you want it straight write "111 wind which blows no man to good."
Some hold that the world needs instruction rather than education.
"When shall we use alcohol?" asks an esteemed. Some use it whenever
asked.
The old fake concerning wifey buying the bum cigar is a weak subterfuge
— you were out for a "bargain" and got stuck.
Dress coats cover a multitude of — ah, what you please.
When a woman cannot boss a man she tries to boss mankind. Right,
that's nature !
We can change "protecting the infant industry" to "respect those gray
hairs."
Little Johnny thought the leader of the orchestra was threatening the
soprano with his stick because she screamed so loud.
"Father died suddenly; nothing serious," is one of the life insurance ap-
plicant's statements; also, "applicant has never been fatally sick."
TH E
HOMCEOPATHIC RECORDER.
Vol. XXIV Lancaster, Pa., June, 1909 No. 6
MORTALITY STATISTICS.
The eighth annual report of mortality statistics (1907) issued
by the Bureau of Census is a quarto volume of 538 pages, heavy
physically, because of the solid paper and heavy mentality for all
save those who find vast areas of figures to be entertaning. The
text matter with tables, ends at page 86, and from there on is
nearly 400 pages of figures in small type, and very naturally one
wonders of what earthly use it is. Why not digest this mass and
give it to the nation in an understandable form ?
The first 86 pages are more interesting and will repay reading.
For instance, we find the (estimate) population of the United
States for 1907 to be 85,532.761, and of these 48.8 per cent, come
under medical registration, hence these statistics do not fully
cover the country.
Medical terminology comes in for a rap ; a specimen is quoted
from Prof. Geo. Dock giving no less than 21 varying terms for
exophthalmic goitre. This, from Dock, is preceded by the state-
ment: "That the unscientific and extremely individualistic, even
anarchistic, license in the nomenclature of diseases has a very
definite retarding influence upon the progress of medicine must be
apparent." Too much effort is "wasted upon mere terminology."
But then the census editor should remember that such termin-
ology is needed to clothe some things that otherwise would be
rather forlorn ; everything has its use. Also it is well to bear in
mind that diseases do not lend them to entomological classifica-
tion ; you cannot bunch them together like bugs, or like metals, or
other material things. Officially a few pimples on the face may be
"small-pox" just as is a black, bloody mass of scab covering the
whole body, yet there is a difference, quite a difference, between
them.
242 Mortality Statistics.
"The total number of deaths recorded in the registration area"
(48.0 per cent, of the total) was 687.034, a death rate of 16.5 per
1,000, which may be taken as the normal. Of the total, 375,990
were male and 311,044 females. These figures (save the ratio
16.5) must be about doubled to get at the total, registered and
unregistered. One thousand three hundred and eighty persons
passed the 95th year of age, while 131,110 never saw the anni-
versary of their birthday.
Among the States in the registration area (14 omitting South
Dakota), Indiana has the lowest average death rate, 12.5, with
Michigan next, while California heads the list with 18.6, with
Rhode Island a close second. California may say, with some
justice, that many people go out there when doctors fail them, and
die there.
Among the 37 larger cities New Orleans heads the list with a
death rate of 22.6, with San Francisco second. St. Joseph, Mo.,
is the lowest with y.y ; these figures being an annual average.
New York has 19., Philadelphia 18.4, while Chicago has 14.3 for
same period, 1901-5.
The diseases which show the most marked increase from 1900-7
are, in their order, heart diseases, which is given thus "(+30.5)."
The others are, broncho-pneumonia, -f"1^; Bright's disease,
4-13. 1 ; railroads and street car accidents, 11, and cancer, 10. 1.
Typhoid shows a decrease over preceding year of 490 cases.
The mortality of the "United States from typhoid fever is much
higher than that of the United Kingdom, Germany, Sweden,
Switzerland, and a number of other European countries." This
is a mild statement, for the U. S. is put at 32.1 as compared with
5.2 for Austria, the other European countries being somewhat
higher. Pittsburg heads the list among cities, for this one year
1907, with 130.8 per hundred thousand inhabitants. In contrast
stand London, England, with 4 and Vienna 3. The difference is
due to the water. Pittsburg isn't the only sinner in the matter of
typhoid by any means, but it happened to be the chief one for the
year 1907. Among the States Colorado heads the typhoid list
with 63.7, with Vermont the least, 10.8. This is a dreadful show-
ing of the United States when compared with that of densely
populated Europe. It looks as if a war on typhoid would bring
ijiiicker victories than one on other diseases.
Mo'rtaltiy Statistics. 243
Deaths from malarial fever shows a "marked diminution —
1,166 deaths in 1907 against 1,41 5 in 1906.
There were 74 deaths from small-pox in 1907.
Measles, 5.087 for 1907. Colorado led the States with tluj
highest mortality, and Mount Carmel, Pa., the municipalities.
The death rate from scarlet fever rose over the preceding year.
Leadville. Col., heads the list of death rates from this disease with
Gardner, Mass., a close second.
In "diphtheria and croup" the first thing of interest is the asser-
tion that these two diseases "would be more properly represented
bv the single word 'diphtheria,' " there being no difference ac-
cording to the census doctors. The average death rate in the
"registration area" per 100,000 inhabitants was 29.7 in 1901 to
1905, in 1907 it was 24.3. The highest in the years since 1905
was in the year 1903. when it was 31.8, and the lowest in 1905,
when it was 23.8. In this disease Xew Jersey, Xew York and
Pennsylvania led the States in the order named, with but a frac-
tional difference between them ; Vermont was lowest. Among
the municipalities Worcester, Mass.. led. with Washington, D. C,
lowest. Among the "minor cities" Pittston, Pa., led; seven cities
report no deaths. Taking it as a whole, it doesn't look as though
the disease were "conquered."
Influenza made a big jump from 10.5 in 1906 to 24.1 in 1907.
In this disease Vermont leads with South Dakota last ; Xew Jersey-
is a close contestant of South Dakota for last place. Among the
cities New Haven, Conn., leads with St. Paul, Minn., last.
"The total number of deaths reported from all forms of tuber-
culosis for the year 1907 was 76.650, an increase of 1,138 over the
number returned for the preceding year." "Tuberculosis
is easily the first in importance among all the causes of death."
The number of deaths from tuberculosis in the registration area
steadily advanced from 61,487 in the year 1903, to 76.650 in 1907.
Why?
In that twin disease to tuberculosis, cancer, the total number of
deaths rose from 29,020 in 1906 to 30.514 in 1907. It is intimated
that the number exceeds these figures, as many of the cases of
death from "tumors" were really due to cancer. The deaths from
tuberculosis and cancer by States and cities show a creeping in-
crease from year to year. Maine which heads the list increased
2\\ Mortality Statistics.
from 85.0 per 100,000 in 1903 to 101.3 in 1907. Every State ex-
cept Michigan shows an increase in cancer. Michigan shows
67.5 in 1903 to 66.7 in 1907. It is practically the same in the
cities — a steady creeping up. Again, why? The report intimates
that it may be due to 'improved accuracy of diagnosis." A lame
answer.
"Like cancer, diabetes shows a constant tendency to increase in
recorded death rate from year to year, some part of which appar-
ent increase is perhaps due to, as with cancer, improved ac-
curacy of diagnosis." The increase was from 5,331 in 1906 to
5,801 in 1907. Again a lame answer.
The rather vague "diseases of the nervous system" deaths
rose from 70,322 in 1906 to 73,298 in 1907 — pretty nearly as bad
as tuberculosis. "Among the individual diseases or affections in-
cluded in this class the most important is apoplexy, which caused
31,500 deaths in 1907, followed by meningitis, which caused II,-
109 deaths."
Pneumonia shows a high but fairly steady level ; 67,324 deaths
in 1907, which seems to be about the average, the percentages
running 1903, 122.3; 1(P4, 135-7; 1905, 115.7; 1906, 110.8, and
1907. 120.8.
Diseases of the digestive system "were responsible for 84,800
deaths," a "decrease of 1,478 from the preceding year;" probably
due to "hard times" and plainer living. In the matter of diarrhoea,
which is included in this class, Rhode Island heads the list of
States with California last, while among the big cities Fall River,
Mass., is far ahead of all others, being 460.8, while its nearest
competitor is 206.4.
The deaths from Bright's disease show a steady gain each
year.
The deaths from violence, which include suicide, homicide and
accident, show a regular and heavy increase from a total of
35,542 in 1903, to 52,548 in 1907, an increase that will jar the
optimists who think the world is becoming better.
The man who can do without a repertory to the homoeopathic
materia medica is like the man who can do without an index to a
text book.
The Minimum Dose. 245
THE MINIMUM DOSE.
By Dr. Eduardo Fornias.
There has never been a time better suited than the present to
approach and discuss the subject of infinitesimals. Unlooked for
discoveries, here and there, have compelled our opponents, not only
to investigate, but to acknowledge the therapeutic power of those
imponderous. imperceptible atoms of medicamental substances
called infinitesimals* So we can now proclaim the value of these
atomic particles of matter with perfect confidence and without
fear of contradiction. The sarcastic smile of the unlearned zealot
does no longer meet us in our route. There is now exhibited on
his face a shade of acquiescence blending into resignation about
those processes by means of which the cohesion of medicinal sub-
stances has been broken, and its molecular components liberated.
YYe all know that when discouragement and doubt had brought
Hahnemann to the verge of inaction and expectation, and he was
■obliged to translate scientific works to gain his daily bread, was
when he. for the first time, conceived the idea of Similia as a
therapeutic principle, and at once concentrated all his attention to
this important subject. Xo other therapeutic guide before his
times had offered guaranties of stability and success, and he un-
dertook his task with indomitable energy and unshaken faith.
When Hippocrates wrote, "Vomiting is cured by vomiting" he
initiated similia, but it was Hahneir?nn who first thought of the
general applicability of this law of cure, and who built up the
pillars upon which the superstructure of his new method could
only rest.
The analysis of a theory which although already mentioned had
been neglected, naturally unveiled to him the imperative necessity
of two elementary essential propositions, namely, pure experi-
mentation and the attenuation of remedies.
To put the first of these propositions into practice he associated
himself with some of his fellows, who. faithful to their trust, start-
ed one of the most meritorious, self-sacrificing series of experi-
ments upon the healthy human organism, a step never taken be-
fore by any medical man. Of these provings or trials he noted the
effects and methodically arranged the remaining phenomena, both
246 The Minimum Dose.
objective and subjective, thus creating a Materia Medica Pura.
unequal in its character, scientific in principle and positive in its
results.
The conception of attenuation was also so logical, so indispens-
able to the accomplishment of his purposes, that, aided by his
knowledge of chemistry, he selected carefully those vehicles
(sugar of milk, alcohol, distilled water) which he knew would not
interfere with the medicinal effects of those drugs, whose atomic
dissociation he had commenced to obtain by the mechanical pro-
cesses of trituration and succussion And as a consequence we
have that Hahnemann was not only the first to experiment with
drugs on the healthy human organism, but the first also to break
the molecular cohesion of medicamental substances. Xo wonder
that after a successful conflict with the enemy he attained a posi-
tion from which he could command respect, reform therapeutics
and mark out the routes others would have to follow to do away
with polypharmacy and correct Galenic errors.
Moreover, his operations of atomic dissociation gave rise to
other discoveries. He found out that by the mechanical processes
he employed he had developed in the drugs an increased medicinal
power which he called dynamic, and unfolded latent properties in
many substances which were till then considered inert.
Hahnemann then established a scientific scale of attenuation.
which would not only permit of a medicinal adaptation to individ-
ual cases of disease, but avoid the baneful effects of overdosing.
With mathematical inborn proclivity he adopted the centesimal
scale of subdivision, in order to gradually ascertain the thera-
peutic virtues of his triturations and dilutions, and the repeated
verifications obtained by himself and his disciples created among
them an unanimous and positive conviction of the value of those
minute doses when given in accordance with the Law of Similars.
It is unnecessary to give here in full the technique of his two
proceses of attenuation, for they are well known to us. It suffices
to say that at the start of his eventful career Hahnemann first
employed the lower attenuations (3 to 6), which were later fol-
lowed by the middle ( 12 to 18), and he finally extended his scale of
dosage to the 30 c, which was the limit he placed to his dilutions.
Limit with which he gained his great reputation and surprised his
enemies.
The Minimum Dose. 247
Hahnemann gave us very distinctly his views as to the vehicles
we should employ in the preparation of our remedies, and never is
-he as emphatic as when he speaks of purity and genuineness. He
•ordains that any kind of medicinal influence capable of causing- a
■disturbance in the constitution of a remedy should be avoided, and
that the physician should have at his disposal only genuine and
unadulterated remedies. He even warns us of the damage of
deterioration, and calls our attention to the necessity of preserving
our remedies in well corked bottles, protected from sunlight. Pol-
lution and adulteration are then incompatible with homoeopathic
pharmacy; in fact, the strict purity of the drug and of its vehicles
is of much greater importance than posological doctrines.
Unfortunately for Homoeopathy the master's limit as to dose
has been overstepped by some of his followers, who, through
ignorance or extravagant enthusiasm, have disregarded the rules
laid down for this class of work, thus creating a situation difficult
to defend and protect. This simple transgression has done, I
think, more harm to our school than all other infringements put
together, and this not so much on account of the endless scope
given to their ultra-potencies, but on account of the senseless and
faulty technique employed. They have devised automatic gradu-
ated apparatus, which, connected with a water spigot, supply them
with all the liquid required for their unlimited potentizations.
This vehicle is neither alcohol nor distilled water as ordained by
Hahnemann, but polluted river water, or water allowed to pass
through beds of gravel, charcoal, alum. etc.. and which to reach
its destination has to pass again through iron pipes and lead
tubes.
Can any one point out to me what guarantee of purity can such
-operations give? Let any intelligent man analyze these debatable
procedures and tell us if they are in harmony with homoeopathic
precepts and progress. It is to be hoped, indeed, that our ultra-
dilutionists, so devoted to Hahnemann, so well posted in other re-
spects, will soon drop their spurious and useless machines, and
become more loyal to the master by attenuating their remedies
with the vehicles and the technique he recommended.
To raise a dilution to the 10,000 c, the 20,000 c, the 50.000 c,
the 100.000 c, the 500,000 c. is an absurd proposition, in fact, an
impossibility, if one employs Hahnemann's technique. Only an
248 The Minimum Dose.
irresponsible, self-acting machine could accomplish the wonderful
act and satisfy a wandering mind.
The advocates of the very high dilutions, of course, endeavor to
demonstrate the efficacy of these preparations by clinical observa-
tions, but, as Dr. P. Jousset has very recently said, these observa-
tions have never convinced us because, as a whole, their wording
is so defective as to deprive their writers of all scientific stand-
ing. Moreover, I must again repeat what I have said elsewhere,
that getting well is not always curing, and that the osteopaths and
mind curists claim also wonderful results without any remedies.
But suppose these ultra-dilutions could be made by the tech-
nique of Hahnemann, has any of the advocates of this practice
ever stopped for a moment to consider the enormous amount of
vehicle required, even for a single series of these preparations, as
well as the centuries of labor such task would impose?
It has been computed by one of our most enthusiastic Ho-
mceopathists of South America (Fontela, of Montevideo) that
calculating two minutes are necessary for each degree of attenu-
tion of a series and that eight hours of work are daily required for
potentizing during 300 consecutive days. The result would be as.
follows :
In one hour he would raise a drug to the 30th c. pot.
In a day and eight hours to the 240th.
In 100 days to the 24,000th.
In a year of 300 days to the 72,000th.
In ten years to the 720,000th.
In 100 years to the 7,200,000th.
In 1,000 years to the 72,000,000th, and
In 7,000 years (approximately) to the 500,000,000th, that isr
D. M. M. pot.
The famous potencies of the no less famous Swan are
offered for sale under the following graduation : 1 M.. 50 M.,
C. M., M. M., C. M. M., and D. M. M., equal to the 1.000, 50.000.
100,000, 1,000,000, 100.000,000 and 500,000.000 potencies.
These dubious preparations are said to be made by hand and a
machine of great power of succussion, but there is no doubt that
the vehicle employed is of debatable origin.
I do really believe that Swan and others like him would have
acted differently if they only had known what natural waters may
The Minimum Dose. 249
contain. In the first place, the mineral salts present in natural
waters are absent in distilled water, and filtered water., if not heat-
ed., is not free of germs. Then, again, filtered water may become
contaminated by the use of filthy containers, funnels and stoppers,
and the greatest caution is required in attenuating drugs with
this vehicle. We should also bear in mind that filtered water
passed through a Pasteur-Chamberland filter, is as clear as dis-
tilled water, but clearness does not necessarily prove that there
are not microbes present. In a general way it may be stated that
the number of microbes per c.c. of water is proportioned to the
percentage of organic filth present. Dr. A. Schneider (Pae.
PJiarm.) has examined distilled water used for pharmaceutical
purposes and found from 5.000 to 15.000 microbes per c.c. If
this was the result in contaminated distilled water, what would
have been that of river water?
As stated above, years of assiduous, unremitting labor are re-
quired to obtain even acceptable dilutions, and we must not ac-
cede to any claims that are not supported by those scientific prin-
ciples which have always governed our practice.
Even Jenichen's potencies, while they are said to be made by
hand, do not ofter any guarantee to the presciber, for his remedies
are potentized by repeated succussions, which do not alter or in-
crease the proportionate power of the dilution. He endeavors to
raise their power by the occasional addition of a few drops of
alcohol, a procedure which is not in conformity with Homoeop-
athy, but which is much more preferable to Swan's, who is very
unscrupulous about purity. Jenichen employs the right vehicle,
but in an arbitrary proportion, and relies more on the force of his
hand than on the systematic operation ordained by the master.
In this way, if a prescriber thinks he is administering the 30th, for
instance, he may only be giving the 6th, or less. It seems indeed
as if Jenichen was trying to avoid spurious vehicles, and yet sur-
pass Hahnemann in the solution of remedies.
But we must admit that what we have lost in this direction has
been compensated a thousandfold by the daily evidences of ap-
preciation and acknowledgment of our basic principles by those
formerly engaged in annoying us with paralogisms and dia-
tribes. The ordinal*}- man of the day dares not deny what
is admitted and indorsed by the leaders of knowledge. Their
250 The Minimum Dose.
only revenge seems to be to ignore completely the source of
the information, and so they parade unconcernedly and uncon-
sciously wearing borrowed garments. But for our part they are
welcome to them. Let the principles prevail. Remember that we
are meeting now with honest, fair men, not afraid to acknowl-
edge Similia and vindicate our cause, and that the numbers of
such men is increasing daily.
Going back to the subject of the minimum dose, let none of my
assertions be misunderstood ; it is not the infinitesimals I con-
demn, but the absurd, unreliable machines and the spurious,
bogus vehicles of our deluded confreres. To the irreconcilable I
would merely say : Drop the nonsensical proceedings, follow
strictly the master, and you will not be sorry long, for a new era
has begun in which Similia and the minimum dose have ceased to
be the object of a baseless terror for our opponents.
Wonderful discoveries have been made, and as they are favor-
able to us, we should not hesitate to endorse them. They have
come to revolutionize the fickle therapeutics of the old school and
convince its followers of the necessity of expanding their knowl-
edge as to the therapeutic value of infinitesimal doses. The atomic
cohesion of medicamental substances have been broken by various
methods, and the ions obtained, have been already introduced as
remedies into the human organism, and it should be our task to
find out how they compare in effects with the minute dose of the
similar. Let us approach the subject with confidence, for it is the
Law of Similar which will carry us out victorious in the contest.
"It is true that former prejudices are gradually disappearing, but
yet for a large number of practitioners Homoeopathy is still a
sectarian school, without any bonds of union with tradition, and'
characterized by singular practices of which they have no con-
ception. This is an error which must be persistently combatted,
and this is the opportune time to do it, now that clinical and'
laboratory works have resolve, and are resolving many problems-
many of them very obscure and undecided three decades ago.
These labors and researches have supplied us with facts that
broadly allow the exposition of an experimental and positive thera-
peutics." (Jousset.)
The history of infinitesimals, we may say, started with the dis-
covery of the microscope, but before the utilization of this won-
The Minimum Dose. 251
•derful instrument we were acquainted with many physical and
chemical phenomena constantly revealing to us the existence of an
invisible and imponderable world. We knew the odorata, mias-
mata and effluvia. We can assert, for instance, that a grain of
musk diffuses an odor for hours and days without apparently
losing weight, and emitting not millions, but billions of atoms
(300.200.000.000,000.000) (Granier). It has been calculated that
a grain of assafa-tida evaporates in 11,781.000 scented molecules.
The vapors arising from putrefying substances were held as ma-
lignant enough to produce such infectious diseases, as plague.
We are warned against the danger of Marsh gas (CH4), a gas-
eous hydrocarbon frequently occurring in nature, without taste,
smell, or color, and no reaction on test paper. It is the fire
damp of mines, and frequently rises from the earth in marshy
districts. The apparatus for Marsh test are so sensitive and the
quantities of Arsenic they reveal are so infinitesimal that the
medical legist becomes every day more prudent in his conclusions.
We were formerly taught that the propagation of many con-
tagions diseases was effected by fomites, but now the miasms, the
effluvia and the fonvites are replaced by microbes or bacteria, and
even the culx mosquito has entered the ethiological arena
with marked prerogatives. According to Vignal and Suckdorf an
adult man passes daily in his faeces from 30.000,000,000 to 50,-
000,000,000 of bacteria, and yet Metchnikoff has demonstrated
that man is born free from microbes, and that their first implanta-
tion occurs in the act of parturition, for soon after birth the skin
and mucous membranes become infected with them from the air
or from the water with which the infant is washed. Later in life
the penetration, even of the Koch's bacillus, takes place not only
through the lungs and bowels, but through the skin. This new
route of invasion has been amply demonstrated by Babes (1904),
who produced an experimental tuberculosis in a guinea pig by
a simple rubbing with the Koch's bacillus without the least erod-
ing of the skin. This invasion is from without, but there is an-
other from within. Bouchard, in "Autointoxication,'' clearly in-
dicates that man is constantly standing, as it were, on the brink
of a precipice ; he is continually on the threshold of disease.
"Every moment of his life he runs the risk of being overpowered
by poisons generated within the system. Self-poisoning is only
252 The Minimum Dose.
prevented by the activity of such excretory organs as the kidney,
and the watchfulness of the liver, which acts the part of a sentinel
to the materials brought to it by the portal vein from the aliment-
ary canal. Disease is not something altogether apart from the in-
dividual. The patient and his disease are too often found living
under identical conditions."
Let the materialists and those who are always ready to deny
what they cannot comprehend, enlist in the study of these in-
visible enemies and try to ascertain their size and power. Let
them stop to consider the routes of penetration and elimination of
these hostile elements, and the means with which the organic cells
count to restore normal conditions and bring about nutritive equi-
librium. Do not reject what it seems impossible to you without
experimentation and observation. We have passed the age of
assumption and arrogance. We must emancipate ourselves from
tradition and habits of thought and keep up with progress. It is
not so important to-day to know that the cidex mosquito is pro-
vided with a proboscis for piercing the skin, but that by means of
this proboscis, not only makes a wound, but injects into it an in-
finitesimal amount of dangerous poison. In this respect is it not
strange that our detractors should have found, at this late hour,
that the poison of the bee {Apis mcllifica) is a good remedy for
rheumatism, when, since the time of Brauns down to Hering and
Humphreys, the first experimenters with this animal poison, we
have been using this remedy, not only in rheumatism and nephritis,
but in acute hydrocephalus and other fluid effusions. (See
Amerikanische Arztieiprufungen. Hering. 1857.)
But this is not all, experiments drawn from many sources do
give us clear evidences of molecular subdivisions ; for instance,
we know that gas molecules actually exist, and starting from cer-
tain well established facts, physicists have been able to calculate
the absolute number of molecules in a given space, their absolute
weight, size, velocity and the spaces between two neighboring
molecules, and so what at first was held as a mere hypothesis is
fast becoming a demonstrated fact.
"According to these calculations a cubic centimeter of air con-
tains twenty-one trillions of molecules, and according to the law
of Avogadro, all other gases must contain the same number in the
same volume. Ten trillions of air, or 144 trillions of hydrogen
The Minimum Dose. 253
molecules, will weigh one milligramme. The mean velocity of the
molecule of air at O0C. (32 F.) is 485 metres (1,591 feet) per
second, and of a molecule of hydrogen gas is 1,844 metres (6,050
feet) per second. Of course, with this inconceivable number of
molecules in the small space of one cubic centimetre, and all mov-
ing at the velocity mentioned, no one molecule could move long in
one direction without colliding with another molecule. The num-
ber of shocks that each molecule receives, in the case of hydrogen
gas, has been calculated to be 9,480 millions per second, while the
mean distance a molecule moves in its path before colliding, is
about .0001855 m. m., which may be taken as the distance be-
tween two molecules. The diameter of the water molecule =
.00000044 m. m. Free path = .0000649 m- m- Although these
numbers give us no real conception of the magnitude they rep-
resent, they are given here to show the tendency of research, and
the advances being made. These numbers, of course, apply to
gases only. (Bartley.)
Heat is the first physical force which plays an important part in
many chemical phenomena, and distillation is a process in which
Homoeopathy is very much interested. When water containing
solid matter in solution is evaporated, the solids remain in the
vessel, while the water only is given off. As I have said before,
it is by means of this operation that we are able to prepare pure
water for our dilutions. The power of water to dissolve sub-
stances is one of the most familiar of its properties, and although
all liquids possess the same power to a greater or less extent, none
surpass water in solvent power, and none offers a better guarantee
of purity than properly distilled water.
More interesting still the subject of light and sound, the study
of which gives us an idea of the infinitesimal constituents of these
physical forces. Let those imbued with corporeal ideas stop to
think for a moment of the luminiferous ether. That this ether
really exists, pervading the spaces between the molecules of all
bodies, so many times more elastic than air or light that it offers
no appreciable resistance to the earth moving 1,100 miles a minute
through it, may be a hypothesis, but it has been advanced to ex-
plain well known facts. That light passes from the sun and stars
to the earth, no one can doubt, and yet without some such assump-
tion we cannot conceive how it does pass unless we hold to a
254
The Minimum Dose.
former view, which taught that light was in itself a form of
matter without weight given off by luminous bodies, and which
is able to pass through glass, water, rocks, etc. And how about
the rapidity and amplitude of the oscillations and their effects
upon the organs of vision?
In sound we have analogous effects. Here we can more easily
demonstrate the truth of the fact that the intensity of the sound
depends upon the amplitude of the molecules, while the pitch de-
pends upon the number of waves or pulsations which reach the
ear in a given time. From well established data we are also able
to calculate the rapidity of the oscillations which produce the
different sensations of color, and the corresponding lengths of the
ether waves. Some of these results are expressed in the following
table :
Lengths of W;
aves in
Xumber of Oscilla-
Fractions
of a
milli-
tions in one Second.
Color.
metre.
Red,
650 millionths,
477,000.000,000.000
( )range,
609
11
506,000,000,000.000
Yellow,
576
a
535,000,000,000,000
Green,
536
a
577,000,000,000.000
Blue,
498
a
622 ,000,000,000,000
Indigo,
4/0
a
658,000.000.000,000
Violet,
442
a
699,000,000.000,000
Spectrum analysis, as well as the chemical effects of light, are
subjects occasionally related with cur pharmaceutical processes.
For instance, many substances in solution absorb certain rays
from a beam of white light passed through them, and the portions
of the beam absorbed are peculiar to each substance. We thus
have a means of detecting the presence of a few substances which
cannot be rendered luminous by passing a white light through the
solution suspected to contain them. Then, again, many crude
chemicals from which we make our dilutions if kept in the light
are in time sensibly changed. Silver and gold solutions especially
are altered by the action of light. The chemical effects of light is
so marked that if a mixture of pure hydrogen and chlorine gases
be prepared in the dark and kept there no combination takes
place, if the mixture he brought out into a light room a gradual
The Minimum Dose.
oo
combination takes place and hydrochloric acid is the result ; if the
mixture be placed in the direct rays of the sun instead of diffused
light the combination takes place with an explosion. The electric
light and other intense lights produce the same action.
Radium is our last arrival, and since discovered, it has been
continually evolving light and heat without the least perceptible
loss of its activity and weight. When in a free state, especially *f
dissolved in water, unfolds a gas called Radium emanation cap-
able of imparting temporarily to other bodies, with which it comes
in contact, the property of emitting the same rays as Radium. To
this property the name of radio-actk'ity has been given. Xo ele-
ment ever discovered has a more limitless power, and we know to-
day that the irriadiations from the different salts of radium possess
all the general properties of the X-ray, and that they emit rays
2.000,000 times more active than uranium. We know likewise
that the radium emanations exert a mortal action on micro-
organisms, and their therapeutic application is presently engag-
ing the attention of many savants. But a word of warning as to
its abuse and misuse has already been given.
In spite of all the striking advances made in the field of X-ray
therapeutics we cannot deny that the subject of electrolysis has
lately come into prominence again by the introduction of drugs
into the system, and also perhaps for the withdrawal of injurious
chemical bodies from the system. It was Leduc. of Xantes
(1903), who first introduced medicaments in the form of '''ions,"
and the practice has rapidly gained ground, and many applications
of the principle are now in vogue. It is unnecessary to dwell long
on the technique of this practice, it suffices to say that in the ap-
plication of this treatment the basic ions move from the positive
to the negative pole, and consequently the medicament must be
introduced at the opposite pole. Acids move in the opposite direc-
tion.
Ionic medication, then, is a term employed for the method of
introducing drugs through the unbroken skin by means of the
electric current. "But we should bear in mind that the process
of introducing these tiny electrified molecules has its limitations,
for ions travel very slowly and a prolonged application, possible
under chloroform, would be required to reach very deep parts. "
Dr. Edwin A. Xeatby. in his presidential address to the British
256 The Minimum Dose.
Homoeopathic Congress, spoke as follows on the subject of ioni-
zation: "The grinding up or dissolving of a medicinal substance
subdivides it, and the finally divided particles are brought into con-
tact with living cells which act the part of liberators of the latent
intra-atomic energy. Such libration of energy goes on every
where, under all circumstances. How much more favorable when
subdivision renders possible ionization by the tissues. As regards
the preparation of homoeopathic medicines by trituration and solu-
tion, it is not contended that the drugs are ion iced, but that their
minute subdivision renders them capable of ionization by the tis-
sues. Xor is it necessary to suppose that before administration
drugs are ionized. * * * Our knowledge of cellular physiology
and cellular pathology demands a cellular therapeusis, and in this
domain bulk gives place to speed. Herein lies the scientific justifi-
cation of the clinical use (long verified by experience) of minute
doses of finely subdivided substances." The adaptation to our
doctrine could not be more perfect.
And how about the dogmatic assumption of Prof. Wright, of
London, as to the existence in the serum of the human body of
principles which have the power of so acting on any invading
bacteria as to .render them an easy prey to the phagocytes ? This
principle or substance Wright has named opsonin — from opsono
— I cater for. It is claimed by this authority that there is a dis-
tinct opsonin for every variety of micro-organism, and if this is
really the case, we have once more a good chance to exhibit our
arithmetical ability. The genesis of the opsonic form of treat-
ment is said by Allen to be found in Jennerian vaccination-, and
the vaccines used in this unusual practice are sterilized watery
emulsions of bacterial cultivation, diluted to contain 500,000,000
to the c. c.
It is not in- the scope of this paper to discuss the opsonic index
in both health and disease and its negative and positive phases,
and consequently we let the subject go by, only saying that it has
not reached the practical point necessary for the busy practitioner
to undertake its application. Only if in touch with a laboratory
and laboratory workers especially equipped, could any one appre-
ciate how laborious and time-consuming is the technique of this
process, still in its infancy.
Dr. R. S. Copeland in his paper on "The Mission of Homoeop-
The Minimum Dose. 257
athy" (Hah. Mouth., Sep., 1908) very pertinently observes that
"Wright did not only rediscover the Laze of Similars, but also,
strange as it may seem, he hit upon the century old conclusion as
regards the size of the dose. "One ten-thousandth of a milligram
(6th x, D.) is the dosage recommended by this scientist."
There are yet many other examples confirming our claims. For
instance, in 1891 we had authentic reports on the laboratory labors
of Loew and Rokorny, which were the starting points of later
observations. Raullin succeeded in showing that Silver nitrate
in the proportion of one part in 1,600,000 parts of water would
inhibit the growth of the Aspergillus niger, and he still further
•discovered that this organism would not live in water placed in a
silver vessel, although no silver could be detected in the water
with the most sensitive reagents. But to the botanist Carl von
Xagali we owe the interesting verification of their researches. He
calls the unknown force of bacterial destruction oligodynamia
(Ueber oligodynamische Esrcheinungcn in lebenden ZcUeihZuvich
1891). His first observation revealed the fact that in the presence
of the most diluted solution of Sih'er nitrate the filaments of the
spirogyra could not live. He found that death occurred in three
or four minutes in a solution of 1-1,000,000,000,000,000. This
solution could contain no more than one or two molecules of this
salt per litre. Mercurius sublimatus corrosk'u>s gave even more
pronounced results, the micro-organism died in a solution of 1-1.-
000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000. In such a solution there could
be no more than a trillionth of a molecule per litre. He even dis-
covered' that many substances hitherto reputed insoluble in water,
such as the metals gold, silver, iron, copper, mercury, lead, and
zinc, could render the water toxic by their mere presence there.
He was able by employing coins placed in vessels of water to
van- the amount of toxic power, according to the number of coins
immersed in the water, and according to the time these coins re-
mained there; and as if to substantiate our precept relative to the
purity of the vehicle, his next step in the investigation revealed
the fact that this oligodynamic power could be neutralized by ad-
dition to the water of such powdered substances as flour, salt, soot,
carbon, cellulose, etc., results showing also much of the absurdity
of polypharmacy.
Colloidal metals offer us another proof of the power of inlini-
258 The Minimum Dose.
\
tesimals. We know that eolloidal silver and colloidal copper de-
stroy bacteria, but very few are aware that if copper vessels are
used to destroy bacteria in water, they must be kept highly
polished, or the bactericidal properties will be greatly reduced.
Stewart asserts that sterile drinking water in clean copper vessels
inoculated with typhoid bacilli invariably showed that these micro-
organisms had all perished in one hour. Water similarly treated
in tin z'essels invariably exhibited living organisms at the end of
twenty-four hours. Water similarly prepared in aluminum ves-
sels showed a disappearance of the typhoid germs in three hours.
The quantity of colloidal copper given off from one litre copper
vessel in three hours, is one part of the fourth millionth. This
infinitesimal amount killed off the added typhoid organisms in
from one and three-fourths of an hour to two and a half hours.
These colloidal metals, says Lamatte, present the best type of
substances capable of breaking the ordinary laws of chemistry.
They exert an energetic action on the organic cell at the small
dose of 1-300 of a milligramme per litre. Filtering cannot sep-
arate the atoms, which remain invisible to the microscope, and yet
they have been obtained from the fluids of the body by the spetro-
graphic method ; three or four drops of blood being sufficient for
the experiment. Colloidal silver, for instance, when injected into
a vein, has been known to remain in the blood twenty-four hours
after its introduction, and Gompel and Henri found atoms in the
liver, spleen, kidneys and heart of a rabbit after having been re-
ceived by the mouth.
We should also bear in mind that colloidal metals possess prop-
erties which have no analogy with those of the metals in solution.
They seem to come near to the oxydases, and in them we cer-
tainly have substances which do change their character and in-
crease their energy by agitation. They are neoproducts which
in certain infections have brought about remarkable results by in-
creasing the organic exchanges with over production of urea and
uric acid. No chemical reaction known can explain their proper-
ties, and the manner in which they are produced conclusively
shows that they contain the dissociated metallic atom. They are
not radio-active, for radio-activity is only produced during the
separation of the atoms. Is the protoplasm perhaps a mixture of
colloidal substances? Probably it is.
The Minimum Dose. 259
The diastases, the toxins, the enzymes have reaction next to
those of the colloidal metals. They act in extremely small, im-
ponderable doses. Toxins and soluble ferments are all ferments
capable of producing effects outside of the organisms that created
them." And is it not strange than when deprived of the infini-
tesimal quantities of mineral, which they contain under a form
next to the colloidal state, these substanes become inactive? All
these reactions, says Lamatte, are produced in the presence of
water, magic combination without which no organic manifesta-
tion can result. The study of the metallic ferments may perhaps
give us the interpretation of these hydrations, dissociations, analy-
ses or syntheses which have as a result the organization of our
tissues and the manifestation of our vegetative life.''
Let any one make a retrospective review of the above illustra-
tions, analyze well the subject, and frankly state if any one to-day
could so easily afford to deride and ignore our higher attenuations
and discredit their therapeutic powers !
Fortunately while our contentions about dosage have been go-
ing on intermittently for years, the critical eye of the scholar has
been doing, unaware, a valuable work for us by following with the
microscope the development, segregation and behavior of the
algar, protozoa, infusoria, vibrio, microbes, bacteira, and ether
organisms, thus enriching etiology and those methods of treat-
ment and diagnosis which seem to have already overpowered the
empirical remedies of our opponents. These researches certainly
have over tradition and polypharmacy the advantage of being
made by precise, scientific processes, allowing the practitioner
the opportunity of extending his resources and of foretelling the
nature and course of many diseases.
Without fear of contradiction we can call Pasteur the father of
pathogenic microbiology, just as Jenner was the discoverer and
introducer of vaccination. Initiated by the works of Pasteur his
disciples undertook with remarkable success the inoculation of
attenuated bacterial products, thus conferring artificial immunity
against the ravages of microbes and inducing prophylaxis.
Pasteurien microbiology gave, in consequence, not only origin to
bacteriothcrapy and toxinotlierapy but to modern vaccinations and
serotherapy distinct methods, bound, however, with each other
by numerous intermediaries and capable of being combined.
2(5o The Minimum Dose.
Though it is unquestionable that to Koch belongs the honor of
first attempting to cure infection by a specific remedy, the names
of Kleb and Loeffier, Eberth, Nicolaier, Roux, Chamberland,
Metchnikoff, Calmetfee, and others are so inseparably connected
with these subjects that they always deserve opportune recogni-
tion. Unfortunately the excessively large doses administered at
the beginning of these practices were not conducive of good re-
sults, and the specific remedies obtained, especially tuberculin,
fell into discredit. But things are gradually mending, and mend-
ing to our advantage, for every successful trial has been the issue
of infinitesimal doses, and has carried with it the imprint of
Similia.
And to close a subject which has been the cause of so much
unnecessary controversy and dissent, one can well ask if the fact
that our drugs produce the symptoms they cure is not sufficient
for an intelligent man to know not only how far he must keep
away from their toxic effects, but even from their physiological
action, which necessarily would produce aggravations. Of course,
all this implies that a prescriber must know well pharmaco-
dynamics, and above all, the degree of tolerance and of toxicity of
each drug. And no less important is that he should always bear
in mind that the therapeutic doses of our opponents do frequently
produce slight and serious, acute and chronic intoxication, which
in some form or other often come to our notice, sometimes so
blended with the phenomena of the disease we are treating as to
demand a great deal of discernment and knowledge to appreciate
and combat the condition.
Who with even aai ordinary experience has not had the oppor-
tunity of observing cases of cinchonism, mcrcurilarism, bromism,
saturnism, morphinism, cocainism, heroinism and other morbid
states, the result of the misuse or abuse of drugs, often, I am
sorry to say, with professional consent.
The employment of massive doses in our practice is an inde*
fcnsible transgration, and the introduction of improperly pre-
pared remedies is a profanation of principle. Hahnemann ex-
pressly recommended for the attenuations of cur remedies those
vehicles which he knew would preserve their purity and main-
tain their efficacy. Khonuropathic dose, on the other hand, is any
one above the scale of disturbing action, applied according to
The Foot and Mouth Disease. 261
Similia and with reference to age, sex, occupation, idiosyncrasy,
etc., which I think are more important subjects than attenuations
carried to extremes. I have found the acute conditions do well
under the lower potencies, while chronic states seem to do better
under the higher potencies.
706 West York St., Philadelphia.
THE FOOT AND MOUTH DISEASE AND
VACCINES.
The report of Drs. John R. Mohler and M. J. Rosenau, of the
results of their investigation of the recent outbreak of foot and
mouth disease in this country puts the official doctors up against
a very serious proposition. Here is the story, in part, taken from
the Washington dispatch of the Philadelphia Xorth American of
May 17th :
"When, therefore, the disease was traced by inspectors of the
Bureau of Animal Industry to calves that had been used for
vaccine by a Detroit establishment — Parke, Davis & Co. — and the
cases of longest standing were found among these calves, these
facts caused Secretary of Agriculture James Wilson and Dr. A.
D. Melven, Chief of the Bureau of Animal Industry, both of whom
had gone to Detroit to make a personal investigation of the out-
break, to suspect that the vaccine was contaminated with the virus
of foot and mouth disease.
"The main facts regarding the outbreak, as brought out in the
report, are as follows : The H. K. Mulford Company, of Glen-
olden, Pa., imported certain small-pox vaccine virus, which was
contaminated with the infection of foot and mouth disease. In
May, 1908, some vaccine of this strain was procured by Parke,
Davis & Co., of Detroit. Calves used by the latter firm in propa-
gating vaccine were sent, October 16, to the Detroit stock yards,
and thence, on the same day, to a farm near Detroit.
"On October 20, three carloads of cattle from points in Michi-
gan reached the Detroit stock yards, and were put into the pens
that had been occupied by the vaccine calves four days previously.
Some were sold for slaughter at Detroit, while the remainder
were shipped to Buffalo, and some were reshipped to Danville and
262 The Foot and Mouth Disease.
Washington, Pa., where the disease was first observed, some days
later. The disease spread to various places in Pennsylvania and
New York, and to one locality in Maryland.
"Three separate series of experiments were made by Doctors
Mohler and Rosenau. Young cattle and sheep were inoculated
with vaccine virus, obtained from both firms. Foot and mouth
disease was produced in experimental animals by the use of vac-
cine of the same strain obtained from both sources, while other
strains of vaccine tested gave negative results. The disease was
also transmitted from one animal to another through several
series, in two instances by natural modes of infection.
"The investigation also indicates that the outbreaks of foot and
mouth disease in New England in 1902-3 were probably due to
contaminated vaccine of Japanese origin from the Mulford Com-
Dany."
The portentous fact that confronts the world in this is the
determination that disease that may be lurking in the body of man
or animal furnishing vaccine virus is latent in that virus.
The cow, we are told by those in authority, is pre-eminently
tuberculous ; so does not this investigation point to what may be
the cause of the tremendous spread of the "white plague" in vac-
cinated Christendom ? True, all calves are tested for tuberculosis
before they are used for producing the virus of vaccine. They are
tested by having tuberculin, itself the very essence of tuberculosis,
injected into their blood ; does not this act make them more or less
sources of danger? Danger not quickly apparent as was that of
the foot and mouth disease, but latent, only awaiting the proper
condition to slowly develop into a case of the "white plague."
There is possible disease lurking in every vaccine point or tube.
Some years ago fifty-eight soldiers in a French regiment were
vaccinated from virus obtained from an "unquestionably healthy
child," yet every one of these fifty-eight men developed syphilis
in a very bad shape from this vaccine ; the fact was not disputed
but the practice was continued.
A good many men would like to know what that substance is
which the vaccine farmers import from foreign countries to pro-
duce sores on the bellies of the calves. Whence comes the vac-
cine virus used in this country?
Another curious feature in this affair is the statement that these
Lines to Hahnemann. 263
calves poisoned by the imported animal or human disease product
were sent to the market "to be slaughtered !" Do our health
boards sanction this?
The time has surely come when the Government, the health
boards and the doctors should adopt the homoeopathic method of
vaccination. Their fees would remain the same, the protection
would be far better, and they would never be in danger of having
to face the many ugly complications, or even the death that so
often follows the old, crude and unscientific vaccination of the
former century. It might give professional pride a jar but re-
member "pride goeth before a fall."
LINES TO HAHNEMANN ON THE ANNIVERSARY
OF HIS BIRTH, APRIL 10, 1755-1909.
Translated from the German of Br. Heine, Lcipzigcr Zcitschrift fur Ho-
moopathie, April, 1909, by P. W. Shedd, M. D.
Ye think, because in alien land
The elements long, long ago
Dispersed his mortal frame, that he
Is dead, with none to love and know!
Ye err. His work, his spirit great,
His potent words are consecrate ;
Nor longer shall ye mock him.
In his achievement still are traced
The ardors of a puissant soul
That fled no conflict, and whose glaive
Still driveth, flame-like, to its goal.
Who shall compute the myriads, who
With us give laud where laud is due,
And gratefully extol him?
Close upon truth, though knowing not,
Great Science plods its rugged way; *%,.
At each turn finding guide-post placed
* I By him long dead, ere it saw day.
That ragged jest of ancient schools,
The magic power of molecules,
% , They're now assimilating.
t ■
Why fear ye, then, the simile,
Why teach ye its abhorrence?
264 Homoeopathic Remedies.
Your sera are but isons tagged
With modern science warrants.
Ay. ye are close to truth. Proceed
Courageously in word and deed,
And ye shall know your master.
Till then, with hate and witless quip
Scorn not instruction from the seer ;
Ye, whom Hippocrates hath sworn
To use all means to cure and cheer.
In equity, prove ye a law
That fears no test. Seek ye a flaw,
And bide by the conclusion.
He is not dead, for in the hearts
Of grateful men he ever lives.
His therapy, law-governed, gave
Relief and health. — and ever gives.
Think ye that those drawn from death's gate
By Hahnemann shall prove ingrate
Or e'er forget their saviour?
So, in his spirit let us bide;
In steadfast hope unshaken.
The victory shall yet be won,
And truth at last shall waken.
Though hard beset with many foes.
By each new foe the honor grows, —
And oui*s the final triumph.
HOIWCEOPATHIC REMEDIES HYPODERMICALLY
ADMINISTERED.
Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder:
For the application of remedies the practitioner can utilize any
of the well known routes of the organism without renouncing his
scientific convictions. At present a marked dispostion is noticed
to hypodermic and intramuscular medication, and we see our col-
leagues of the old school always ready to use their tiny syringes
and of extolling the introduction of remedies by this means. In-
dividualization of their cases does not seem to concern them
much, and they rather deal with the general ideas of nervous
prostration, debility, denutrition, etc., applying such remedies as
Arrhcnol, Medullary and other products offered to the trade by
unscrupulous druggists.
Homeopathic Remedies. 26
If the abuse of subcutaneous medication without previous indi-
vidualization is censurable, its judicious application, on the other
hand, is worthy of our study.
It is my intention to demonstrate that with the hypodermic in-
troduction of some of our drugs we can obtain splendid results
without breaking any of Hahnemann's precepts.
During my practice in this city I have had the opportunity of
treating many cases of pernicious malarial fever, and contrary to
what our ultra dilutionists advise (Xash, Kent, etc.) I have been
compelled to use massive doses of Quinine instead of the high
dilutions recommended by them and with better results.
We should bear in mind that Homoeopathy does not consist
either in the small doses nor in the infinitesimal ones ; and, al-
though in the larger number of remedies physiology demands
dynamization in order to avoid hardships to the organism we in-
tend to cure, there does exist, on the other hand, a small num-
ber of substances which seem to act better in the lower dilutions
and even in massive doses. Dr. Xash himself, in a paper on the
dosage of remedies published in the North American Journal of
Homoeopathy, refers to a young lady under his care who having
contracted syphilis in a dental office received Asafcctida high with-
out result, but who was finally cured by this remedy by going
gradually down to the mother tincture.
In cases of pernicious fever of malarial origin, abundant vomit-
ing and purging are common symptoms, and the former especially
is often so severe as to become an obstacle to the administration
of the indicated remedy by the mouth. A hypodermic injection of
ix dilution of Quinine sulphas will almost always control the
febrile process, for between the morbid and pathogenic symptoms
the relation of similitude is correct. Of course, as we always in-
dividualize our cases, in many instances, others will be the indi-
cated remedies, such as Ant. tart., Ars., Vcrat. alb., Camph., etc.
I have used in pernicious malarial fevers the hypodermic in-
jections of Quinine sulphas, both the officinal preparation and the
ix dilution with identical good results. However, as the special
conditions of this method of treatment are such as to make us
always fear the development of tetanus, the employment of
sterilized ampullcc, containing remedies prepared according to our
pharmacopoeia, becomes an imperative necessity, and it is to be
266 Homoeopathic Remedies.
hoped that our colleague and friend, Dr l>oericke, of Philadel-
phia, whom we recently visited, with his ample resources, scrupu-
lous methods and fine laboratories, may study the subject and
present to the homoeopathic profession in the form indicated, some
of those remedies which we could call of urgency.
I have used also Berberis vulg. ( 10 drops 0 in 10 grammes
boiled water) hypodermically for the atrocious pains of renal
colic with marked relief. The dose injected shoud be i ex. or
2 c.c, according- to the susceptibility of the patient.
Other remedies which could be employed hypodermically are:
Millefolium ix in urgent cases of hemoptysis, threatening death;
Thuja oee. 0 in certain forms of warts; the injection being made
under the growth ; Amyl uitris ix in dyspnoea and angina pectoris
if indicated. Experience would likewise confirm the value of
Colehieum, Digitalis, Hamamelis and other remedies when given
subcutaneously and according to the Law of Similars.
In the National Homoeopathic Hospital of Mexico Dr. Manuel
Xarro, chief of service No. 2, for men, has at my suggestion
undertaken a series of experiments with the hypodermic injections
of our remedies when indicated. In February of the present year
I had the opportunity of seeing in his ward various cases under
this treatment, one of them of hemiplegia was relieved by Causti-
cum.
Dr. Narro believes that our remedies employed in this manner
develop much better their specific action.
The hypodermic method of treatment, with strict asepsis, does
not oiler any danger whatever. Those who claim that our doses
are destroyed in the stomach by the gastric juice have here not
even a pretext for this absurd conclusion.
I invite herewith Dr. Boericke and the homoeopathic pharma-
cists of Philadelphia to resolve this question, for it is our most
ardent desire to see our school soon provided with ampulla: con-
taining our remedies, so as to be able to use them hypodermically
in emergency cases.
Dr. Rafael Romero.
Calle 64 Sur, 581, Merida, Yuc, Mexico, April, 1909.
A Letter to Dr. H. C. Ane;;. 267
A LETTER TO DR. H. C. ALLEN.
12 August, 1907.
My Dear Dr. Allen:
I hope that you will get out your new book this fall, as I am
anxious to have all your writings on the Nosodes.
For a few years I have had the conviction borne in upon me
that therein lies an indispensable part of our homoeopathic arma-
mentarium, and I sometimes wonder seriously whether a very
large portion of mediocre or even mongrel practice is not to be
referred to ignorance of remedies like Psorinum, Tuberculinum,
Pyrogen, and others.
I have had a large number of patients from a certain family —
brothers and sisters and their children — who at one time or an-
other, for at least one time during some severe illness, require
Psorinum. It would seem that in their blood (heredity) there is
some reason for a demand for this remedy. What the reason is I
cannot discern except through the symptoms at the time, and I am
not able to cure the patient till Psorinum is given. Even then
the case is not always finished, but it is so far raised to a more
normal plane that perhaps even a mild remedy completes a per-
fect cure.
By the way. is there something wrong here? Should the
Psorinum cure? I have often speculated about it. and as to the
possible mistake in following with another remedy through seem-
ingly demanded. As a rule, however. I believe this practice is
almost an invariable one with me. for the reason that it seems
imperative.
Another item. I have lately given Tuberculinum in two im-
portant cases wherein seemingly indicated, but the vitality of one
case was low. Seemingly the last stages of pulmonary phthisis
were reached. There was nothing else to do. but could she stand
it? The 10 m. was given, one dose. The immediate outcome was
an improved appetite, which had been at the lowest, and to-night
I have a letter from patient and nurse in which the progress of
four weeks is recounted with the fullest gratitude. The patient
now complains only of a rough throat from the morning cough.
It makes me question whether we are ever to withhold the
homoeopathic remedy when indicated, provided we select the
suitable potency.
268 A Cause That Is Doubted.
I am doubtful what to give next when further medicine is im-
perative, but it occurs to me that at that time a higher potency
may be suitable.
In another case, the appetite was first improved also, and the
other advantages are marked.
I hope soon to send you some conclusions of mine in a different
field, and though they will not be of much value to you, I venture
to depend on your interest.
Very sincerely yours,
John Hutchinson.
Xew York, August 12, 1907.
A CAUSE THAT IS DOUBTED.
The following under the side title, "Bacteria as the Cause of
Infectious Diseases," an editorial appeared in the May number
of the British Homoeopathic Review. It looks as though the
scientific ones were preparing to dethrone the ancient ''germ
theory :"
"There is an interesting leader in the Lancet of March 20th,
under the heading 'Bacteriology Tested by Epidemiology," com-
menting on a paper recently read by Dr. W. H. Hamer, before the
Pathological Section of the Royal Society of Medicine. Dr.
Hamer discusses the question as to whether the so-called causal
organisms are truly causal, or only 'secondary invaders.' He
shows that in many instances the 'causal organism' is not of itself
capable of producing the disease, and that a tertium quid must be
assumed, and thinks that the 'causal' bacteria are often normal in-
habitants of the body and only become important in diesase. For
example, the swine fever bacillus is generally a normal inhabitant
of the pig's intestine, and in diphtheria and enteric fever the
organisms generally considered to be the causes of those diseases
are widely prevalent in healthy people. He finds a point strongly
in favor of the existence of some third factor to be 'the fact, as a
rule, emulsions prepared by grinding up some of the tissues, or
organs, of an infected animal are far more virulent than cultures
containing approximately an equal number of bacilli. For in-
stance, in the ox the smallest fatal dose of a culture contained
some 20,000 million of tubercle bacilli, whilst the smallest fatal
Hypodermic Injections of Mercury. 269
dose of emulsion prepared from the tissues of an infected animal
contained only 5,500 bacilli. There is evidently some other factor
which has to account for the greater activity of the emulsion
which contains portions of tissue in addition to the bacilli.' This
fact should be borne in mind by us in the preparation of our
nosodes. It seems that we are likely to gain more powerful reme-
dies by triturating diseased tissues and making our potencies from
them than by using cultures of the bacilli for that purpose. Ac-
cording to the above figures they would be nearly four million
times as powerful. The methods of Swan and Burnett in the
preparation of nosodes are. it seems, justified by the latest ex-
periments."
The day of the ''"germ" is waning.
HYPODERMIC INJECTIONS OF MERCURY.
Concerning the injections which are among "the latest," the
American Journal of Dermatology, May, says:
"But even this sweet dream has been ruthlessly shattered. We
find that Dr. YV. Bartsch, of Breslau, has published several cases
of poisoning which resulted fatally. In the cases related there
were three females and one male. The first, a young woman aged
twenty-three years, had been treated with injections of salicylate
of mercury in a 10 per cent, suspension of liquid vaseline, the total
amount of the salicylate of mercury given to her, within five
weeks, being 1.15 grams. The patient was discharged suffering
with a vaginitis. About two weeks later she was again admitted
suffering from a necrosis of the vagina and vulva and also diar-
rhoea. She died fourteen days later. On post-mortem examina-
tion it was found that there existed an ulecrated colitis, paren-
chymatous nephritis, and myocarditis. The second case observed
involved a young woman of twenty-four, who had had four in-
jections of salicylate of mercury and then developed diarrhoea and
fever. In two weeks she died, and at the autopsy there were
found fatty degeneration of the heart and of the aorta, paren-
chymatous nephritis, mercurial colitis of a necrotic character, and
erosions of the stomach. In the third case a woman, of forty
years, she was given injections of 10 per cent, calomel in oil of
vaseline. In all, she received 0.7 gram of calomel. After the
270 A Circular Letter.
fourth injection, she had diarrhoea, which stopped upon the ex-
hibition of opium. She died suddenly, and, on post-mortem, she
was found to have suffered from mercurial colitis and intestinal
haemorrhages. The fourth case, a man, fifty-seven years old, was
treated with injections of calomel in liquid vaseline. After 0.35
gram of calomel had been injected, diarrhoea made its appearance.
Two weeks after this the patient died. At the autopsy, degen-
eration of the heart and mercurial colitis were found. In addition
to these atrophy of the kidneys was present."
''Ring out the old, ring in the new" seems to be the rule of
action among the modern medics, they forgetting that as soon as
they, individually, settle down to make use of their knowledge
their "new" will soon be "rung out" and with it themselves. Con-
stant hopping to and fro isn't necessarily "steps in advance."
A CIRCULAR LETTER.
My Dear Doctor:
Perhaps the circular letters have been more of an annoyance
than a benefit to you, but you can rest assured that they were sent
only in the interest of Homoeopathy and her institutions with the
hope that some enthusiasm and interest would be aroused by the
physicians of the State.
You well know that the A. M. A. is using every effort to gain
power and control. In this she will not be successful as long as
we remain true to our system. It seems strange that the older
school, which at one time could not find adjectives offensive
enough to describe homoeopathic physicians, and which heaped
ridicule and sarcasm upon the system, should now almost bow to
the profession in beseeching tones, and asking us as individuals to
join their societies. Why is this? They tell us it is in the interest
of medical progress. It is not. It is in the interest of medical
tyranny and medical usurpation, the control of Homoeopathy and
homoeopathic institutions. Are we so willing to enter a camp
from which every concession we received had to be fought for?
Their changed attitude should set us thinking, for the motive is
surely impure.
We ought, in this State, to stand as one man against the
common enemy, and also to unite as one man in our own cause
and own interest. We will need the support of all, of every man,
Calendula as a Surgical Dressing. 271
in our legislative battle, which is sure to come the approaching
session of the Legislature, and we will win if every man is true to
his profession and belief. Awaiting the pleasure of greeting you
at the spring meeting in May,
I am very sincerely and fraternally,
A. P. Stauffer.
Hagerstown, Md.
CALENDULA AS A SURGICAL DRESSING.
S. T. Von Martinetz, M. D. A. M., Cedar Rapips, Iowa.
I desire to add my testimony to the action of Calendula in the
treatment of severe lacerated wounds. At one time, when in a
distant city, I was called to see a young man, who had had a very
severe injury to the elbow joint from being caught in a thrashing
machine. All the usual antiseptics had been tried by the physi-
cians in attendance. Suppuration had set in, in spite of the treat-
ment, and the pain was extreme. The attending physicians de-
manded an immediate amputation. The father insisted on my
seeing what could be done, by conservative methods.
I made a lotion of Calendula, and instructed that it be kept ap-
plied by means of wet dressing, for from twelve to eighteen hours.
If there was no benefit at that time, the attending physicians were
to proceed with their amputation. But to the delight of all con-
cerned the benefit was so pronounced, when the dressings were
removed the next day, that they desired to continue the treatment
I prepared then a quantity of the lotion, and advised them as to its
continued use.
I left the town on that day, but I learned subsequently that the
cure was a very satisfactory one, with the exception that the joint
was stiff from adhesions. Later, he fell on the stiff arm, breaking
up the adhesions by accident, and at the suggestion of his physi-
cian he kept up motion in the arm. until almost the entire normal
action was restored.
At another time I was consulted for a young lady who had been
thrown from a cart in a runaway, and had been dragged a long
distance, on the shoulder and arm. The shoulder had the skin and
deeper tissues torn away so that the joint was bare and there was
laceration on the side of the body, beneath the axilla, leaving the
axillary artery bare and in plain view.
2"J2 Tilings Doing Down South.
This wound was thoroughly cleansed, and was kept dressed
with Calendula for a number of weeks, and notwithstanding its
extreme severity, the restoration of the torn and lacerated parts
was very satisfactory. It was especially noticeable that the skin
which formed over the denuded surface to the extent of at least
twelve square inches, was very natural, and there was but little
scar tissue and no deformity.
My last case is that of a young man whose hand was lacerated
in a leather cutting machine. The skin was torn from each
finger, from the tips to the palm, so that the hand resembled that
of a skeleton. I washed the ringers with the Calendula solution,
and made a persistent application of this dressing. The hand was
redressed daily, healing took place slowly, but all the fingers were
movable to a degree, the scars interfering with the movement
only to a limited extent. He is now an attorney and makes no
complaint about the hand, which would probably have been am-
putated, but for this treatment.
I generally use this remedy in the proportion of one ounce of
the tincture to a pint of water, but I prefer the single remedy in
surgical cases to any mixtures, though I often give internal treat-
ment as a tonic or restorative.
I use this remedy also in burns, but in these cases I combine it
with a small proportion of Arnica, and with powdered alum. In
the treatment of simple forms of sore eyes, I use Calendula in
very weak solution and the results are the very best. — Elling-
wood's Therapeutist.
THINGS DOING DOWN SOUTH.
President Dr. Edward Harper, of New Orleans, La., and Sec-
retary Dr. Wm. A. Boies, of Knoxville, Tenn., have sent out the
"Announcement" printed below. Doubtless inquirers can obtain
any desired particulars by addressing either of these gentlemen.
"The South" is a vast region, homoeopathic physicians are few in
it, so they should, in lieu of State societies, unite in the association
even if they cannot all attend the meeting. To be a member of
such a body adds strength to that body, and, in turn, to the mem-
ber. The strength is intangible, but for all that. real. A man
should not unite with these general organizations with a sole view
of benefit to self, but for the common weal.
Announcement. 273,
ANNOUNCEMENT.
The twenty-sixth session of the Southern Homoeopathic Medi-
cal Association will be held in Hot Springs, Ark., November 15,
16, and 17, 1909. We earnestly urge every homoeopathic physi-
cian in the Southern States to become a member of the Associa-
tion and aid in the work of propagandism now being carried on all
over this country with more vigor than ever before in the history
of Homoeopathy.
Organization and propagation are more imperative now than
ever, and it is a duty each one of us owe to the system of medi-
cine we practice to support our national, sectional, State and local
organizations, if we are to maintain our rights before legislative
bodies and secure the representation to which we are justly en-
titled in medical departments of State universities and other medi-
cal institutions of this country that are supported by taxation of
the public. This can be done if we will all join together and work
with this purpose in view.
The benefit of good and successful meetings for the propaga-
tion of Homoeopathy in the South are already apparent, and aptly
demonstrated by the results of the last meeting of the Southern
in New Orleans, as quite a number of letters have been received
from several different States making inquiry in regard to ho-
moeopathic treatment, and in every instance they came from places
where we have no homoeopathic physician. From this it is but
reasonable to suppose that where there were representatives of
our school, others consulted with them. This also renders invalid
that old excuse, "I can never attend the meetings, so can derive
no benefit from the organization," which we so often hear as a
reason for not becoming a member of the Southern Association.
The last meeting of the Southern was one of the best held in-
many years, and there is no reason why the next session at Hot
Springs should not be even more successful if we will only work
to make it so, but we must all work together with this purpose in
view. Spasmodic efforts and occasional good meeting will be of
little avail in the work of propagation, they must be continuous,
we must have good meetings every year to accomplish our pur-
pose and obtain lasting benefits, else the good one may do is lost;
before we hold another.
2J4 Therapeutic Notes.
Let us again urge every Southern Homoeopath to support the
Southern by becoming a member, give it his moral as well as
financial support and contribute his mite to the cause. "In union
there is strength."
Edward Harper. President:
Wm. A. Boies. Secretary.
THERAPEUTICS NOTES.
A man, whether doctor or under doctor's orders, being un-
known to our informant, bought some Succus cineraria maritime
and some tablets of Calcarea fiuor., and remarked to the clerk who
waited on him that the combination, the one externally and the
other internally, was the best procedure known for cataract.
In the case of a man, he is dead now for some years, who was
"bedridden for a long time, nearly ten years, it was found that
Arnica oil was the best remedy for the inevitable bed sores. By
the use of this agent he was kept quite free from those trouble-
some sores during that long period.
A contributor to Therapeutist, Dr. J. L. Myers, Hiawatha,
Kan. "Phaseolus nana is a grand remedy for heart troubles, but
be a Homoeopath in its use, not under 6x or you will have trouble/'
This is the remedy proved by Dr. A. M. dishing ; its effect on the
heart was so very marked as to seriously frighten the prover.
An unknown writer says that Gaultheria (i. e., wintergreen)
will give great relief in severe cases of asthma, though it may not
permanently cure the case. He gave 15 drops for a dose.
Dr. Wirz, Durlach, Germany, details a case that turned out to
De tape worm and not anaemia or chlorosis. "I gave her my old
reliable tape worm medicine, homoeopathic Cuprum oxydat., and
when the patient returned in a week all her symptoms had van-
ished ; she actually had had a tape worm.
"I consider Stramonium the best remedy for suppression of
urine during the course of any eruptive disease," writes Dr.
George Royal in the Iowa Horn. Jour.
Dr. M. E. Euller, Wauconda, 111., writes (Chicago Night Uni-
versity Bui) how he had a severe fall on the ice and the result
Therapeutic Xotes. 275
was unusual absentmindedness, would forget in a few minutes
what he had done. He took Caladium 3.x, with the result that he
lost all taste for his cigar, which previously he had much enjoyed.
Some of the remedy was given to a heavy smoker, but he refused
to continue it because it was taking all desire for smoking from
him.
"Dr. C. E. Walton, Cincinnati, I would like to call attention tx>
one use of Bisulphide of carbon, that is, the local. Some physi-
cians who practice Homoeopathy also make local applications for
the control of neuralgia. They may be tempted to use chloroform
liniment. If they will take Bisulphide of carbon, put it on cotton,
put it in a morphine bottle and lay upon the skin, they will get the
most intense heat without any vesiculation. There are some things
that will respond quickly to their treatment ; facial neuralgia,
sciatica, etc. It is a great relief." — Journal A. I. H Trans., 1909.
In an old pamphlet is the statement that for ecchymosis that
lingers long Ledum is the remedy ; not externally but internally.
This particularly recommending Ledum 30. If any one has any
old "black and blue" marks let him give this drug a trial and note
results.
Dr. Wallace McGeorge (Hahn. Monthly) reports a case of
heart disease where l< post-mortem revealed calcified coronary
arteries and a calcareous deposit on the aorta" in which Magnesia
phos. in hot water so relieved the paroxysms of pain and lessened
their duration that the patient begged for "those powders."
Dr. W. H. Phillips (Med. and Sur. Rep.) reports a case of in-
creasing deafness for two years, buzzing and whizzing, increased
in damp weather, in which massage, electricity, etc., had been em-
ployed with no special results, that was cured by Petroleum 6x^
given on the aggravation from damp.
The same (Dr. W. H. Phillips) also reports the case of a man-
suffering from pachydermia laryngis, had been hoarse for years,
and had almost lost the use of his voice. Thuja 30X caused tem-
porary improvement, and Thuja 0, 5 dropsdaily, caused an almost
complete cure. Local treatment had been previously unsuccess-
fully employed.
"My temperature stayed around 103 ° to 1040 for about two
weeks, and, although I attended to business, I was the sickest pa-
Suggestions Concerning the Nose. 276
tient of them all. I felt as if I was reincinerated in a wooden
walking machine, as all ordinary sensations were lost, and I didn't
care particularly if they stayed lost," writes Dr. I. V. Cole, Seattle,
in Ell. Thcrap. A teaspoonful of Achillea Millefolium in a pint
of hot lemonade at bedtime produced a profuse sweat, and with it
the fever disappeared. Later, in practice, he found this drug,
Millefolium, would relieve these cases of continued high tem-
perature.
A solution of Calendula and water, externally, with Arsenicum
internally, according to Helmuth, will quickly relieve carbuncles.
SUGGESTIONS CONCERNING THE NOSE.
Every now and then the American Journal of Surgery sends
out a sheet of printed "Surgical Suggestions" which you will find
filling the little blank spaces left at the bottom of the page in
me Heal journals. The last lot concerns the nose. Here are some
of them that may be useful : "Polypi are not merely cystic
tumors — they often spring from a base of diseased bone. Remov-
ing the poly- m does not cure the disease; the affected bone neces-
sarily must be removed." Another and pleasanter way would be
the homoeopathic remedy for diseased bones of which there are
several.
"Pain and swelling of the tip of the nose, is often caused by an
infection of the hair follicles in the vestibule."
' 'Nose-picking' may result in a perforation of the septum."
"An infection of the hair follicles of the nose is quickly relieved
by the application of a 1 per cent, salve of yellow oxide of mer-
cury."
"A foreign body in the nose of a child is often suggested by a
discharge of mucus from one side only."
"Small clinging pieces of adenoid tissue which have not been
removed by the curette will very likely set up an inflammatory re-
action on the posterior pharyngeal wall which is more distressing
than the adenoids themselves."
Homoeopathic Recorder.
PUBLISHED MONTHLY AT LANCASTER PA.
By BOERICKE & TAFEL.
SUBSCRIPTION, 3i.oo,TO FOREIGN COUNTRIES $1.24 PER ANNUM
Address communications, books fo* review, exchanges , etc., fo* (he editor, to
E. P. ANSHUTZ, P.O. Box 921 Philadelphia. Pa.
EDITORIAL BREVITIES.
Ficus Religiosa. — After reprinting the note that appeared in
the November (1908) Recorder, concerning Drs. King and
Mattoli's experience with Ficus religioso, which note seems to
have angered Dr. Ghose, who is responsible for the remedy — he
wrote a letter to every homoeopathic journal on the matter, and the
most of them published it — the Calcutta Journal of Medicine
makes the following comments :
"In Dr. Clarke's 'Dictionary of Materia Medica' we see the
name 'Pakur' has been given to Ficus Religiosa. But Ficus
Religiosa is not Pakur; it is Peepul, or Aswatha. Pakur is Ficus
venosa. And neither Pakur nor Aswatha belongs to the specie
Mara con. Both of them belong to the sub-order Ficaca?, which
"belong to the natural order Urticacae. The botanical and the
native name of the tree could not have been so mistaken by Dr.
'Clarke had he not implicit reliance upon Babu S. C. Ghose.
About the proving of the drug there is grave doubt because
Ficus venosa (the Pakur) and not Religiosa has the virtue of
stopping haemorrhage from the bowels and the lungs. This is
known to every Kaznraj of our country. Proving of drugs ac-
cording to the method of Hahnemann is not an easy affair, and
the future compilers of our materia medica will do well to ex-
ercise their judgment in sifting the chaff from the grain, because
medicine not well proved placed in the pages of a high authority
is calculated to do more evil than good and ultimately disgrace is
brought upon our profesison."
The Philosophy of Bill Collecting — A good manv doctors
278 Editorial Brevities.
worry and are short of money because they cannot collect what is
due them. A doctor's or lawyer's fee is essentially no different
than the bills of the grocer, coal dealer or any other tradesman's.
In one case the commodity delivered was professional service, in
the other goods, in both the buyer owes the seller money that in
normal cases should be paid. The grocer first duns and then
sues ; let the doctor do the same, for it is not "unprofessional" to
demand your own. If the man owing you money is really unable
to pay you are stuck and must make the best of it. If he is un-
fortunate, but of the right sort, even increasing the debt may be
wise, generous and noble ; help the man. If he be the other sort
go thy way in peace. If he is well able to pay but shifts, dodges
and adopts the ways of the typical dead beat, sue him — or give it
to a lawyer .for collection. "But the effect on the neighborhood
and the public?" It will, first, either amuse them to know that
so-and-so has been sued for his "doctor bill ;" or second, it will
make them think your services must be valuable because you do
not hesitate to press your claim. But above all else send in your
bills promptly, and if you haven't time to make them out hire
some one to do it. Lastly set a good example by paying your
own bills.
What Shall Be Done With the Xew Pariah? — Having
discovered that the consumptive is a "pariah," and proclaimed the
fact to the people, the gentlemen who did it are now worried
about what they shall do with him. Dr. Albert E. Roussel dis-
cusses the subject in the pages of the Bulletin of the Medico-
Chirurigical College. He writes:
"The anti-tuberculosis propaganda has achieved marvelous re-
sults in diagnosis, prevention and treatment of the disease, but
has made no provisions or outlined no directions for the welfare
of the discharged or semi-invalided tuberculosis patient. The
odium attached to the disease is sufficient to brand him as a
pariah, and he drifts around as a social outcast until a relapse
occurs and he again becomes an inmate of some charitable insti-
tution, meanwhile having produced other infection in his down-
ward course."
That the public has been worked np into a panic about the
danger of contracting this disease by contact with those afflicted
with it is apparent from the various laws passed by several State-
Editorial Brevities. 279
legislatures excluding" persons suffering from tuberculosis. The
panic is a foolish one, but that does not take away the serious con-
dition it has caused. The men who caused it ought to be held
responsible for its possible consequences. There are with us a
huge army of men and women who are every day becoming more
of a pariah class, avoided more and more and the doors shut in
their faces, all because of the teachings so sensationally oreached
by a certain body of men. What shall be done with them? Dr.
Roussel advocates putting them to work on farms. But the
farmers do not want them, and even if they were received on a
farm its produce could not find buyers if it were known to be
worked by those afflicted with tuberculosis.
Perhaps, however, it is not altogether fair to blame any set of
men for what logicallv follows the germ theorv ; that is the root
of the trouble. So long as it is taught that tuberculosis (and
other diseases) is due to a specific germ and not to the manner of
living so long will the error prevail.
Two Rattle Snake Bite Cases. — The March issue of the
Recorder for this year, page 121, contains the treatment of a
rattle snake bite with prompt recovery, related by Dr. H. D. Beck-
with ; the remedy was Cimicifuga internally and externally. Pa-
tient out the next day. Now a case of a similar bite is given in
the Jour A. M. A., May 5th. On the thirty-third day the patient
was far enough along to be discharged. The scientific treatment
consisted of cauterizing and then, either externally, internally or
hypodermically, he received potassium permanganate, strychnine,
whiskey, salt solution irrigations, bichloride of mercury, Cal-
mette's antivenous serum, ichthyol ointment, Bland's pills, and on
the twenty-second day the finger was amputated. The case re-
lated by Dr. Beckwith was treated by a native Indian doctor,
whose like would quite properly be hustled to jail if he attempted
his ignorant practices to-day.
Another Regular Row. — The famous Council on Pharmacy
and Chemistry, set up by the bosses of the A. M. A., a sort of
proprietary inquisition of proprietories, on the one side, and a cer-
tain "Chemical Co." with Dr. Henry Beates, Jr., President of the
Pennsylvania State Medical Board, on the other have come in
conflict. The Council threw out the chemical company's product
280 Editorial Brevities.
as unethical, hence no good, and that company, backed by Dr_
Beates, replies by pamphlet that the Council is ditto. To this the
Council comes back heavily, and among other things says :
"So far as the referee can judge from his letter. Dr. Beates has
confused his hostility to various persons, including some members
of the Council on Pharmacy and Chemistry, with his belief in the
products of the ^Ifg- Co. In no other way can the
referee explain his dark hints as to politics, conspiracies, persecu-
tions and bribery, or his unqualified approval of the slanderous
pamphlet issued by the manufacturer of the products, or his
failure to recognize that loose and irrelevant suggestions of fraud
could not do the products any good in the eyes of any competent
referee."
We omit the name of the company and its product as being
irrelevant, because the advertising pages of journals swarm with
similar things, neither better nor worse whether "recognized" by
the Council or condemned by it. About two years ago Dr. Beates
in the pride of his heart and office tried to ride down "dying Ho-
moeopathy." Xow he is up against giants. Such is life! Once-
mighty, and then, punk.
The Cumulative Effect of Serum. — The Jour. A. M. A.,
May 8th, contains a letter from Dr. H. D'Arcy Power, of San
Francisco, relating his personal experience with serum. In 1902
he gave himself an injection of antitoxin as a prophylactic with
no inconvenience. A few months later he received an injection of
Haffkine's prophylactic against the plague, to which there was a
severe reaction and malaise. This year, 1909. he again had a
prophylactic dose of antitoxin, an interne at the same time re-
ceiving one. A very decided and serious state followed it.
"Xow the main interest of the case lies in the fact that in 1902
I was not susceptible to the toxic action of the serum; in 1909 I
was intensely so. The serum of the latter date was not toxic in
itself, as shown by its lack of action in the case of both patient and
interne — ergo it would seem as though I had been activated by
the first dose and remained so after a period of seven years. We
clearly need the aid of a careful investigation into the question of
time limit. It may well be that my experience was not so excep-
tii nal as it appears."
Editorial Brevities. 281
And while investigating the time limit it might be well to look
into the permanent changes for the worse wrought in the body by
those injections of brute serums into human beings. The fact
that it happens to be the "correct" thing to do at the present stage
of the game does not guarantee its being harmless. It may be
laying the foundation for another kind of poison.
Homoeopathy Is Taboo. — In a letter to the May issue of
Brit. Horn. Review, Dr. E. A. Hawkes relates his part in a certain
case before a court of law, the particulars of which is not to the
point. He writes, among other things : "I volunteered to give
evidence, and on reading extracts from the article on 'Agaricus'
in the 'Cyclopaedia of Drug Pathogenesy' I was told that, as the
hook was not a recognized one, my evidence was valueless. I,
"however, read some of Ringer's remarks from the same book, and
these were accepted." This item is quoted for the benefit of those
gentlemen who, though holding degrees from a homoeopathic
medical college, nevertheless long for affiliation with "regular
medical men." If a book like the Cyclopcudia is refused recogni-
tion how would J. Smith, M. D., of the Homoeopathic
Medical College, stand? He wouldn't stand, he would sit in a far
back seat — if he kept quiet.
Typhoid Bacilli. — The learned Journal A. M. A. devotes an
editorial in its May 8th issue to ''Typhoid Bacilli Carriers ; Their
Importance and Management." It is said that 5 per cent, of all
individuals who have suffered from typhoid, and many ''who have
never had an illness clinically recognizable as this disease, may
carry typhoid bacilli in their excreta for years." "It might seem
theoretically feasible to form colonies of bacillus carriers as we
now do of epileptics, but * * * the public would not stand
for'' it. The effect of purgation is nil, "the bacilli remaining as
before." Intestinal antiseptics have proved useless. "The con-
ception of Forster that the gall bladder is the site of constant
production of typhoid bacilli" points to the "extirpation of the
gall bladder," but it is doubted if the public would stand for
"so dangerous a major operation," and this the more so as later
observations show that in such cases "also the smaller bile pass-
ages are infected." Further than this deponent saith not. It is
up to the scientific ones to find a way of disposing of those "bacilli
282 • Editorial Brevities.
carriers." Probably their one measure, as in all similar cases
with other diseases, will be "isolation." How the bacilli get into
the gall bladder and flourish there for years is not stated. Quite
likely if this new "menace" were to receive constitutional treat-
ment by homoeopathic medicine the bacilli would soon cease, also,,
and this is more than likely, the individual remedy will not be
allowed to take part in the matter.
"The Minimum Dose." — Under this title we publish a paper
in this issue from the pen of our learned friend, Dr. Fornias.
Some of the readers will not agree with it, while others will wel-
come it. The Recorder aims at being a homoeopathic journal, and
whether a man prescribes the tincture as Hahnemann did in the
illustrative case he records in the preface to the Materia Medica
Pura, or the 30th potency as he advises later, or whether it be the
D. M., so long as the drug is given according to the law of
similia, is not considered by this journal. The potency and size of
the dose is a matter of individual judgment. If any one wishes to
dispute the matter with Dr. Fornias these pages are equally at his
disposal.
Curious Reasoning. — With the regularity of the seasons al-
most come the gentlemen who tell the world that many of the
reproaches Homoeopaths suffer at the hands of "physicians" is
due to their ill considered attitude. He tells us that Hahnemann
lived in another century, and that while we all do him the utmost
honor for what he did and for his great learning, still, you know,
we have advanced since then, and it is not reasonable to expect us
to be bound hand and foot to the past ; let us throw off our shack-
les and go forward ! and so on. A speech or paper on these lines
is almost sure to obtain a round of applause and a tolerant reply
from the allopathic brother who — indirectly, of course, — tells the
company to persevere, and in time they may become physicians,
which is to say, allopaths. The reader of such a paper, or the
speaker, is usually so full of cordial love for the other man that
every one is moved to a sense of good fellowship. However,
when the. effects wear off things take on a different look. The
law discovered by Newton is unchanged ; it has not ''advanced"
a bit. So it is with the deeper and more subtle law discovered
(not created) by Hahnemann; it has not advanced or changed.
Editorial Brevities. 283
"What the man Xewton or the man Hahnemann wrote and taught
is worthy of respect but is not binding- on any one, but the laws
they discovered are things no man can "advance ;" a whole con-
gress of scientists, big and little, cannot budge them. If any
gathering of scientists pooh, poohs, the law discovered by Hahne-
mann, so much the worse for that bunch. Get your ideas straight
on this thing of "advance" and then you can judge them rationally
and go forward with those that are really advancing in an under-
standing of the application of the universal therapeutic law.
Cure Must Stand First. — Our amiable neighbor had its war-
paint on in the beautiful month of May. It says there is a baneful
influence in the "indiscriminate State aid to hospitals." and there
are too many hospitals and medical schools in Philadelphia. On
this latter point it says, among other things : "And why should
there not be appointed a professor or professors to teach the
history of Hahnemannism and the therapeutics of Rhus tox. 0, of
1-6 drug strength and of further potentizing as far as your con-
science will permit, in the University of Pennsylvania ?" The chief
objection would be in the making of the master thing in medicine
the subordinate, which is a disorderly proceeding. The end of
medicine, strange as it may seem, is the cure of disease, and Ho-
moeopathy is the Law by which men are scientifically guided in
the administration of drugs for the cure of disease. The cure of
disease must stand first in a real medical school. The "amiable
neighbor" is Medical Xotes and Queries.
Only Like to Like Goes. — Under the very appropriate head-
ing, which is also a reply, the Iozca Homoeopathic Journal pub-
lishes a letter from a subscriber which runs as follows :
"How can I get back home?" "Will the Hahnemann Medical
Association of Iowa admit to membership one who is a member
of the A. M. A.? The society of which I was a member voted to
go into the A. M. A., and I was taken along. I want to go back
into the fold. I thought there would be an opportunity to discuss
homoeopathic principles and homoeopathic remedies if I joined the
county and national societies of the old school, and so put some
leaven into the lump. I find, however, that I was counting with-
out my host. Such discussions are not permitted, so I am coming
back." "We were warned at our last meeting about consulting
with irregulars."
284 Editorial Brevities.
The best way to leaven the lump is to practice plain common
sense Homoeopathy and keep with your like. When incompatible^
are mixed there is only a mess resulting.
Color in Tinctures. — Professor John Uri Lloyd contributes
a paper on Chlorophyll to the April issue of Ellimvood's Thera-
peutist. He says that this substance (the green coloring matter)
is to plants somewhat as the lungs are to an animal. It is the
same in all plants, and in itself is absolutely inert. It is this sub-
stance that causes tinctures to sometimes change their color with
age. For instance, a doctor who has had a lot of a given tincture
for several years may notice that it is of a different color from
the fresh lot he may have received. The change in the chlorophyll
by age is the cause of the difference ; therapeutically, there is no
difference in properly made tinctures. We may add to this that
at one time tricky pharmacists would subject dried plants to-
strong alcohol, which extracts the chlorophyll very effectually
from dried plants, and then point to the markedly increased green
color resulting as an evidence that the plant was a fresh plant
tincture, wheras it was not a fresh plant tincture.
Progress of the Year. — An estimable "regular" exchange
prints a paper headed, "The Medical Progress of the Past Year.''
A goodly portion of it is made up of the consideration of the
numerous new "tests" for diagnostic purposes. These do not
seem to have been pre-eminently successful, but even had they
been so, the question would have naturally arisen. What are you
going to do about it? Your old ways of curing disease are con-
demned by your leaders, and your new ways, with serums and
vaccines, are, when put mildly, of "doubtful value," "uncertain,""
and the like. Wliere is that "progress?" Truly the honest allo-
path had better get him a few homoeopathic books and a modest
stock of the polychrest homoeopathic remedies and take refuge in
them until his Osiers and the kindred scientists can discover some-
thing that will cure the sick baby and other members of an ordi-
nary household that come under the care of the average family
doctor. Now this is really and truly excellent advice, for while
the preventiion of disease is a noble work, it is not all a family-
doctor is called upon to do.
Editorial Brevities. 285
"Scientific" Drugs. — Herman Weller is a member of the New
Jersev Pharmaceutical Association. At a recent meeting he read
a paper, and this is a clipping from it : "I have learned from good
authority that the majority of coal tar preparations are not used
in Germany, but are manufactured expressly for the American
market. Our friends from abroad have erected at our expense
many monuments upon our shelves to commemorate to future
generations the shrewdness of the German chemist. I have also
heard it whispered that some coal tar preparations have been the
means to have caused many tombstones to be erected ahead of
time." But bless your heart, man, isn't the aim of the elect of
medicine to (first) stop pain, and (second) cut out the disease?'
Go to!
4 Ax Unlawful Combination.''' — There be those who say that
the American Medical Association is "an unlawful combination
for the suppression of trade;" if that be true then the powers at
Washington should proceed against it as they have against sun-
dry other unlawful would-be monopolies. Its enemies — good
allopaths, too, — say that it, the A. M. A., has fallen into the hands.
of a few political doctors and medicine factories, and they are
bent on a monopoly. Their Council of Pharmacy says what a
journal may advertise and a doctor prescribe outside of the-
domain of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. On this an esteemed allo-
pathic exchange hotly asks :
"'Who gave this council the right to dictate to the press what
shall and shall not be advocated? This is the most insolent, high
handed and outrageous act of all the brazen acts of the political
machine that controls the American Medical Association and its
organ?" Why, dear sir. the '"right," like most rights of that
nature limiting the personal liberty of man in things he has the
God-given right to enjoy, was simply taken, assumed, and is to
be fortified by medical laws bullied from bewildered law makers.
The companion scheme is to dictate which colleges are ''scientific,"
and. therefore. O. K., and which are X. G. With the sought-for
law to "protect the public," and endorse these schemes, they will
have as tight a monopoly as ever that good man, John D. Rocke-
feller, created. May be "Standard Oil" will take "them under
cover"' as it does most things.
286 News and Current Items.
An Optimist. — Dr. Woods Hutchinson said recently that
twenty million dollars would render Xew York City free from
consumption. Dr. Hutchinson is a cheerful optimist. Xew York
"has about five million people, so the twenty million dollars would
give only four dollars per head, which isnt enough. Even omit-
ting "the 400" and Wall Street from the count, it isn't enough, for
tuberculosis is not like a marsh that can be drained and filled in
once for all times. A glorious ''fight" could be put up with
twenty million dollars, but whether there would be no more con-
sumption in the city after it was spent would be another question.
Sin and disease, even when scientifically considered, seem to be in
a manner synonyms.
NEWS AND CURRENT ITEMS.
Hering Medical College, Chicago, has conferred the Honorary
Degree of Doctor of Medicine on E. P. Anshutz in recognition of
his work for Homoeopathy. The honor was unexpected, and is
most highly appreciated by the recipient.
Mr. Anshutz was also recently elected Corresponding Member
of the Societe Francaise d'Homceopathie.
Dr. Samuel G. Dixon has a rod in pickle for all doctors who
fail to report births. A bunch of them have been arrested. The
penalty is a fine anywhere from $5 to $50.
Dr. W. C. Abbott, scientist and medicine maker, informs the
world in a purely scientific paper that "Arnica is one of the Ameri-
can plants that came to us from the Indians." Live and learn !
Dr. Ward has removed his office to "The Galen," 391 Sutter
street, San Francisco, Calif. Needless, perhaps, to add that Dr.
Ward is the great surgeon of that city.
Dr. John Strothers Gaines has removed to the Sherman Square
Hotel, 71st street and Broadway, Xew York City.
Dr. H. M. Richardson (Boston M. and S. J.) laments the lack
of "intelligent history taking" in both medical and surgical cases,
both before and after. A good deal could be learned by following
the after history especially.
Dr. H. D. Andrews (Buffalo Med. and Surg. Jour.) writes:
Xews and Current Items. 287
"As to the clinical value of the ophthalmo-tuberculin reaction for
prognosis clinicians are being impressed with its limitations."
Very gently put.
The committee on the bill enacting compulsory vaccination on
the children of Illinois gave its opponents just thirty minutes'"
hearing and treated the opposition as a joke ; the bill's advocates
had all the time they wanted and were treated with the respect
due those who occupy the seats of the mighty. Latter day poli-
ticians in Illinois are evidently out of date, or are hypnotized by
the allopathic big ones. Bright politicians know that wherever
the voters get a chance to-day ancient and feudal laws are kicked
out with vigor.
Dr. H. W. Schwartz in a letter to Medical Advance says he is
to read a paper on Homoeopathy to the Sendai Medical Society,
Japan, of which he is a member. He writes that the Japanese..
many of them, have never even heard the word Homoeopathy. A
few years ago they knew little of battle ships. They learn fast.
An old, responsible newspaper recently said, editorially, and
concerning medical "experts:" "Now it looks as if the wise
doctors can make any man insane if they get the fees." The
sting of truth makes this all the more bitter for the honest physi-
cian
The U. S. Labor Bulletin | Xo. 79) asserts that 49.2 of deaths
among the grinders is from tuberculosis caused by the dust.
Tut. tut ! You mean bacilli.
"According to the latest estimate there are about 400,000 lepers
in India. This estimate does not include those tainted with
leprosy, but covers only those who have developed the disease
sufficiently to be easily recognized as confirmed lepers." — Public
Health Reports.
For third quarter, 1908, Public Health Reports give for the
Phillipines 18,292 cases of cholera and 11,573 deaths, a death
rate of a fractoin over 63 per cent. Why should not the Govern-
ment employ Cuprum as a prophylactic for those exposed, and
according to indications Camphora, Veratrum alb., Arsen. or
Cuprum for the cure. This quartette has kept the death rate*
down in other places to 6 per cent.
PERSONAL.
An advertising journal seriously tells the world that "heroes" have been
made by advertising. Sure!
One of the suffragette journals now writes it "the British lioness." Poor
old lion !
Beecher said he never let grammar get in the way of an idea.
Some scientists say there are no people in Mars and others talk about
signaling Mars.
"Hot air therapy." Well !
"Homoeopathy will wake up some morning and find itself dead." — III.
Med. Jour. Ah, there, Pat!
A new thing has been added to medical science and the new thing is
impulsive insanity/
Some men are so charitable that they damn any one with a belief.
What shall we say to Mars when signaling?
A pure mental food bill has been suggested.
"That blessed and comforting word 'scientific!' Like charity it covers
a multitude of sins — of empiricism." — Brit. Horn. Review.
"We may therefore assume" means fight if you question it.
It is said that man is a reasoning animal, but he doesn't exercise the
faculty — much.
"Thousands of professional men are starving," says a contemporary.
Well, "the people demand competition." don't they?
"Alcohol in hot cross buns," says the Lancet. Alcohol goes with a bun
in this country, too.
Dr. Wiley says mixed drinks are dangerous. Many citizens will agree
with him.
Dr. A. Gordan : "The attempt to draw dividing lines between sanity
and insanity is unreal and unscientific." Well?
Dr. W. S. Hall : "Alcohol is a waste product of tissue metabolism."
Very profound.
"What shall we teach the general practitioner concerning the treatment
of abortion?" Title of recent paper. Why not the truth, O superior one!
"The increasing interest in serum poisoning" begins an article.
"Every family should . . . not produce more children than they can
love," etc. — DepeWj X. Y. Health Board.
"No family should raise more than four children." — Depeii.', Health
Board.
"Every married family should have a family physician whose duty it is to
space the children." — Depezv, Health Board.
"Healthy criticism is invited." — Depezc, Health Board. The other sort,
presumably, need not apply. Great age!
"We have broken the chains of authority." "Regular" editor. That's
THE
HOMCEOPATHIC RECORDER
Vol. XXIV Lancaster, Pa., July, 1909 No. 7
SOMETHING ABOUT PRESCRIBING, MATERIA
MEDICA AND PROVINGS.
Hahnemann was a somewhat testy gentleman, as witness what
he said to those persons who asked him for "exact directions'*
for homoeopathic prescribing. He wrote, (and this you will find
in the '"preamble" of his Materia Medico Pura) :
"Many persons of my acquaintance, but half converted to Ho-
moeopathy have repeatedly begged me to publish still more exact
directions as to how this doctrine may be applied in practice, and
how we are to proceed. I am astonished that after the very par-
ticular directions contained in the Organon of Medicine more
special instructions can be wished for."
Here it is, put as sharply as is allowable in a formal work of
this nature, that if you will not read the Organon, where all this
and other relative matters, is fully explained, you can go — else-
where, for all he cares, for he does not intend to again repeat the
instructions.
An "organon" is ''a method by which philosophic or scientific
investigations may be conducted." The Organon written by
Hahnemann is the instrument by which Homoeopathy may be
investigated, and applied in practice, in all its details. If one
aiming to be a homoeopathic physician has not, or will not, read
it, so much the worse for him, according to Hahnemann— but
he will not re-write, or re-explain the matter for the benefit of
lazy, or impecunious, enquirers.
"Get the book and read it," he exclaims in effect, "if you want
to know what Homoeopathy is."
Here is another swipe at that class who would know and prac-
tice Homoeopathy without comprehending its fundamentals. He
290 Prescribing, Materia Medica and Provtngs.
writes : "I am also asked, 'How are we to examine the disease
in each particular case ?' As if special enough directions were not
to be found in the book just mentioned !" And then he goes on
to testily state that Homoeopathy is not directed towards imagi-
nary or "invented" things, or to man-made names of the ailment,
but to the disease as it manifests itself in each particular person
by the complex, or "totality," of its subjective and objective
manifestations or symptoms. Treat the patient.
"Now we can neither enumerate all the possible aggregates
of symptoms of all cases of disease that may occur, nor indicate
c priori the homoeopathic medicine for these (a priori indeter-
minable) possibilities." Hence each case of the same disease must
be individualized. It is not a case of so and so but of a sick
human being.
Nevertheless, after the general all-round scolding outlined
above, Hahnemann proceeds to give an illustrative case, the
famous "washer-woman case" to which he gave Bryonia 0 and
made a striking cure.
In this "preamble" he touches on the subject of proving and
says that every homoeopathic physician should make provings,
using the "dynamized drug" for that purpose. "It is somewhat
too much to expect us to work merely for the benefit of selfish
individuals, who will contribute nothing to complete" the materia
medica and enlarge the knowledge of it.
There is a point here that is well worth considering. We do
not think that Hahnemann meant that the men should push prov-
ings to the- limit of poisoning, or disability, but until they can feel
for themselves the "sphere" of the drug. A very slight electric
shock will give any one the "feel" of electricity as indelibly as
though he were nearly killed by it. Similarly, if a man takes
continuously of any of our well known drugs — Arsenicum.
Aconite, Rhus or any other — until he feels, as it were, the first
shock of the drug, he will have a clearer idea of that drug than
will any other man who has not experienced it. If the general
effect of these slight provings are sent to the homoeopathic jour-
nals and published they will go to make up the great materia
medica of the future.
Provings of this sort, it is said on good authority, Hahne-
A Certain Brand of Science. 291
mann for instance, and others, not only do one no harm, but are
really beneficial to the general health. This was certainly true
of Hahnemann himself. Select some one of the polychrests, or
any drug, in the 6th or 30th potency, put a vial of it handy and
take it repeatedly until you feel the first undoubted shock of the
drug efTect, or try it on some willing layman and report.
Provings of this sort might be compared with the provings of
massive doses, as the gradual dawning of light on a scene is
compared with a blinding flash in the darkness.
All the foregoing is old, very old, but still it is interesting to
sometimes go over the old "open road" again "lest we forget."
CONCERNING A CERTAIN BRAND OF "SCIENCE"
TAUGHT IN OUR COLLEGES.
The colleges here referred to are not our generally excellent
homoeopathic colleges, but the great universities and seats of
learning stretched from Massachusetts to California. The
"science" referred to is that outlined by Air. Harold Bolce in his
three papers published in the Cosmopolitan for May-July.
True science, as we understand it, deals with matter, with that
which can be demonstrated to the senses, with that which can be
handled, controlled and put to use. On the old standard that
a man, or thing, is to be judged by its fruits, this science can be
pronounced good, for its fruits are good, and its works are mar-
velous. But there is another realm into which matter does not
enter, once termed meta-physics — above physics, or matter. Now
the corps of professors who deal with this realm in the uni-
versities seem to have assumed that they are to treat things there
as their brethren in the other realm treat matter. The result is
curious ; also sad, or amusing, according to your temperament.
They teach that "the Decalogue is no more sacred than a
syllabus," even though it is the basis of all civil law. From this
naturally follows the teaching that "there are no absolute evils ;"
that "moral precepts are but shibboleths" and "immorality is
merely a departure from the accepted standard of the time."
These are but a few of the many similar teachings that lead up
292 Sepsin.
to the final one that men are gods — though some of them say
that God is something that can be demonstrated in the laboratory
(therefore, a chemical) and their pupils try to create life, or
God.
Some of them tolerate the Bible, but want to re-write it. Per-
haps it would be better for them to understand it. The greatest
powers are least in evidence ; the tornado, the volcano, the earth-
quake are noisy but nothing to the power that forever carries the
earth around the sun and keeps the fire of the sun forever burn-
ing. Christendom dominates the world for good — and for bad.
Before the advent of Christianity the people of Christendom were
primitive barbarians and had been so from the beginning. Chris-
tianity came without apparent force and lo, the mighty change !
Xow they would "re-edit" that which raised them from bar-
barians.
In medicine they seem inclined to sweep away, with a Pod-
snapian wave of the arm, all of the old medicine. They seem to
incline to Christian Science, or things like the Emmanuel Move-
ment ; one of them in the most ultra scientific center recently re-
signed his professorship and became a Christian Scientist. Medi-
cine from the days of Aesculapius, like Christendom, remained
in a species of barbaric chaos until Homoeopathy was given to
the world. Then there followed a mighty change. The ma-
jority of men said the sudden change was due to "progress" and
"science;" but those are mere terms explaining nothing and so,
though coming from very scientific centers, are quite unscientific,
for they explain nothing. The medical world was in chaos until
Homoeopathy came. Then there was a change, for the power
was mighty ; it was a truth — therefore, fixed and unchangeable,
though many would "re-edit" it also.
"Little tin gods" is of the people's slang, but Oh, so expressive !
"SEPSIN."
By P. W. Shedd, M. D. New York.
Since the days of Hahnemann and his immediate followers,
there has been (if we exclude drug pathogenesis) little or no re-
search or laboratory work or even utilization thereof bearing the
Sepsin. 293
"hall-mark of the homoeopathic branch of medicine. And the
newer provings, with few exceptions (such as the pathogenesis
of Gelsemium) do not figure prominently as therapeutic assets.
The great polychrests are legacies from the old masters, and ex-
cluding them, what has been accomplished in any line of re-
search ?
The moderns go about masticating, Fletcher-like, what Hahne-
mann considered the alpha of his therapy, and which they hold
to be the omega of effort and investigation.
* * * * *
Over in Germany (whence Hahnemann came) and in France
(where Hahnemann died) there is being done an enormous
amount of research work, particularly in the biochemic, biologic
~and bacteriologic laboratories, from which, however, no exceed-
ing great benefit has been derived in the line of therapy. For
example, much energy has been expended in the hope of finding
a specific for tuberculosis, and almost daily a new tuberculin is
put upon the market. An inherited homoeophobia, however, pre-
vents accurate individualization and there is a quiet but continued
transit of carbolized or otherwise disinfected tuberculins into in-
nocuous desuetude. The guinea-pig and the rabbit grow fecund
with a working-knowledge of the 'various tuberculous toxins, and
in the clinics they are tried upon the sick poor.
We have mentioned tuberculin merely because it is popular, and
to illustrate the point of view.
* * * sk %
With another view-point in mind, it is proposed to introduce
into homoeotherapy a series of pure toxins of the chief mor-
bifacient bacterial products composed only of the microbic virus,
aq. dest., and sp. vini (95 per cent. Tralles). As a matter of fact
and history, the homoeopathic school was the first to utilize the
so-called nosodes, whose essences were bacterial toxins ; bacilli-
num, medorrhinum, anthracin, etc. With betterment in bacterio-
logic technic, such toxins become feasible by the author's method
of preparation, and, furthermore, are in conformity with the re-
quirements of homoeopharmacy.
The series, as planned at present, will be derived from the fol-
lowing pathogenic micro-organisms :
294 Sepsin.
Proteus vulgaris. Pneumococcus.
Staphylococcus pyog. Streptococcus pyog.
Bac. diphtheria. Gonococcus.
Bac. tetani. Vibrio cholerae.
Bac. coli. Tricophyton microsporon.
Bac. typhosus. Tricophyton megalosporon.
Bac. tuberc. hominis. Achorion Schonleinii.
Bac. tuberc. bovis. Microsporon furfur.
Bac. tuberc. avis. Bac. pertussis.
Bac. leprae. Bac. influenzae.
Bac. mallei. Bac. pyocyaneus.
Bac. botulinus. Bac. enteritidis.
Bac. anthracis. Micrococcus tetragenus.
Streptococcus intracellulars. Actinomyces bovis.
The difficulties impeding such work may be realized if we state
that of the two prominent firms in this country dealing in bio-
logic and bacteriologic products, which were asked to furnish pure
cultures or suspensions with which to begin the preparation of
the toxins, one refused absolutely to undertake it ; the other sent
contaminated cultures. Hence, the writer has had to grow his own
cultures, for, on pharmacal and clinical principles, only pure
toxins are permissible.
Provings of such toxins upon the healthy are requisite, but if
we have pure (/. e.} non-disinfected) toxins of the pathogenic
bacteria, we have also their pathogenies, viz., the morbid states
in which the micro-organism is the exciting factor and whose
chief symptoms are due to its toxin. YVe trust this view-point
and its therapeutic applicability will not be confused with those
of the "old school." The difference is material.
Since the analyses are still at odds concerning the chemical na-
ture of bacterial toxins, and since the chemistry of such products
is immaterial therapeutically, we shall proceed with a considera-
tion of the proteus vulgaris, whence ''Sepsin." the first of the
toxin series, is derived.
Us prototype, pyrogen (evolved in the pre-bacteriologic era)
was an extremely impure product. Drysdale (cf. Clarke'-
Diet, of Mat. Med.) put some chopped lean beef in water and al-
lowed it to stand in the sun for two or three weeks and decom--
Sepsin. 295
pose. From this rotten beef, with its swarming menagerie of
bacterial life (including the omnipresent and putrifacient proteus
vulgaris), pyrogen and its dilutions were made. A partial prov-
ing plus numerous clinical observations have demonstrated its
value in certain conditions. The pure toxin of its essential ele-
ment, the proteus, should be a much more efficient and dependable
remedy.
Proteus, herding the seals and other marine live-stock of Nep-
tune, was a sea-god, capable of assuming any form that pleased
him, and in the well-named proteus vulgaris we have a micro-
organism of like erratic morphology : slender rods, long tenuous
threads, isodiametric forms, spiral evolutions. Hauser observed
that by nitration through clay filters (thus freeing the fluid of
bacteria), extremely toxic metabolic products were got from the
proteus (Centralblatt fur Bakteriologie, VIII. , Nr. 768) and
other biologic and bacteriologic data concerning this micro-or-
ganism are available in German literature for those interested not
only therapeutically but also bacteriologically.
As regards proteus distribution outside of the human body, it
is found in putrid meat, in foul water, and is the commonest cause
of malodorous decomposition. Like the bacillus coli communis,
it inhabits the digestive tract of healthy persons, and like that
micro-organism may become pathogenic, either alone or in sym-
biosis with the coli communis, and is capable of developing severe
cystitis with ammoniacal urine and other affections of the genito-
urinary tract. Booker found the proteus in 18 cases of cholera
infantum, none being present, in the faeces of healthy children
(Centralblatt fur Bakteriologie, X., Nr. 84), and according to
Jager (Zeitschrift fur Hygiene, XII., Nr. 525) Weil's disease or
infectious febrile icterus with muscle-pains, enlarged liver and
spleen, is caused by the proteus vulgaris.
It may be asked : Why not develop a proteus antitoxin rather
than a toxin? The reason for not so doing embodies a funda-
mental differentiation betwixt the allo-antipathic and the ho-
moeopathic schools in dealing with bacterial (or nosodic) prod-
ucts. Antitoxins are obtained by subjecting an animal (usually
296 Sepsin.
the horse) to gradually increasing injections of toxin which cause
the formation in the animal blood of an antitoxic body. The ex-
istence of this antitoxic body is demonstrable in vitro and in
vivo, and Ehrlich's side-chain theory is an attempt to explain its
action. When, for example, diphtheria antitoxin is thrown into
the blood-stream of a diphtheritic patient, there supposedly de-
velops a sort of physio-chemical union with the toxin thrown out
by the living bacteria, leaving the body-cells of the patient unat-
tacked ; in other words, we have an antidotal or neutralizing ef-
fect, which should permit the return of the body to health. The
very theory of antitoxin eliminates any possible action thereof
in dilution or potency upon the morbid syndrome of diphtheria.
If, however, we take the pure toxin and potentize it, we are
able, by reason of its similarity to put it to clinical use, doubtless
more often as an intercurrent remedy. Its action, expressed in
the technical terms of the laboratory, forces the body to manu-
facture within itself its own antitoxin, even as the body is prob-
ably compelled, in the indicated case, to elaborate an antitoxin cor-
respondent to the protoidide or the biniodide of mercury or to lac
caninum, etc. In other words, the homceopathist works, essen-
tially, with dynamic and similar quality rather than with gross
and dissimilar physio-chemical quantity. Furthermore, we ap-
ply here the principle of individualization, whilst by the other
procedure we are limited to generalization alone.
* * * -:< *
We shall intercalate here Sections 25-33 °f tne Organon trans-
lated directly from the German :
Section 25. In all carefully executed tests, pure experiment,
the sole and infallible oracle in therapeutics, has positively dem-
onstrated that the drug which, in its action upon the healthy body,
developed the greatest number of symptoms similar to those noted
in the morbid case to be cured, will, when administered in suitable
potency and adequately minimized dose, remove quickly, thor-
oughly and permanently the totality of symptoms present in the
case, i. e.} the entire morbid syndrome, and return it to health,
and that ever}- drug, without exception, cures those cases of dis-
ease most similar to it in symptomatology, and leaves none such
uncured.
Sepsin. 297
Section 26. This rests upon that natural law of similars, the
ever-existent fundament of all true healing, hitherto not un-
surmised, it is true, but until now, unrecognized :
In the living organism, a weaker dynamic affection is per-
manently removed by one stronger, if the latter (though differ-
ing in kind) is very similar to the former in its sympiomalogic
expression.
Section 27. The curative power of drugs rests, therefore, upon
their symptoms, similar to, but more powerful than, those of the
disease, so that each morbid syndrome is most thoroughly, quick-
ly and permanently annihilated and removed by a medicament
capable of engendering (in the human economy) in the most
similar and complete manner a totality of symptoms simultaneous-
ly stronger than those of the natural disease.
Section 28. Since this natural therapeutic law is evident in all
fair tests and genuine experimentation (the fact, therefore, exist-
ing) the scientific explanation of how it happens is little needed,
and to such elucidations I attribute small value. The following
concept, however, seems most probable, inasmuch as it is based
upon purely experimental premises :
Section 29. Since every disease (not purely surgical) is due
only to a particulate morbid derangement of our vital force in its
sensations and functions, so in the homce other apentic return to
health of vital force (affected by natural disease) through the
administration of a drug accurately chosen according to the
similarity of symptoms, there is engendered a somezvhat more
powerful, similar, artificial morbidity, which is, so to speak, thrust
into the place of the weaker, similar natural disease and against
which the instinct-like vital force (now drug-sick alone, but more
intensively) is compelled to exert greater energy, but, because of
the briefer action of the morbifaciertt drug, soon overcomes it,
and thus, as it was first freed of the natural morbidity, so it is
now rid of the artificial (drug) disease and enabled to carry on
the life of the organism as in health.
* * 5i< * *
In a pure artificial toxin of a bacterium we probably have the
most similar drug to the average case of disease caused by
that bacterium or, to the average of all cases of diseases caused by
298 Sepsiri.
that bacterium ; hence a specific in the broadest sense of the
term, the variations from type, being due to that other, neglected,
factor in bacterial affections, viz., the constitution or predisposi-
tion of the patient. This positively precludes the discovery of any
specific, in the accepted sense of the term, for any disease what-
soever, and these be the reasons why our old school friends and
the industrious, earnest laboratory workers go about with sore
knees, bruising the one against faulty technic and the other
against a faulty nosologic theory.
And, here is where the constitutionally, the personally indicated
remedy, the proto- or bin-iodide, the lac caninum, etc., comes
in as adjunct to the curative action of a pure diphtherin, for ex-
ample.
Delving into that mine of accumulated homceotherapeutic-
knowledge, Clarke's Diet, of Mat. Med., we find :
"Pyrogen is one of the germinal remedies of the materia
medica. When once the idea of its essential action is grasped, an
infinity of applications becomes apparent. As Drysdale put it.
'The most summary indication for pyrogen would be to term it
the aconite of the typhous or typhoid quality of pyrexia ; and
wherever poisoning by bacterial products (e. g., in the hectic of
phthisis) is going on, pyrogen will be likely to do good. Sepsis
is the essence of the action of pyrogen. H. C. Allen gives this
indication for its use in septic states : 'When the best selected
remedies fail to relieve or permanently improve' — analogous to
the action of psorinum and sulphur in other conditions. Also :
Patent pyrogenic process, patient continually relapsing after the
apparent simillimum. As pyrogen is a product of carrion, the car-
rion-like odor of bodily secretions and excretions is a keynote for
its use. [The effluvium from a flourishing colony of proteus vul-
garis would drive a dog into a tanyard. P. W. S.] Other lead-
ing indications are : Restlessness ; must move constantly to >
the soreness of parts. Constipation, from impaction of faeces in
fevers ; stool large, black, carrion-like.'' "Chill begins in back,
between scapulae." "Severe general chill of bones and extremi-
ties." "Pulse abnormally rapid, out of all proportion to tem-
perature."
Sepsin. 299
SYMPTOMATOLOGY.
i. Mind. — Loquacious; can think and talk faster than ever before (s).
Irritable (s). Delirious on closing eyes; sees a man at foot of bed.
Whispers; in sleep. Sensation as if she covered the whole bed; knew
her head was on pillow, but did not know where the rest of her body was.
Feels when lying on one side that she is one person, and another person
when turning on the other side. Sensation as though crowded with arms
and legs. Hallucination that he is very wealthy; remaining after the
fever.
2. Head. — Staggers as if drunk on rising in morning (s). Dizziness on
rising up in bed. Pains in both mastoids, < r. ; dull throbbing in mas-
toid region (?). Great throbbing of arteries of temples and head; every
pulsation felt in brain and in ears ; the throbbings meet on top of brain
(s). Painless throbbing all through front of head; sounds like escaping
steam (s). Frightful throbbing headache > from tight band. Ex-
cruciating, bursting, throbbing headache with intense restlessness (often
accompanied with profuse nose-bleed, nausea, and vomiting). Sensation
as if a cap were on. Rolling of head from side to side. Forehead bathed
in cold sweat.
3. Eyes. — L. eyeball sore, < looking up and turning eye outward (s).
Projecting eyes.
4. Ears. — Loud ringing, like a bell. 1. ear (also r.) (s). Ears cold.
Ears red, as if blood would burst out of them.
5. Xose. — Xose-bleed : awakened by dreaming it. and found it was so.
Sneezing ; every time he puts his hand from under covers ; at night.
Nostrils closing alternately (s). Cold nose. Fan-like motion of al?e
nasi.
6. Face. — Face : burning ; yellow ; very red ; pale, sunken, and bathed
in cold sweat ; pale, greenish, or chlorotic. Circumscribed redness of
cheeks.
7. Mouth. — Tongue ; coated white in front, brown at back : yellowish
brown, bad taste in morning (s). Tongue: coated yellowish gray, edges
and tip very red; large, flabby; yellow brown streak down center. Tongue
clean, smooth, and dry; first fiery red. then dark and intensely dry; smooth
and dry ; glossy, shiny, dry, cracked, articulation difficult. Taste : ter-
ribly fetid as if mouth and throat full of pus (produced by dose of Pym.
c. m.. Swan) ; sweetish. Breath horrible ; like carrion.
8. Throat. — Diphtheria with extreme fetor.
9. Appetite. — Xo appetite (s) ; or thirst. Great thirst for small quan-
tities, but the least liquid was rejected instantly. ^> drinking very hot
water. Thirst and vomiting (dog).
10. Stomach. — Belching of sour water after breakfast (s). Xausea and
vomiting. Vomiting ; persistent ; brownish, coffee-ground ; offensive, ster-
coraceous; with impacted or obstructed bowels. Vomiting and purging.
Vomits water when it becomes warm in stomach. ]> by vomiting. Urg-
ing to vomit; with cold feet. Stomach feels too full (s).
300 Sepsin.
11. Abdomen. — Full feeling and bloating of abdomen (s). When lying
on 1. side bubbling or gurgling sensation in hypochondria, extending back
to 1. of spine (s). Pain in umbilical region with passage of sticky, yellow
stool. While riding in a buggy aching in 1. of umbilicus; < drinking
water; > passing flatus downward. Soreness of abdomen so severe she
can hardly breathe, or bear any pressure over r. side. Very severe cut-
ting pains r. side going through back, < by every motion, talking, cough-
ing, breathing deep; > lying on r. (affected) side; groaning with every
breath.
12. Stool and Anus. — Feculent and then mucous, and finally bloody
diarrhoea and tenesmus (dog). Two soft, sticky stools 8 to 8 a. m. In-
voluntary escape of stool when passing flatus (s). Profuse, watery, pain-
less stools, with vomiting. Stool horribly offensive, carrion-like. Stool
very much constipated, large difficult, requires much effort; first part
balls, last part natural, with streaks of blood; anus sore after (s). Con-
stipation ; hard, dry accumulated faeces ; stool large, black, carrion-like,
small black balls like olives. Congestion and capillary stasis of gastro-
intestinal mucous membrane, shedding of epithelium, bloody fluid dis-
tending intestines (dog). (Sweat about anus removed; fistula relieved.)
13. Urinary Organs. — Urine scanty ; only passed twice in twenty- four
hours (s). Urine: yellow; after standing, cloudy with substance looking
like orange peel ; red deposit on vessel hard to remove ; deposits sediment
like red pepper (s). Got up three times in night to urinate (s). (Bright's
disease of kidneys.) Urine albuminous, containing casts; horribly of-
fensive, carrion-like. Frequent calls to urinate as fever comes on. In-
tolerable tenesmus of bladder; spasmodic contractions, involving rectum,,
ovaries, and broad ligaments. [Cured in case of Yingling's with Pyro.
cm., Swan (and higher) ; patient's next period came on naturally and
painlessly, whereas before menses had been painful and extremely of-
fensive.]
14. Male Sexual Organs. — Testes hang down relaxed ; scrotum looks
and feels thin.
15. Female Sexual Organs. — Puerperal peritonitis with extreme fetor;
a rotten odor. Parts seriously swollen (Bright's disease). Menses hor-
ribly offensive ; carrion-like. Menses last but one day, then a bloody
leucorrhoea ; horribly offensive. Haemorrhage of bright red blood with
dark clots. Septicaemia following abortion ; fcetus or secondines retained,
decomposed. (Has cured prolapsus uteri, with bearing down, > by
holding the head and straining, as in the act of labor.) Absceiss of I.
ovary, acute throbbing pain, great distress, with fever and rigors (Pyro.
cm., Swan, produced an enormous flow of white creamy pus with gen-
eral >). Lochia: thin, acrid, brown, or foetid; suppressed, followed by
chills, fever, and profuse foetid perspiration.
16. Respiratory Organs. — Wheezing when expiring (s). Cough; with
large masses of phlegm from larynx ; < by motion ; < in warm room ;
cough = burning in larynx and bronchi ; = pain in occiput ; = stitching
Sepsin. 301
in small of back, only noticed in the chair ; coughs up yellow sputa through
night (s)/ Cough > sitting up, < lying down. Expectoration; rusty
mucus ; horribly offensive.
17. Chest.— Pain in r. lung and shoulder, < talking or coughing. Neg-
lected pneumonia: cough, night sweats, frequent pulse, abscess had burst
discharging much pus of mattery taste (rapid recovery under Pyro. cm.,
three doses). Chest sore, purple spots on it. Severe contracting pain
within lower sternum, sometimes extending to rib-joints and up to throat,
as ot oesophagus b^ing cramped. Ecchymoses on pleura (dog).
18. Pain in region of 1. nipple, as if in heart; increased action; pulse
120 (s). Heart tired, as after a long run; increased action < least mo-
tion (s). Every pulsation felt (painlessly) in head and ears (s). Sen-
sation as if heart enlarged; distinct consciousness of heart (s). Sensa-
tion as if heart too full of blood. Feels as if heart were pumping cold
water (Yingling). Violent, tiresome heart action. Palpitation or in-
creased action without corresponding increase of temperature. Palpita-
tion < by motion. Loud heart-beats; audible to herself and others.
Could not sleep for whizzing and purring of heart ; when she did sleep
was delirious. Cardiac asthenia from septic conditions. Ecchymoses on
heart and pericardium (dog).
19. Neck and Back. — Throbbing of vessels of neck running in waves
from clavicles. Weak feeling in back; stitching pain on coughing (s).
20. Limbs. — Aching: in bones; all over body as from a severe cold;
with soreness of flesh, head feels hard; > motion (s). Cold extremities.
Numbness of hands, arms, and feet, extending over whole body. Auto-
matic movement of r arm and r. leg, turned the child round from r. to
1. till feet reached pillow; repeated as often as she was put right (cere-
bro-spinal meningitis).
21. Upper Limbs. — Pain in shoulder joint; in front, passing three inches
down arm (s). Hands and arms numb. Hands cold and clammy. Dry
eczema of hands.
22. Lower Limbs. — Aching above knees, deep in bones, while sitting by
a hot fire; > by walking (s). On going to bed aching in patella; >
flexing leg (s). Aching above 1. knee as though bone broken (s). Ach-
ing above knees in bones, > stretching out limbs (s). Tingling in r.
little toe as if frost-bitten. Feet and legs swollen (Bright's disease).
Numbness of feet.
22,. Generalities. — Cannot lie more than few minutes in one position,
nervous, restless (s). Aching all over, bed feels hard. Great muscular
debility; rapid recovery in few hours (dog).
24. Skin. — Skin pale, cold, of ashy hue. Obstinate, varicose, offensive
ulcers of old people.
25. Sleep. — Slept awhile; woke to roll and tumble in every conceivable
position (s). Unable to sleep for brain activity and crowding of ideas
(s). Restlessness after sleep. Cries out in sleep that a weight is lying
on her. Whispers in sleep. Kept awake by purring of heart. Dreams :
of various things ; of business.
302 Notes on Detroit Meeting.
26. Fever. — "In all cases of fever commencing in the limbs" (Swan).
Shivers and begins to move about restlessly; temperature rises gradually
and as gradually subsides (dog). Temperature rises rapidly to 1040 F.,
and sinks rapidly from heart failure (dog, fatal dose). Chilly at times
and a little aching; a little feverish (s). After dinner, ache all over,
chilly all night, bed feels hard (s). After getting into bed. chilly, teeth
chatter; woke 10 p. m, in perspiration on upper part of body; > motion
(s). Feels hot. as if he had a fever, but was only 99 ° F., feels like 1050.
Cold and chilly all day. No fire would warm ; sits by fire and breathes
the heat from it ; chilly whenever he leaves ; at night when the fever came
on he had a sensation as if lungs on fire, must have fresh air, which gave
>. Frequent calls to urinate as soon as fever came on; urine clear as
water. Every other day dumb ague. Perspiration horribly offensive, car-
rion-like ; disgust up to nausea about any effluvia arising from her own
body. Cold sweat over body.
;■; :•: ^J $z ^
The above review of the pathogenic and clinical data known
of the older remedy, pyrogen, will serve as outline of the power
latent in the clean-cut, pure, unchemicalized toxin of the proteus
vulgaris : Sepsin.
RANDOM NOTES ON THE DETROIT MEETING.
This isn't a formal report, but just an informal letter to our
readers. The Journal, or one of the big homoeopathic publications
employing stenographers, doubtless, will give you the formal
reports of what was said and done.
We went with Dr. J. B. Garrison's party, requiring two Pull-
mans, from New York. Here is a hint worth something: Go
with Garrison if you can. To do so saves much bother, insures
good railroad service and, what is better, good company. Time
did not hang heavy on the trip and much wisdom and learning
was heard in the smoking room, and in Dr. A. M. Cushiner's
"club room," as he called his end of the car.
The chief thing of general interest at this Detroit meeting was
"The Journal question." There was strong opposition to that
publication and strenuous defense.
It was argued that there are 21 homoeopathic journals pub-
lished in the United States, which have borne the heat and burden
of the day in building up Homoeopathy and the Institute ; that
Notes on Detroit Meeting. 303
these are equally entitled to consideration; that a journal must
have advertising to live; that the fact one of them had been
selected as the official journal was already telling on the advertis-
ing patronage and subscriptions of the others ; that the new
journal would create discord because the other journals would
not tamely submit but fight for their existence. So ran one line of
the opposition.
Another line was that the cost of the new organ was excessive,
though this did not "cut much ice," as the exponents of the newer
English would put it, with the members, who had faith in the
integritv of the committee, who made the contract. The members
realized that competent men cannot be secured at bargain-countor
prices. They also knew that the price paid in money was not
the real issue.
It was also pointed out, and this was rather telling, that the
Institute did not own or control its own journal, or editor; nor
the advertising or editorial pages.
To be candid, it must be confessed that we are somewhat in
the dark as to what was determined in the matter beyond the
fact that the Journal Committee were sustained. In the near
future the whole matter is to be taken up by the committee and
put on a satisfactory basis, the matter being in a tentative stage
at present. That this report of what was done is not very clear
is as apparent to the writer as to the reader, but without print-
ing the resolutions, etc., or going into details, we cannot make
it. clearer. Like many other tangles in deliberative bodies, it was
''referred'' after many of the deliberators had expressed very
varying opinions of divers colors.
The Journal, like the young bear, has its troubles ahead of it,,
and many things may happen before it is put on a generally satis-
factory basis. The Recorder has no fears that it will be crowded
off the earth by the official Journal. We do not think the editor
of that journal will repose on a bed of journalistic roses; we can
imagine him sighing as he is compelled to give space to some
paper that, as an editor, he would not covet and turn down for
lack of space the juicy and readable stuff that might otherwise be
run in. He may get a fair financial return, but he will earn it.
The Recorder wishes him and the Journal ah prosperity and,
304 Notes on Detroit Meeting.
success. As Uncle Toby said to the fly. 'There is room enough
tor us all in this world."
A good many persons make a habit of speaking of the leaders
in any deliberative body, political, or anything else, as "the
bosses," "the ring," "the gang," "the clique," and so on, and on.
This has often seemed to us to be rather unjust. Such men, in
bodies paying no salaries, do a great amount of work, some of it
actual drudgery, and get very little out of it save knocks. "The
bosses" are not always right, but it may be safely believed that in
the vast majority of instances they are animated more for the
good of the body for which they work than for self glory. Some
men get an office and won't work, or work unsatisfactorily ; they
do not become "bosses."
And while on this topic let us touch on another kindred one ;
why should not all agree to cut out "mongrel," and similar terms?
They sometimes may express a speaker's, or a writer's, feelings,
but they do not advance the science of the great therapeutic law
in the least.
We met many of the men who alternate, prescribe compound
tablets and mother tinctures, use hypodermic syringes ; who do
lots of homceopathically reprobate things of that sort, but, one and
all, they had a good, healthy belief in the great Law and, what
is more, they very largely practice it.
The Law is the thing. We all (and the Recorder among the
rest) often accuse the allopaths of stealing our thunder. Well,
after all, have they not as much right to this Law of nature as
we ? It is a universal law. To be sure the men of Homoeopathy
proved many drugs and have built up a great materia medica,
and good literary etiquette requires acknowledgment, but, after
all, the world has not reached the limits of the Law by a very
long ways ; we are only on its threshold, as Hahnemann intimated
when he urged his followers not to rest in the provings he gave
the world, but carry them on and on.
This reminds us of a very pleasant chat with Dr. S. M. Schell,
of Hamilton, Ohio, who, after speaking very highly of the book,
New, Old and Forgotten Remedies, (that mention is a sly ad-
vertisement of our book), got to talking of this class of rem-
edies that need proving. He said that Skookum chuck was one of
Notes on Detroit Meeting. 305
the best general remedies we have for hay fever. Now this
bears out the partial proving Dr. Gentry made when he brought
the drug to notice twenty years ago. 'The first effect produced,'*
he wrote, "was a profuse coryza with constant sneezing, as in hay
fever." This is also further confirmed by the men who handle
the salts, who say they produce a burning in the nose with sneez-
ing and hay feverish symptoms. Dr. Schell also spoke highly of
Latrodectus mactans, introduced by Dr. Samuel A. Jones, for
angina pectoris. He also said that in Enpion we have a fine rem-
edy for those who have cramps in the legs when they go to bed.
Then, too, each decade, as Rademacher learned, may need new
remedies. There is plenty of work to do for all.
This reminds us of another story, on olive oil. Dr. Blackwood,
who has a big clinic among the poor in Chicago, was speaking of
the good results he got from hypodermic injections of olive oil in
tuberculous and other cases (he ought to write it up for the Re-
corder) when "The General," otherwise known as Dr. M. O.
Terry, happened along and was jollied a little on his advocacy of
olive oil in appendicitis. This brought out the following story
by him "guaranteed to be true :"
An Irishman came to him suffering from a pretty bad case of
appendicitis, a disease which the patient had been subject to, off
and on, for several years. He had been told that an operation
was simple and safe, but had seen too many pine boxes leaving
the hospital to believe it. So he hunted up the "ile doctor," as
he termed him. Dr. Terry had him cleaned out, gave him olive
oil, hot water, etc., and told him he would operate on him in two
days. "Indade ye'll not do so, I'll carry me appendix to the
grave. I want the ile." Well (we cannot give Dr. Terry's in-
imitable imitation of the brogue nor the full details) the Irish-
man, refusing an operation, was given the "ile threatment." Sev-
eral years passed, when a strapping big man of brawn and mus-
cle, called on the doctor and said : "I want to see ye'r father."
He was told that the father has been dead for many years. "Well,
I want to see the milithary man, the ile docthor." Terry told him
he was the man, but had shaved off his beard, which was the
cause of his changed appearance. "And how is the appendix, Mr.
O ?" was the query. "Sure ye cud hit it wid a hammer and
I'd not fale it," was the reply. That is the story baldly related.
306 Notes on Detroit Meeting.
Dr. Fahnestock, of Pipua, O., told us he had a small work up*
his sleeve, on rectal diseases. It ought to be a good one. There
is room for it. It won't be a rehash of artificial surgery.
Here is another item picked up that is worth knowing in order
to prevent possible misunderstanding of the get up of H. C.
Allen's Bocnninghauseris Repertory. There are four values, des-
ignated by different types, given in the original Pocket-book.
These do not correspond in all cases with the value given on the
long slips of the H. C. Allen edition. The changes are not proof
errors, but were made by Dr. Allen because, from his experience,
the values amended, or added, by him, are more nearly correct
than those found in the original work.
In reporting the meetings when "the Journal question" was dis-
cussed, a Detroit newspaper had a sensational headline, "Doctors
Verge on Real Fight," etc.. and told of how interference averted
"the danger of a real allopathic bout in a homoeopathic meeting."
This was a yarn, for, while the discussion was hot, there was no
evidence of danger of fisticuffs.
The visitors were liberally half-toned by the papers and a bunch
of them cartooned. The latter group showed President Foster,
who reminds one of an Episcopalian Bishop, with his gavel ; Car-
michael, wTith his fist clenched as though to annihilate those who
oppose the pharmacopoeia so dear to his heart ; Ward, looking
like a Pacific coast pirate, in fierceness ; "a member from Arizona"
looking at the Y. M. C. A. placard "No smoking;" he is smok-
ing, but who he is, is doubtful — built on the monitor model ; two
sweet little ladies, one saying, "This is the dearest amputating
saw I ever used;" Frank C. Richardson inspecting "the newest
thing in nerve jokers;" Hensley, the man from Oklahoma ,with
the Mormon whiskers, and Runyon, "the snake charmer," gazing
in the eyes of a serpent he clutches like Hercules and, doubtless,
learning wisdom. All save Richardson and the ladies, have sweat
in great drops pouring from their brows. The caricature was
good humored.
The newspapers printed Dr. J. C. Wood's paper on the mar-
riage of the unfit ; President Foster's rap at therapeutic nihilism ;
Dr. Hills Cole's "Death In the Feather Duster" and it may be
others that escaped our notice.
Notes on Detroit Meeting. 307
The officers elected were :
President, Dr. James C. Ward, San Francisco, Cal. ; First Vice
President, Dr. Herberr Dana Schenck, Brooklyn, N. Y. ; Second
Vice President, Dr. Sarah M. Hobson, Chicago, 111., Treasurer,
Dr. T. Franklin Smith, New York: Secretary, Dr. J. Richey
Horner, Cleveland, O. ; Censor, Dr. J. B. Garrison, New York.
The Institute also elected E. P. Anshutz, Honorary Associate
Member, a compliment most highly esteemed by the recipient.
The next meeting is to be held at Los Angeles, California.
Detroit is a fine city on the Detroit river which is really a
strait connecting the great fresh water seas. The only kick we
could register was the absence of ice-water ; it was difficult to get
it unless especially ordered. Dr. Richards was general overseer of
things, a very busy, but very courteous host. The meetings were
held in the Young Men's Christian Association Building, a very
large, new, fire-proof structure — at least near-fire proof. The
exhibitors were on two floors, as were also the rooms in which
the various meetings were held. During one of the meetings it
was proposed to change the code of ethics so that physicians at
their discretion might give information to prevent, or warn
against, the marriage of men with venereal diseases — it was
brought out by Dr. Wood's paper. Some one pointed out the fact
that ethics, or no ethics, the doctor informing might run up
against a libel suit. Dr. Romero, of Waukeegan, called out that
the law compels the reporting of "communicable diseases" so
why not obey? Another member, though not for the meeting,
whispered, "and lose all those cases." During this discussion
Walton got off the Waltonian "An honest lie is the noblest work
of — man."
Dr. T. Franklin Smith wanted the Institute and not the local
committee to have charge of the exhibits, but this was voted
down. He said an offer of $1,000 had been made for the privilege
of leasing the exhibit space. There may be a point in space
prices at which exhibitors will balk. As they are a part of the
show they should be encouraged wherever possible and not dis-
couraged by too high rates. Their room is where you naturally
go to meet old friends and make new ones, a sort of common
meeting place where every one goes after sessions, so it would
308 West Virginia Homoeopaths.
seem wise to provide roomy quarters wherever possible in the
same building in which the meetings are held, and at reasonable
rates.
There were something over 400 members present, though the-
generous reporters gave the attendance at 1,500.
Reader, you ought to become a member of the American In-
stitute of Homoeopathy, if possible. Don't get the notion that:
it is "nothing but" this, that or the other thing. It is really
cosmopolitan. At its annual meetings you will meet the man who,
uses the D. M. M. potency and the man who doesn't; the man
who can cure cancer and leprosy and the man who doesn't believe
him; the man who uses tinctures, the lower potencies or oc-
casionally a 30th or 200th, and the man who uses vaccines, com-
bination tablets and advertised medicines; specialists of every
field ; many men with fads and some with grouches ; men who telt
funny stories and men who discuss grave matters ; men who at-
tend all the sessions and men who attend none ; men who attend
to the routine drudgery ("the bosses") and men who go sight-
seeing; men who are having "a good time" and men who want to
go home ; men frorh all over this country ; men from foreign
countries and "the isles of the sea ;" Beau Brummels faultlessly
attired and the country doctor in his Sunday suit — but don't fool
yourself on the latter, for he is an all-round man, general prac-
titioner, surgeon and everything else ; in fact, you meet all sorts.
You can talk high potency, low potency, or no potency ; Hahne-
mannian Homoeopathy or Scientific Homoeopathy, or anything
else you please. It is all broad gauge. You ought to go.
E. P. A.
P. S. On reading the foregoing over it does not seem to give
much information and many sins of omission loom up, but — let
it go, for what it is worth.
WEST VIRGINIA HOMOEOPATHS.
Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder:
The meeting of the West Virginia Homoeopathic Medical So-
ciety was held on May 18, 1909, at Wheeling, W. Va. Dr. W. R.
Andrews, of Mannington, W. Va., President; Dr. A. A. Roberts,
of Wellsburg, W. Va., Secretary. Papers by Dr. John McCall,
Odd Cases in Practice. 309
of Wheeling, W. Va., on Pseudo-Bulbar-Glosso-Pharyngeal
Paralysis, and Tetanus Treated Successfully, were well ieceived
by the Society. Dr. W. B. McClure, of Martin's Ferry, Ohio,
presented a bone, which he had wired over six years ago with
perfect union.
The Society was banqueted by the physicians of Wheeling,
and in the evening was addressed by Dr. W. A. Dewey, of Ann
Arbor, Mich., on the Advancement of Homoeopathy.
The Ohio Valley Homoeopathic Medical Society was reor-
ganized at this meeting with a large roll in attendance. Dr. A. A.
Roberts, of Wellsburg, W. Ya.. was elected President; Dr. J. M.
Fawcett, of Wheeling, W. Va., Vice President; Dr. H. L. Wells,
of Cambridge, Ohio, Secretary ; Dr. W. T. Morris, of Wheeling,
W. Ya., Treasurer. Much enthusiasm was manifested, as this
opens a large field of Homoeopathy to organization; much of
which has been without any local society, and excellent meetings
are anticipated twice a year.
Resolutions were adopted declaring it the sentiment of the So-
ciety not to consolidate the American Institute of Homoeopathy
with the American Medical Association. And for the members
of this Society to maintain their dignity and individuality as Ho-
moeopaths.
The next meeting will be held October 5, 1909, at Wheeling,
W. Ya.
H. L. W7flls, M. D.
Cambridge, O.
(This interesting report was received too late for our Jmw
number. — Editor H. R.)
ODD CASES IN PRACTICE.
G. W. Harvey, M. D.
Every physician in the active practice of medicine runs across-
things that are not only odd, but strange and seemingly un-
natural.
In the fifteen years of my professional life, I have met some-
freaks, but only within the last year have I seen any realh worth
recording.
310 Knighting of a Homoeopathic Physician.
The first one was a woman of forty-five, who has had the
measles more than a dozen times. Every time they come into her
neighborhood she gets them unless very careful to avoid all pos-
sibility of contagion. The attacks, if anything, are more severe
with each succeeding one, until she is as scared of measles as the
devil is of holy water.
The second is a case of alopecia capitis, and alopecia pubes. in
a woman of thirty-five. The funny part of it is that the alopecia
is complete and constant since the birth of her first child, up to
which time she had a beautiful head of dark hair, except when
she becomes pregnant. During the whole term of pregnancy her
hair grows as natural as any one's, but soon after delivery it all
comes out and stays out until she becomes pregnant again, and by
this sign she knows positively whether she is pregnant or not.
This has happened four times and at the present time she is
wearing a wig, as her last child is a couple of months old.
Xow if some brother M. D. will give us a remedy that will
make the hair stay when she is not pregnant, or tell us how to
keep her in that condition all the time I will greatly appreciate
the favor.
Ripon, Col., June, 1909.
THE KNIGHTING OF A HOMOEOPATHIC
PHYSICIAN.
Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder:
I thought you would like to have for publication in the Re-
corder the following notice of the Knighting "de moto propiro"
of our esteemed confrere, Agostino Mattoli, of Rome, Italy.
The letter of notification from die Prime Minister, reads :
Rome, March 11, 1909.
The President of the
Counsel of Ministers.
Dear Sir:
It is with pleasure that I give you the news of your nomination
to Cavalier of the order of the Crown of Italy by Royal Decree
in date of today.
Symphoricarpus Racemosd. 311
In congratulating you for this most merited distinction, light
recompense of your work, so truly meritorious, for humanity, I
wish most sincerely that you may long continue your fertile
studies always assisted by the iron will and tenacity of purpose
that have already conducted you, young in years, to the best re-
sults a scientist could desire.
With a cordial shake of the hand,
Your most affectionate
Giolitti
To the learned Cav. Dott. A. Mattoli.
* * * *
Yours,
Spencer Carleton
J2 IV. $oth St., Nezv York City, June 26, 1909.
BARCELONA ACADEMY.
Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder:
Permit me through the estimable columns of your journal to
express to Drs. Pinart, Comet, y Morgagas, of Barcelona, Spain,
my hearty thanks for the unexpected honor of unanimously elect-
ing me Corresponding Member of the "Academia Medica Ho-
meopaitico dc Barcelona," honor I value very highly.
No less grateful am I to the other members of the Academy,,
who, with their votes, contributed to the distinction with which.
I have been honored.
The handsome title already occupies a selected place in my of-
fice and there shall remain, as long as I live, as a memorial of
my good friends of Barcelona.
Eduardo Fornias, M. D.
Philadelphia, Pa., June 16, 1909.
SYMPHORICARPUS RACEMOSA.
Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder:
Your Therapeutic Pointers, on Page 219, speaks Symphori-
carpus Racemosa, as being introduced by Dr. E. V. Moffat. Dr..
S. P. Burdick lectured before our class in N. Y. Homoeopathic
312 Letter From Arkansas.
Medical College in '74-5, and had proven, I am sure, this remedy;
if not proven it, he has given it for nausea of pregnancy and told
us of it ; I have used it with great satisfaction in many severe
cases of nausea accompanying pregnancy.
Believing this correction right, would be very glad to have you
make a note of it.
Yours very sincerely.
H. D. Baldwin.
Elyria, 0., May 27, 1909.
LETTER FROM ARKANSAS.
Messrs. Boericke & Tafel, Chicago, 111.
Gentlemen: — I am moving to this place to practice. My re-
moval from Pine Blurt, Ark., leaves that place without a homoeo-
path and there are many patrons there who want homoeopathic
treatment. My long and hard fight against allopathic ignorance,
and hence prejudice, has opened that field for some progressive
man who has the courage of his convictions and is not afraid of
allopathic ''spooks."
I would be pleased to correspond with any such man who may
contemplate taking that field and will place him in touch with
many reliable people, whom my experience of ten years' practice
there has discovered.
This is another new field for our system of practice that I
am attempting and the initial signs augur well. Being a man of
peace rather than war I hope this may prove less "strenuous"
than that. If necessary, I guess there is, at least, one more good
fight in me.
I am conscious of the fact that my ability to "make good" in a
tight place has very often been due to the reliability of "B. & T."
remedies.
With kindest regards to all my friends, both in and out of the
profession, I am
Very respectfully yours,
Wells Le Fevre. M. D.
Huntington, Arkansas, May 25. 1909.
Olive Oil in Hyperchlorhydria. 313
SOME QUESTIONS.
To the Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder:
I want to ask how Dr. Romero reconciles his statements on pp.
24( -266 of the Tune number of the Recorder with Section 235 to
Section 244 of the Organon, especially the footnote to the latter.
I would also like to know how Dr. Fornias gets over what is
said on p. 380 of the Aphorisms of Hippocrates by Boenning-
hausen about Section 276 of the Organon.
C. M. Boger, M. D.
Parkcrsburz, West Va.3 June 25th.
OLIVE OIL IN HYPERCHLORHYDRIA WITH
AMYXORRHCEA.
By E. Fornias. M. D.
Recently I read in a French journal (La Presse Medicale) an
interesting article on the therapeutic value of Olive Oil in some
listressing affections of the stomach which I consider worthy
of reproduction.
In this article attention is called to the well-known protective
action of the gastric mucus on the mucosa of the stomach. Once
- - ■ >rotection ceases to exist we must expect aggravations in
the course of such pathological changes as hyperchlorhydria,
' -'. or withoui ulcer. There is no doubt that the symptoms of
5 chlorhydria proper are worse when there is insufficiency of
the mucous secretion, which is a more or less accentuated form
of amyxorrhoca.
It is in many cases of this kind where Dr. Schalij. of Rotter-
dam, has found Olive Oil such a useful remedy. According to
this authority it should be given before each meal, from the mo-
ment the analysis of the stomach reveals the existence of amyxor-
( absence of mucous secretin -
The examination of the contents of the stomach is very simple.
The mixture withdrawn with a sound or tube, after a test-meal is
placed in a jar, and by stirring the liquid one will at once perceive
that, in case of amyxorrhara, the particles of the residual debris
314 Olive Oil in Hyperchlorhydria.
rest detached and mobile, not blocking or arresting each other ;
while, if the mucous secretion is normal, or the stomach-contents
hold mucus, the alimentary residuum in the jar, will form a co-
herent, glairy mass. If one attempts to filter the glairy liquid, the
filtration is hardly successful, a mixture of food remnants and
mucus will be found floating on the filter ; but if there is no
mucus in the mixture, filtration takes place readily, leaving only
the alimentary debris on the filter.
When amyxorrhcea complicates hyperchlorhydria or ulcer, and
its presence is established, we must at once prescribe the proper
regimen and the indicated remedy. But the treatment will be
highly benefitted by the administration, before eacli meal, of an
increasing amount of pure Olive Oil, for instance, first, from I to
5 cubic centimeters (16 m. to 80 m.) and raised after some time
to from 10 to 15 cubic centimeters (2.71 io to 4.06 f5). Dr.
Schalij also recommends almond oil, but it is inferior to Olive
Oil in many respects, principally on account of the difficulty of
obtaining it fresh and pure and the high price of the article.
Administered, as above stated, before each meal, Olive Oil takes
the place of the absent mucus and protects the diseased mucous
membrane, not only against traumatic lesions, but against the
fatal action of the hydrochloric acid. Moreover, we know well
that Olive Oil possesses the property of diminishing the acidity of
the gastric juice.
As shown by his observations and remarks. Dr. Schalij has re-
peatedly verified the incontestable efficacy of this treatment, both
in hyperchlorhydria and in gastric ulcer, and is convinced that
the beneficial effects obtained in these gastric troubles have been
due to the replacement of the absent mucus by the oil. He
claims to have employed this treatment with the same favorable
results in all cases of arnyxcrrhcea, even when the acidity was
normal, or below normal {hyperchlorhydria).
Oils pressed from unripe, green olives, or bleached by ether,
permanganate of potassa. bioxide of nitrogen, or by electricity,
are not good substitutes for internal use.
Few nations can color the oil and preserve its taste and trans-
parence. Often taste and quality are offered up for looks (Prof.
Aloi L' Olivo— e 1' Olio).
Homoeopathic Vaccination in Pennsylvania. 315
HOMCEOPATHIC VACCINATION IN
PENNSYLVANIA.
(The following is taken from the Pittsburg Despatch of April
23d and is self explanatory ; the reason for printing it here is the
fact that the daily press, outside of Pittsbuig, paid no attention
to this important decision. It may be carried to a higher court,
or the authorities may act the wiser part and leave the people
in freedom as to which form they will choose. — Editor of the
. Homoeopathic Recorder.)
Judges Frazer, Shafer and Haymaker yesterday heard argu-
ments in the equity suit of Dorothy M. Lee, by her father, Harry
E. Lee, against W. E. Borger, principal of the Edgewood Public
School, involving the question as to whether the allopathic method
of vaccination by scarification and a resulting sore shall be the
only method of vaccination or whether the homoeopathic method
of giving pills or triturated vaccine virus administered inwardly
shall be accepted by the school authorities. The bill m equity was
filed by Attorneys Herman L. and Frederick C. Grote last De-
cember.
The question arose on the form of certificate given to Dorothy
M. Lee by Dr. W. R. Stephens, a homceopathist of Wilkinsburg,
who had certified that he had administered the internal treatment
to the child and that she was successfully vaccinated. Professor
Borger notified her that she could not attend school until she had
been vaccinated and a certificate presented in form as prescribed
by State Commissioner of Health Dr. Dixon ; in other words,
she must have a properly scratched arm or leg as prescribed by
the allopathic system and produce a certificate to that effect.
Had Doctor's Certificate.
The certificate given the principal by Dr. Stephens, reads :
After personal examination of Dorothy M. Lee, aged 7 years,
residence 124 Elm street, ward, I hereby certify that she
has been successfully vaccinated.
Mr. Lee filed a bill in equity to test the question as to wheth 1
or not the State Commissioner of Health can prescribe the form
of the certificate, alleging that it is not in his power to exclu \
any school of medicine from its practice in the State.
3io Echinacea An Internal Antiseptic.
The question of anti-vaccination does not enter into the litiga-
tion.
Attorney Grote argued that it was not in the power of the
State Commissioner of Health to prescribe the form of the cer-
tificate of vaccination, and denied that the Act of Assembly of
April 2J, 1905, creating a department of health and denning its
powers and duties conferred authority such as was used in this
case. He rested his case on the case of Cousins against the school
district of Warren Borough.
Physician is the Judge.
In this case the Court decided that the school authorities could
not go beyond the physician and take other evidence of the fact,
because when the certificate was given it was sufficient authority
under the act to admit the child to school. In other words, the
Court decided that the physician and not the board of teachers
is the judge of the fact.
Attorney John D. Myers defended on the ground that the act
did confer the power upon the Health Commissioner to prescribe
the proper form, so that the certificate should state that scarifica-
tion or a resulting sore took place. He contended that under the
police powers of the State this authority wras given.
Before Mr. Myers had proceeded very far in his argument the
Court intimated that from the present facts as admitted in the
bill and answer it would have to decide for the plaintiff ; that the
child had a proper certificate under the requirements of the act,
but thought the question of such great importance that it would
give the defendant time to amend his answer if he wished to do
so. The hearing is, therefore, postponed for the present. Phy-
sicians of the different schools will be called to give their testi-
mony on the different methods of vaccination, the defendant con-
tending that the child has not been vaccinated at all.
ECHINACA AN INTERNAL ANTISEPTIC.
The following is taken from a communication by Dr. A. D.
Hard, Marshall, Minn., published in the June Medical Summary:
"Echinacea has been one of the most valuable internal remedies
Hypodermic Injections. 317
that I have ever used in practice. I have very carefully studied
its action on the component parts of the human body, and am
satisfied that it counteracts the effects of toxins which have en-
tered the circulation. It may do so by stimulating the natural
antitoxins or it may be antitoxic in itself. In cases of infectious
wounds where there is systemic disturbance due to infectious
material being taken into the circulation, where the heat center
is over irritated, the heart action fast and weak, the excretory
organs all burdened, the mind itself showing evidences of toxic
effects, Echinacea will very promptly show its beneficial effects on
the entire system if taken freely internally, and the infected
wound and surrounding tissues kept soaked with a 50 per cent.
solution of the tincture. I have saved human lives with Echina-
cea and I am a willing champion of its virtues. It comes as near
being an internal antiseptic acting in the blood itself as one can
ask for in such cases as I have mentioned. The physician who
does not know Echinacea is unacquainted with one of the doctor's
best friends."
HYPODERMIC INJECTIONS OF HOMOEOPATHIC
MEDICINES.
Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder:
The article anent hypodermic injections of homoeopathic reme-
dies, by Dr. Rafael Romero, of Mexico, makes much of allopathic
methods ; such procedure is wholly unnecessary and would give
much trouble and be very inconvenient.
In the first place, medicines administered in that manner would
not act any quicker or better, for the effect of a homoeopathic
remedy administered per orum, takes place immediately it strikes
the tongue, and is through the whole system in twenty-three
seconds. I have many a time cured a toothache and headache
and other pains in one minute with one dose of the correct remedy
on the tongue. Many times the effect is noticed immediately by
the patient when the remedy is correct.
What a bother it would be to have a set of hypodermics for all
our remedies and for the different potencies, for surely Dr.
Romero would not always be prepared to clean his hypodermic
and bake it after using it, and would not be so unscientific and
crude as to use the same hypodermic for the different remedies ?
318 A Remarkable Case.
He surely knows that a hypodermic needle and barrel never
can be freed of the medicinal effect by merely washing it, and that
if not boiled and baked he would soon have a great mixture of
medicines represented in his hypodermic syringe, and could not
do accurate work.
Besides this such methods are painful and not gentle. They, no
doubt, would impress the patient and his friends.
Yours truly.
Dr. Pompe, A. A.
Vancouver, Wash., June 29, 1909.
A REMARKABLE CASE.
Dr. H. A. Watts details the case of the death of his brother. Dr.
Pliny R. Watts, in the June issue of the Pacific Coast Journal of
Homoeopathy. The patient himself determined that an operation
was necessary. Here is the description of the condition presented :
"The usual incision was made, and while the abdominal wall
was quite vascular it presented no unusual features. Upon taking
out the intestines, in searching for the appendix, we immediately
saw we were confronted with appalling conditions. We probably
saw altogether about two feet of the intestines. They, and espe-
cially the mesentery, were dark, livid, highly congested, and
necrotic. Absolutely nothing was cut inside but from the mere
handling of the mesentery most alarming haemorrhages appeared.
An ordinary ligature would tear through. Haemostats were use-
less because of the great friability of the tissues. Mere sponging
would start new foci of haemorrhage, and as soon as one point was
closed new ones would appear and when one side of the mesentery-
seemed quiescent another alarming haemorrhage would appear on
the other side. I believe that no case could present a more pro-
fuse and more alarming haemorrhage. It literally boiled and
spurted, was very dark, and I believe, wholly venous. It was
finally controlled by long continued hot compresses. However,
the color of the bowel and mesentery was not brightened nor im-
proved in the least. With such conditions it would have been
folly to attempt anything further. In anticipation of secondary
haemorrhage, and sepsis from gangrenous sloughing, the wound
was closed with drainage.
'':'- '-':- ^: * -k j£ ^ *
The Decay of Fortunes. 319
"We would like to know the cause of this very unusual condi-
tion, but so far every explanation seems woefully inadequate.
Some believe it was the result of poisoning from the constant ab-
sorption of bichloride of mercury, an idea that does not appeal to
one at first, but after more study it may seem possible. If there
is one surgeon, even in a thousand, with such a mercurial
idiosyncrasy in whom this thing might occur we ought to know
it at once."
"THE DECAY OF FORTUNES."
Some medical journals are readable, others are not, though they
may be very profound, so much so, indeed, as to be unfathomable
by the average reader. One of the Recorder's exchanges, Medi-
cal Xotes and Queries, is not very profound, but it is frank, well
written and readable. It discusses "the decay of fortunes" in its
July issue, medical fortunes, though in reality the decay is in the
incomes of the "eminent" or "prominent" physicians. The public,
it seems, has taken them at their word and are looking elsewhere.
Here is a quotation that speaks for itself — the italics are in the
original :
"The corner druggist has his theory, which is not so bad after
all. Tt is the fault of the doctors themselves ; they did it. They
began by running down all the time-honored drugs, whose value
they had never taken time to study ; they dropped them all and
pursued the will-'o-the-wisp "serum cure" and the ignis fatuus
"fresh air," and when they did prescribe anything else in bottle or
capsules they showed so much uncertainty and lack of faith in
their own formulae that their patients had none at all.' We might
add that, with Osier leading, they laughed at prescription writing,
which, by the way, was a lost art with them, and generally or-
dered some proprietary remedy about which they knew little or
nothing. While they laughed, the public never laughed with them,
though sometimes at them, but it took to thinking, and discovered
in certain sects, quite irregular, the lost jewel of belief in them-
selves and their methods, or, perhaps, the assertion of belief only,
but they weighed it against our general skepticism and found us
wanting.
"Has anybody studied the statistics of homoeopathic success
320 Chronic Inflammation of Ovaries.
in recent years and compared it with ours ? Have their in-
comes and clients fallen away, too? If they have, perhaps they
too have lost faith or ceased the assertion of their faith, for faith
is one of their simples, breaking the rigid law of the separate ad-
ministration of remedies." etc.
If any of our readers lust after the "serum," "vaccine" and
other "scientific" medical flesh pots — empty pots, it seems — let
them re-read the foregoing quotation and honestly stick to the
time-tried law.
Elsewhere, though, this is another story, having, it may be, a
remote bearing on the above topic, this same journal asks :
"What is the reason for the increased number of ear cases
recently? Some regard it as a manifestation of grippe, but in the
first years of grippe it was not noticed to the same extent."
Do you remember, during the great epidemic, that the stock of
quinine was exhausted ? That it is to-day the popular remedy for
"colds ?" You may get on the trail of the answer by investigating
the action of quinine on the human body.
CHRONIC INFLAMMATION OF THE OVARIES.
By Dr. K. Kiefer, Nuremberg.
Translated for the Homceopathic Recorder from the Leipz. Pop. Z. /.
Horn.
A lady, thirty-two years of age, consulted me on account of
violent ailments appearing during the menses, and also in the
interval between the menses. The menses, indeed, appeared at
the right time, but with their appearance there also appeared
regularly severe pains in the back, accompanied with a pressure
downwards. At the same time she is much depressed, everything
looks doleful, and she is inclined to lament her fate. A nervous
unrest does not allow her either to sit down or to lie down in
quiet ; she has to walk about, but after a while her pains compel
her to seek rest and recuperation in sitting down. The flow is
copious, with dark lumps. Also when the menses are over, she
has a dull pressive pain in the small of her back. In company she
cannot remain sitting any length of time fon a lengthy conversa-
tion, but has to get up and combat the sensation of discomfort
Chronic Inflammation of Ovaries. 321
by walking about. She has for years been compelled to secure
her stools by artificial means.
On examination I found the right ovary much enlarged and
painful when pressed upon. The lady now remembers, that after
her last delivery — she has three children — she had fever for sev-
eral days, and pains in the abdomen. It was evidently a case of
chronic inflammation of the ovaries, which occasioned her nerv-
ous irritation, which especially affected the spinal marrow. I
gave her Platina 6. and the result was that her violent symptoms
during the menses were much relieved ; during her next menses
she could remain for a day in bed. without being driven about by
her nervous irritation, and on the second day she could follow her
usual occupation. To counteract her morbid tormenting symp-
toms, I prescribed Kali carbon, 6. The ailment was slow in yield-
ing to the medicine, but it was always pressed back for a time
through its influence. I then gave her frequent doses of Calcarea
carb. 6. and before the appearance of the menses I transitorily
substituted Platina; until the flow became bright and almost pain-
less, and the general condition of the patient was such that she
declared herself to be in good health. The swelling of the ovary
also had become less and more compact : still it did not altogether
disappear during the two years that the patient remained under
my observation. This is a new proof, for the fact frequently pro-
claimed by Homoeopathy, that in morbid changes in the sexual
organs of women, the ailments that appear are not only to be at-
tributed to these changes, while also other causes may contribute.
It is in this respect as with infectional diseases and the receptiv-
ity for the same ; as also with the tendency to disorders of the di-
gestive and the respiratory apparatus. The causes which lead
to diseases and, indeed, to severe cases with one person, leave an-
other untouched ; his organism being in an equilibrium which en-
ables him to throw off the morbific causes or to make their effect
inoperative. Thus also the female organism frequently helps it-
self and endures without any trouble considerable changes, large
but innocuous tumors, changes in position of the uterus, chronic
inflammatory indurations and growths in the uterus, the ovaries
and their surrounding parts. But where the organism is not in
this enviable equilibrium, the homoeopathic law of similars enables
322 Therapeutic Notes.
us to remove these disturbances, and even without surgical opera-
tions, secure a tolerable state and even the sensation of perfect
health.
PRACTICAL AND THEORETICAL SUGGESTIONS.
Several writers contend that sweet milk is not good in typhoid
as it is a culture medium. Buttermilk is better when relished.
Whether there is anything in it is the question. Depends, as
usual, perhaps, on the individuality of the patient.
Phytolacca is claimed as a specific, by some doctors, in epi-
thelioma— skin cancer. The cerate of Phytolacca decandra folia
is especially commended in this disease as dressing. As its name
indicates, it is a cerate medicated with the juice of the leaves of
the plant, which the old herb men claimed was far better in this
ailment than a preparation made from the more poisonous roots.
Echinacea, Kali phos., and Lachesis seem to have a similar
thread running through them, infection, bad blood, malignancy.
X ympheca odorata suppositories have been termed the "vege-
table curette." They will do no harm to the most delicate and
often give the greatest satisfaction to patient and doctor.
The extract of Phytolacca berries is used for its claimed anti-
fat properties, it being claimed a better preparation for fatty heart
than a preparation from any other part of the plant. It is also
claimed valuable in membranous croup. Steeped in gin or brandy
the berries form a popular home remedy for chronic rheumatic
affections. The inspissated juice from the leaves is preferred for
local applications, but the recent fall-gathered root carefully dried
is the part usually employed. — Dr. M. T. Bcllencourt, Gladzvater,
Texas, in Ellin gwood's Therapeutist.
THERAPEUTIC NOTES.
They say that you will not find the pneumococci in the rain or
the cold blast that develops pneumonia. They appear after the
disease.
South American homoeopathic physicians found Tarantula
Cubensis to be not only the best remedy for the bubonic plague,
Therapeutic Notes. 323
but a prophylactic against it. Dr. Nilo Cairo writes this to the
official journal of the French Society.
This verification of Silicea was related verbally. The patient
had never suffered from constipation before, but recently, for
two or three weeks, constipation had been rather bad, the stool
starting and then having a tendency to go back, only prevented
by strenuous straining. Half a dozen Silicea I2x tablets were
taken and that was the end of the trouble. There was no change
of diet during, or after, this. Whether the remedy did the trick
must be a matter of individual opinion. The patient thought it
did.
Eryngium aquaticum was first brought to the attention of the
profession by a Dr. Parks, of Cincinnati. It was brought into
Homoeopathy by Thomas, in his Additions, 1855. It is the rem-
edy for the inordinate, and weakening, involuntary seminal emis-
sions. He used it in the 3d potency, but it can be safely used in
the 0.
(Enanthe crocata is mentioned by the old medical writers as a
remedy for epilepsy or "fits." One of them describes the effect
on those eating it : "Of a sudden they fall down backward, and
lie sprawling on the ground ; their faces soon turn ghastly ; they
foam at the mouth."
Dr. G. H. Moser, Areola, 111. {The Clinique), writes of a case
of tetanus from stepping on a rusty nail. The first physician
called used two tubes of antitetanic serum and other measures and
pronounced the case hopeless. Dr. Closer was then called and
as a sort of forlorn hope gave Echinacea 6, 15 drops, every two
hours, and 40 drops of Passiflora 0, every two hours. The patient
recovered.
Dr. Palmer, Beardstown, 111. (Therapeutist) , says, good, quick
results can be obtained in acute piles by applying a mixture of
glycerine and Echinacea.
There are as many remedies for hiccough as for warts. One
of them is "give a hot infusion of Capsicum."
324 Book Notices.
BOOK NOTICES.
Vital Economy or How to Conserve Your Strength.
By John H. Clarke, M. D. 96 pages. Paper. London.
T. Fisher Unwin. New York. A. Wessels Company. 1909.
"I hold," writes Doctor Clarke, "that a medical man is either a
fool or a philosopher at fifty." This is a safe saying, for every
man of fifty or more, doctor or not, feels that he is in the last
named class, and he is not averse to seeing his fellows mildly
roasted. Dr. Clarke gently roasts and stews many a medical bit
of folly that passes for hoary wisdom among doctors, and their
patients. Perhaps some readers will think our amiable Dr. Clarke
is mouthing folly ; that, however, is a question our reader must
settle to suit himself. This little paper-bound book, printed on
light, thick paper that would do duty as blotting paper in a pinch,
takes a shy at many current ideas concerning breathing, fresh air,
exercise, stimulants and other things of a like nature. Now as
for bathing, he writes, "I once lost a very good patient — one who
was always ailing, though not dangerously ill — by cuting off his
daily morning tub." The man got well. Foul air breeds disease,
hut so does a surplus of fresh air, that is so strenuously advocated
by many doctors. A healthy body is needed for a sound mind
but, says Dr. Clarke, "A healthy mind cannot comfortably dwell
in a body which is too much developed in any one direction."
Old age is not nice for your over-trained man. Also chew on
this : "When we come to analyze it, nine-tenths of the power of
worry for mischief is derived from an exaggerated sense of self-
importance." It is an entertaining little book, and instructive —
if you believe it. Men with pronounced health fads will, perhaps,
be jarred by it.
The Primitive Fundamental. By William Colby Cooper. 63
pages. Paper. 50 cents. Cleves. Ohio.
Editors of medical journals, readers of medical periodicals, and
subscribers to the old Medical Gleaner will remember how bright
and readable that publication was when Cooper was its editor;
Book Notices. 325
it was one of the first periodicals we selected from the pile of ex-
changes because it was readable — an excellent thing in journals.
There were many, many things in the Gleaner with which the
Recorder did not agree, but there is no reason why, if a man's
hobby-horse does not trot as yours does, you should not give him
a friendly hail as you both trot down the long, dusty road.
Cooper retired from the editorship of the Gleaner and failing
eyesight has caused him to retire from too active practice, but
he has sent., probably, a last message to the world in this curious
and interesting (for several reasons) little book, with which, by
the way, we do not agree. Its refrain seems to be "What is it
all when all is done !" It is to us a pessimistic book. It says :
('We are here, and this is now. We are like rats in a trap. We
did not do it; we cannot help it. We do not know." There is
optimism and pessimism. The one founded the church, the other
says. "What's the use !" And the book concludes with a quotation
from the highest authority, revealed to man. one which teaches
far otherwise, 'Love ye one another."
Now, reader, if you want a curious bit of literature, "a sign of
the times," send for it to the author, to the address given in the
title.
International Homoeopathic Directory. 1909. London
Homoeopathic Publishing Company, 12 Warwick Lane, E. C.
London, England.
This is the 14th year of the publication of this excellent and
useful little work. It embraces the homoeopathic physicians of
England and her colonies. European countries and those of
South America, including Mexico and Central America. Only
those physicians of the LTiited States, who are subscribers, have
their names entered, probably because a complete list would re-
-quire a book many times the size of the present volume, which
contains 159 pages. If you want your name in the "Inter-
national," write to the publishers at address given in the title.
Homoeopathic Recorder
PUBLISHED MONTHLY AT LANCASTER, PA.
By BOERICKE & TAFEL
Subscription $1.00, To Foreign Countries $1.24, Per Annum
Address communications, books for review, exchanges, etc.,
tor the editor, to
E. P. ANSHUTZ, P. O. Box 921, Philadelphia, Pa.
EDITORIAL BREVITIES.
Learning To Cure Disease. — Discussing the ''Davis Bill,"
an act "to prevent cruelty by regulating experiments on living
animals," the Post Graduate says : "The only way to learn
what a disease is, how it -is caused and how it may be overcome,
is by animal experimentation." Also, to take away, or interfere
with the right to experiment on animal- "will greatly hamper the
progress of medicine." The Post Graduate, from its name and
aim ought to represent, and express the sentiment of the leaders
in what is termed Scientific Medicine. The statement that only
by experimenting on brutes can the disciples of this branch of
medicine learn to treat human beings is significant of the vast
difference between it and Homoeopathy. To them disease is "a
plant" (that is the last definition of bacteria), which takes root
and grows in an animal organism; whether it be dog, rat, guinea
pig, or a human being, it is the same. The vital part, the man,
is not considered. Disease to them is a vegetable.
Strong on "Fits." — The skill of the surgeon today is great ;
he can almost take a man apart, clean him and put him together
again, even as a watchmaker does with a watch. To be sure
many a man is taken apart and cleaned that would have been
better under homoeopathic treatment, not a few refuse to "go"
after being put together again, but this does not detract from the
skill, the great usefulness, of the true surgeon who does not
make "a case" of everyone presented. Sometimes there is a bit
of humor in the work — though not. perhaps, humorous to the
patient, or. indeed, to the surgeon. For instance, the Semaine
Editorials. 327
Medicate relates the case of a man who was relieved of "incon-
tinence of the anus" by a surgical operation ; it concludes the ac-
count with the statement that "the anal sphincter had become
paralyzed after several operations for prolapsus of the rectum. "
Well, yes, the humor is a bit sardonic.
Beyond the Germ. — Commenting on the recent spread of the
foot and mouth disease among cattle by means of vaccine virus
propagated for use in vaccinating human beings to protect them
from small-pox the Journal A. M. A., editorially, says:
" Discovery of the actual agent of foot-and-mouth disease in
contaminated vaccine by any other method than animal experi-
ments is out of the question, because it concerns an agent that
is not visible or cultivatable by our present methods. Being a fil-
terable virus, that is, passing through filters that hold back ordi-
nary bacteria, it is commonly spoken of as an ultramicroscopic
virus. Hence the presence of the virus of foot-and-mouth disease
in vaccine lymph can not possibly be detected by the routine
methods ordinarily employed to test the purity of vaccine lymph.
Under the circumstances it was a matter of good fortune that
human beings are relatively but little susceptible to foot-and-
mouth disease and apparently not at all when the virus is applied
as in vaccination ; were it otherwise there surely would have re-
sulted a large number of human cases."
There are two points in this worth noting. The first is the fact
that after the bacilli, or germ, has been filtered out and the disease
''cannot possibly be detected," it is still present in a most virulent
form. It is contended by some men that the bacilli secrete or
generate the poison of the disease, but this is not very sound
reasoning; in fact, it would be more reasonable to believe that
the function of the bacilli is to absorb in a measure the virulence
of a diseased tissue acting as a maggot does in diseased flesh.
Indeed it looks as though the world would be about as near right
as it is at present if it were to adopt the term "miasm" in place
of bacilli. As to the assertion that this miasm of the foot and
mouth disease had no effect on human beings that is made very
likely at random. We know of one doctor who said of a patient
at about the time the cattle plague was raging that if a human
being could have the disease that man had it. There was no sen-
328 Editorials.
v
>'
sational epidemic, but an investigation, were it possible, of the
trail of that vaccine might show some interesting things.
Infantile Scurvy. — The following is taken from a paper by:
Dr. W. H. Smith, of Cincinnati, describing two cases of infantile
scurvy, published in the Medical and Surgical Reporter for July.
The last paragraph is worth noting: "A diagnosis of infantile
scurvy was promptly made and the patient put on orange juice,
raw milk, properly diluted, and beef juice almost raw. In a week
all symptoms had disappeared. The mother had been feeding
this child on almost pure top milk thoroughly sterilized — too
much fat — insufficient proteid, and then she cooked the life out
of it."
Diagnosis of Small-Pox. — Dr. J. M. Armstrong {Archives of
Diagnosis) writes that the diagnosis of small-pox must rest
almost wholly with the eruption on the skin. ''The small-pox
papule has characteristics which make a positive diagnosis pos-
sible within a few hours of its appearance. The papules appear
first on the exposed parts, particularly the forehead and flexor-
surfaces of the wrists. They are under the epidermis hard,
round, flat-topped, umbiiicated, rose-pink and waxy appearance.
All these characteristics are usually present. In general the en-
tire course of evolution of the lesion from papule, vesicle, pustule,,
to scab formation, is regular and characteristic. The lesions
vary in number. They may be few, or so numerous as to become
confluent, but the individual characters of the lesion are present
in all cases."
Who'll Be the First.' — "Wouldn't it be wholesome to read
articles about cases that have been wrongly diagnosed? Wouldn't
readers learn more from the chronicle of these errors than from
the perusal of the present multitude of articles on the successful
outcome in diagnosis and treatment?" — Medical Brief.
"Delayed Healing of Wounds." — A correspondent of the
Journal A. M. A. asks "what is the reason that in some persons
the healing process in cuts, abrasions, etc., is so slow?'' The edi-
tor answers that it is 1 ecause of "a lack of resisting power on the
part of the general system ai e local condition in the skin
Editorials. 329
-unfavorable to healing." If the enquirer is satisfied with such an
answer he must be blessed with a very contented mind. A ho-
moeopath who is tinctured with the teachings of The Chronic
Diseases would probably suggest the wide reaching psoric taint
as the cause. The remedy "for small wounds heal slowly" is not
hard to locate— Hcpar sulph. But then the enquirer probably has
no use for Homoeopath}'.
Ax Old Friend. — It has been some weeks since we met our
old friend., "the search light." but here he is again with Dr. Her-
bert Smith, who thus introduces the familiar one in the London
Daily Mail: He says that Homoeopathy "is effete and powerless
before the search lights and methods of modern medicine, which
meets both trivial and grave diseases." One would like to know
what Dr. Smith, and others like him, who have the search light
habit, mean by that term? To be sure "modern medicine"
meets "both trivial and grave diseases ;" sometimes the cases get
well and sometimes they die; but, then, so does old saddle-bag
medicine, the modern Osteopath, the Christian Scientists and
any other, when called, and their patients sometimes die, and
sometimes get well. Once in a while, after glancing over the
vast areas of words that go with that "search light" one is tempted
to believe that it is a phonograph.
Something Anent Psora. — The American Journal of Der-
matology runs a very interesting department, headed "Musings
In Historical Paths." From the June number we clip the follow-
ing : "It may not be uninteresting to our readers to learn that
scabies or the itch, so widely disseminated in Europe, seems to
have been unknown to the ancient Greek and Roman medical
authors. It has been iterated and reiterated as well as repeated
again and again, that the Greeks described the disease we know
as the itch, under the name of psora. This assertion is one that
is incorrect. By this word they designated scaly diseases in a
general way, and by no means a vesicular eruption susceptible
of transmission by contagion." Now Hahnemann writes :
"Psora is that most ancient, most universal, most destructive, and
yet most misapprehended chronic disease," etc. It is true that
Hahnemann included itch under psora, but it was but one of this
330 Editorials.
ancient miasm's manifestations, even though it did have a bug in
it, which fact was known to the medical world before Hahnemann
wrote. It looks as if this misapprehension of the Greek work
was the cause, or one of the causes, that have influenced men to-
re ject The Chronic Diseases. They reasoned that the book was
based on an error whereas the error was their misunderstanding
of Greek.
A Queer Query. — In a recent meeting of an allopathic society
one of the members told of two cases of blindness (amaurosis)
caused by quinine ; one of them had received, by mouth and
needle, 690 grams in ten days and the other 410 grains in eight
days. The cases were brought forward to get the views of the
members as to the maximum dose. We would suggest the 6x
two 1 grain tablets a dose, because it will not cause blindness ;
between that condition and malaria, the average man would choose
the latter, the more especially as the huge drugging in these
cases does not seem to have even cured the malaria. There are
some curious things in "regular'' medicine, more to be dreaded.
perhaps, than the disease. In the report of another society in
same journal one prominent physician said that he had employed
polyvalent vaccines "without benefit," but homologous vaccines,
"proved effective," though several patients whose disease had
been controlled by the latter subsequently died ''from such com-
plications as tuberculosis or pneumonia, which, as yet, are beyond
the influence of vaccine treatment." For ever they are just on the
verge of putting salt on the bird's tail !
The Mosquito-Malaria Theory. — This theory is generally
accepted by scientific physicians, but Dr. Amos Sawyer, of Hills-
boro, 111., doubts its truth and bases his doubts on grounds that
always trouble the man who is guided by theory. He writes in a
letter to The Medical Times that when his father first settled in
that part of Illinois malaria was so thick there that "you could
cut it with a knife;" every year in September it became epidemic;
now, with the soil under cultivation, and drained, the disease oc-
curs only in isolated instances, while the mosquitoes are still
there. Perhaps in time the old idea may come to the front again,
that malaria is due to decaying vegetation, like typhus is to decay-
Editorials. 33 l
ing animal matter. Certain it is that when new soil is turned up
malaria, or "chilis and fever" follow, but with continued cultiva-
tion, the disease ceases. There are a goodly number of things left
for man to comprehend, and this mosquito-fever question is one
■of them.
Malaria and Mosquitoes. — It looks as' if another "triumph"
has gone the way of many others. According to The Lancet,
April 3, London, for the past six years, efforts, in which no ex-
pense has been spared, have been made to exterminate the mos-
quito and thus malaria in Mauritius, but the result has been ab-
solute failure. During this time it is reported that the percentage
of parasites in the blood rose from 37 to 8 1 per cent, and enlarged
spleen from 52 to 69 per cent. However, if the authorities can
exterminate the mosquito they will have done a good work, pro-
vided some worse pest does not arise. Such things have been
known to happen.
Concerning Old Books. — The demand is ever for "the lat-
est ;" but did it ever strike you that, if you have never read them,
the works, say, for example, of Hippocrates, of Plato, of Hahne-
mann, not to mention several old worthies who were epoch men,
are as new to you as they were the day they were written ? You
have them all in "the latest?" In a degree, yes, colored and
altered as they are from passing through the minds of various
ether and generally lesser men. If you are a homoeopath and
have not read Hahnemann's works, especially The Organon and
the diadactic portion of The Chronic Diseases, which is obtain-
able now in a separate volume, you are not as capable of judging
Homoeopathy as the man who has read them. You are in the
position of a man who has heard men talk about foreign countries
compared with a man who has visited them. Don't be a hear-
say !
The Achievements of Modern Medicine. — If any one will
scan the medical journals of the past decade he will see that the
only advances in medicine that justify themselves are those made
by the surgeons and the sanitarians. With a trifling exception
here and there, every change in surgery has been for the better ;
the death percentages have decreased, while the good results have
332 Editorials.
increased. Take up a volume of a medical journal printed ten,
years ago and you will realize what changes have been made
since then ; but who can say that there has been any of the same-
sort of progress as is apparent in surgery. Antitoxin is 'the prize
winner among the therapeutics, but it is a very uncertain quantity
in the hands of a physician, for it may cure or it may kill ; its.
doubters are growing. Homoeopathy is about where it was ten
years ago ; it has not "advanced" much, for the reason that there
is not much room for advancing in its treatment of the ordinary
run of human ills. The man who grasps the full scope of similia
and knows the indications of the remedies is well fitted to combat
disease, none better. There is ample room for the advance of the
individual in his knowledge of the Law and its application, but
this is a different matter from advancing or changing the Law
itself. The others are wandering aimlessly in a therapeutic wild-
erness. The only road out of it is Similia.
"Unrest." — A great many writers dwell on the state of unrest
prevailing in medicine, the seeking for something better, the
breaking down of "sectarianism" and so on. It is a peculiar fact
that the school that is especially denounced as being ultra sec-
tarian, the homoeopathic, does not experience that state of unrest,
unless it be the unrest of those who would avoid the hard study
often necessary to find the remedy that is the similar, or who seek
the easy proprietory highway — that old broad and easy highway.
The Homoeopaths are not sectarian. They have the therapeutic
key. They see the fallaciousness of most other means, and, there-
fore, refuse to seriously consider them, thereby incurring the un-
just reproach of sectarianism from those who know no better, as
they restlessly wander about pursuing the phantoms of what they
curiously call their science. Much of their science is genuine, is.
of real value, but, having no chart, they cannot make constant
use of it. It would be a wise thing for their men to stop their cry
of "sectarianism" and learn what it is that holds a great body of
men together in a practice that has not changed, only enlarged,
for nearly a century. Let the restless ones read the homoeopathic
Organon. It is an old book, but, like the gods, is ever young.
A Complaint That Won't Hold Water. — Dr. Hawley in the
Journal of Animal Therapy writes: "The average medical paper
Editorials. 333.
could be cut one-half by eliminating useless verbiage, circumlocu-
tion, tautology, redundacy, and unnecessary bibliography, statisti-
cal details and axiomatic truths. As regards results, a majority of
medical contributions are a waste, either of wind or space. A
time limit on papers, and an intelligent, snappy editorial blue
pencil, would doubtless popularize the two greatest means of post-
graduate education.'' That reads very well, and at first one is
tempted to say, good ! but second thought causes a doubt. True,
there are many papers that could be blue penciled to advantage,
even to extinction, but remember you cannot study astronomy in
a popular ten cent "manual."
The Indicated, or the, Specific Remedy. — Our esteemed
Medical Gleaner says: "No medicines should be given for which
there is not a direct or specific indication. This ground is now so
well covered by the specific medicationist that he need have little
trouble in selecting a safe and rational remedy. Study Aconite,,
Ipecac, RJius, Belladonna, Nux vomica, Rheum, Epilobium,
neutralizing cordial, glyconda, and similar medicines, and pre-
scribe them only when clearly indicated, and we believe you will
excel the less careful though equally conscientious physician who
prescribes for cases after a routine fashion.'' There does not
seem to be very much difference between the "specific indications"'
for a remedy and the "totality of the symptoms," save such differ-
ence as exists between a charcoal drawing and a finished drawing
of the same object. The difference between the eclectic and the
Homoeopath widens rapidly when it comes to dosage and phar-
macy. The true homoeopathic trituration stands by itself in phar-
macy as does the fresh plant tincture containing as it does the
very life of the plant.
What Shall Be the Official Cause? — Dr. Frederick X.
Brown, of Providence, R. I., discussing old age and its conse-
quences, touches upon the question of what shall be the cause on
the death certificate. "Played out" would be about the truth, but
it would not do officially. "If old age, inanition or arteriosclerosis,
etc., be given, I am inclined to think that after a time a note bear-
ing the seal of Rhode Island will come to hand saying essentially
in very polite language that if the doctor would be a little more
explicit as to the real cause of death, the State statistician would;
334 Nezvs and Comments.
be extremely obliged. But, certainly, it is that there is degenera-
tive process which is persistent, though gradual, and with the tired
heart, the sluggish digestion with accompanying mental lassitude
and general inanition, it is contended that, in the face of these
facts, the term old age as a cause of death may be entirely appro-
priate."
In time it may be recognized that men die because their time
has come, they are played out, "Tired he sleeps and life's poor
play is o'er."
"Sleepers." — Dr. Wiley writes concerning the Pullman sleep-
ing cars :
"We have taken samples of material breathed by the sleepers
in these cars, and we are analyzing it to find out what it is. We
don't know what it is ; all we know is that it isn't air." It is
germs, dangerous germs of infectious diseases. This item is a
good thing to pass along for it will stir up the company to extra
cleanliess and scare the timid into the coaches, so that it will be
easier for the reckless ones to secure lower berths.
NEWS AND COMMENTS.
Everyone will have to carry his own cup in Kansas after this,
for the Health Board has forbidden the use of the usual tumblers
and cups in depots, hotels, etc. What will the limit be?
An English gentleman has left an estate of $58,000, the income
of which is for the benefit of surgeons who contract blood poison-
ing from post mortems, etc. A vial of Lachesis would do them
more good. That remedy made Dr. Carroll Dunham a homoeo-
path by curing him of such poisoning.
Dr. E. Fornias has been elected Corresponding Member of
the Homoeopathic Medical Academy of Barcelona, Spain.
Dr. J. B. Sullivan has removed to 15 13 Lincoln Ave., Pitts-
burg.
In the bills passed by the last Legislature of Pennsylvania and
signed by the Governor the American Homoeopathic Pharma-
copoeia was retained as the official authority in the State on ho-
moeopathic drugs.
News and Comments. 335,
Dr. V. T. Giltman has removed from Oneonta to Gloverdale,.
N. Y.
"The thing that was quite noticeable in the attendance of the
State medical meeting was the number of men returning to the
Association who had been misled by the bombastic and willfully
leading invitations of certain allopathic physicians that the medi-
cal millennium was at hand, and that all schools would be wel-
come:! into the allopathic profession, with full fellowship. Such
has not proven to be the case. Our men, who have been misled
and believed that they would be taken into full fellowship, find
themselves like a 'strange cat in a strange garret.' " — L. E. R.y
Eclectic Medical Journal.
Dr. J. Duncanson has removed from Long Cay, F. I., Bahamas,,
to Ruatan, Bay Islands, Spanish Honduras.
From July 15th to September 15th, Dr. Byron G. Clark will be
in his office, 25 YV. 74th St., New York, on Tuesdays and Fridays,
of each week.
Dr. C. I. Swift has removed from Auburn to Castle Creek,
N. Y.
Dr. J. G. Maeder has removed to 123 W. 121st St., New York.
Venezuela has passed a compulsory vaccination law and estab-
lished a vaccine plant. Foreigners will do well to take their vac-
cination certificates with them when visiting that country.
"The International American Congress of Medicine and Hy-
giene of 1910 will take place in the City of Buenos Aires, Argen-
tine Republic, in the month of May, 1910." "Adhesion can also
be obtained by the payment of $5 in gold." — Public Health Re-
ports.
Dr. O. R. Gregg has removed from Nemaha, Iowa, to Alva,
Oklahoma.
In a personal letter Dr. Leon Vannier, of Paris, France, writes
that certain physicians and surgeons there have established a
model Homoeopathic Dispensary which will be a centre of obser-
vation and labor for the cause of Homoeopathy and devoted to-
the welfare of the poor.
Dr. L. L. Danforth, New York, sailed for Europe on June
30th, to be gone until September 1st. Dr. F. W. Hamlin will at-
tend to his practice in the interim.
Dr. John L. Moffat, of Brooklyn, will be at 476 Main St.,.
Orange, N. J., from Aug. 1 to Sept. 7.
PERSONAL
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THE
Homeopathic Recorder
Vol. XXIV Lancaster. Pa.
A DISCOVERY CONCERNING CANTHARIS
„ .'.' _ ""."'•..;" .'---' -1 ~:Z ."
is in English re: rittt 1 lew Y rk
French : :tir:til : : ,i
n:e riif e In :'.". ■. "nn : issue s i ■
7 r. 11. Z. Li:t:-_-r-_i:-::
?irts. r-ii in::: r :
cine : : tint :i:v. The
title of his paper is The Treata
Epithelial Xerltritis
r - -- i •
"i:h the Tin :r.:re : hit-firi ie
3
_r. — r r .' r * v . ?.
■ ----- ; ' .-- ----- - -
e : : : r-
^ :i lent;-, ir. :P .2. :
.nit _ .".it ' tin tie . ^ . rnetts
: tit rhtettir f
inthir: es :.tr U: iff ent : e:
ithelii:
r.e: hritis v. hi :h re :11 -
irriiitst the .. hitftistriti n : ii
V it., -v.: ?•. - -
r and that cantharides which pi
■: lutes
rz - " . ■ •
'"Si:
; : ■:.-. - ■■: - tincture : rinthi:
-
cuite i lireee rut' er :
rises r t in ill t nes : :: f '"" t -
which are particiil
ir ft
?.rn:rii. 7 : r this anv.rl:
is the result i the obstruction
:••' tiles ' ; V.t re : in : s
: lien e : it.tr. nut: in. 1 it se e tie 1 :
:: :■:. : : ::v it this
: "it uti "it i tittiitistertn^
tvhielt i :te 1 ■.:• :: the se
e; itltrlii. VtitLi. h - Itielt in.
loses has the facultv of <
iestroving' the renal epitnena. wnei
g
in snti..er ::ses. ::ne
- t it e ■_ ' . t " -_ . '. i . e . e 1 1 1 e n. t s ~ c r
er may be
kit:
338 Discovery Concerning Cantharis.
of epithelial nephritis. This is proved by the cases which we have
reported previously, as well as by those which we are about to
relate."
The first case was that of a girl eight years old "with an epi-
thelial nephritis threatening her life," which followed an attack of
scarlet fever. One drop of the tincture of cantharides mixed with
a mucilaginous syrup was prescribed ; this was continued for five
days, and the case made a fine recovery.
The other cases, three, were young men who received some-
what larger doses, and recovered.
Dr. Lancereaux remarks : "It should be noted that we always
took care to use a freshly prepared tincture as the old tincture
loses much of its strength.'' He concludes his paper with the fol-
lowing statement :
"It has been said too often formerly that pathological anatomy
does not give any clue to therapeutics. This is an error which is
easily refuted, for if instead of a nephritis localized in the epi-
thelia, we are in the presence of a nephritis affecting more espe-
cially the arteries or the connective tissue, cantharides will remain
without effect, as we have convinced ourselves repeatedly. In such
cases, diuretics will give better results. What remedies shall we
use in this class of cases to combat the anatomical lesions ? "We
must use an agent which is capable of affecting the connective
tissue and the vessels, for example, potassium iodide."
All humane men will be glad, for the sake of sick humanity,
that the "regulars" of Paris, or one of them, has made the dis-
covery that Hahnemann made about one hundred years ago. If
they will confine themselves to the dosage given by Dr. Lancer-
eaux, the action of which he says astonished him, or even ma-
terially decrease it, all will be well, but the chances are that they
will go their old road giving ever increasing doses until nature
rebels ; then some learned man will discredit and sweep away this,
discovery with the statement that he had given cantharides in
twenty, or even thirty, drop doses, with no relief, but. instead,
with actual harm to the patient. These gentlemen, like the public*
cannot shake off the common notion that if a little is good, more
must be better, and apparently cannot believe that there is any
power in the potentized drug. But that does not affect the Law.
Disintegration of the Profession. 339
THE DISINTEGRATION OF THE HOMCEOPATHIC
PROFESSION ; THE CAUSE AND THE
REMEDY SUGGESTED.
By W. L. Morgan, M. D.
The object of this paper is to point out wherein our pro-
fession, as a whole, is on the brink of complete disintegration, and
•dwell in a concise manner on the causes leading up to it, and then
in an humble spirit suggest the remedy.
It is not my purpose to go into a lengthy discussion at this time,
as time will not permit, and I might add that perhaps patience
(that of my fellow physicians) will not permit it either.
However, dipping deep into the whys and wherefores of the
conditions that our school finds itself in at the present time, the
•causes for our alarms are very apparent, and do not require the
assistance of the microscope. The many and oft repeated ex-
pressions of intelligent allopathic physicians in discussing the
pros and cons of Homceopathy as compared to allopathy will
form the extrinsic basis of the cause. The intrinsic basis of the
cause is entirely another matter, and will be touched on a little
later. The expressions we hear, and we have all heard them
directly or indirectly, and have probably taken part in such ex-
pressions and discussions, run something like this :
Dr. D. P., for instance, a very amiable and intelligent old school
man, will say to us, or to the laity, "I would like to recognize and
consult with the Homoeopaths, but I seldom find any that have
confidence in their own system of medicine, for when they get a
bad or troublesome case to treat they invariably resort to allopathy,
and then give larger doses than we do in most instances ; this
shows to me that they know nothing of their own system and less
of ours."
Another old school man will remark: "Their colleges (Ho-
mceo.) turn out physicians that profess to practice Homoeopathy,
when in reality they know nothing about the true science of Ho-
moeopathy, or else are afraid of it, have no confidence in it, and at
once go into allopathy with a restlessness bordering on abject
ignorance ; they belie their pretensions, they belie the founder of
the system."
Another old school man will say : "The State should pass
340 Disintegration of the Profession.
some law to get rid of your (Homoeo.) impostors; you profess
to be Homoeopaths and practice allopathy with more daring and
restlessness than we do ; you are dangerous to the community ;
if your system or science were well founded you would not resort
to our school remedies."
We have all heard such expressions in our time, and the laity
even have added their quota of ridicule, and strange to say they
are right. Their ridicule stands as a monument — of what shall I
say — perfidy? No, I shall not make it quite so strong, and yet
on a strict construction it savors very much of it, though begotten
more in ignorance than in intention.
When these things are so it is little wonder that the lines of
discrimination are fast disappearing, and the old school see their
opportunity of giving a final death knell to our system, or science,
of Homoeopathy, and this may be done by any one of several
methods.
A dean of one of our homoeopathic colleges was telling me
some little time since what great things his college was doing for
Homoeopathy. When I asked him who was teaching the Organ on
and Repertories he scornfully said : "We don't have anything to
do with them ; they are out of date and impracticable ; we are
teaching modern Homoeopathy. "
And that college sends out alumni to practice Homoeopathy
who never have read a section of the Organon, and don't know
the meaning of Repertory, and could not begin to write the
anamnesis of a case. Is it to be wondered at that our profession,,
as Homoeopaths, is on the threshold of a downfall? These same
alumni can spatter about 3X and 6x without knowing the meaning
of it, and can talk fluently about microbes, bacteria, antiseptics
and disinfectants and not know how to make a potency. And
these alumni parade as Homoeopaths.
Another dean of a homoeopathic college publishes over his
signature that the "greatest fad of the present time was Hahne-
mann's teachings of the totality of symptoms in prescribing.''"
The latter, one of the fundamental principles of Homoeopathy,
and this "wise one'' rejects it, teaching students that the dose
cannot be effective without demonstrable presence of the drug,
diabolically contrary to the true principles of Homoeopathy and
all its teachings.
Disintegration of the Profession. 341
When these principles are so presented in our schools, it is not
so amazing that our students are so quick to resort to allopathy.
They know no better, they know nothing about Homoeopathy.
They are in most instances taught no better, by men rejecting the
fundamental and vital principles of our system. Calmly review-
ing these facts we at once see that we ourselves furnish the am-
munition for our destruction. Can anything be expected other-
wise? Are these facts not the intrinsic basis for our fears? Can
we not see the handwriting on the wall, "Thou hast been
weighed in the balance and found wanting/' Yea, and who has
furnished the material for the past twenty or thirty years, and
especially more recently, for the indelible inscribing of this judg-
ment? There is but one answer, and that very apparent. Sow-
ing to the wind we are about on the eve of reaping the whirlwind.
Can it be so surprising that so many see the inevitable, see their
own weakness and absolute inability to defend the cause of Ho-
moeopathy (and this for obvious reasons), and in abject despera-
tion join the enemy's camp and constitutionally turn "State's evi-
dence?"
It is now claimed that there are more Homoeopaths joining the
A. M. A. than there are joining the A. I. H. The present situa-
tion was more fully and better explained in the Homoeopathic
Recorder of October, 1903, in my paper on "How to Train a
Physician to Practice Homoeopathy." This was followed up by
Dr. Guernsey Waring, who, with others, instituted a crusade
against the frauds upon Homoeopathy, and organized a large
association in Chicago, called "The Regular Homoeopathic So-
ciety." The latter society is still in existence, and has effected a
reorganization of three colleges, which are now teaching the true
science of Homoeopathy, and their alumni are doing well.
Whether it will be necessary for the Homoeopaths following the
true principles of our science and teachings to form an associa-
tion in contra-distinction to the so-called modern, or up-to-date
Homoeopaths, as was done in Chicago, remains yet to be seen.
However, there must at some time, unless conditions radically
change, be a parting of the ways, for the Homoeopaths following
the true principles of their system, as laid down by Hahnemann
and exemplified by Boenninghausen, Lippe, Hering, and
others of our present day, are not content to be dragged down to
the level of those imposing a fraud upon Homoeopathy.
342 Disintegration of the Profession.
Now I will crave a further indulgence for a few words on the
remedy for the situation as presented.
Hahnemann says : First remove the offending cause, the
offensive odors from the room, the belladonna pains from the
stomach, and the splinters from the flesh ; what in the present
situation appears impossible except through the making of very
radical changes. This would require trustees of our colleges to
engage as professors and teachers men well grounded in the
fundamental principles of Homoeopathy, men who are in full sym-
pathy with the Organon, Repertory and the system of dealing
with chronic diseases,, and assign them sufficient time to enable
good students to become thoroughly versed in homoeopathic phil-
osophy. Teach the student what is curable in disease and what is
curative in drugs. Teach him less of microbes, bacterias, anti-
septics, disinfectants and demonstrable drug doses, etc., but teach
him how to apply the true principles of similia similibus curantur.
Then we, as a profession, will be better able to demonstrate to
the laity (never mind about the old school as a profession) that
our science is true and exact, and superior to any other system for
the curing of sickness and ailments, whether acute or chronic.
By following the outlined precepts we will demonstrate that our
science of treating disease is separate and distinct from any other ;
that it stands alone : that our science is based on natural laws, not
man made, but God given though man discovered. Another sug-
gestion that might prove of importance would be a systematic
method of educating the laity by public lectures, circulating in-
structive literature under the auspices of some society or clinic
and demonstrations of the fundamental principles of our science
and the advantages to be gained in every aspect, by the use of our
medications over the crude drugs, antiseptics, etc.. of the old
school. One subject alone followed and treated religiously ac-
cording to our true principles would be the beginning of a revolu-
tion in the medical world, and would heap such praise and glory
upon our profession as we can at this time but little anticipate,
and I refer to tuberculosis. Following these suggestions, I
venture to say, in five years Homoeopathy would dominate and
there would be lucrative business for five times as many M. D.'s
as now, and in turn the allopaths would be writing and reading
papers on the disintegration of their profession.
Tissue Building. 343
Let the spirit of Hahnemann, Bcenninghausen, Lippe, Hering
and others of the departed masters be born anew in us.
Respectfully submitted, and for the time and attention given
me, I thank you.
Baltimore, May, 1909.
Read before Homoeopathic Society of Maryland.
TISSUE BUILDING.
Many years ago a German naturalist, physician and all round
enthusiast, thus wrote of tissue remedies :
"It was here in Philadelphia, in 1834, that a wealthy old man
broke his thigh bone, and as it had not healed it was to be operat-
ed on some weeks later, by surgeons of high standing. Xo phos-
phate of lime being on hand, a strong dilution of pyro-phos-
phoric acid was added by drops to the lime water of the shops.
The gelatinous deposit, formed by two or three acid combinations
of the two, was pressed out in filtering paper, and about one
grain, in five doses, handed to the sufferer, with the advice to put
off the operation. Several weeks later he came in his buggy to see
the doctor. The callus was felt by the surgeon about ten days
after the powders were given. The callus contained certainly
fifty or sixty times more phosphate of lime than had been taken.
The man having not allowed the two ends of the bone to be rubbed
together by the surgeons, there was no doubt in the conclusion
that the phosphate of lime given him as a nutritive remedy had
acted as a functional one. Drs. Gideon Humphreys and S. Green,
coming at the same time for instruction in Homoeopath}-, were
recommended to make provings, and as they knew of this cure,
were requested to prove the rest of the preparation, which they
did. To give them a right idea of our law, it was said to them
that as they would not break their bones in pursuance of their
provings, so they should never look for diseases to be produced
by any drug. Belladonna never caused scarlatina ; there are no
diseases produced, only similar symptoms.
"Soon afterwards the basic phosphate of lime, prepared from
bones by a skillful chemist, was proved ; it was of great use, not
only in such cases, but also in open fontanelles of children, hydro-
cephalus and tedious dentition, particularly in the important
period of second dentition.
344 Tissue Building.
"In 1832 it had been written: 'All the essential component
parts of the human bodv are great remedies.' ' Stapfs Archives,
XXII, Xo. 3, P- 34.
In 1846 as a result of numerous careful provings during twenty-
two years, there was published the following in Stapfs Archives :
"All constituents of the human body act on such organs prin-
cipally where they have a function.
"All fulfill their functions when they are the cause of symp-
toms.''
"Xobody took any notice of it except Grauvogl in his text-book,
and now it is made the basis of a new system."
So wrote Dr. Constantine Hering of the tissue remedies father-
ed by Dr. Schuessler and best known as Schuessler's tissue reme-
dies.
In the text-book of Homoeopathy, that profound and phil-
osophical thinker, Yon Grauvogl, thus mentions the tissue reme-
dies :
"The determination of a remedy towards a given locality, and
in this case of a remedy of nutrition, is that which impresses upon
it its specific character, and on this observation of qualities with
the co-operation of quantities, which latter merely carry the de-
gree of intensity up to an injurious chemical action, rests one
entire half of the art of observing at the sick bed, which, for a
therapie to be conducted according to natural laws, hence a prac-
tical one, is of prime necessity."
Xow is it true that with the twleve tissue remedies of Schuess-
ler. viz. : Kali plies., Natrum phos., Calcarea phos., Magnesia
phos.. Ferrum phos.. Kali sulpJi., Natrum sulph., Calcarea sulph.,
Kali mur.} Natrum nnir.. Calcarea iiuorica, Silicea, one can cure
all diseases?
And if so, how do these remedies cure disease?
But can we cure all diseases with the twelve biochemical com-
pounds so-called? I fancy most physicians who have any prac-
tical knowledge of the action of the tissue remedies will answer
this question with a no. But if they are frank will also tell you
that the Schuessler remedies are of very great usefulness when
they are properly indicated.
Xow I do not suppose that when we give Calcarea phos. to a
baby in order to make the baby develop bone we think that we are
Tissue Building. 345
actually causing any deposit of phosphate of lime in the system
from the medicine itself. But the tiny electrons of Calcarca phos.
seek their like and find their way through the blood channels of
nutrition to where the poor, tired out lime cells are in a feeble>
half-hearted way trying to build teeth or bone, and not doing their
work correctly. And this electron of lime stimulates into an
activity of proper cell building the bone parts, and the lime is then
attracted from the blood as it ought to be and the cell building be-
comes healthy. It would seem that thus Dr. Hering interpreted
the cure of the rich old man who broke his leg.
From personal experience the writer knows that the tissue
remedies are of great value. He has been using them for many
years and relies upon them. He knows that Calc. phos. will make
a forgetful person remember his words ; that it will make the
backward child develop more normality ; that M agues, phos. will
stop many a toothache; that Kali sulpli. will help diseases of the
epidermis ; that it will often cause liver spots to disappear from
the skin; that Xatrum phos. will assist in co-ordination of mus-
cles, and that Fcvruui phos. will help many a hoarseness. The
little repertory of Schuesslers remedies, edited by Hering and
issued in 1875, is used almost daily for reference by the writer.
And he has been taught by glad experience to depend upon these
remedies.
There have been many editions of Schuessler, and one large
repertory which includes Schuessler and several other things.
Recently the worthy editor of the Recorder has taken some
pains to compile a small guide or text-book of the tissue remedies,
which, in some ninety 121110 pages, well covers the doctrine of Dr.
Schuessler, and must be of great value to the physician who lias
used these remedies or intends to try them.
And this old doctor takes great pleasure in saying that the
tissue remedies are all right and will well repay studying, and that
this small book of Dr. E. P. Anshutz contains the needful in-
formation for student or practitioner.
It is a little book with a plain preface. Part 1 in a few words
introduces us to Wilhelm Heinrich Schuessler, of Oldenburg, and
his one work on abridged biochemistry. The proper dosage is
given, the preparation of the remedies, selection of the remedy,
duration of treatment. Part 2 contains the materia medica, with a
list of the remedies and an outline of the action of each one.
346 Something About Epidemic Remedies.
Part 3 contains the therapeutics of the biochemic remedies.
In this the common diseases are given in alphabetical order
with the name of the proper biochemical remedy. There is also
a very complete index.
It would seem that the secret of the action of Dr. Schuessler's
twelve remedies is governed by the selective action of cells. The
blood takes along on its journey the elements all the different
parts of the body require. The healthy body gets of each element
just what is needed.
But when improper matter is introduced into the circulation,
and when the cells take up not enough or too much, in a word, the
equilibrium of health is disturbed, then by the introduction of the
carefully and minutely subdivided chemical element that the body
is crying out for, healthy cell action is made possible and the
organs all cry out together with joy, and, as Carlyle says, we
ought to forget that we have a stomach.
T. L. Bradford, M. D.
Philadelphia, Pa., July 15.. 1909.
SOMETHING ABOUT EPIDEMIC REMEDIES.
(The following, translated from Vol. IV, of the International
Homeopathic Press, may prove interesting to the readers of my
translation of Rademacher's Universal and Organ Remedies.
A. A. R.:)
First, I will quote some remarks from Dr. Motin, professor at
the University of Vienna, who says : The epidemic pathological
constitution may be recognized by the difference of pathological
forms. But I believe that the homoeopathic physician can recog-
nize it in another way. As is well known, every pathologist makes
up the picture of a disease, not from one single symptom, but from
a larger or smaller complex of symptoms which he finds in one
and the same individual. The homoeopathic physician gets his
picture of the drug disease not from the complex of symptoms
found in one and the same individual, but he makes up the picture
of his drug disease from the detached symptoms which he meets
one after another in different individuals along with one constant
main symptom.
I have often had occasion to notice, especially towards the end
Something About Epidemic Remedies. 347
of the last cholera epidemic, that the epidemic constitution, as well
as the homoeopathic drug, causes diseases, the single symptoms
of which can be found along with a constant one, either segre-
gated in different patients or follow each other, alternate, so to
say, in one and the same individual. The pathologist cannot
bring such diseases, taken alone, under any pathological forms.
But when the homceopathist has obtained the picture of the drug
disease, after putting together the single symptoms, he finds the
proper remedy and easily accomplishes the cure. We will illus-
trate this by an example : An intestinal catarrh is not always the
same disease for the homoeopathic physician. According as it
causes stools of different forms, is or is not accompanied with
vomiting, colic, fever or headache, etc., it offers a different pa-
thological picture which must be met with a different drug, viz.,
sometimes with Opium, or Phosphorus, or Mercurius sdlubilis,
or J'eratrum, or Ipecacuanha, or Rhus, etc., although this brings
us in conflict with morbid anatomists.
I firmly believe that Homoeopathy can find out remedies which
cure a disease appearing under different pictures, as soon as all
these different pathological pictures can be brought together so
as to form one single drug disease picture. But since this, remedy
is the only one among its cognates which cures different pa-
thological (pictures) forms, it corresponds that there must be a
single cause producing the different pictures. And as this cause
can be no other than the epidemic disease constitution, then the
remedy also must be an epidemic remedy.
The importance of finding such remedies will appear from the
following :
1 ) The physician can cure acute diseases speedily, prevent the
disease, and prevent morbid products and chronic diseases.
2) He may find sure remedies for pathological conditions for
which he cannot give a sure diagnosis, yea, even for diseases
against which he cannot find any remedies recorded in the text-
books of special therapeutics.
3) As soon as he has found the epidemic remedy he need not
wait for the full development of the disease before giving the
curative remedy, since he can cut the disease short at the appear-
ance of the first symptom.
4) Finally, by proving itself really efficacious, where alio-
348 Something About Epidemic Remedies.
pathic physicians are impotent, since they cannot even furnish a
diagnosis, the homoeopathic system can celebrate its greatest
triumphs and prove to the anatomical pathological schools that it
alone is a curative science, since it has to do not only with
morbid products, but also, and this pre-eminently, with pa-
thological processes.
Proofs. In the second half of the month of October (1872?),
while the cholera epidemic was rapidly decreasing, I had occasion
to observe in my private practice some intestinal catarrhs which I
considered as a modification of the not quite extinct epidemic dis-
ease. For the characteristics of the vomiting and of the very
frequent diarrhoea (often twenty or thirty times per hour), the
cyanosis of the hands and of the face, the cadaveric coldness of
the arms and of the cheeks, at first the complete apyrexia, the
total prostration, and the apathy of mind presented the picture of
cholera even to a beginner in the medical art. To complete this
picture there were only lacking the suppression of urine, the
cramps and the aphony. I could not consider the disease acute
intestinal cararrh, for it lacked at the first the main symptoms,
viz., fever, which appeared the third day only, and then only in a
small degree (hardly eighty pulsations per minute), and that in a
young patient.
But the treatment of my patient was a harder puzzle than the
diagnosis. All the remedies employed, according to the prin-
ciple "similia similibus/' and selected after mature consideration,
failed to cure until the unexpected appearance of two symptoms
led me to use a remedy which not only cut short the whole pa-
thological process in a wonderfully short time, but proved effica-
cious, too, in all cases. It was only after using the drug two or
three times that I began to compare its effects with the single
symptoms appearing in the different patients, and this compari-
son forced me to the conclusion, first, that the cholera epidemy,
while dying out, underwent a peculiar modification, and secondly,
that while treating intestinal catarrh under the influence of the
cholera epidemy, I came upon a really epidemic remedy, as will
appear from the following:
Case I. — Miss Marie Z., 19 years old, a quiet, robust, well
developed blonde, was attacked with diarrhoea on the evening of
the 1 2th of October. During the night she slept quietly, awak-
Something About Epidemic Remedies. 349
ing twice only on account of the diarrhoea. On the 13th the stools
were pretty frequent, and accompanied with tenesmus and a high
•colic, the patient keeping to bed without appetite, but otherwise
well. In the night she slept quietly, and the stools were much
less frequent than during the daw On the morning of the 14th,
right after awaking, the stools were very much more frequent,
the patient became very sad, was anxious about her condition and
very weak. While visiting her at 8 A. M., I found the temperature
and the respiration normal, the pulse free, regular, strong but not
hard, with 72 beats to the minute ; the chest was free, the abdomen
somewhat bloated, but soft, painless under pressure, but with
fluctuation ; the tongue coated a little at its root, otherwise normal.
The patient gave the information that she had had a passage al-
most every five minutes, but in small quantity ; I could not ascer-
tain their color, as they never were inspected, but they were
without smell, and were driven out as if coming out of a pump.
I gave her a drop of Opium- 1, to be taken every hour. At 1 P.
M . the condition was the same, but the arms and the cheeks were
cold, and the patient was thirsty. The passages were perfectly
liquid, of a greenish color, with flakes of dead epithelium. I
ordered her to continue the same remedy, to be taken every half
hour, along with a clyster containing three drops of Opium 1,
to be repeated in three hours, if needed. At 7 P. M. the condition
\vas the same, only the last passages were nearly white. I now
gave her V e rat rum 1, one drop every quarter of an hour.
Under its influence the passages were less frequent, and had a
darker color, and a stronger smell. She went to sleep at 10 and
slept till 7 in the morning of the 15th without any passage. But
she was hardly awake when the diarrhoea returned, and a quarter
of an hour later vomiting appeared ; the stuff vomited was liquid,
greenish-white and slimy. At my visit at 8 A. M. I found her
pretty much the same, only more spiritless, and complaining of
headache and increased thirst. I ordered Ipecac. 1, one drop
every hour. At 12 I found that the vomiting had returned once
more, the greenish-white, stinking, but liquid stools had been
pretty frequent, the headache was still present, the cheeks, the
forehead and the arms were cold as marble, and the fluctuation in
the abdomen was caused by incarcerated gas, not by fluids. But
strangely I found a feverish pulse, which was very full, and
350 Something About Epidemic Remedies.
numbering 80 beats to the minute. This symptom in connection
with the others induced me to select Rhus 3. I put ten drops of
this remedy in half a pint of water, and had the patient take a tea-
spoonful of this every five minutes. (See Mat. Med. Pura,
symptoms 900, 901, 902. — A. A. R.)
I never saw a drug act like a charm as did this one. After the
fourth dose, viz., in one-quarter of an hour, the pulse had fallen
to 72, the temperature was normal, the thirst and the insipid taste
wTere gone, the headache diminished, the mind was brighter and
she had no nausea, no desire for stool. I ordered the same rem-
edy to be given three more times at ten minutes' intervals ; the
pulse descended to 66 ; the headache disappeared almost entirely ;
the patient called for the chamber, but only passed urine, which
was dark colored. Before leaving I bade the patient take two
more doses of the drug at intervals of a half hour, then of an
hour, till evening. At 8 P. M. I visited her and found her bright
and entirely free from headache. The appetite had returned, the
tongue was entirely clean, the pulse was 60, the whole surface
covered with an agreeable moisture, the abdomen was sunken,
the palms had a normal heat and moisture, there was no nausea,
no diarrhoea, no tenesmus. During the afternoon fetid wind was
often passed. She had a very quiet night's rest. On the 16th
early menstruation appeared ; the general condition of the patient
being the same as the evening before. She felt very well, only a
little weak, and complained of hunger. As she had had no open-
ing as yet, I bade her keep to bed, take Rhus every three hours.
and allowed her a weak tea with a little bread for breakfast, a
rice soup and some chicken for dinner, and two soft eggs for
supper. The night was perfectly quiet. On the 17th early she
had no opening, but she felt quite well, only a little weak, and
complained of hunger. The menstruation took its regular course.
the abdomen was not hard, the pulse 60. I stopped the medicine,
allowed the patient to be up for a few hours, let her have her
regular fare with a little red wine. During the day she had a
well formed passage, and on the 18th I dismissed her cured.
Case II. — Mrs. Mary G., 55 years old, a widow of robust con-
stitution, quiet temperament, with black hair and a brown com-
plexion, suddenly got an attack of diarrhoea in the afternoon of
the 16th. The stools were not copious, but very frequent, five or
Something About Epidemic Remedies. 351
six times per hour, accompanied by slight colic pains, very fluid,
greenish, smelling but little. The temperature was normal, the
tongue coated at its root, the abdomen a little bloated, not painful
under pressure but fluctuating on account of water. The pulse
was 74. which was the normal beat for this lady. She only com-
plained of thirst. I gave her Opium 1. one drop every hour.
During the evening the stools were less frequent, and the patient
slept quietly during the night. On the 17th the condition remain-
ed unchanged, but the thirst was greater, and she had no appetite
whatever ; she felt very faint, did not like to speak, and laid in
apathy the whole forenoon. The stools were not so frequent as
the day before, but much more pale, almost white, and without
smell. The same remedy was continued. When I visited her at
night she told me that she often passed stools without being
aware of it: therefore, I changed Opium for Veratrum 1, one
drop every half hour. She slept pretty well during the night,
awakening only twice on account of the diarrhcea. On the 18th
early I found her in the same condition as on the day before, only
that the back of the hands appeared cyanotic, and the forehead,
the chest and the arms felt cold to the touch. The stools were
very liquid, but bad smelling, and of the color of chocolate. The
patient suddenly vomited during my visit ; the vomited stuff was a
white liquid mixed with slime. The vomiting and the modified
stools caused me to change Veratrum 1 for Ipeeac. 3, in dilution,
two teaspoonfuls every hour. At 7 P. M. I found her cyanotic,
her face, hands and arms cold, her features remarkably changed,
the abdomen soft, but tilled with rumbling gas, the pulse was 74
but small, no vomiting ; the stools did not pass unaware any more,
but were frequent, almost every hour. The patient had lain
apathetic all day on her back ; she shuns speaking, complained of
exhaustion, thirst, tenesmus, confusion in the head, and some-
times noises in the ears. This array of symptoms made me feel
really uneasy. But remembering the brilliant results I had ob-
tained in the preceding case, which seemed to me to be similar, I
decided to try Rhus before preparing the family for the worst.
I dissolved ten drops of Rhus 3 in half a pint of water, and gave
her myself a teaspoonful every ten minutes. In this case, too, the
remedy proved wonderfully efficacious. After the third or fourth
dose the pulse decreased to 70 and became fuller, the features
352 Something About Epidemic Remedies.
grew brighter, the cyanosis began to disappear, the face and the
arms became warmer, and she passed wind. The amelioration,
continued steadily. After the fourth dose I administered the-
remedy twice at an interval of twenty minutes, then from half"
hour to half hour. At 10 P. M. the pulse was 60 and full, the
thirst and the cyanosis had entirely disappeared, the body had its
natural heat and moisture, the patient could raise herself up, and
felt so well that she said if she were not sleepy she would like to
get up and play at cards ; no trace of nausea and diarrhoea. I
left her to sleep, with the direction to give her two teaspoonfuls.
of the Rhus solution if she awoke. She awoke only once during-
the night to pass water, which looked like thick brown beer.
On the 19th early she was entirely well. The pulse was 60, the
tongue clear and the appetite had returned. I ordered to continue
to give Rhus every two hours, and in the afternoon every three
hours, and allowed her light nourishment with a little red wine
for dinner. She had no stool during the day but urinated often ;
the night sleep was calm. On the 20th the pulse was still 60, and
the appetite stronger. I kept the patient in bed, bade her continue
to take Rhus, but only every four hours, and allowed a more
nutritious diet and red wine. On the 21st early she had her first
passage; as it was well formed, I allowed the patient to get up
and dismissed her cured.
Case III. — Dr. H., a veteran of the homoeopathic physicians of
Vienna, sent me an urgent call at 9 A. M. on the 21st. I found
in bed a very vigorous man of seventy, who told me that he had
had a violent attack of diarrhoea three weeks ago, which had dis-
appeared in a few days by merely keeping to bed and dieting
himself ; a constipation of several days followed the diarrhoea,
whereupon the normal conditions had returned. But in the after-
noon of the 19th he got, without cause, a diarrhoea, which so in-
creased during the night that he decided to keep to bed on the
20th and to diet himself. Nevertheless the diarrhoea was so fre-
quent during the day that he felt very weak towards evening, and
he sent for another celebrated homoeopathic colleague, who, being
sick himself, and living in a distant suburb, begged to be excused.
but from the description of the disease sent Veratrum 1. He
promised to call next morning, but recommended me, if needful,
since I lived not far from the patient. The diarrhoea did not give
Something About Epidemic Remedies. 353
way to Vc vat rum, which was taken all night long. He purged
twenty times, at least, during the night, and vomited early on the
2 1 st. Shortly after this, at 7:30 A. M., the colleague in charge
had visited him and given him Ipecac. 3 instead of Veratrum,
recommending again to send for me if he did not soon get betterr
since on account of his large practice, he could not see him before
evening. But as the diarrhoea rather increased than decreased
under the action of Ipecac. 1, and as the patient felt very weak
and nauseated, he decided to send for me. I found the following
status praesens : Head clear, features not changed, temperature
and color of skin normal, only the arms and the cheeks cool, voice
normal, tongue covered almost to its point with a thick, yellowish
coat, the abdomen tense, painless, fluctuating, the pulse 80 and
full (patient claiming that a pulse of 80 was normal with him),
tenesmus, bad taste, no appetite and a violent thirst. The stools
were bad smelling and painless, but the patient could not describe
their color, as he always went to the closet.
The two preceding cases had put me on my guard, hence I
soon had made up my mind after eliciting the above complex of
symptoms. I considered this case as one of those peculiar intes-
tinal catarrhs, which, as the two preceding ones had developed
under the influence of the still prevailing cholera epidemy, and no
other remedy than Rhus, which I considered the epidemic .rem-
edy, could cure it. As it happened that the physician in charge of
the case was one of my intimate friends, I told the patient that I
would change the remedy, and take it upon me to justify the
change with my friend. I related the success I had had with
Rhus in similar cases, gave him ten drops of the third dilution in
half a pint of water, to be taken at first every ten minutes, and
later at longer intervals, and promised to visit him again in a few
hours. At 1 P. M. the patient told me that during my absence he
had felt only once a desire for stool, but that he had no passage,
only some wind. The face and the arms were of normal tem-
perature, the pulse was 70; the edges of the tongue were already
getting clean and rosy, the gas was rumbling in the abdomen, but
the lack of appetite, the bad taste, the nausea and the thirst were
still present. I bade the patient continue to take the Rhus solu-
tion, but only every hour. At 7 P. M. I visited him again. He
had urinated, had passed much wind, the tongue was clean along
354 Something About Epidemic Remedies.
the- edge, the pulse was 60, the abdomen not so tense, and the
thirst was less, but the appetite was still lacking, and he had had
no passage. I told him to take Rhus every two hours. The
night was very good. On the 22d the tongue continued to get
clean towards the root, the pulse remained 60, the abdomen was
not tense any more, the bad taste and the thirst had disappeared ;
the patient had had no passage, but felt hungry. I kept him in
bed bidding him take Rhus every three hours. On the 23d the
tongue was entirely clean ; the other symptoms were unchanged,
but no passage ; the patient complained of hunger. He now got
Rhus every four hours, and was allowed soup and chicken. On
the 24th he had the first passage, which was well formed. He
got up and began to eat more and quit taking medicine.
Case IV. — On the 26th of October, about noon, the father of
the girl mentioned in my first case, sent for me. He was a strong,
vigorous man of fifty, living very regularly. He told me that the
evening before he had purged suddenly twice, and after sleeping
well had purged four times again during the morning. The pass-
ages were accompanied with light colic and had color and odor,
the pulse was 66, the tongue clean, the abdomen tense, the tem-
perature of the skin normal. The patient claimed that the diar-
rhoea was caused by a perturbation of the mind. Being satisfied
that this catarrh was connected with the prevailing epidemy, and
that Rhus was the present epidemic remedy, I gave it at once in
solution in hourly doses. The same evening all traces of the dis-
ease had already disappeared.
Other Cases. — During the month of October I had to treat
nine more similar cases of intestinal catarrh, which wrere all cured
by Rhus in a wonderfully short time.
Conclusion.
The epidemic character of these catarrhs is proven by their
sudden appearance within a few days in different parts of a very
large city.
From the description of the first case it is clear that I was led to
Rhus only by the appearance of the feverish pulse. (In his Lesser
Writings, p. 847, Hahnemann recommends Rhus in alternation
with Bryonia in the consecutive fever of cholera. — A. A. R.)
But by comparing the four cases described above, it is clear that
Something About Epidemic Remedies. 355
the svmptoms of Rhus were not conspicuous in their total com-
plex in every case, but came out singly in the one or the other
case. From these considerations I believe that I am justified in
my conclusion that Rhus was really an epidemic remedy in those
epidemic intestinal catarrhs.
The following is translated from an article of Dr. Steus, of
Bonn, published in the Vol. II of the International Homoeopathic
Press:
I was treating a drunkard for delirium tremens. After being
cured of this trouble he suffered from a violent sciatica, which
had its paroxysms at 4 o'clock every morning. At the same time
the cholerine was prevailing, with its time of aggravation at the
same early hour, and for which Veratrum was the specific rem-
edy. This opened my eyes, and since I found a similar char-
acteristic sciatica in the symptom picture of Veratrum, I was the
more convinced that the sciatica was merely an effort of the
causa noceus laying at the bottom of the epidemy, which in one
case caused vomiting and purging, in another vertigo or confusion
of the head with general weariness, but in this patient attacked
the weaker part, the sciatic nerve, and caused the sciatica, but
with the characteristic of the epidemy. I must here remark that
he had long suffered of sciatica before, and, therefore, there was
a disposition to this trouble on his part. This induced me to give
him a drop of the 9th dilution of Veratrum, the remedy which had
proved efficacious in the epidemy. rather than to give him Nux
which has a very similar sciatica, and which drug his in-
temperate habits might have indicated. He did not get another'
attack.
Dr. Ran mentions a case of dropsy, the sequel of a previous
scarlet fever epidemy. against which he gave without succe —
the remedies usually employed against this disease, but which he
cured with Belladonna, the remedy corresponding to this pre-
vious epidemy.
On the other hand, the unsuccessful employment of an epidemic
remedy during an epidemy should cause us to look for other nox-
ious elements at the bottom of the diseases.
For instance. Dr. Steus was treating a man of forty for chronic
syphilis, which manifested itself in big., loathsome ulcers on his
legs. These healed up gradually, leaving large bluish brown
35^> Something We May Never Know.
spots with some small pimples of suspicious character appearing
here and there. Suddenly, says Dr. Steus, he who had a pretty
robust constitution and very good lungs, is attacked with a violent
pneumonia, the cause of which was unbeknown to me. I gave
him the remedies used at that time, at first Aconite, then Antiin.
tart., but without the least success; on the contrary, he was get-
ting worse from day to day, and the copious bloody expectoration
with fever, general prostration, profuse sweat became so ominous
and the disease was progressing so rapidly that the patient was
in the greatest danger. What could be done ? After considering
the case from all sides, I became convinced that this was not a
pneumonia caused by the prevailing epidemic influence, but that
here the syphilitic poison remaining in the body was the noxious
agent, although the epidemic influence may have played its part.
After giving a few doses of Mercur. cow. i in trituration, a
prompt amelioration followed, and in a few days he was com-
pletely cured of this dangerous disease. Bearing this precaution
in mind, the consideration of the epidemic constitution and the
search after the corresponding epidemic remedy is of the highest
value for the therapeutics. This procedure is bound to increase
our knowledge in regard to pathological causes and the effects of
drug action.
A. A. Ram sever.
Salt Lake City, Utah.
SOMETHING WE MAY NEVER KNOW.
The pathogenesis of Nat nun ninr., by Hahnemann, in the
Chronic Diseases, presumably obtained from the 30th potency,
evidently excited skepticism when it appeared. ''This substance."
salt, writes Dr. Richard Hughes, a man who took nothing on
faith, in his Sources of the Honuvopatliic Materia Medica. "This
substance was reproved under the supervision of Dr. Watzke, a
most competent observer, and with all his prejudices the other
way. But he writes, T am, alas! (I say alas! for I would much
rather have upheld the larger doses which accord with current
views.) I am compelled to declare myself for the higher dilu-
tions. The physiological experiments made with Nat rum nuiriat-
icum, as well as the great majority of the clinical results obtained
Something We May Never Know. 357
therewith, speak decisively and distinctly for these prepara-
tions.' ' The experiments referred to by Dr. Watzke were the
provings by Austrian Homoeopaths who doubted the patho-
genesis of Hahnemann's last work, the Chronic Diseases.
Probably no man did more to cast doubt on this book than did
the late Dr. Richard Hughes, an honest man and a student. You
•can read between the lines that this book worried him ; he had a
very great respect for Hahnemann, was a staunch believer in
Homoeopathy, did great and valuable literary work for it, but it
was necessary that he should be able to understand before he
"would accept. This position, indeed, is the one that at first sight
•every man will say is the only one to take, but if any one will
reflect a little on the proposition, he will see that it is untenable ;
that as a matter of fact every man believes more things that he
•cannot understand than things he does understand. Every man
believes that his heart beats and his lungs breathe but does he
understand it? Does he understand whence and how comes the
power of that perpetual motion continuing while life lasts ? And
life? Science has been chasing life as a kitten chases its tail from
the days of the alchemists, and has not caught it yet — and never
will. So you see there are things we see and know, but cannot
xinderstand or explain.
Hughes (Lecture 11) relates how Hahnemann left Leipsic in
1821, and retired to Coethen, where he remained until 1835, when
he went to Paris to end his career. In leaving Leipsic he left his
old life and methods. There followed years of silence. Then
appeared the volumes of the Chronic Diseases, so different in
many respects from Hahnemann's previous work, that honest
Hughes shakes his head. Before this, in the Materia Mcdica
Pnra days, drugs were commanded to be proved on the healthy,
and nothing but the pure drug effects were to be recorded or
accepted. Whence come these strange provings, if they be prov-
ings, of strange drugs ? Hahnemann doesn't answer. There they
are and they worry the practical English follower of similia.
Mostly the pathogeneses "are introduced without a word of ex-
planation, and no fellow-observers are acknowledged."
"He," Hahnemann, "was between seventy and eighty years old,
•and it is hardly likely that he did anything in the way of proving
upon his own person." Hughes is, therefore, compelled to the
358 Something We May Never Know.
conclusion that Hahnemann drew these symptoms from observa-
tion of their effect on the many chronic sufferers who flocked to
Ccethen in those years. How else ? He may be right in this ;
who knows? Who can decide? If so, it is not the Homceopathy-
previously given, argues Hughes, and he reasons correctly from
the premises.
Among these pathogeneses are many "strange drugs" but cut
these out of your practice and what would happen? Yet they
were introduced by an old man, without any explanation. What
are we to make of them? There you are, up against what
Hughes, the honest and careful student, was up against. The
contributions in these pathogeneses "must be collateral effects of
the drugs observed on the patients to whom he gave them. They
must all, moreover, be supposed to have resulted from the 30th
dilution ; for since 1829 Hahnemann had urged the administration
of all medicines at this poteny."
And yet — and yet — "we are not justified, I think, in rejecting-
symptoms purporting to be obtained by infinitesimal doses of
drugs." A correct conclusion for these have been tried and
found true, as Homoeopaths can attest every day in the year.
There is an unexplainable difference between genius and'
science. A man of genius once wrote the line —
The light that never was on land or sea.
Science would say "the only light we have is from the sun and
stars. It cannot shine on any place but land or sea, for the earth
is so divided. Therefore, the light above referred to is nothing.'*
Yet this "nothing" haunts humanity and they see it, it deeply
moves them, yet scientifically it is "nothing." Read the riddle.
Another man of genius wrote about "sermons in stones, books
in running brooks." Science says: "Clearly an error; it should'
read, 'Sermons in books and stones in running brooks,' to be ac-
curate." But the world laughs at this. Why? Science is quite
correct, why laugh ? You can see it but you cannot explain it.
There are many things in this world that we cannot know and
among them is the method by which Hahnemann obtained the
long symptom lists contained in his Chronic Diseases, which later
provings, as far as they have gone, confirm. We know they are
there and we know that "the test at the bedside" demonstrates,
that thev are reliable.
Fluxion Potencies. 359
FLUXION POTENCIES.
Editor of the Homceopathic Recorder:
In reply to a question directed to me by Dr. Boger in the Ho-
mceopathic Recorder for July last, I must frankly admit I do not
know what parallel does he wish to draw between paragraph 2j6
of the Organon and any comments Bcenninghausen might have
made on the Aphorisms of Hippocrates. Were he more explicit,
or had I Bcenninghausen's book at hand, I might be able to give a
•satisfactory answer ; as it is, I must content myself with saying
that I have always found, not only paragraph 276. but 275 and
277. sound in principle : in fact, we all could be perfectly satisfied
if every declaration of the master was as acceptable as those made
in these sections. Much as I admire the labors of Bcenning-
Tiausen, in doctrinal questions, I only consult the Organon.
I hope, however, that Dr. Boger does not mean to say that in
the paragraph he mentions Hahnemann is indorsing anything like
those pseudo-potenices, prepared and compounded by means of
graduated kettles, and diluted with impure vehicles, capable only
by their constitution and character to create a mass of valueless
application. Of course, one may choose to call a dog Xapoleon,
or a cat Cleopatra, but the name will not change their nature.
The student who may read this brief reply should bear in mind
that in paragraph 2yy of the Organon, which may be said to be
the complement of the preceding ones, Hahnemann simply refers
to those remedies of acknowledged therapeutic value, capable of
influencing disease in a gentle, curative manner. His declaration
here is plain and needs no explanation. The more we break the
molecular cohesion of drugs the easier can we reach the damaged
cells. All intra-atomic energy is derived from the demoralization
of matter, and only the atom can penetrate the cellular plasma to
become its component. But to try to raise higher in the scale of
graduation already attenuated remedies of recognized merit by
such spurious means and vicious technique is nothing but the
delusions of a shattered brain or the manifestation of perfect
ignorance.
"To attempt to prove, says Le Bon, that matter, formerly con-
sidered inert, is a revision of enormous energy, and the probable
source of most forces of the universe, must be still shocking to
360 Remedies Necessary to Cure.
certain minds ; just as it is offensive to all preconceived ideas to
endeavor to show that the atoms of all bodies thought to be
eternal are far from being so."
But "gods and dogmas, says the same authority, do not perish
in a day."
E. Fornias, M. D.
706 West York St., Philadelphia.
A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF A FEW OF THE
COMPLEMENTARY REMEDIES NECESSARY
TO CURE, AFTER PULSATILLA HAS BEEN
WELL INDICATED AND PROPERLY
ADMINISTERED.
G. P. Waring, M. D., Chicago, 111.
The study of Pulsatilla and a few complementary remedies will
be of greater interest and far more useful to the trained physician,
the Hahnemannian Homoeopath, than to those who substitute one
or more varieties of the palliative practice so common in modern
medicine.
The allopath, or the so-called Homoeopath, who prescribes like
the allopath, will see little or nothing in this paper of value.
The eclectic, or the Homoeopath who treats his cases like the
eclectic, may also be unable to appreciate the fundamental truth
so important in this discussion.
The surgeon, the X-ray electro-specialist, the osteopath, or the
eye, ear, nose and throat specialists who largely give local and
mechanical treatment to remove or correct malformations — the
end product or results of disease — will regard this study as a
"back number," and prefer something more "scientific.''
However, the doctors who really want to be Homoeopaths, and
desire to give curative rather than palliative treatment, by select-
ing the remedy best indicated in each individual case, will natural-
ly become the most interested auditors during the next ten
minutes. The remedy "best indicated" for permanent curative
results must be based upon the constitutional, individualizing
symptoms more than upon the pathology and symptoms of the
local disorders. The latter lead more often to palliation only by
the removal of disease results, while the former lead toward a
cure and the removal of the causes
Remedies Necessary to Cure. 361
Pulsatilla is a peculiar and interesting remedy. Peculiar be-
cause presenting such a diversified and contradictory patho-
genesis, and interesting because when well understood it ranks
high with the drugs in the homoeopathic materia medica for use-
fulness and curative results.
Pulsatilla being more superficial in its action than many other
medicines will often be well indicated as the first prescription,
and if properly used, and not abused, as it often is, will bring
prompt and pleasing results to the patient as well as the physician.
However, when the constitutional condition, presented by the
symptoms, shows deeply seated disorder, whether due to a bad
inheritance, an intemperate life or faulty environment, then the
skill of a well trained, closely observing homoeopathic physician is
needed to select the complementary remedy required to complete
the cure so well begun by Pulsatilla.
This is the place where the doctor, often thoughtlessly, brings
•discredit upon a good remedy, upon himself and upon Ho-
moeopathy, by the careless remark that 'The remedy has failed."
An indicated remedy does not fail in curable cases, when its
■sphere and limitations are understood, but the doctor often fails
by expecting a remedy to do work not warranted by its nature
■and pathogenesis.
Pulsatilla has been thus abused by unskillful prescribers be-
•cause when indicated in the beginning of the case they continue
to give the medicine too often or too long, producing an aggrava-
tion and greatly confusing- rather than curing the case. To know
when a remedy is indicated is of great importance, but to discon-
tinue giving when its limitations have been reached is quite as
important, especially in chronic cases.
There are many peculiar and characteristic symptoms of Pul-
satilla, but in this limited paper only three will be considered.
First. — Great sensitiveness. Morally so sensitive that the Pul-
satilla patient is easily shocked by wrongs done to a friend, a
nephew, a neighbor, a community, a state or a nation by unjust
treatment or legislation, hence a large majority of the ministers,
prohibitionists and socialists are Pulsatilla patients, who are so
sensitive to wrong doing that their sympathies are expressed in
active reform work.
Mentally, this same nature is full of weeping, sadness, melan-
choly, etc., so sensitive to personal wrongs, pain or suffering.
362 Remedies Necessary to Cure.
Physically, so sensitive that the tissues of affected parts can-
not sustain long pressure without causing discomfort, nervous-
ness and pain. This is why the Pulsatilla patient will not endure
the clothing tight about the neck, waist, wrists or ankles, and
prefers to go without high collars, corsets, cuffs and high laced
shoes.
Second. — The changing, wandering, diversified and often con-
tradictory nature of the symptoms which so often puzzles the-
physician who sees Only the pathology and tries to select a physi-
ological remedy. Gross's "Comparative Materia Medica" gives
more comparisons with Pulsatilla than any other remedy because
of this well known characteristic.
Third. — The aggravation by heat and the amelioration by cold
so pronounced in the remedy — fresh, cool air, cold drinks and
food, cold bathing of the entire body or affected parts are de-
manded by the Pulsatilla patient. They make up the class most
benefitted by open camp life, but sometimes the reverse of this is
true of Pulsatilla. There are other prominent characteristics be-
longing to this drug, but the above will be taken as a basis for
comparison within the limitations of this paper. These char-
acteristics form a so-called "three-legged stool" for Pulsatilla in
this study, and must be kept in mind while considering a few com-
plementary remedies.
Attention will be first called to the remedies not commonly re-
garded as complementary to Pulsatilla, leaving Lycopodiumy
Silica and Sulphuric acid until later, if time permits, as they are
recognized by all and well understood by most homoeopathic phy-
sicians, as sustaining such a complementary relationship. Only a
passing reference can be made to each remedy which will be more
suggestive than exhaustive, and, I trust, be introductory to a
profitable discussion.
Cyclamen is like Pulsatilla in that both are suited to anaemic
and chlorotic patients, with almost identical menstrual irregulari-
ties, accompanied by similar mental states of melancholy and also
mental derangement during the climatic period. Hering says :
"The concurrence of these two remedies is very remarkable, want
of thirst, nausea in the throat, disgust for fatty things, disagree-
ing of pork, sensation of fullness in internal parts, sore, bruised
pain in external parts ; both have the same aggravation at rest and
Remedies Necessary to Cure. 363
improvement when rising from a seat, when walking and from
motion generally."
Some distinctions are well marked between these two remedies.
Cyclamen has more thirst, is aggravated in the open air and
ameliorated being indoors ; in nearly all complaints the opposite
-of Pulsatilla. Farrington says: 'The Cyclamen patients suffer
from a peculiar kind of debility and torpidity, both of the mind
-and body with languor. They cannot think but are better when
aroused and forced to exercise." This is true of Cyclamen in the
morning, passing off through the day, while Pulsatilla is com-
monly worse during the afternoon, continuing into the night.
Hering says: ''Cyclamen lacks the over-sensitiveness of Pul-
satilla, and generally also the sensation of numbness in suffering
parts." Cyclamen differs in two of the characteristics previously
named, great sensitiveness and the open air modality.
Stannum is a deep acting metal and is often indicated when the
Pulsatilla patient is suffering from acute or chronic sore pain,
especially of the chest, when the soreness spreads or extends from
above downward. Instead of great sensitiveness like Pulsatilla,
Stannum has intense soreness of affected parts where the tissues
have been injured by inflammation or wounds. The mental state
is like Pulsatilla, there being much sadness and weeping, and
when present, with great weakness and soreness, will cure seri-
ous chest symptoms which will not be reached by Pulsatilla. The
general weakness and soreness of affected parts will often suggest
Stannum, especially in the Pulsatilla, patient, who is developing
pneumonia or tuberculosis. The two points of difference noted
are, instead of the wandering pains of Pulsatilla, there are the
sore spreading pains of Stannum, and instead of the general over-
sensitiveness, the soreness of affected parts.
Lac caninum is to be thought of in Pulsatilla patients where the
-changing, wandering pains in rheumatism and kindred com-
plaints are only palliated by Pulsatilla; especially is this true if
there is a shifting and alternating from side to side. Many of our
test prescribers have observed that Lac caninum follows Pulsa-
tilla in rheumatism" where the characteristic wandering pains
predominate.
The affected parts like Pulsatilla are very sensitive to touch
and relieved by cold applications, thus in this remedy there is a
364 Remedies Necessary to Cure.
marked degree of agreement upon all three characteristics of
Pulsatilla noted in the beginning of this paper.
Kali Sulphuricum, known mostly because it belongs to the
group of Schuessler's remedies, is often well indicated after Pul-
satilla, has done good work, but the chronic state of the patient has
not been changed to permanent health. This medicine has two
deep and long acting drugs combined and potentized together,
and when suited to a chronic case it becomes remarkably curative
in its action if given at long intervals in single doses. Xot being
a well proved drug, but having more of a clinical record, it should
be used with care and caution.
Like other combined metals and minerals not thoroughly prov-
ed, much confusion in chronic cases and harm to the patient may
result if given when not well indicated, or too often, or for too»
long a time. This I know by testing some of them myself as
well as to observe the effects upon others.
Dr. J. H. Clark, in his dictionary of Materia Medica, says,
"Kali sulphurieitni is Schuessler's Pulsatilla." Kent has written,.
"It takes up the work and finishes a complement to Pulsatilla."
While this newer unproved remedy has many symptoms like
Pulsatilla, perhaps the most characteristic likeness is the mo-
dality, warmth aggravates, better in the cool, open air. "All com-
plaints better in the open air," says one authority. It also has in
a more moderate degree over-sensitiveness, especially to noise,,
with wandering sticking pains, conforming as much as any other
remedy to the three selected characteristics of Pulsatilla.
However, unlike Pulsatilla, the patient is more irritable, appre-
hensive and anxious. Impatient, always in a hurry. Dreams of
falling and of ghosts. I have been successful in a few cases
where constitutional gonorrhoea, or sycosis, has been well mark-
ed, by the use of this medicine where the above symptoms pre-
dominated. For instance, the young married Pulsatilla woman
who has been the victim of the young man who, after giving at-
tention to his "wild oat" crop, has been cured of acute gonorrhoea
by injections. When Pulsatilla does not cure such cases, think
of Kali sulphuric um.
Thus far remedies have been considered which agree with the
cold and warm modality of Pulsatilla, but other drugs having the
reverse of this peculiarity are prominent complements. The Pul~
Remedies Necessary to Cure. 365
satilla patient so changeable and contradictory, as before stated,
when in a condition of lowered vitality and faulty reaction be-
comes chilly and cold for a time ; then, after the indicated remedy
has prompted good reaction and the vitality has been restored,
there will be a return to the original warm condition. It is not
unusual for a patient under the influence of a deep acting medi-
cine to shift back and forth in this modality for the reasons just
stated and Pulsatilla does this very often.
In this cold state, — a lack of reaction, — is where Lycopodium,
Silieea and Sulphuric acid will be needed, according to the symp-
toms, to complete or advance the cure started by Pulsatilla.
If, after one of these remedies has been administered, followed
by a good response, the patient changes to a warm subject, then
Kali sulphuricum or some warm remedy may be needed to com-
plete the cure. The modalities as much, if not more than any
other part of the symptoms picture, will guide the careful pre-
server in the selection of the remedy.
There is one other condition of the Pulusatilla patient calling
frequently for a complementary remedy, which will meet the
chronic effects of mercury. This sensitive patient very often is
made sick or continually ill, by this enemy to the human race-
Even the presence of mercurial fillings or the pink (colored with
mercury) plate in the mouth will sometimes prevent a cure until
removed and antidoted as the symptoms direct. He par, Natrum
sulph.. Nitric acid, Lachesis, Sulphur or some known antidote to
the vicious poison of mercury may be called for by the symptoms.
These are hard cases to cure and usually cannot be unless all
mercurial exciting causes are eliminated.
Another condition, similar to the one just mentioned, is where
the Pulsatilla patient has syphilis, in the later stages, and lias
been heroically treated with mercurial preparations until symp-
toms of rheumatism, neuritis, locomotor ataxia, etc., may have
developed. In these cases mercury causes more of the com-
plaints than syphilis, but both combined present a complication
which taxes all the skill of the best prescribers. Kali iodatum,
Aurum metallicum, Phytolaeea and Asafcetida may be added to
the list given above because of the drugging by mercury more
than the syphilis. Hahnemann observed this nearly one hundred
years ago, and wrote exhaustively upon the subject, the sari, I ic-
ing compiled and published in his "Lesser Writings."
366 Kali Phosphoricum.
As before stated, this paper is more suggestive than exhaustive,
and I fully expect the comments and the discussions to follow will
add much of interest to this interesting study.
Chicago, June, 1909.
KALI PHOSPHORICUM; AN ANALYSIS AND A
CHALLENGE.
By E. R. Mclntyer, M. D.
A careful analysis of the provings of this remedy as far as may
be. would seem to be of interest to the real student of materia
medica, though it may not to him who sees no need for more than
key-note symptoms, so-called.
The time of appearance of but few symptoms is given, but we
find that on the second day there was increased appetite, which
lasted until the fourth day. This was followed on the fifth day by
loss of appetite, which lasted for thirty days, or throughout the
proving. We are not told whether this was a real increase or
only a sensation. This leads to the inquiry, what is appetite as
applied here? Literally it would mean a desire for food, hunger.
Then what is hunger? It is an outcry of the tissues for more
nourishment. The sensation of hunger is in the stomach, but is
reflected there because the stomach is the receptacle for food.
These two symptoms, following each other as they do, form tht
Ley to the whole action of the remedy, lack of proper mttrit'or.
This points to the beginning and ending of its action. If hunger
is a call from the tissues for better nourishment, and its sensation
is sent to the stomach, it must have some means of reaching that
organ, and this can only be by nerve fibres. Nutrition can only
take place in the cells of the body. So far as nutrition is con-
cerned, food is as much outside of the body when it is in the
stomach as it was before entering the mouth. It must reach the
eel1 and be incorporated into it before it can nourish. If the cell
sends its call to the stomach, it must have a nerve connection
with the stomach.
Then the second symptom, loss of appetite, must depend on one
of three conditions: (1) Lack of ability on the part of the cell
to make the call ; (2) lack of power in the nerve fibres to convey
Kali Phosphoricum. 367
the call, or (3) lack of ability in the stomach to receive it. That
is crippled cell action, interrupted nerve action or loss of tone in
the stomach. If we were to consider the symptoms of the
stomach alone we would be led to the conclusion that here is the
seat of the primary trouble. But this would be misleading, be-
cause all the other symptoms point to loss of rhythmical action in
the cells. And the primary increase of appetite points to irritation
that causes a temporary increase in cellular activity. Now what
controls cellular activity? That part of the nervous system that
controls all action connected with nutrition, the ganglionic or
vegetative. Then we are forced to look for the primary disturb-
ance in this system, and in the cells of the central ganglia of it.
This being true, the disturbing action cannot extend any further
inward, and must extend outward toward the periphery.
That the loss of appetite, on and after the fifth day, was the
result of lack of nutrition is shown by the fact that the provers
lost in weight, one as much as ten pounds. What would we
expect to result from the primary irritation and consequent over-
work of the cells but depression and loss of function? This is
just what we do get, as expressed in the loss of appetite. The
cells composing the tissues are so disabled that they cannot send
out the call for nourishment.
Since the cell function depends upon the sympathetic nerve
supply of the cell the primary action must be in this system. And
since the solar plexus and semilunar ganglia constitute the center
or brain of this system, we are not unprepared for the other gas-
tric symptoms, such as "gaseous eructations, sour liquid eructa-
tions after breakfast, gaseous eructations with nausea, relief from
belching," etc., all of which indicate defective or deficient gastric
secretions. If this constant irritation to the stomach continues
for some time, the "soreness and tenderness of the stomach" is a
necessary result.
With such disturbances in the great center or solar plexus, it
requires no very fertile imagination to get the symptoms of the
liver and spleen, since it can be sent out over the cceliac and
hepatic plexuses to the liver, and the splenic to the spleen. And,
while their is no record of jaundiced skin, this would be a neces-
sary condition following the continued disturbance of rhyth
the hepatic cells. Neither is there any record of fatty si
368 Kali Phosphoricum.
But since the pancreatic plexus is so intimately connected with
the hepatic; the function of the pancreas must be disturbed. And,
therefore, it is altogether probable that the absence of this condi-
tion in the record depends upon the fact that the stools were not
examined. And this leads to a very important deduction, namely,
that if we know the anatomical and physiological relations of
parts, we may be able to cure patients of symptoms that do not
appear in the recorded provings of the remedy given, and know
the reason for the same.
When we know that the superior mesenteric and aortic
plexuses are formed of fibres which come directly from the solar,
the latter receiving some fibers from the dorsal ganglia, and sends
out fibers to form the inferior mesenteric, and that from the two
mesenteric plexuses are derived Auerbach's plexuses, which con-
trol the peristaltic action of the intestine, and that Billroth-
Meisner's plexuses, which control intestinal secretions, are but a
continuation of the latter, we are not surprised that the intestine
is "distended with gas" and the provers had "colicky pains in the
hypogastrium, with constant rumbling in the bowels." Indeed
these with all the other bowel symptoms are but necessary re-
sults of the loss of rhythm in these plexuses of nerves. The
regular peristalsis is changed into a spasmodic contraction of por-
tions of the intestinal walls, causing the pains, and the normal
secretions are changed in quantity or quality or both, which per-
mits fermentation, the consequent formation of gas, with the
"offensive, noisy flatus," etc. The light colored pasty stools tell
us of absence of bile in the stool, owing to hepatic disturbance.
The urinary symptoms are such as we would expect from the
primary disturbance in the cells of the semilunar ganglia, if we
remember that the renal plexuses are derived from the solar, that
is, irregularity in quantity and quality of the urine as shown by
the provings. The sexual symptoms follow the same rule of
irritation, then depression, as expressed in primary increase of
desire in the male followed by cessation or impotence, and in the
female too early and prolonged menses and intense desire or de-
layed menses. The delayed menses should follow the other symp-
toms, and probably did, but were not so recorded. The dis-
turbed rhythm in the solar plexus is transmitted over the other
abdominal plexuses as already given to the pelvic, from which it
Kali Phosphoricum. 369
travels over the uterine and ovarian to the automatic menstrual
ganglia in the uterus and ovaries, whose rhythm it disturbs, first
by increased activity, and secondarily by depression of action.
This same disturbance in the solar plexus is sent out over the
abdominal splanchnics to the dorsal and cervical ganglia, and from
here over the cardiac splanchnics to the automatic cardiac gang-
lia in the walls of the heart, as indicated by the "palpitation of
the heart with vomiting of blood." The last part of this symptom
indicates disturbed action of the blood vessels of the stomach,
permitting their rupture from overfilling- consequent on increased
cardiac action. We would expect to find this followed by a slow
weak cardiac action, but this does not appear in the record.
With all these disturbances in the circulation, and the other in-
dications of crippled cell action, we are prepared for "loss of
memory, lassitude and mental depression, mental sluggishness,
exhaustion after moderate mental effort, lack of attention, con-
fusion" and all the other mental symptoms. But the mental
symptoms could not be very early in making their appearance.
We would expect them to follow the disturbances in other organs.
And if they were recorded as appearing early I should be in-
clined to the belief that imagination played no unimportant role
in the proving. Indeed almost the entire symptomatology given
by one prover is the result of a fertile imagination. Symptoms
that could not appear early are given as appearing in a few
minutes after a young lady held a powder of a high potency in her
hand. And no record is made by any one of the constituents of
the excretions from the body, faeces, urine, perspiration, etc., be-
fore, during or after taking the medicine.
It requires one of two conditions to see the mental symptoms of
depression during that stage of drug action when all other facul-
ties are in a state of irritation, viz., a fertile imagination or
ignorance of physiological action.
With the contents of the stomach in a state of fermentation
and decay, we could hardly expect to find the mouth and breath
in a very pleasing condition. And we read : "Offensive odor
from mouth, tongue white, slimy tongue, putrid, bitter, sour
taste, stinking breath, like rotten cheese."
The throat symptoms are the result of disturbed rhythm in the
organs of circulation, with final loss of tone, which permits a
3/0 Kali Phosphoricum.
passive congestion with consequent changes in quality and quan-
tity of secretions from the glands.
The symptoms in the back and extremities follow the general
rule, stitching, severe pains during the stage of cellular irrita-
tion, followed by dull aching, soreness, stiffness and creeping
sensations, numbness, etc., when the secondary depression ap-
pears.
The statement, "Lymphatic glands on back of neck swollen
(fifth day)," is of doubtful importance, since if they were swollen
at that time they were probably swollen before taking the drug.
The fever symptoms point to disturbance in the circulation in
the caloric centres in the base of the brain. The highest tem-
perature recorded was 1020. The time of this is not given, but it
is recorded that it was 1010 on the nineteenth day. And on the
fifteenth day the record says : "Chills ran up the spine in the
evening, continued after retiring, could scarcely get warm in
bed." But we are not told whether the temperature was normal
or otherwise at that time. Therefore, the question arises, was
that chilliness simply a sensation, or was the prover really cold?
We are told that there was "general itching" from the fifth
day throughout the proving ; that the skin was dry, with little or
no perspiration ; that pimples and small boils appeared. But we
are not told the time of their appearance. It is reasonable to
suppose that the itching came first during the stage of irritation,
and the pimples and boils appeared later as a result of loss of
tone. The record tells us that the itching was worse from the
sixteenth to the twentieth day, but whether there was any erup-
tion at that time we are not told.
It is not unlikely that if we had a complete record of the
symptomatology of this drug, we would find its indications
occupying a much broader field than we have heretofore attribut-
ed to it. But from the very incomplete record we have, wre are
justified in classing it with our deepest acting remedies, because
the first shock of its action is in the cells of the ganglion of the
sympathetic symptoms, and its action extends from here toward
the periphery.
I do not know whether any one reads the papers I write or
not, or if they do, what they think of them. If they are not read
or are of no use to those who do read them, I see no reason for
Apocynum Cannabinum. 371
writing them. Therefore, I would be pleased to have some kind
of expression from members of the profession, either condemn-
ing or commending them or rather the ideas I have tried to pre-
sent. This in the form of published expressions in the Recorder.
Friendly criticism is always profitable. If I am in error I want to
be convinced of it.
Chicago.
APOCYNUM CANNABINUM, AN ANTIDOTE FOR
ALCOHOL POISONING.
By D. E. S. Coleman, Ph. B., M.D.
"Twenty drops of Apocynum cannabinum decoction in a tum-
bler of water will put an 'old soak' on his fee quicker than any
other remedy." (Elements of Homceopathy," Boericke and
Anshutz.)
This was my introduction to the use of this remedy in alco-
holism, and my results with it have been gratifying to the ex-
treme. Lately I have given larger doses than recommended
above.
When I first see a patient suffering from acute alcoholic poison-
ing, I give him a teaspoonful of the decoction in a glass of water.
Then I put three teaspoonfuls in a glass of water, and order two
teaspoonfuls of this mixture to be given every half hour until I
make my next visit. I repeat the teaspoonful dose in from six
to twelve hours if necessary. I diminish the quantity of alcohol
at the beginning of the treatment, mixing liquid peptonoids and
water with the whiskey. In this way I am able to satisfy the crav-
ing and diminish the quantity of alcohol more rapidly than when
whiskey alone is given. The liquid peptonoids act as a food also.
Of course, the patient must never know of this substitution, and I
have fooled some of the wisest and most experienced topers in
New York.
Briefly, the results are these : Patients who formerly took from
three weeks to as many months on each spree, now are brought
around in a few days. Apocynum also seem to stop the physical
craving. If any craving does exist after the patient has sobered
up I give teaspoonful doses of the decoction in a glass of water
from two to four times a day until no desire remains. About a
dozen cases so treated is my clinical record.
3J2 Experience with Kalmia Latifolia.
What is the modus operandi of Apocynum in this condition?
Simply antidotal. It is a chemical antidote to alcohol as well as
a physiological. This is proven by the fact that the decoction is
much more efficient than the tincture, and dilutions run in alcohol
are of no value.
I believe that the action of an antidote to the primary effects of
a poison is in perfect accord with the homoeopathic law. (See
"Physiological Antidotes and the Homoeopathic Law," read be-
fore the International Hahnemannian Society, June, 1907. Ho-
moeopathic Recorder, November, 1907.) — The Chironian.
CLINICAL EXPERIENCE WHERE HEART IS IN-
VOLVED WITH KALMIA LATIFOLIA.
By Dr. Stiegele, Stuttgart.
The close relations existing between Kalmia latifol. and affec-
tions of the heart caused by rheumatism or connected therewith
have long been recognized and are continually meeting with clini-
cal confirmation. I myself have also had several opportunities
lately of testing the efficacy of Kalmia latifol. in articular rheuma-
tism with endocarditis. I would like to submit some proofs of it
here. Altogether I have somewhat more than ten cases which
by the prescription of Kalmia latif. were quickly cured. As there
is a certain degree of uniformity in these clinical cases I shall
submit only a few.
I. The first case which caused me to thoroughly prove the
efficacy of Kalmia in similar cases was that of Mrs. C. M., who
came to my office on the 26th of November, 1902. Two years
before she had had an attack of acute articular rheumatism, and
had received Salicylic acid in large doses without any effect.
When she could not bear the remedy any more, per sc, she
received clysters of Salicylic acid also without any effect on the
rheumatic fever. But now there appeared maniacal attacks
which made it necessary to take her to the insane asylum at
Tubingen, where these attacks were pronounced to be effects of
salicylical poisoning. In the clinic these psychical and rheumatic
symptoms gradually disappeared. Since that spell of sickness
the patient has suffered from frequent violent attacks of palpita-
Experience with Kalmia Lati folia. 373
tion of the heart. Since the last two months they have appeared
with greater severity. The hands and feet are swollen, she com-
plains of violent pains. The palpitations are attended with severe
dyspnoea, the appetite is diminished, the thirst augmented. The
stools and menses are normal. The urine is dark with acid
smell, free of sugar and albumen.
An objective examination shows a doughy swelling of the
right side and the left hard, extending over the whole dorsal sur-
face ; so also both feet are painfully swollen in the region of the
ankles ; the dorsum of the feet has an cedematous shining appear-
ance. In the heart are perceived loud diastolic bubbles ; the right
ventricle is dilated about three fingers' breadth. Prescription,
JCalmia latifol. 2, five drops four times.
The patient reported that during the first two weeks while
taking the medicine the swellings had disappeared, the palpita-
tion of the heart and the dyspnoea also had much diminished, and
the urine turned a lighter color. In the last week of the year
(the Christmas pressure in the business) she overtaxed herself,
her hands swelled again, but still she can attend to all her work.
Also this relapse quickly yielded to Kalmia 2, three times a day,
five drops.
This form, which was rather subacute, was followed in the
summer of 1903 by an acute attack of the disease.
On the evening of the 29th of May I was called to see the
patient, as she was attacked with renewed arthritic pains. Both
the knee joints, the right shoulder, the right elbow and the right
wrist were attacked. The urine was of a deep color. The heart
symptoms were as they had been before. Prescription. Kalmia
1. three drops every two hours. The curve of the temperature
gradually receded and with it the rheumatic symptoms, and this
at a rate which, in comparison with its course during the former
attack, was very striking. Since that time the patient has been
well. By having some regard to the muscle of her heart she has
not to complain of any trouble.
II. The second case was that of a man twenty-seven years of
age, who came to my office on October 9, 1906. For the last six
years (after passing through a siege of articular rheumatism
while in the army) his heart has been affected. Within the last
year he has noticed an aggravation : there is palpitation of the
374 Experience with Kalmia Latifolia.
heart after exertions, the pulse is very much accelerated, and it
takes a long time before it comes to rest. The general health is
good.
An objective examination showed a dilatation on the right
side and a striking diminution of the sounds of the heart at the
apex, especially in the first mitral sound. Prescription, Kalmia
3, five drops three times.
The patient appeared again in my office on the ioth of January,
1907, and reported a considerable improvement. The palpitation
of the heart has altogether disappeared ; he can undergo bodily
exertions as formerly.
In April of the same year he was again taken sick with articu-
lar rheumatism. It was especially the right knee joint, the left
ankle and the right shoulder joint which were affected. But
after taking Kalmia 1, these rheumatic symptoms quickly yielded.
III. On August 15, 1902, I wras called in to see a young
woman. I found her left knee joint, the right hip and the joints
of the left foot swollen. From the anamnesis it appears that she
had had arthritical rheumatism already three times before, and
from the last attack there remained an affection of the heart.
Her former attacks had lasted six to eight weeks each. An ex-
amination of the heart proved a mitral insufficiency. On Kalmia
1 she was able to resume her work in two weeks.
IV. I was able to make quite a noticeable observation lately.
A young lady who had for years suffered from a recurring ton-
sillitis, was taken sick in the beginning of May with an extensive
and very painful swelling of the left tonsil and the peritonsillar
tissue, which, after a few days, subsided again. A week later
there appeared violent pains in the joints, first in the joint of the
right foot, later in both the hips, both the knee joints, and the
joints of the right arm. At the same time there appeared a
systolic-distolic bubbling in the mitral valve with a sensation of
oppression, a sensation as if the heart was too large and a slight
dilatation toward the right side — the patient is suffering from a
slight degree of congenital pulmonal stenosis. There was no
improvement from the medicines prescribed on the first two days.
It was only when owing to the frequent symptoms (tongue, etc.)
Kalmia was given in alternation with Bryonia that the fever
quickly subsided with an abatement at the same time of the
Experience with Kalmia Lati folia. 375
•clinical symptoms. A parallel case I observed within the last
two weeks.
V. A case of angina followed by arthritical rheumatism with
septic complications ought to be described in connection with
this. Mr. V., twenty-six years of age, was taken sick November
19, 1906, with severe trouble in swallowing, attended with fever.
On examination there appeared a considerable redness of the
tonsils with a veil-like coating, hardly visible, attended with a
most profuse salivation. The general health from the very be-
ginning was very bad. There was great prostration and sleep-
less nights.
On the 22d of November he was removed to St. Mary's Hos-
pital. The pains in the throat were very slow in mending, so that
Ave had to acknowledge that the use of the indicated remedies
(Belladonna, Mercur. bijod.) had been ineffectual. On the right
tonsil I found a great epithelial deficiency. Violent pains in the
right shoulder joint and the joint of the left foot. In the follow-
ing days, while the arthritic pains continued, endocarditis de-
veloped, an anxious sensation in the cardiac region, slight sounds
in the mitral valve and the aorta.
November 25. The sounds in the heart could not be any more
distinguished, only large bubbles were audible, there were stitches
in the cardiac region and great oppression.
November 26. The inflammation communicates itself to the
pericardium. On the base of the heart a considerable frictional
sound is audible. The general health is very bad, the tongue
much coated, it quivers as it is protruded for examination. The
arthritic symptoms are unchanged.
November 2y. The friction sounds are weaker, the dulling of
the sounds extends on the right side to the right border of the
sternum on the left side, two fingers' breadth beyond the mamilla ;
exudation.
From the 29th of November there was noticed .a recission of
the exudation and a diminution in the dulness of. the sounds of the
heart. The sounds of the heart are again audible, though not
clearly. From this time on the arthritic symptoms were again
more prominent, there also appeared puriform coatings of the
tonsils. The curve of the temperature enables us to follow the
alternations of the clinical symptoms, the times of relative relief
376 Experience with Kalmia Lati folia.
and the days of infectious relapses. The final recession of the
temperature with the cure was simultaneous with the giving of
Kalmia I.
Now it is well known that slight attacks of arthritic rheuma-
tism may heal in a very brief time, in the course of a week. But
all the cases here reported were relapses, and the primary disease
and the whole character of the attacks did not point to a rapid
cure. Then, again, the reaction on this remedy was so strik-
ingly prompt that I could draw but the one conclusion — these
cases confirm the old indication of Kalmia — arthritic rheumatism
with complication of the heart.
This specific relation* to the changes in the heart may be shown,
however,, not only in an acute case, but it may be recognized in a
much more striking manner where there is some relation of the
ailment with preceding inflammatory symptoms of the heart sep-
arated by great interstices of time and rendered more difficult
to trace. Thus Proell, who is acknowledged to be a close ob-
server, relates an interesting case: A boy. 13 years of age, with
mitral insufficiency, was suffering with headache and weakness
of memory, so that he was about to be taken away from school.
Proell cured him with Kalmia 1-3. There was in this case prob-
ably a disturbance in compensation, which was removed through
the tonic effect of Kalmia.
In several cases in practice I have observed that Kalmia has art
extraordinary effect in cases of muscular insufficiency which was
due to awakened arthritic effects. American authors generally
mention retardation of the pulse as one of the indications for
Kalmia; but I found the remedy useful also in cases where there
was an acceleration. If retardation of the pulse should be estab-
lished as a characteristic for Kalmia, it may be that the enclo-
cardiac localization on the valve of the aorta (stenosis of the
aorta) may be the organically specific characteristic. It may
also be mentioned that the frequency of the pulse varies in dis-
eases and in provings according as the primary or the secondary-
effects are considered. In the severe case last described, the
relatively low number of pulsations throughout the disease was
striking, it hardly ever rose above one hundred.
The original article is accompanied with a number of illustra-
tions showing in all the cases the curves of temperature. — Trans-
lated from Allg. Horn. Zeit.
Homoeopathic Recorder
PUBLISHED MONTHLY AT LANCASTER. PA.
By BOER1CKE & TAFEL
Subscription $1.00, To Foreign Countries $1.24, Per Annum
Address communications, books for review, exchanges, etc.,
for the editor, to
E. P. ANSHUTZ, M. D., P. O. Box 921, Philadelphia, Pa.
EDITORIAL BREVITIES.
Homceopathy axd Mysticism. — A correspondent of the P.
C Journal of Horn., who attended the recent meetings of the
State Society, writes that he is not sure whether he is awake or
in a dream, this state being caused by the numerous and marvel-
lous results ascribed to homoeopathic remedies reported in papers
and conversations by the members, which cannot be explained on
rational or scientific grounds ; if these results cannot be so ex-
plained, the correspondent wants to know "where is the difference
between Homoeopath}- and Christian Science or any other psy-
chological cult, which thrives on th eignorance of its followers by
infusing them with mysticism." He does not write in a hostile
spirit, but he wants to know. Well, what is "mysticism?" It is
something we do not understand ; when we do understand any
part of it that part becomes science. From this science we are
apt to judge other things we cannot comprehend. Very simple
tricks give a man the reputation of being a magician among
primitive people. We are of the same stock, but we have master-
ed a little elemental "mysticism" and call it "science." Some
scientific men are inclined to be skeptical and haughty, which, in
view of the history of science, is rather absurd ; the greatest scien-
tists rather, and naturally, incline to mysticism, or rather take an
affirmative and inquiring state towards it ; they realize there are
things undreamt of in our philosophy.
A man may not know how some of the apparently marvellous
homoeopathic cures are effected, but that they are is certain. If
you take too much whiskey over a period of time you will see
some curious things that others cannot see, and will say they are
378 Editorials.
all imagination. If you take too much Phosphorus you may see
ghosts and other things. If you take too much Aconite you will
be in horrible fear of death, and so with many other drugs. Sick
people get into these curious states without the aid of drugs and
by the great Law, the similar drug will cure them — sometimes,
not always. The whys and the wherefores are to the wisest
largely a matter of mystery. "Whereas I was blind now I see,"
said the one whose sight had been restored. He did not know
how it had been done, but he knew the fact.
The science of allopathy is that of the microscope and the test
tube, plus much vain theory. The science of Homoeopathy is all
this plus much that we know but cannot "scientifically" explain.
Homoeopaths report many cases that will not bear the light of
critical examination, but there are countless other cases that will
bear it. yet which cannot be explained : they are cases like those of
the blind man. YVe see an enormous lot of effect in this world
but deuced little of cause, yet we know there is no effect without
its cause. To deny an effect because we do not know its cause
is unscientific. In reality Homoeopathy is a vast and, as yet. but
little comprehended science. A large part of it is still super-
science, but some day we will know.
A Question. — The Critic and Guide, a journal with consider-
able red pepper in it. suggests a lot of questions for "a practical
state board examination paper." One of the questions, or orders,
is "Give the address of a 'homoeopathic' physician who practices
Homoeopathy.'' Look in Polk's Directory and you will find about
10,000 who do. The fact that a man gives a hypodermic for pain
sometimes, or clears out overloaded bowels, or is led astray once
in a while by some of the glittering, ephemeral, "strictly scien-
tific,'"' or highly '"eth-pharmacal," products of the advertisers
does not exclude him from the followers of the Law of Similars
— every man makes mistakes at times. Some day, let us hope,
learned men will learn what Homoeopathy is ; until that occurs
what is popularly known as "medical science"' will remain some-
thing of a mole — very industrious but not seeing much save that
immediately before its eyes.
The Xew Live Stock Act ix Pexxsylvaxia. — The last leg-
islature passed an act amending and defining the powers of the
Editorials. 379
State Live Stock Sanitary Board. Section 4 prohibits any person
from injecting or administering any substance "containing patho-
genic or disease-producing germs" without "special permission"
from the board or its agents. If the board will refuse all such
permissions and abstain from such injections itself it will justify
its existence. It is provided, however, that such substances may
be injected into cattle for the purpose of producing vaccine virus
for inoculating human beings. The same section also requires that
all tuberculin sold for testing cattle must be reported to the board
by the seller ; also all such tests must be reported by the one mak-
ing them. This indicates apparently that the board now realizes
that such tests are dangerous. It might be very beneficial to the
Commonwealth to abolish these "tests" and compel veterinarians
to rely on some less harmful method of diagnosis. The injection
of this product of a disease into the blood of any animal must
be more or less harmful.
A New Specialty. — If medical progress keeps up its pace
there soon will be a crying need for word specialists, else last
year's graduate will be writ down a back number by this year's
man. At the meeting of the A. M. A. many changes were made
in the make-up of medical terms. For instance, you must write
"meiosis" for "myosis," unless you prefer "contraction of the
pupils." You must write "sclopeticum" for "extormentorem
pilis ;" "aponeurosin" instead of "aponeurosim" and "pediculosis"
for "pitheiriasis" (unless you prefer "lousy"). Change "Rigg's"
to "Riggs's ;" "morbus Bright" to "nephritis ;" "rachitis" to
"rhachitis;" "fracture non solidata" to "fractura perstans;"
"united" to "persistent" (not "persistent we stand") ; "Ham-
buryi" to "Hanburyi," and many more. Whether this is an
emerging from bum Greek and Latin, or an evidence of advance,
is a question you can settle for yourself.
A Heavy Death Rate. — Probably there never was a medi-
icine on which opinions differed as widely as they do about anti-
toxin. With many it is a specific. "I no longer fear diphtheria ;
I can cure every case with antitoxin," is often heard and read.
Others, like Dr. G. F. Thornhill, view it differently. He writes
(Med. Advance), July: "There is no doubt in my mind but what
antitoxin kills more than it ever cured." He quotes the figures,
380 Editorials.
in part proof, given by the State Health Department of Texas.,
wherein it is shown that the death rate in that State from diph-
theria was 66 per cent, last year. There is something about this.
queer thing that does not appeal to the average human being. To
make it you must disease an animal, then nearly bleed him to
death, and then squirt the product from this diseased blood into
the blood of the patient. It doesn't seem nice, or really scientific.
More like pow-wow.
The Trouble. — "The trouble really comes from the fact that
the honest practice of medicine is such a beastly poor graft. It is
hard to make money out of legitimate practice, and some doctors
with a genius for high finance simply can't 'stand for it/ For
such as these there are various resources. A favorite one is to
lay hold of what is valuable in homoeopathic therapy and try to
syndicate it. This has been done sometimes without the name
and sometimes with it. Dear old Munyon long ago tried it, using
the name, and he had his picture taken. (See daily papers.) A
man named Abbott about ten years ago somewhere learned what
Homoeopathy could do by any other name, and he formed a
stock company. He sells the stock and he sells the medicine, and
he sells the journal that advertises both the stock and the medi-
cine, and he sells them all within those precincts where the name
uf Homoeopathy is eschewed by written agreement. He sells
'aconitine' and 'calcidine' and 'gelsemine' and 'colchicine' and
'vertine' and many other 'ines' in minimum doses to be given for
the identical symptoms found in every homoeopathic text-book.
(See Abbott's advertising literature.)" — The Cliniquc.
A Gentle Hint to the Older Practitioners. — One of these
complained in an old school journal recently that the young men
with autos and "fine fixtures'' are displacing the older men;
their success is attributed to this show. One of the young men
comes back next month in a letter which, after citing a number
of cases, concludes : ''The older physicians will not be displaced
on account of autos or office fixtures ; but if they treat patients
without examining them; if they are not up to date in asepsis; if
with old age come sloppy offices, careless dress, lack of display of
sympathy and interest in their patients ; if they fail to keep up to
date through journals, books, and occasional visits to colleges,
then they shall and ought to be displaced." He might have added,
Editorials. 381
Don't be too economical in subscribing to medical journals; they
keep you in touch with things.
The Modern Minotaur. — "The public never has and does
not to-day appreciate the real gravity of the venereal peril. Phy-
sicians themselves have only begun to appreciate it. The truth of
the matter is that both by the laity and the profession the whole
matter has been treated as a joke. We do not crack jokes about
cholera, or yellow fever, or plague. The survivors of Messina, as
they sat among their ruined homes, found nothing to joke about
in that awful catastrophe, yet grown men are perfectly willing to
crack jokes about a subject which involves the future of the race.
They are satisfied with the most futile precautions against dis-
eases whose ravages far exceed that of all the plagues of the
world. We joke with death, but our children and our children's
children pay the price. Is blindness a joke? Is permanent
sterility a joke? Is the chronic and incurable invalidism which
overtakes many a fair bride a joke? Are mutilating and disabling
operations jokes? Is it a joke to bemire the very fountain of
life and turn a sparkling fountain into a sullen and seething mud
hole from whence shall issue all sorts of creeping and crawling
deformities, and misshapen things of disease and woe?" — Ar. K.
6\ Jour, of Med.
Sweet Oil in Surgery. — "Dr. J. F. Lee, of Rochester, N. Y.,
read a most interesting and instructive paper upon peritoneal
adhesions and post-operative obstruction of the bowels. He re-
lated his experience with the use of sterile olive oil applied in the
peritoneal cavity at the time of operation in these cases, and
reported two instances where he had used it successfully when all
other measures appeared to be hopeless. Prompt recovery fol-
lowed in both cases. Since that time Dr. Lee has had experi-
ments made which seem to show that sweet oil destroys bacteria
or at least renders them inert. He strongly recommends the use
of olive oil in the cavity in cases of tubercular peritonitis." —
Clinical Reporter Xotes on Detroit Meeting of A. I. H.
Destruction of Sweat Glands by Roentgen Rays. — "The
reports which we receive concerning the action of the X-rays on
the skin are not always flattering and encouraging. Among the
latest we must not omit that of A. H. Pirie, in whose experience
382 Editorials.
the use of the X-ray in its application to areas of skin over which
the sweating is excessive resulted in the destruction of the sweat
glands. We learn that six sittings are all that are required to ac-
complish this result. One each month and the use of the maxi-
mum dose that the skin will stand is all that is necessary. The
sweat glands are the ones most easily affected by these rays in
the entire body, and, in addition, are the ones most readily de-
stroyed. By making efficient applications to the axillae, not only
are the glands destroyed but the hairs as well." — American Jour-
nal of Dermatology.
Learned Writing. — A skin man recently wrote that "peliosis
rheumatica resembles several forms of purpura and perhaps hem-
ophilia, but these conditions have an absence of the pruritus and
oedema." The skin editor commented on this. "The more we
read on skin diseases the less we know." He politely failed to
add, as A. Ward used to, "N. B. — This is sarkasm."
"Quacks." — A doctor, J. L. Field, Jeffersonville, Ind., writes
a letter to the Medical Summary on this subject from which we
clip the following: "Quacks are getting to be numerous. We
have 'Christian science healers,' 'osteopaths,' 'magnetic healers,'
•suggestion treatment,' 'faith doctors,' 'medico-physic' doctors
(whatever that means), and not to forget 'eclectic' and 'electric'
doctors." We are pleased to note that Dr. Field does not include
the ancient and honorable order of homoeopathic physicians in his
list of quacks — for this is July and the weather is hot enough.
He also pays attention to some in his own ranks, as follows:
"Quacks are not found among men who honestly practice that
system [allopathy]. It is only when some arrant quack uses it
as a cloak to hide his impositions from the public. We have
quacks enough who call themselves 'specialists,' and who are no
better than any other well equipped physician." Dr. Field makes
one strong true point : "While there is no profession about which
men know so little as that of medicine, yet there is none on which
men profess to be so well informed."
"Traumatic Neurosis" Questioned. — In discussing a paper
on this subject at the A. M. A. meeting held at Atlantic City, Dr.
A. C. Brush, Brooklyn, said: "I object to the term 'traumatic
neurosis' as it implies a form of nervous disease due to injury,
News Items. 383
and does not tell the real history. The use of such a term in medi-
cine is proper, but when we come, as Dr. Gaver has said, to deal
with the legal side of the question,, it impresses both court and
jury with the idea that there is a distinct disease due to trauma,
and this leaves the claimants and their counsel at liberty to play
on the fancy and increase the severity of the case in the eyes of
the jury. In dealing with such cases in court, I absolutely ex-
clude that. term and characterize the condition at once as hysteria
or neurasthenia. The jury all know what hysteria is, and they
all know what nervous prostration is ; but they do not know what
traumatic neurosis is ; and the result is that that term has done
more to rob corporations, city railroads and others, than any-
things else in the world."
Bleeding. — Dr. W. H. White in a paper published in the
Clinical Journal, London, on "Venesection" contends that there
are still cases in which it is useful. He quotes Wilks's picture of
the typical patient who needs it: "You see your patient sitting up
in bed, the face, tongue and lips blue or purple, and the jugular
veins starting out of the neck and often visibly pulsating, the
heart beating quickly and perhaps a tricuspid bruit, indicating the
gorged right heart and obstructed lungs ; the veins of the body
are full to bursting." Such is the old time picture of the patient
who needs blood letting, and needs it badly, according to the
leaders of medicine in the early part of the last century. If con-
fronted by such a case the Homoeopath might be puzzled — Bella-
donna, Veratrum z'ir., Glonoine, Opium? but the right remedy
would be better than venesection.
NEWS ITEMS.
Dr. C. Sigmund Raue, of Philadelphia, author of Diseases of
Children, now in its second edition, is at present in Europe where
he will spend three months chiefly in the study of his profession.
Dr. Robert Ray Roth has removed to Smyrna, Del., as assist-
ant to Dr. Thomas C. Moore.
Dr. J. T. Biddle has removed from Monongehala to Washing-
ton, Pa.
Shedd's Clinic Repertory is being translated and published in
Spanish.
PERSONAL.
If animals are ''our lesser brothers" then we are all cannibals excepting
the vegetarians.
Man laughs at the terrors of night when the sun shines again, but he
hasn't changed.
"I stand in my place with my own day here." — Walt Whitman.
If the homoeopathic organization becomes disrupted, the ''regular"
phalanx will sweep it away like an unorganized mob.
When a man proclaims his disbelief in drugs it proves that he does not
believe in them, but nothing more.
A "quack"' has been defined as "one clothed in a cloak of hypocrisy."
Rather far-reaching !
John D. says happiness consists "in doing good to others." Binks says
-delete, three words, and you have J. D.'s idea.
They say it is wise to see your children as others see them.
Some say ptomaine poisoning is said to have largely increased since the
enforcement of the Pure Food Law. Others say, '"taint so."
"Don't make a nuisance of yourself by prating about modern science
advancing," remarks an allopathic journal in a caustic mood.
Don't gas about medical science, demonstrate it. he means.
'"I consider them beautiful from a scientific standpoint, but disastrous
from a practical one." — Writer /. A. M. A. A perspicacious distinction
between scientific and practical.
A writer asks "Is immortality desirable?" Don't fret, blister.
The climate of Arizona is healthy for those who mind their own busi-
ness
If others do not appreciate you, pity them from the Olympian heights.
It doesn't matter much, though, one way or another.
A "regular" says calomel will cure a broken heart.
The "typhoid carrier" is the latest scare of the microscopic doctor>.
Those who write accurately write it "low," instead of "high," finance.
"Friend." after cheap advice. "What do you do for itching. Doctor?"
Doctor, "Scratch."
"The syphilitic should have no rights." — Exchange.
"First remove the skin." says a recent author in treating of infantile
ichthyosis. Heroic!
A man who wrote on "How to train children" recently bailed hi< son
out of the pen.
A philanthropist advises the dwellers in the congested slums to buy
to acre farms and move.
THE
Homeopathic Recorder
Vol. XXIV Lancaster, Pa., September, 1909 No. 9
" IMMUNE."
Webster doesn't give this word, though he gives us "im-
munity," from the Latin "immunis," meaning "free from a pub-
lic service."
The Century gives the word, and marks it "rare."'
Dunglison says it comes from the Latin "immunis" which he
translates "safe."
Medical journals, and the newspapers now, use the word free-
ly, so the foregoing authorities are "out-of-date" in the matter.
Well, we all know what it means, or think we do, which is
quite sufficient.
But, after all, what does it mean ?
The common idea in medicine is that if a certain thing has
happened you won't "catch" a certain disease. The people have
an idea that every one must have measles, whooping cough and
the mumps, once, and after that are forever "immune" from
those diseases. They once thought that every one must have the
small-pox, hence to get it over and done with they had them-
selves inoculated with that disease. From this proceeding was
evolved vaccination in which you have the disease in one spot
on the arm (if you are lucky and it doesn't spread) and are then
"immune." This very old idea of making yourself sick, to keep
yourself from getting sick of a certain disease, has spread lately,
very rapidly among our allopathic brethren who now pronounce
the practice "scientific."
The science on which they base it is essentially just the same
as that on which our forefathers based their inocculation of
small-pox — you must have it, so get it while you are healthy
and can bear it. Get the matter over !
386 "Immune."
The learned say that one attack of typhoid makes you "im-
mune;" so they inoculate, or vaccinate, you for that disease,
just as the people once did for small-pox. Not only for typhoid
but the cry is for inoculating for all diseases; also the prevail-
ing practice is to inoculate, or vaccinate, in about the same way
for the cure of disease. Put the dead matter of disease into the
blood to get well and keep well !
Whether there is anything more in this than there was in the
old inoculation practice is a question. On the surface they look
the same, though the modern instruments are more highly polish-
ed and sterilized, to prevent bad things getting into the blood.
What happens when the "pure" stuff alone and undefiled gets
in? What does "immune" mean? Is there such a thing as
scientifically immunizing a human being?
The "pure," whatever it is, of typhoid, is put into the blood of
a healthy man. We know it does not immediately make him
more healthy and thus capable of resisting disease for those who
perform the operation warn the patient that he must not be
frightened if he feels so and so. Still the operation is said to
make him "immune" to typhoid. Does the immunity consist in
the departure from normal health caused by this, and other simi-
lar, operations? If so, a return to normal health will put him
just where he was before. That seems to be inevitable.
Some one sent us a clipping the other day describing the opera-
tion of immunization against typhoid. It explained that it was
"well known" that one attack of typhoid made one "immune"
against further attacks and that the operation took the place of
the one attack of typhoid. This is precisely the theory on which
the old small-pox inoculation was based. The sender of the
clipping penciled on the margin "I have had typhoid three times."
The whole matter really narrows down to the question : Is
the old belief that one attack of a certain disease prevents any
future attacks, true or false?
If it is true it follows that there must be something inborn in
every one that must come out in the form of a certain disease, in
which the artificially produced disease may answer the purpose
as well as the naturally acquired one does. If it is not true, the
artificial disease is a hurtful, useless burden put on humanity.
Homoeopathy the Older School 387
Taking it all in all it looks as though the homoeopathic was the
only scientific physician. He can read the remedy in the signs
of the disease. He does not go about making his patients sick
in order to keep them well.
HOMOEOPATHY THE OLDER SCHOOL.
Address As President of the Homoeopathic Medical Society of
Maryland, May 19, 1909. By A. P. Stauffer, M. D.
What Is Homoeopathy?
"Homoeopathy is the simple art of healing, unvarying in its
principles, and in its methods of applying them. The principles
upon which it is based, if thoroughly understood, will be found to
be perfect and unassailable," says Hahnemann.
Homoeopathy is the science of therapeutics. It is not an un-
certain and variable rule of practice, dependent upon clinical
experience. Homoeopathy is the system that cures more swift-
ly, more pleasantly and with better results than any system
known. It is a science resting on the law of nature. It is a method
of procedure which is invariable, certain and positively correct.
It works in harmony with nature. It is the guide post that leads
unerringly to the cure of disease, that which one can trust and
depend upon in the moments of need. It is an empiric law —
known as the law of similars — likes cured by likes.
The contention as to whether it is a law or rule of practice
matters but little, for its working is not changed by the theories
of men.
There is a law, no doubt, of healing. That law is the law of
similars, but it gives no theory of drug action, but simply notices
that what a drug will produce in the healthy, it will also cure in
disease if the symptoms are similar. It does not differ, there-
fore, from other laws. No one can explain why the object falls
to the ground due to the law of gravitation ; neither can one ex-
plain the force of electricity — chemical affinity, or why the mag-
netic needle points to the pole.
How is it known that Homoeopathy is a scientific system — a
law of nature? In the same way that all scientists know their
388 Homoeopathy the Older School
working rule. The rule or law of Homoeopathy is that likes are
cured by likes, and this has been demonstrated clinically since
Hahnemann's time.
While clinical demonstration is proving the law of similars,
the bacteriologist is also demonstrating the law of similars. Dr.
Wright by the opsonins has established the law by biological
methods. He observes that in using bacteria of a diseased organ,
especially tuberculosis, and after diluting by injection into a
number of animals in succession to dilute it, and using this serum
in a small quantity by injection into the patient cures the lesion.
He observed that the serum, if given in too large a quantity pro-
duced aggravation or symptoms similar to the disease. He also
observed that the minimum dose, 7th or 8th dilution of Ho-
moeopathy, not too often repeated, once or twice a week, pro-
duced the best results. His observations, therefore, reveal the
law of similars, the single remedy, the minimum dose and the
aggravation of a drug.
The minimum dose is the distinctive feature of Homoeopathy.
Hahnemann says : "The true physician will prescribe his well
selected homoeopathic medicine in a dose so small as to be just
sufficient to overcome and extinguish the disease," and this dose
must be so small as not to produce any ill effects to the patient.
"For this reason," says Hahnemann, "too large a dose of medi-
cine, though homoeopathic to the case, will be injurious." The
remedy, or dose, must, therefore, not be repeated, says Hahne-
mann, "until the remedy ceases to produce improvement."
With- the small dose, goes the single remedy as another corol-
lary of Homoeopathy. It is reasonable that since each drug is
proven singly, it must be used singly to cure. Alternation of rem-
edies is not compatible with homoeopathic dosage. "Combination
tablets" have no place in the materia medica of Homoeopathy.
They are unproven, an unscientific commodity, and, therefore,
worthless as a homoeopathic prescription. They discredit the
school.
The doctrine of individualization is another important tenet of
Homoeopathy and distinguishes it from all other systems of prac-
tice. This, with the totality of symptoms, is the link that forms
the complete chain and is the foundation upon which all pre-
scriptions are based.
Homoeopathy the Older School. 389
Hahnemann says : "The totality of the symptoms must be re-
garded by the physician as the principal and only condition to be
recognized and removed by his art in each case of disease, that it
may be cured and converted into health.''
What is Homoeopathy? Homoeopathy is not the practice of
the careless or indifferent man. It is inconsistent with the clini-
cal plan. Its followers believe in its philosophy, but are not dog-
matic enough to believe there may be no other methods of cure.
"Many lights thou hast kindled ; by any of them may we find
the path." Ptrhaps there are other laws of cure, but the ho-
moeopathist believes it is the only true and correct method of
curing disease by drugs. Homoeopathy is the law of nature
recognizing the dynamic action of drugs. It is the mild and
gentle, though elaborate and difficult system of treating dis-
eased humanity. Homoeopathy is the subtle force based upon the
law of similia ; its successful application depends upon the single
remedy, the minimum dose, the totality of symptoms.
Homoeopathy has no relation to pseudo science. It is the sys-
tem that remains steadfast and unchangeable, not guided by the
uncertain experiments on animal organism.
It is the system that believes in the power of the ion, the in-
finitesimal, or "the dynamic derangement of life." It does not
sanction the fallacy that disease is an entity, a something to ex-
terminate from the body with ponderable doses. It believes that
disease is the manifestation of an inward process, a disturbance
of the vital force. In curing disease it is the conservator of
nature's powers and holds no communion with the method that
depletes the system and interferes with the harmonious process
of nature. It is that system of medicine that does not take the
life before the kindly hand of nature bids the time.
What Has Homoeopathy Done for Mankind ?
To fully understand the beneficial influence of Homoeopathy
upo.i mankind, the medical condition prevailing at the time of its
announcement is the best answer. Inhuman and heroic treatment
served the day. Nature was never aided, the system wras never
fortified, but abused, tortured and robbed. Before the two last
decades every patient was the victim of depletion ; heartless cruel
39° Homoeopathy the Older School.
and irrational treatment served the day. Such was the condi-
tion when Homoeopathy appeared. It grew and broke down the
opposition to it and undermined the impregnable school, and tra-
ditional medicine was compelled to recognize its power and in-
fluence. It stands, therefore, the champion of scientific medi-
cine in the medical world and triumphs over the changed thera-
peutics of the dominant school. "It left its impression on the
medical thought and raised the standard of medical prac-
tice in all schools today." "It gave impetus to other lines of in-
vestigation to benefit mankind." Science in all fields of knowl-
edge recognizes the beneficial influence of Homoeopathy and read-
ily ascribes the meed of praise. It has greatly mitigated the
suffering of mankind, softened the bed of sickness quickly, agree-
ably and pleasantly ; shortened the convalescence, lessened the
death rate, and for countless thousands made life worth while.
Homoeopathy has taught the older school the worthlessness
of its methods. It compelled them to relinquish human depletion
and to forsake the cup, the leech and the blister. It compelled
them to relinquish the large and poisonous doses in treating dis-
ease and to save the strength of the organism so that its func-
tion would be unimpaired in its performance. It compelled them
to simplify their practice and to discard the heroic doses and get
nearer nature in treating the sick. This fact alone, even if Ho-
moeopathy becomes a tradition in medicine, will immortalize
Hahnemann.
Homoeopathy instituted new methods of obtaining knowledge
of drugs and in this Hahnemann was the pioneer and was the
first, therefore, to require exactness and completeness in the
minutest detail, antedating the exactness of laboratory methods
many years. The system Hahnemann established requires the
knowledge of the action of drugs on the healthy. Xo such
knowledge existed at this time and he therefore undertook the
stupenduous task of proving drugs upon himself. This was a
new therapeutic field and, without a chart or compass to guide,
he led the way alone, giving himself a sacrifice for the cure and
suffering of mankind, and though, notwithstanding the criticism
his drug provings received, it was so well done that his follow-
ers have found but little to improve, save what chemistry and the
microscope adds to the symptoms of drug provings.
Homoeopathy the Older School. 391
Had Hahnemann done nothing more for humanity than this,
it alone is sufficient to give him a place as the greatest medical
genius and benefactor in the world.
Homoeopathy has been foremost in dietetic and hygienic regula-
tions in health and disease. Hahnemann lays great stress on
these important adjuncts, who was the first in the therapeutic
field to inaugurate them, and his followers have trodden in his
footsteps. In these later days the dominant school regard these
measures as their strongest aid in dealing with diseased human-
ity.
Homoeopathy also gave to the world a long list of useful rem-
edies that have stood the test of time and are curing conditions
today that the same remedies cured 100 years ago. Therapeu-
tically. Homoeopathy occupies the highest position in medicine,
and because of this fact its remedies are gradually being incor-
porated into the medical practice of all schools without due ac-
knowledgment.
Dr. Dyce Brown, in an address before the British Homoeo-
pathic Society, in 19x52. says. "That he found 71 remedies in the
therapeutics of the dominant school that are used on the prin-
ciple of similars."
If Homoeopathy, therefore, is not a truth — a law of medicine —
how could it be such a mighty force and tremendous power in
medicine and benefit to mankind and be able to resist the tre-
mendous forces that were used to destroy it? The persecution
of Hahnemann and his followers is scarcely paralleled in history,
and though, notwithstanding this persecution, they stood by their
principles and time demonstrates their truth and great worth to
mankind.
"In the beginning everything was against it : the college
and pharmacy united to destroy it :" and yet today it is stronger
than ever. There are more homoeopathic physicians prescribing
the single remedy than ever before : there are more patrons of
Homoeopathy than ever before, and a more determined effort to
propagate its principles than ever before. It cannot be destroyed.
"Measured by what it has resisted." says Sutherland, "it stands
among the mighty. It is a truth that stands tested, unshakable
in public and private esteem in honorable recognition.''
392 Homoeopathy the Older School.
What is the Therapeutics of the Dominant School Today?
The therapeutics of the dominant school is in the most unsatis-
factory and chaotic state. It has been so before and since Hahne-
mann's time and nothing was done to "elevate it to a science or
to even dignify it as an art." The advent of Hahnemann, who
announced new principles and methods, should have modified
more quickly the whole field of therapeutics, but it did not. It
is still the empiric school without a law to guide it. The dominant
school has not found the road, therefore, has made very little
progress during its 2,500 years of existence. They are still blind
leaders of the blind. Dr. Osier, who but voices the authorities
of his school, says : "He has faith in but four drugs," and these
he'll not mention, for he is not absolutely sure of them.
What is the Status of the Dominant School ?
It is best answered by uncertainty and disbelief. In the great
field of medicine, it has not kept pace with science along all other
lines, and while they have accomplished much in the way of sani-
tation and hygiene, and make places unfit for habitation the abode
of luxury and refinement and added greatly to methods of diag-
nosis and dietetics, etc., yet in the therapeutic field they have
accomplished very little and have not met the expectations or re-
quirement of the people, and this has caused, therefore, a grow-
ing distrust in drugs, a diminished confidence in the ability of
physicians to cure diseases.
This distrust in drugs by the laity has developed in the coun-
try "a state of erethism which leads it to adopt any new thera-
peutic movement, no matter how illogical."
That accounts, therefore, for the growth of Christian science,
the growth of the hygienist, the growth of physical culture, the
growth of Emanuelism, and the growth of osteopathy. This
growth is an expression of revolt against drugs, against the
dominant school ; and this revolt is growing notwithstanding the
claim of scientific medicine.
There is growing, too, among the medical men a therapeutic
agnosticism; a disbelief and rejection of drugs.
This agnostic spirit is manifest in every book of practice in the
Homoeopathy the Older School. . 393
older school, and every page is marked with discouragement,
uncertainty and doubt. This disbelief in drugs, therefore, comes
as a natural sequence.
Is it not a fact apparent to all observers that, with all the
elaborate methods of scientific medicine (so-called) in the labora-
tory and clinical field, that the death rate in some diseases is on
the increase, and that cancer, consumption and Bright's disease,
the dreaded diseases, are more prevalent than ever? These facts
are given in the last census reported by the Government.
What is the Hope in the Therapeutics of the Dominant
School?
There is no hope for the people in the therapeutics of the
dominant school. The endless experimentation with drugs all
the years of its existence is practically useless. Their time and
talent has been given to experimentation on the animal organism
and while the results seem favorable and satisfactory from a
scientific standpoint, when the same procedure is applied to the
human organism the results are disappointing and most unsatis-
factory. And as long as the dominant school ignores the human
organism the mental and the moral forces in the study of drugs
and depends upon pharmacist to elaborate a semi-proprietary
therapeutics instead of using the large clinical field open to them,
the death rate will increase and chronic invalidism multiply.
There is scarcely anything in their system that has stood the test
of time and what benefit the world reaps from their therapeu-
tics is in accordance with the principles of Homoeopathy. The
mercurial treatment, which is greatly praised for specific diseases,
is strikingly on homoeopathic line. The same can be said of the
anti-toxic, anti-tetanic and anti-rabic serums. There is a ten-
dency, however, to forsake the failures of the past and to turn
from 2,500 years of medical darkness.
What is the Trend of the Dominant School Today in
Medicine ?
Simpler medication is gradually changing the whole field of
their therapeutics. The prescription of a dozen or more remedies
is a relic of the past, and traditional medicine will soon be but a
memory.
394 Homeopathy the Older School
The trend of the old school is more and more toward Homoe-
opathy, and little by little, slowly and surely, here and there, are
absorbing the practice and principles of Homoeopathy, and are
advocating the doctrines that Hahnemann announced in the Or-
ganon of the Healing Art.
Century after century, the disease with which the patient suf-
fered had to be known to be treated scientifically (so-called), but
now that is less potent, and much more attention is paid to the
patient. The uncertain knowledge of drug action which was ob-
tained on the lower animals, by accidental poisoning of the hu-
man and by observation on the sick is gradually giving way to
experimentation with drugs on the healthy human organism.
The Philadelphia Medical Journal says : "Many modern phy-
sicians have fallen into the habit of giving a single remedy and
depending upon it."
Prof. Schultz, of the University of Griefswald, in speaking of
the use of a single drug, says : "Before a drug can be used at
the bedside at the fullest advantage, it is absolutely necessary to
interpose the experimental use of it on the healthy individual."
Dr. Howard Fussell, at the last session of the A. M. A. in
1908, says : "That physicians should study their cases and not
prescribe for the name of the disease."
Dr. Huchard, of Paris, says : "The organism profits and de-
rives much benefit from the infinitesimal dose, our cells are more
sensitive to the small dose."
Thus many quotations could be produced bearing evidence of
the turn of the therapeutic tide toward Homoeopathy, but this
is enough.
We observe that the thinkers and the scholars of the dominant
school advance the single drug, the proving of drugs on the
healthy, the individualization of cases, and the minimum dose.
Thus the spirit and influence of Hahnemann is shaping the
thought of the medical world, and is cleansing and purifying and
enlightening the path and pointing to the road that is leading to
therapeutic light and success.
The tremendous forces back of the changes in the so-called
rational school, a complete reversal of former position, is but
the forerunner of a complete evolution of the therapeutics of
Homoeopathy the Older School. 395
the old school. This force is the intellect of the school, students
of Hahnemann, on the road to Homoeopathy.
Dr. Cabot, of the Harvard Medical School, and Dr. Trudeau,
of Saranac Lake; Von Behring, Koch, Roux, Huchard, Pas-
teur, Robin, Trousseau, all of Europe, recognize Homoeopathy
and some of them announce it to the world.
If homoeopathists are not careful and hold fast to their moor-
ing, many of them will be sitting at the feet of the dominant
school learning lessons in the doctrines of Homoeopathy.
The serums, anti-toxins and vaccines, of the older school, are
similar to the nosodes of Homoeopathy. They are isopathic in
their action and are engaging the attention of the dominant
school more and more, clinically. They are, therefore, working
for the first time on a law of cure. The immunity treatment, of
which we are familiar, is almost a complete appropriation of Ho-
moeopathy. It is so intertwined with its principles that their
action cannot be explained on any other basis.
What of the Serums?
The serum treatment of the dominant school, the product of a
disease to cure a disease, is of vital concern to us. They are
similar to the nosodes of Homoeopathy, which antedates the
serum treatment a number of years.
Dr. Clark, of London, says : "Homoeopathists are untrue to
their trust, if they allow the so-called orthodox party to exploit
their principles, make use of them in a violent manner, and carry
off the credit of such result as they obtain. The injection of
animal solution called serums into patients' blood current is to
my mind a violent proceeding, and it is quite unnecessary since
the use of homoeopathic infinitesimals is open to all. The cura-
tive effects of the nosodes can be obtained without violation of
the organism from which they are obtained."
Drs. Burnett and Clark, of London, have demonstrated bevond
the shadow of a doubt the efficacy of the nosodes, especially in
tuberculosis and cancer, and if homoeopaths believed less in ma-
terial and ponderable doses and more in dynamics and infinitesi-
mals, the experience would be similar.
If energetic and ambitious efforts are not exerted by our able
396 Homoeopathy the Older School.
men of our hospital staffs all over the country, where clinical
material is available to demonstrate the power of the nosode, it
will be done by the older school and will, therefore, reap the
honor.
Dr. Inman, in the London Lancet, says : That Tuberculin
given by the mouth, rectum or subcutaneously, and though the
dose is dissimilar, the opsonic curve and temperature charts show
that the same effects are produced.
It remains, therefore, for the homceopathists, to press the in-
ternal treatment in these so-called bacterial diseases and thus
replace the method that is fraught with so much danger to the
organism.
In conclusion, let me ask : Is Homoeopathy true to its prin-
ciples and tenets? It seems that while the dominant school is
getting tired of drugs and leaning our way, homceopathists are
beginning to stray out of the field into strange pastures. What
has caused this mistrust and disbelief in Homoeopathy which is
as perfect and unassailable as the day it was given to the world?
Polypharmacy, the combination tablet, has crept into its thera-
peutics and has absolutely displaced the Materia Medica of many
of its members and made it a sealed book to the man when he
needs its truth the most. Polypharmacy has made him an indif-
ferent and unsuccessful prescriber, and he blames it, therefore, on
the system when the fault lies in the lack of knowledge and he
thus floats and flounders on the waters that lead to failure and
despair.
The time is here, therefore, for homceopathists to get back to
the simple principles, follow the footsteps of the masters and
practice pure Homoeopathy. The time is here to strike hard for
its principles and practice and to quit apologizing for being a
representative of the system. It is time to give up the combina-
tion tablet and the semi-proprietary medicine of the pharmacy.
It is time to drive from the field the vendors of combination tab-
lets and to crush out these foes who corrupt the young men with
false doctrine and damnable hope. It is time to study the
Materia Medica, the best — though not perfect — in the world. It
is time to study the Organon, the soundest medical doctrines
ever announced. It is time to recognize the totality of the symp-
Comments on Homoeopathy. 397
toms upon which to base a prescription. It is time to assert that
a disturbed vital force is the cause of disease. It is time to
prove that an infinitesimal will set it right.
If we do this, Homoeopathy will be the leaven of all therapeu-
tics ; will be the light of all medical paths ; the hope of all man-
kind. Will we be true to our philosophy, true to our traditions,
true to our founders?
Then Homoeopathy will reign and the victory and reward will
be ours.
COMMENTS ON HOMCEOPATHY.
By E. Fornias, M. D.
Homoeopathy Under the Hammer of Allopathy. — "It is too
late in this day of scientific medicine, says Osier, to prattle of
such antique nonsense as is indicated in the 'pathies.' We have
long got past the stage when any 'system' can satisfy a rational
practitioner, long past the time when a difference of belief in
the action of drugs — the most uncertain element in our art —
should be allowed to separate men with the same traditions, the
same hopes, the same aims and ambitions. It is not as if our
homoeopathic brothers are asleep ; far from it, they are awake —
man}' of them at any rate — to the importance of the scientific
study of disease, and all of them must realize the anomaly of their
position. It is distressing to think that so many good men live
isolated, in a measure, from the great body of the profession, the
original grievous mistake was ours — to quarrel with our brothers
over infinitesimals was a most unwise and stupid thing to do.
That we quarrel with them now is solely on account of the old
Shibboleth under which they practice. Homoeopathy is as incon-
sistent with the new medicine as is the old-fashioned polyphar-
macy to the destruction of which it contributed so much. The
rent in the robe of Aesculapius, wider in this country than else-
where, could be repaired by mutual concessions — on the one hand
bv the abandonment of special designations, and on the other, by
an intelligent toleration of therapeutic vagaries which in all ages
have beset the profession, but which have been mere flies on the
wheels of progress.'' (Counsels and Ideals. Carnac, p. 116.)
398 Comments on Homoeopathy.
Note. — Good for Osier, but how about the others. Read the
following :
The great scholar, Lander Brunton {Effects of Drugs), as-
serts, that a small dose may have an entirely different effect from
that of a larger dose. For example, he says, a very small dose
of Atropine may slow the pulse, a very large dose may quicken
it and will quicken it, and an enormous dose may slow it again,
but the effect of the drug in these three cases is different. The
first slowing of the pulse is due to stimulation, probably of the
vagus roots, and the second quickening to paralysis of the vagus
ends in the heart, while the third slowing is due to weakening of
the cardiac ganglia. He gives as a general rule, however, that
while small quantities of almost anything may stimulate, large
quantities will paralyze, and this holds for food, for exercise, for
mechanical stimuli, and for drugs. So that you may say that if
a drug in very full doses has any effect, quite small doses will
have a different effect, very often the opposite, what does not
hold good for Atropine.
"It has been formulated by Hahnemann — and the rule is known
in homoeopathic parlance as Similia Similibus Curantur. If any
drug produce symptoms similar to those of a disease, that disease,
said Hahnemann, will be cured by that particular drug if ad-
ministered in doses smaller than those that would produce the
symptoms of the disease. You see, however, that practically this
rule comes to the same as Contraria Contrariis Curantur, and
that he was simply in administering the smaller doses giving
drugs which produced an opposite effect to those caused by the
disease, because the drugs in different doses produced different
and contrary action."
Speaking of constipation (p. 431, Actions of Medicines), he
claims that Belladonna, in very minute doses is sometimes ef-
ficacious. "I believe it is in such cases as these that homoeopathic
practitioners have a great advantage, because they begin with
such exceedingly minute doses that they are not likely to overdo
the effect of the drug, and so they may work up and get the
bowels to act regularly."
Comments on Homoeopathy. 399
Note. — Is this not inconsistency in a man who claims so much.
Fortunately things have wonderfully changed since Brunton made
these assertions. Every recent research carries with it the im-
print of Similia, and small doses of the single remedy are no
longer subject of derision. -
^ * <? ^ ^ %.
Speaking of Suggestion the distinguished Brunton comes out
with other weak remarks about Homoeopathy, which he classes
with faith-cure and Mattei System. He says: "Another plan
of treatment, which may be regarded as in great measure one by
suggestion, is Homoeopathy, which is exceedingly good, especial-
ly for supposititious diseases." "Homoeopathy is practically, in
many instances, a method of faith-cure. But it is not always so,
for some of the homoeopathic drugs are excessively powerful.
Some of these preparations and more especially those of Aconite,
are not things to be tampered with." (Is this ignorance or
malevolence?) "But some of their drugs, such as Carbo vege-
tabilis, which is simply vegetable charcoal, so much attenuated by
admixture with sugar of milk that there is practically no char-
coal in it, can have no action except through the imagination."
It would be pertinent here to ask this savant : .What has be-
come of the charcoal during the process of attenuation? He
himself claims Charcoal to be a useful remedy in dyspepsia, and
more efficacious in the powder form. Why in the powder form?
He states, "how it acts one really does not know, but at all
events charcoal very frequently serves to give relief to a patient
who is suffering from dyspepsia, especially when this is asso-
ciated with a large amount of flatulence."
Note. — Brunton does not tell us in his work, "On the Action of
Medicines'' anything about polypharmacy, the put-up and cram-
ming of drugs of different effects, and I think he could have done
better for himself and the school he represents by letting Ho-
moeopathy alone and giving the student of therapeutics the origin
and actual value of polypharmacy.
* -I- * * * *
But the most nonsensical outburst of Brunton against Ho-
moeopathy, is the following: "The great objection to Homoe-
opathy is that it gives you, as a rule, to be universally trusted,
400 Comments on Homoeopathy.
a rule which is false, and which will not hold in every case. The
best way of convincing oneself of the insufficiency of any such
rule as this is to take one of the largest homoeopathic text-books
and look through it. When I was a student I thought homoeopaths
were badly treated. I was rather fond of working at Materia
Medica; I read a good deal about it, and thought that, as many
drugs did actually cause in larger doses different effects from
what they produced in smaller ones, there might be a good deal
of truth in the homoeopathic doctrines. At one time I proposed
to read a paper before a students' society in defence of Homoe-
opathy, and if I had only read the books that abused Homoe-
opathy I have no doubt I should have read the paper. But, un-
fortunately for my purpose, I began to read up some homoeopathic
text-boks and one of the things I came across was this :
Treatment of a Stillborn Child. Take a small bottle of "some
particular tincture — I forget the name" (but not the fact, won-
derful!) "and put 5 drops of the tincture into a glass of water,
and put 5 drops of this mixture upon the tongue of the child
every 5 minutes until it recovers." This reminds me of my stu-
dents days in Germany, when, for the first time I heard the say-
ing: "I am the Doctor Eisenbard, I cure the people according
to my art, I make the blind walk and the lame see." Dr. Brunton
is certainly joking, for he could hardly afford to accuse any ho-
moeopathic physician of such fallacy — unless he belongs to the
class of infallible allopaths who think grey matter can only be
obtained by following the precepts of tradition and empiricism.
* * * * * *
"If you wish to convince yourself of the defects of Homoe-
opathy," says Brunton again, "I recommend you to read Dungeon's
'Cyclopaedia,' in which you will find pages and pages devoted to
a description of the symptoms produced by Aconite. You will
there see that it simply produces all the symptoms under the
sun, and that you can choose it for any disease or for any group
of symptoms, and you can also use it for the opposite group of
symptoms, because it not only produces one set of symptoms, but
also their exact opposite."
Note. — Is this erudition or ignorance? We can assure the
critic that when his book "On the Action of Remedies" be buried
Comments on Homoeopathy. 401
in obscurity, and the age of arrogance and assumption has ceased
to exist, Homoeopathy will still be found resting upon the solid
pillars of Similia, the single remedy and the minimum dose.
'Truth," says Jousset, "has an attraction to which, finally, all the
most tenacious prejudices must yield."
I cannot help thinking that only ignorance of our system
could have led an otherwise well-read physician, like Brunton, to
make the silly assertions he has made about Homoeopathy. Dun-
geon's Cyclopaedia, Hahnemann's Materia Medica Pura, in fact,
all our Materia Medicas contain verbatim the expressions of the
provers, but there is not one tyro of our school who does not know
how to extract from the symptomatic polyformisms of our records
what he may want or need to individualize his cases, for we
treat patients and not diseases. There is not one either who
cannot outline the leading features of the proven drugs, who
cannot separate the essential from the contingent, and thus ascer-
tain, study and apply each one of our remedies to the treatment
of disease.
Was Brunton not aware that we have condensed Materia
Medicas, where he could have found what he wanted, without
being scared at the magnitude of our records and compelled to
drop the subject, he says, he had at heart?
However, Dr. Brunton can still learn from one of his com-
patriots the reason why we keep the original records of the
provers.
"Every thoughtful physician," says Schofield, "knows the real
illuminating value of letting a patient describe his symptoms in
his own language, however quaint, and how he learns thereby
more of the inner working of the disease than by the most cun-
ning phrases which he puts into the patient's mouth." I wonder
if Dr. Schofield knows that homoeopaths have been doing this
for the last hundred years.
* ^ * * ^ ^
"The curious thing about it," persists Brunton, "is that Homoe-
opathy was founded upon observed facts erroneously interpreted.
The way it came about was this : Hahnemann suffered from
ague at one time. He had not had an attack for some years, but
one day he thought he would prove the effect of cinchona bark
402 Comments on Homoeopathy.
upon himself. He took a whole tablespoonful of cinchona bark.
Other people have taken a tablespoonful of cinchona bark and
found it act as a very active irritant to the stomach, causing vio-
lent vomiting. Hahnemann apparently did not vomit, but he
got a violent rigor and well-marked ague fit." (All this is in-
correct and shallow.) 'This return of ague after it has been
absent for some time is a thing that is well known to every one
who has had to do with the disease. An ague fit in many pa-
tients may be brought on by any strong irritation, and if Hahne-
mann had taken mustard and water or anything else equally ir-
ritant the result would very likely have been the same. But
having taken Cinchona, he said, "Cinchona is a remedy for ague,
and in me it has brought on the disease; therefore, Cinchona be-
ing the remedy and having brought on the disease, a small dose
of a drug which produces certain symptoms will cure the same
symptoms when they are caused by disease."
Note. — The singular thing about it. is that Brunton, a man
writing on drug-action, could have lost his balance so easily. His
assertions reveal either ignorance or malice. He has cunningly
combined truth with sophism to confuse his readers. It is pure
sophistication, a corruption by mixture of facts and inventions.
Even his confreres must have taken his remarks as a joke, for
certainly many of them know the history of Cinchona, and how
this plant is connected with Homoeopathy. He would have serv-
ed a better purpose if he only had told us why Calisaya was call-
ed Cinchona, and what is the origin of this name.
It is a historical fact that the name Cinchona was given to
Peruvian bark in honor of the Countess de Chinchon, wife of the
Viceroy of Peru, who was the first prominent peison who was
cured of ague by the use of this bark, in Lima (1638). For
many years, long before Pelletier and Caventon discovered
Quinin, the Cinchona bark was medicinally used in the form of
a powder, which being sent to Europe by the South American
Jesuits was commonly known as Jesuit's bark, or Peruvian bark,
and also as Quinquina bark, from the tree being called quina-
quina, or bark of bark, by the Indians, by whom its virtues were
communicated to the Spaniards. A great deal of nonsense has
been written about these virtues, but only in the Spanish Archives
Comments on Homoeopathy. 403
is a reliable history of this plant to be found. A historical fact,
very important to Homoeopathy, is that the Indians, when ex-
hausted by toilsome labor or drudgery, in order to get a needed
rest without suspicion, prepared and took a decoction from the
bark, with the result that a morbid state was always produced
similar to an attack of ague which gained for them the desired
rest. It was this early practice, published by Cullen and others,
that gave rise to a revelation for the working out of a doctrine
that had been occupying Hahnemann's attention for some time.
He compared results, made analyses, and finally came to the con-
clusion that Cinchona really overpowers and suppresses inter-
mittent fever, chiefly by exciting a fever of short duration of its
own.
Cinchona, then, came to him with the reputation of curing
ague, so he naturally proceeded to verify the claims others had
made by pure experimentation on the healthy human organism,
thus laying the corner-stone for the "Temple of Similia." The
proving of this drug is one of the most thorough Hahnemann
ever made, and the pathogenesis, with valuable prefatory re-
marks, appears in the ' 'Materia Medica Pura."
But how things have changed since ; even among our op-
ponents, are now ardent defenders of the small doses of Qninin
in place of those usually used to combat severe cases of malaria.
Dr. Fuster, of France, and Dr. Bertin, of Algiers, claim that
one can successfully treat severe cases of malaria with small
doses of Quinin, without exposing the patient to drug intoxica-
tion, such as have resulted from large doses, especially when
prolonged. And no less an authority than Prof. Plehn, of Ger-
many, considers large doses capable of producing serious results.
He has called the attention of the profession to a toxic neurosis
of the heart, characterized by frequent and irregular palpitations,
and resembling that produced by the abuse of tobacco, and ob-
served sometimes in malarial patients returning from tropical
countries. Then we should remember the action of Quinin on
the liver, spleen, brain and blood, and the fact that when given
in large doses alters the blood-globules, while, when given in
small doses, it only kills the parasite.
404 Comments on Homoeopathy.
Xo less unreliable and debatable are the last assertions of Dr.
Brunton in his tirade against Homoeopathy (page 37, Action of
Remedies), for he says: "Hahnemann next went on to develop
the homoeopathic doctrine in the form of giving not only smaller
doses, but further preached reduction and reduction until tht
dose was reduced almost ad infinitum. In favor of this he brought
forward the fact that if a small quantity of Mercury be triturated
for a length of time it becomes more and more powerful. He
had not taken into consideration the fact that if you triturate
mercury {which salt of Mercury?) for a long time you alter it,
and you produce instead of the mercury a mercurious and after-
wards a mercuric oxide ; so that upon those two errors he founded
the whole of his system."
After reading all this, one cannot help but say, without fear
of contradiction, that Dr. Brunton's series of unfair declamatory
abuses are full of inaccuracies and absurdities, incredible in a
man of his ability and standing — unless, of course, his jabbing
was destined to humor vascilating students and prejudice them
against Homoeopathy. What has become of innumeral pre-
dictions of our end made by our enemies since the time Hahne-
mann, who, like the old man of Cos, was persecuted and torment-
ed, not only by the rival schools of those days, as it was the case
with Hippocrates, but by a host of ignorant druggists, who saw,
in self-prescribing, the ruin of their much disputable prerogative
and business?
If Dr. Brunton, while addressing his students, had said: Ho-
moeopathy is a system of therapeutics, one hundred years old,
claimed by his followers to be based on the Law of Similars and
to have as unavoidable precepts: pure experimentation in the
healthy human organism, the single remedy, and the minimum
dose, he would have told them the truth. And, had we been in-
vited to say something more in behalf of our system, we, of
course, would have told the students, that what constitutes the
homceopathicity of a remedy is not its bulk, but the symptomatic
relation it bears to the disease, to which it is applied : also that
as our remedies produce the symptoms they cure, we are obliged
to avoid unwelcome aggravations, to give them in doses beyond
the scale of disturbing action, and finally that the precepts men-
Comments on Homoeopathy. 405
tioned are with us imperative, and stand and will stand as solid
pillars to support the superstructure of our imperishable doc-
trine. Homoeopathy, like all sciences, has its limitations, but it
has eternal life. For the sake of truth we could have told more
things worth knowing, but we would not have been understood
be untrained brains.
And now it behooves us to tell Dr. Brunton the kind of man
he has been criticising, either through ignorance or preconception,
for he seems to know very little of Hahnemann.
Every educated physician acquainted with the history of medi-
cine, knows quite well that Hahnemann was a chemist of reputa-
tion and held official positions in his country as a chemist, and no
one could doubt his medical knowledge and education. He
was the only one living, at his time, who practically undertook
pure experimentation on the healthy man, and the self-sacrifices
he made to obtain a knowledge of the action of drugs, are the
most brilliant gems of his crown. These labors alone make of
him a superior man ; but he was also the first to break the molec-
ular cohesion of remedies by his processes of trituration and
succussion, to establish Sim-ilia in practical solid bases, and to
point out the routes modern science should take to keep on pro-
gressing and reach its destiny. And, certainly, Osier knew what
he was doing when he said that Homoeopathy has contributed so
much to the destruction of polypharmacy.
It is not possible that a man with such stock of knowledge, es-
pecially chemical knowledge, could not have known what to do
with a drug himself discovered, for I have no doubt that the
Mercury alluded to by Brunton is the Mercurius Solubilis Haluie-
manni. But this remedy was not prepared by Hahnemann by
trituration and solutions, as the other twelve salts of Mercury
used in Homoeopathy. Sugar of milk and alcohol did not enter
into its composition ; it was made as follows : He first dissolved
the Mercury in Nitric Acid in the cold. The difference of solu-
bility of mercury in heat and cold was not as yet known to
chemists. Professor Hildebrand even wrote in his exhaustive
treatise, "On the Solution of Mercury in Nitric Acid:" "A
saturated solution can only take place with heat." "Hahne-
mann tried to obtain pure metallic mercury from a solution of
406 Comments on Homoeopathy.
the sublimate by means of metallic iron. The mere mechanical
process of refining by squeezing through leather did not con-
tent him. He dissolved mercury thus obtained by Nitric Acid
in the cold, allowed the salt to crystallize, washed the crystals
with a very small quantity of water, and dried them on blotting
paper." He thus obtained a pure nitrate of the oxide of mer-
cury, which is the salt proven on the human healthy organism
and which is still retained in the German pharmacopoeia. Even
'Hahnemann's proportions, the constant excess of mercury, solu-
tion in the cold, washing the crystals with a very small quantity
of water, drying on blotting paper, without heat, are retained,
because all these details are recognized.'
"Hahnemann treated these crystals with a certain quantity of
water and precipitated the solution by means of specially prepar-
ed ammonia free from carbonic acid, for which he gives direc-
tions. The precipitate, after having stood six hours, forms a
black paste, which is then dried without heat on a filter of white
blotting paper."
"Hahnemann did not neglect to weigh the amount of the mer-
cury obtained by means of sheet iron from the sublimate. One
part of the sublimate contains o. 625 of Mercury. Hahnemann
says 0.624, which, considering the instruments then used, cer-
tainly shows the accuracy of his work.". Professor Gren wrote
of this preparation : The problem of Herr Macques, to obtain
a preparation of Mercury which is at once very soluble (in the
acids present in the body according to the views and intentions
of those days, here in Acetic Acid), and yet free from corossive
properties, is fully solved by Herr Hahnemann's "Mercwrius
Solubilis." "According to my opinion, Mercwrius Solubilis is to
be preferred to Mercwrius Dulcis" (Calomel). "He even wished
this preparation to be used for making Ugt. Xeapolit. And Gren
was no blind eulogist, as was shown by his previous attack on
Hahnemann in the matter of his test for metals — a contest which
was decided by Professor Gottling and others in Hahnemann's
favor." Physicians, says Ameke, considered that "science had to
thank the well-known, and for this immortal, Hahnemann, for
one of the most effectual and mildest preparations of Mercury."
Kurt Sprengel, the historian, stated that Hahnemann's Mer-
Comments on Homoeopathy. 407
cury was an excellent and mild preparation, the usefulness of
which has been proved.
We could fill many pages, continues Ameke, with the acknowl-
edgments which Hahnemann received on account of his Mer-
cury from non-homoeopathic doctors.
Hahnemann never claimed that Mercury could become more
powerful by trituration. What he claimed, and we claim it
also, is, that by successive triturations and succussions we break
more and more the molecular cohesion of our drugs, thus ren-
dering them more efficacious in treatment. There is in Homoe-
opathy a knowledge of hidden power that only of late has com-
menced to be appreciated and studied by the most progressive
men of our days. Even drugs formerly considered inert have
unfolded, by our methods, new therapeutic powers which Ho-
moeopathy has been successfully applying for many years. The
ordinary laws of chemistry have no control here. We have found
them valueless in some of our processes ; and in the reduction and
attenuation of such drugs, as Lycopodium, Silica, Carbo veg.,
Graphites, Sepia, or such metals as Gold, Platinum, Silver, Cop-
per, Zinc, and Tin, we have discovered the type of drugs capable
of breaking these laws. We know positively that after the 6th
trituration they become soluble in alcohol, and that filtering does
not exhibit the separation of the atoms. We do believe that dilu-
tions so obtained possess properties of their own, which have no
analogy with those of the original substances from which they
were derived. They change in character and increase in energy,
exactly as it happens with the colloidal metals. No chemical re-
action known can explain the properties of these neo-products,
but the manner in which they are produced conclusively proves
that they contain the dissociated atoms.
Hahnemann never reduced the dose ad infinitum, but as far as
the 30th centesimal dilution, which was the limit he allowed to
his reductions. A high gradation which certainly should not
astonish anyone today that our opponents are leaving us behind
in the race for reduction, with their ionization, sterilized diluted
emulsions of bacterial cultivation, oligodynamic dilutions, col-
loidal metals solutions, and who knows what will come next.
By all this one can see how far in advance of his chemical con-
408 Still and Osteopathy.
temporaries was Hahnemann, for he was the observer who, for
the first time, undertook to break the molecular cohesion of
drugs, so as to give them a greater power of osmotic penetration.
Every educated physician of our school knows well the degree
of oxidation reached with time by the mecurial product alluded
to by Dr. Brunton, even when the ordinary precautions are taken,
but there is something in connection with our remedies that our
critic and all his confreres seem to ignore, and that is, that any
substance already altered by oxidation or otherwise, if proven
after the change has taken place, is considered by us a neo-prod-
uct, retaining the name of the original drug only for convenience's
sake. But altered or not, the effects of our proven remedies in
the healthy man, are properly recorded, and their pathogenesis
will always remain in our Materia Medica to supply indications
for the treatment of our patients.
And, finally, nothing Dr. Brunton ever wrote appears to us as
senseless and frivolous as his remarks about the two errors upon
which Hahnemann founded the whole of his system, and we
prefer to leave them unanswered. We may only say we hardly
did expect such absurdity from a man of his intelligence and
knowledge.
Philadelphia, Pa., 706 W. York St.
STILL AND OSTEOPATHY.
Fra Elburtus has a characteristic essay on Dr. Still and Oste-
opathy in the August number of The Fra. He met Dr. Still who,
dressed in a flannel shirt with his trousers tucked in his boots,
was burning brush on his farm. "Dr. Still thinks he is a back
woodsman. That is where he plays to the gallery of his psy-
chic self." He is, instead, a brainy, earnest and successful man
who plays the part of Tolstoy. "When I wanted to talk to him
about medicine, he changed the subject. He swore with an oath
that he knew nothing about medicine — had never really read any
books, was absolutely uneducated and was only a mechanic."
Here, again, he plays to that gallery for he has built up a school
at Kirksville that has from five to six hundred students a year.
"He probably knows nothing about his financial affairs." "I
The War on Tuberculosis. 4°9
have a suspicion that Dr. Still's indifference to finances arises from
a firm faith in the ability of his wife and children to look after
these things for him." His son, Dr. Charles Still, and his son-
in-law, Dr. George Laughlin, run the school. The old doctor's
mantle (he is 80) will probably fall on the latter, the son being
general business manager.
Fra Elburtus thinks that the secret of Dr. Still's success lies in
the fact that "he has the Healing Touch. What is the Healing
Touch? Bless my soul — I do not know." "All good doctors
have this ability to awaken hope and help in the patient to cure
himself."
Osteopaths do actual good in some cases, but have the further
advantage in that "they impress the patient with the fact that
something is being done for him."
"Dr. Still was almost alone when, thirty years ago, he lifted a
stern, warning voice against drugs, calling attention to the fact
that while the drug had a direct primary effect that was known,
it had also a secondary effect which could not be foretold. And
this reaction often causes other diseases, and brings about sore
complications which require further drugs." And so on and on
to the grave.
The Osteopathy of Still seems to be a little manipulation of the
body of the patient plus a vast amount of plain, right living; in
other words, the application of common sense to living. But, re-
marks the Fra, "there is a Pauline Osteopathy, practiced by the
wiseheimers who claim to have discovered the secrets of life and
death." That must be the class we meet in our large cities — ■
and other places. An Osteopath of the Still variety would be an
honest and useful member of a community. But the "wise-
heimers !" They are the men who take a basis of common sense
and build on it "a sturcture of metaphysical clap-trap."
THE WAR ON TUBERCULOSIS.
An exchange, The Interstate Medical Journal for August, pub-
lishes a long paper by Dr. S. Adolphus Knopf on this subject—
"The Hopeful Outlook," etc. — but after reading it one inclines to
the belief that the hopefulness in the matter resides chiefly in
the eminent gentlemen who are conducting the campaign. Dr.
Knopf writes :
410 The War on Tuberculosis.
''According to the annual report of the National Association
for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, the year 1908 saw
the most successful organized campaign against tuberculosis in
the history of medicine. Measured in money, the report says, the
fight against 'the great white plague' in the United States cost
more than a million dollars during the last year."
This is a goodly sum of money, and while Dr. Knopf and the
other specialists in tuberculosis may be hopeful about the out-
look, the analysis of the U. S. Census report of mortality pub-
lished in The Recorder for June does not lend any aid, when it
shows a steady increase in the disease year after year.
The "Tuberculosis Exhibit" displayed at Washington, and other
cities, required 50,000 feet of floor space, 11,000 feet of wall space,
1,200 packing cases, and 10 special cars to transport it. $30,000
were expended in removing it from Washington to New York.
A good many persons visited the exhibit — the number is given —
but whether they learned anything from it is not stated; prob-
ably about as much as the average man gets from viewing a
collection of geological specimens.
The paper bristles with many eminent names and many figures.
Among the latter are some that are startling. For instance, the
money value of each one who died of the disease is put at $8,000,
which makes the total loss from tuberculosis in the United States
for one year $1,100,000,000. In truth a staggering sum. With
beautiful optimism we are told "An effort to reduce the mortality
by one-fourth would be worth, if necessary, an investment of
$5,500,000,000. We wonder if these worthy gentlemen realize
what the financing of five and half billion dollars means?
"Tuberculosis is a preventable and curable disease," we are
told ; also that the work of the Emanuel Church people, "clergy-
men, physicians and laymen," in curing tuberculosis is "astonish-
ing." Indeed, this is so, for we are told that "the tuberculosis
class of the Church, reports as much as 80 per cent, of cures of
pulmonary tuberculosis, composing all stages of the disease."
It was a Chicago class, which may account for the marvel.
All that is needed in carrying on this war is plenty of money.
Symphoricarpus Racemosus. 411
SEPSIN.
''The Sepsin" writes Dr. Shedd, "is a pure toxin, not an anti-
toxin. Antitoxin cannot be used homoeopathically ; e. g.} in diph-
theria., but is supposedly a physico-chemical horse serum anti-
dote to the toxin of the b. diphtheria already circulating in the
blood. Sepsin is a toxin and its action is to so stimulate the or-
ganism that it begins to manufacture and pour out into the blood-
stream its own antitoxin. In other words, Sepsin is a stronger
artificial drug disease, substituted for the weaker, natural disease,
but directly under control of the physician (Cf. Organon). Thus
where Rhus is indicated in typhoid we are using a botanical
toxin, similar in symptomatology to the typhoid syndrome pres-
ent and forcing the organism to evolve a Rhus-typhoid antitoxin.
If Rhus be clearly indicated but Baptisia given, we then have a
dissimilar toxin used and a dissimilar antitoxin (to speak bac-
teriologically ) created, which, of course, is utterly useless in the
case. Hence Sepsin is not similar to antitoxin. It should be pre-
pared in alcoholic dilution from the 3d centesimal up."
SYMPHORICARPUS RACEMOSUS.
Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder:
On pages 311 and 312 of the Homceopathic Recorder for
July, 1909, is a correction on Symphoricarpus Racemosus:" by
Dr. H. D. Baldwin of Elyria, O. I want to corroborate what
Dr. Baldwin says concerning Dr. S. P. Burdick and his mention
of the Symph. race, to his classes. I remember that he mentioned
the drug in lecturing to the class of 1883. Moreover, in looking
up dear old Dr. Samuel Lilienthal's "Homceopathic Therapeu-
tics;'' edition of 1879, I find ** there mentioned, p. 612, under the
head of "Morning Sickness and Vomiting of Pregnancy." Evi-
dently this ante-dates Dr. E. V. Moffat. I think I am correct
when I lay claim to being a subscriber of the H. R. since its first
issue.
Yours truly.
Lawson Allen,
Class of '83. N. Y. Horn. Med. Col. and Hos.
Worcester, Mass., Aug. io, 1909.
412 rhe Foot and Mouth Disease.
THE FOOT AND MOUTH DISEASE.
Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder:
I am afraid I do not quite follow you in your comment on a
paragraph quotation from the Journal A. M. A. on page 327 of
the JuJy 15 issue of the Hom. Recorder.
You say,, "after the bacilli, or germ, has been filtered out," etc.
But do you not understand that the quotation on which you com-
ment makes the statement that it is one peculiarity of the foot-
and-mouth disease virus that its bacteria or germs cannot be
"filtered out" owing to their "ultra-microscopic" minuteness
which enables them to pass through all filters yet devised?
It may be, of course, that I misinterpret your expressions
rather than that you overlooked the point of the quotation.
Very truly yours,
A. H. Tompkins.
Jamaica Plains, Mass., Aug. 7, 1909.
The term "ultra-microscopic" means "beyond the microscope,"
or invisible to it. The Journal A. M. A., we take it, assumes that
nevertheless there must be germs else how can there be disease?
If germ diseases can be transmitted, or acquired, without germs,
then the whole theory of what is known as modern scientific
medicine, falls as a house would with its foundations removed.
We believe that the different germs, or bacilli, found in various
diseases have nothing to do with the cause of the diseases, and so
believing tried to point out (rather obscurely it seems), that here
was a virulent disease transmitted without the germ. Diphtheria,
according to some men, may be contracted from sewer-gas, and
sewer gas, according to other men is entirely free from germs, or
any organic matter, yet the Klebs-Loffler get the credit. The day
may come when it will be seen that what we now term, generally,
"germs," and credit with being the cause of disease, are nothing
but changes wrought in the before healthy tissue by the real
cause of the disease — "dynamic change," "miasm," "bad living,"
or what not. — Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder.
Homoeopathy and Cancer. 413
HOMCEOPATHY AND CANCER.
By Dr. Schlegel, Tucbingen.
The following interesting cases are taken from Dr. Schlegel's
work on Cancer :
I. Miss P. B., of T., forty-nine years of age, came under my
treatment in April, 1900. She is psychically not quite normal, and
some years ago she made an attempt to poison herself with
Phosphorus, and after that showed symptoms of acute yellow
atrophy of the liver, but she made a perfect recovery, with the ex-
ception of great emaciation. She now has an indurated gland on
the left breast, the nipple being drawn in. She received Hydrastis
3, which caused the induration gradually to disappear, and the
nipple became quite free again. In August of that year nothing
could be seen any more of the swelling. It is possible that the
former poisoning with Phosphorus helped to develop the cancer,
and there may have been less of a constitutional cause, and the
case may have been more amenable to treatment owing to this
reason.
II. Airs. M., from T., forty-six years of age, appeared in my
office in 1903 with an induration above the left nipple, which was
drawn in. She was treated from January till June. Her ex-
hausting periodic haemorrhages had caused an anaemic condition
which only improved in the course of time. Also she received
Hydrastis 3, and on June 28th nothing could be seen of the former
induration, and the nipple was again normal.
III. Miss L., from this place, forty years of age, came to me,
February 15, 1906, because she had some time before noticed a
knot in the left breast, slightly above and toward the outer side.
It is a hard lump of a gland, half as large as a plum, projecting
somewhat, causing no pain. The patient is the more anxious
about it as her sister had her breast excised owing to a similar
affection. Prescription, Conium 30. On the 17th of March the
hardness was entirely removed, and a careful examination on
April 20th, and again on November 15th, showed a normal con-
dition.
IV. C. Sch., forty-eight years old, unmarried, from K., came
under my treatment on October 30, 1886. She was in the hospital,
where they wanted to excise her breast. Some weeks ago she
414 Homoeopathy and Cancer.
noticed a knot in her breast. There is now an induration of the
size of a nut in the upper half of the left mamma. The glands in
the axilla are noticeable, there is a noticeable murmur in the
swelling, extending under the arm. She received Conium and
Bryonia. I did not see her again till the year 1888; in the mean-
time she took homoeopathic remedies of her own accord at various
times. There is no sign of a swelling. I saw the patient again in
the year 1894, when she stated that after influenza she felt a pain
in her left breast, but objectively nothing was noticeable. Finally
I saw her again when she was seventy years of age in October.
1907, when she complained of catarrh and headache, but was
otherwise healthy. I enumerate this case because of the long time
it was given me to observe her, and which extended so long be-
yond the time of the formation of the swelling.
V. Miss K. Sch., seven and forty years of age, from B. Came
under my treatment December 3, 1891. Fifteen weeks before she
had noticed an induration in the right breast, which rapidly in-
creased, and was operated five weeks later, and the whole breast
was excised. The wound did not heal at once, and was finally
closed by transplanting skin from the arm. The patient is much
afraid of a relapse. She is very weak and the skin is unusually
dark. Her symptoms caused her to continue for some time under
homoeopathic treatment until 1908. and under it she grew strong.
There is no symptom now of cancer.
VI. Sister Sch., forty-eight years of age, from St., came to me
in November, 1892, with an induration of the left gland of the
mamma on the inner side. She has already consulted three physi-
cians, and they all declared the swelling to be cancer, and advised
her to be operated on. The patient has been something of an in-
valid, having had haemorrhage of the stomach, and offered a fair
chance for homoeopathic remedies. She received Bryonia, and
later on Mercurins, Hepar, Conium, Lycopodium, Belladonna,
Arsenicum, Phosphorus, and other remedies, which resulted in a
complete cure of the breast and many years' ability to work. I
personally saw the patient again in the years 1902 and 1905. In
the meantime she had suffered several attacks of disease, also
haemorrhage from the stomach, but her breast had remained
sound.
VII. Mrs. St., from K., twentv-eicrht vears of a<re. came under
Homoeopathy and Cancer. 415
my treatment in October, 1901. Some weeks before she had
noticed a swelling on her breast, on the periphery of the left
mamma, with an uncomfortable feeling as if something there was
enlarging. There was an induration as large as a cherry, easily
moveable. I treated the patient, who is very thin, but looks
healthy. I treated her homoeopathically till February, 1909. and
only then it could be said that the swelling has disappeared all but
a slight thickening of the glandular tissue. A striking feature
were the nipples, which showed strong crusts. Cleanliness was of
no avail, the thick, scaly epithelial crusts did not become loosened.
In the year 1904 she became pregnant, her breasts swelled up and
loosened their remnant of scales, and there is no trace of the
former hardness. The courts around the nipples show a remark-
ably dark pigmentation. In the year 1908 the nipples again be-
came encrusted, while the breast remained well, the same in the
years 1907 and 1908. The various symptoms that appeared gave
occasion for the employment of various remedies, which I herewith
enumerate, and under their influence, the constitution of the young
woman and her health gradually improved. She nursed for a
considerable time, and her little boy was well. The remedies
were: Hydrastis, Nitric acid. Thuja, Xatrum mur.. Sulphur,
Calcarea phosph., Conium, Causticum, Graphites, Lycopodium,
Mur ex.
VIII. Mrs. M. L., a widow in H., forty-two years of age, is
much disquieted on account of an induration in the left breast, ex-
hibiting lancinating pains and soreness from the pressure of the
corset. She is especially anxious also because her sister was
operated for cancer of the breast. On the inner and upper peri-
phery of the nipple there is plainly to be felt an induration, which,
as she says, has existed for some time. She is very anxious and
loses sleep. The patient received Bryonia, Belladonna, Sulphur,
Pulsatilla, Conium and Arnica. The treatment began June 9,
1903, and on June 13, 1904, the gland is free and there is no more
hardness to be felt. This good result also held good till March.
1906, when the patient sought my advice on account of another
ailment.
IX. Miss H., from P., sixty years of age. came to me on Oc-
tober 29, 1903. Two years before her left breast had been ex-
cised, and last April the glands under the axilla were removed by
416 Homoeopathy and Cancer.
a secondary operation. The swelling, owing to which the left
mamma was excised, was no larger than a filbert, but it was in-
dubitably cancerous, as was shown by the relapse. This case is
of value because under steady treatment for five years there has
been no further recurrence, of which there had been a strong
probability. The patient had many morbid symptoms when I first
took up her treatment, and was very anaemic ; her chief complaint
was a severe headache, besides her justified dread of cancer.
She received in turn the homoeopathic remedies indicated, and I
saw her last in April of this year for struma. Her breast then
was well.
X. Mrs. St., sixty-seven years of age, came to me on Septem-
ber, 1899, and showed me a carcinoma on the right eyebrow some-
what larger than a cherry. It had grown from a wart in the
few years. She said that on the 10th of October she had received
a severe blow, causing a considerable haemorrhage from the swell-
ing. Prescription, Nitric acid 30. In November she complained
of severe pains in the back, while her general health was re-
ported better. Natrum mur. 6. In February, 1900, the swelling
was reported to have diminished in size, and now has a peduncle,
whereupon she again received Nitric acid. In July the patient
came herself, and there is nothing to be seen but a trace like a
wart. Chelidonium 3. Accidentally I received to-day, July 24,
1908, a report about the patient on another matter, and I found
out by inquiry that for years there has not been a trace of the
swelling.
XL The wife of Deacon K. here died lately, 74 years of age,
from heart disease and dropsy (in R.). About ten years ago she
was seized with a cancerous swelling on the left cheek, which
started from a wart on the face. A brother of my patient had
died some ten years before from cancer of the fauces, another
brother was then lying sick with cancer of the glands of the neck
after an operation on the same, and died soon afterwards. I
treated Mrs. K. with various homoeopathic remedies suitable to
her total condition, according to the law of selection. The swell-
ing was cured without leaving a mark. An external remedy was
also applied, consisting in moistening the excrescence and the
surrounding parts with the freshly expressed juice of the house-
wort (Sempervivus tectorus), which showed good results.
Psoriasis. 417
XII. Mrs. R., a widow in F., sixty-seven years of age, not
able to journey to see me, requested me in July, 1907, to pre-
scribe for her a homoeopathic remedy. She stated that she had a
malignant excrescence in her fauces, so that she could not swallow
anything solid, and even liquids she could swallow only with
much trouble and pain. Great emaciation. The patient received
Hydrastis 4 and Naja tripudians 30. She quickly improved, and
could swallow solid food, receiving in the meantime Argent u 111
nitric, and metallicum, always with Hydrastis between. In
October she wrote me a grateful letter with the significant words :
"I would be glad if you could look into my throat, but I cannot
travel, nor is it necessary, for that you know perfectly well my
situation is manifest from the fact that I am better, yea, as-
tonishingly better. . . . My appetite is better. I have again
some taste when I eat. and the swallowing has proceeded quite
well since, only to-day at dinner I had to eat more slowly, but
then it was fried dumplings and endive salad. Vegetables, cab-
bage and stewed fruit I manage very well." In December the pa-
tient had a severe haemorrhage from the bowels of red clotted
blood. The physician found a tumor in the abdomen from which
+he bleeding was said to proceed. She received China, and she
improved ; she reported that she could be up again, her fauces
were quite well and her swallowing proceeded quite freely. Later
she yet received Mercurius and La diesis. In the beginning of
July, 1908, thus a full year after the beginning of her treatment.
she was quite well, and wrote that she at present needed no more
medicine. — Translated from Horn. Monatsblaetter, May, 1909.
PSORIASIS.
By Dr. J. T. Tessier, Paris.
Since the time of William we understand under the name of
psoriasis a cutaneous disease which is characterized by groups of
dry shining scales, which form small pointed elevations, or larger
round scales, which rest on a well defined red basis which bleeds
easily. (Kaposi.)
I do not intend here to enter on any extended discourse or in-
vestigation of psoriasis beyond this simple definition. Any derma-
tological treatise will supply all that I here omit. I simply intend
41 8 Psoriasis.
to show that homoeopathic treatment, whether supported by local
treatment or not, may succeed in curing an affection, concerning
which such a master as Besnier uses the following expressions :
"Go to the hospital of St. Louis and ask all the patients suffering
from psoriasis who return to it periodically every five or six
months, to seek their old quarters in our halls, how they have
been treated. You will find among such as have already been
treated by Biettani who have since then pinned their faith on all
the physicians who have since that time followed him in this
hospital. With many of these disappointed patients skepticism
has reached its limit. They only request us to allow them a bed
in our hospital, some baths and sufficient lard to enable them to
anoint the diseased parts twice a day with lard."
We would not deny the palliative effects of lard, but I believe
that we can add to it more of a medicinal and effective treatment.
Case I. — M. C, a merchant, twenty-three years of age. The
disease began with him when he was fifteen years of age, ap-
pearing first in the head, then on the body, and lastly on the ex-
tremities. All treatments tried failed. Entirely discouraged the
patient turned to Dr. Escathier, an old physician for internal medi-
cine in the hospital of Paris. On August 15, 1903, he received
Sulphur 24.
September 10. No effect, but rather an aggravation. Pre-
scription, Nitric acid 10, twenty drops in 300 grams of water, two
teaspoonfuls a day.
October 12. A very perceptible improvement, which had first
appeared on September 20. Nitric acid 15, twenty drops in 300
grams of water, two teaspoonfuls a day.
November 3. No spots can now be seen on the upper part of
the body ; very few on the lower part of the body ; the scaling off
of the hair is less. The trunk is clear. Nitric acid 10, one spoon-
ful a day.
December 6. In spite of a journey and several breaks in the
manner of living, the improvement continues.
March 1. The cure is complete. The treatment had been in-
terrupted in December, and in January, owing to a disturbance in
the bowels and of bronchitis, which returned twice. One year
later this cure (from a trouble with which the patient had been
afflicted for eight years) still held good.
Psoriasis. 419
Case II. — M. L., a janitor, forty-eight years of age, had for
several months been suffering from psoriasis, which would not
yield to any of the remedies which he used. He came to me in the
hope that a homoeopathic treatment would give him an immediate
relief. He had extensive spots on the body, on the legs and the
arms, and, as is usual, especially on the elbows and the knees.
August 5, 1886. I prescribed for him Arsenicum alb., first
trituration, 20 grams in 250 grams of water, one tablespoonful
three times a day.
September 5. In one month the cure was effected under the
use of three prescriptions like the one above. I must remark that
the remedy caused some dry colic, which was not, however, of
any import, and which did not cause the patient to discontinue
the prescription.
Case III. — A man, twenty-eight years of age, had been afflict-
ed with psoriasis since his puberty. The first trituration of
Arsenicum effected his cure, though he used besides the following
ointment: Juniper oil, 10 grams, and Vaselin, 30 grams.
To those who may object that the cure was effected by the
Juniper oil, I would answer that the patient had often before used
the Juniper oil as also Chrysophanic acid, but without the in-
ternal medication, and that he had not received from these the
benefit received when the internal medicine was added to the local
treatment.
Among the homoeopathic authors who have treated of psoriasis
I would mention Kafka, who begins with a dose of Sulphur 6
every morning, so long as the itching continues. I may here re-
mark that the itching is frequently lacking. After this prepara-
tory treatment he gives Sepia 6, one dose a day for a week, then
he leaves the patient for four days without medicine. Then he
begins again with Sepia 5. which he gives in the same manner.
Then a pause followed by Sepia 4, and so on to the first dilution.
If the eruption by that time has not quite disappeared, he returns
again, step by step, to the sixth dilution. According to him it
takes three to four months to cause the most inveterate psorias-.s
to disappear. Xo acids, no sharp or spiced food must be taken
during this treatment. He prescribes alkali baths (lukewarm
baths in water in which soda is dissolved, half a pound of car-
bonate of soda to a full bath) twice a week with an interval of
420 Therapeutic Items.
three days, and the spots of psoriasis to be washed every morn-
ing with soap water. After the bath in the water with soda, and
after washing- with the soap water, the patient must stay in a
warm room until the bodv has cooled off. (Cfr. Kafka, Therapy.
Vol. II.)
Hughes (in his Therapeutics) has seen the disease disappear in
its early stage, and chiefly as psoriasis palmaris, on the use of
Mercurius sol. We should not forget that psoriasis palmaris or
pseudo-psoriasis is a frequent concomitant of syphilis, which may
explain the action of this remedy. Arsenicum will often be found
necessary to complete the cure. Xankivell (Horn. World, IV,
74) reports a severe case which continued for a year, with chaps
on the hands which bled easily. This case was cured with
Petroleum 3 and Sulphur 30. Betet, an old assistant physician in
the hospitals of Paris, has recommended Xuphar luteum.
Fredault, also an old assistant physician in these hospitals, has
cured two cases with Ipecacuanha 6. I confess I cannot well
comprehend the indication for this remedy, in the pathogenesis of
which we find only the following cutaneous symptoms: "Erup-
tions like millet seed; violent itching on the skin of the leg and
arms; during the disease one is forced to scratch until vomiting
sets in." This may be as it will, Dr. Fredault was a physician of
too much experience for us to discredit his report. — Translated
from help. pop. Z. f. Horn.
THERAPEUTIC ITEMS.
You occasionally meet a man who cannot urinate while stand-
ing, must sit down to it. Zincum met. is reported to have re-
lieved such a case.
The American Journal of Surgery devotes five pages to the
treatment of the itching anus. Ratanhia 3 with an internal appli-
cation of an ointment, or suppository, of the same drug would,
according to Dr. A. M. Cushing, prove effective. Certainly it
would be cheaper than a surgical operation though, perhaps, not
so impressive.
Dr. Harvey Farrington {Med. Advance, Aug.) gives in detail
three cases of agonizing pain in the rectum cured by Ignatia.
The paper is headed "Ignatia As a Rectal Anodyne."
Therapeutic Items. 421
Dr. J. R. Etter, Crawfordsville, Ind. (Med. Summary), writes
that a thorough cleansing of the alimentary canal at the begin-
ning of a case of typhoid will always prevent it from running the
typical course. "I have never had a fully developed case of ty-
phoid in my practice." The same rule he claims holds good in
malaria.
Dr. J. A. Ward, of Troy, Mo. (Med. Summary), tells of the
good effect on an old gentleman of 80 who was suffering from
partial paralysis of the legs, of a warm bath in which 1 pound
of sulphate of magnesia, or Epsom salts, had been dissolved.
Body rubbed dry afterwards. Two baths put him on his feet
all right.
Dr. Sieffert was called to a case of a man of 70, who, the pre-
ceding night had suffered severely from an attack of gall-stone
colic and who "felt as though he should have a new attack. An
examination showed an enlargement of the liver and I could feel
the filled and tense gall-bladder." Calcarea carb. 30 every hour
had a very favorable action. Hughes (Pharmacodynamics)
speaks highly of this remedy and potency in gall-stone colic.
It is said that an application of olive oil as hot as can be toler-
ated will, over night, almost clear away a "black eye," or any
form of ecchymosis.
The physiological effect of Avena sativa is a pain at the base of
the brain.
The International Journal of Surgery says that blowing to-
bacco smoke in the ear is a good, and usually available means, of
killing insects that sometimes get in the ear in summer time,
though a piece of cotton saturated with chloroform is better.
"Maggots are best removed by injecting sterilized olive oil."
CHIPS.
"The use of repertories and the study of repertories frees the
mind from the bondage of fixed ideas about symptoms, and the
tyranny of a few important remedies. The student should be en-
couraged and instructed in their employment and the art of using
them should be a very prominent part of the curriculum." — J. B.
S. K., Medical Advance.
422 Book Reviews.
Dr. James B. McElroy tells us that "Schandin's discovery of
the pathogenetic cycle of the macrogametocyte in the blood of
the vertebrate furnishes a long desired explanation of the re-
lapses which so frequently occur in this disease," i. c, malaria.
Very satisfactory, no doubt, if understood.
Another good old "superstition" is gone up the flue. Dr. G. T.
Jackson says that boils are due to "local infection with staphy-
lococci." Constitutional condition has nothing to do with them.
Boils are contagious. Great !
A Philadelphia editor (of a big daily paper) wrote: "We
have studied every debate, every address, every resolution pre-
sented at the Atlantic City meeting." Did any one else?
"Writers on leprosy give the incubation stage from 3 weeks to
27 years."— Got-. Health Reports. Must be a hardy egg.
As it was in the beginning and ever will be. "One last word.
The men whom you now see sitting on the bank left behind while
the boat of progress swiftly glides away with fresh winds and
under fresh sails were themselves in their youth passengers of
similar boats and cut faces at others who were left behind." —
Dr. S. /. Metzler, in lour. A. M. A. Where is that boat headed?
BOOK NOTICES.
Diseases of the Personality. By Professor Th. Ribot,
Paris. Translated (with homoeopathic annotations), by P. W.
Shedd, M. D., New York. 142 pages. Cloth, $1.00. Postage,
7 cents. Philadelphia. Boericke & Tafel. 1909.
This work is a correlation of one of the branches of modern
science and research with homoeopathic — psychology and the
mental operations and effects of drugs — translated from the con-
cise French of Prof. Ribot, one of the greatest of modern psy-
chologists, into the succinct, forcible English of Dr. Shedd.
We get here down to the beginning of things, to the biologic
cell, and when the reader gets through the book, he has a solid
scientific basis for all the mental symptoms in the materia medica.
Book Reviews. 423
The physician with any predilection for thinking, will find the
book as absorbingly interesting as a novel to the average reader.
For students in medicine, beginning their course in mental and
nervous diseases, the book will prove invaluable, not because it
teaches mental and nervous diseases, with their accompanying
psychic transformations, but because the student will see things
from the beginning, from the birth of the cell to its downfall
and disintegration, and furthermore, the application of his thera-
peutic knowledge will become "a living thing," a process of
growth and understanding, for he also has acquired a scientific
or "known" fundament for his prescription.
The annotations by Dr. Shedd are elucidative and historic.
They evidence Hahnemann still up to the century-mark (1909).
Confessions of a Neurasthenic. By William Taylor Marrs,
M. D. With original illustrations. 115 pages. i2mo.
Cloth, $1.00. Philadelphia. F. A. Davis Company.
"The pursuit of health is like the pursuit of happiness in that
you do not always know when you have either," is one of the
happy phrases of this interesting little book, which purports to
be an autobiography, but which Dr. Marrs tells his readers is
made up of the, to others, absurd vagaries, that beset the habitual
neurasthenic more or less, which he has met with in his experi-
ence. Ever and anon the reader can see that the neurasthenic
stops talking and the author does it instead, as, for instance,
where it is indicated that cases of appendicitis are very rare while
there is plenty of belly-ache. The homoeopaths come in for a
sly dig, for the hero who is really a healthy man who imagines
he has every ill he hears of, consults them all. The homoeopath
gives him some pills of a very "high potency" and the invalid in
a fit of despondency takes them all at a dose to commit suicide.
The osteopath pulled his leg literally and metaphorically. While
reading this entertaining little book we wondered whether it would
open the eyes of the class for whom it is intended ; whether the
neurasthenic hero would not have run after it for a little time as
he did after everything else, and then have dropped it, as he did
the others. We are what we are. Still we fancy there are many
patients who would be the better for reading it.
Homoeopathic Recorder
PUBLISHED MONTHLY AT LANCASTER, PA.
13y BOERICKE & TAFEL
Subscription $1.00, To Foreign Countries $1.24, Per Annum
Address communications, books for review, exchanges, etc.,
tor the editor, to
E. P. ANSHUTZ, M. D., P. O. Box 921, Philadelphia, Pa.
EDITORIAL BREVITIES.
"Stomatologists/' — Dr. Edmund C. Briggs in his address be-
fore the Section on Stomatology, by which in popular tongue is
meant dentistry, said: "I venture to say we suffer much from
the term 'dentist/' " and he urged his hearers to shake off the
name as the surgeons have shaken off their birth name of
"barber." Later on he says "we, as stomatologists ;" so, pre-
sumably, that is to be the title for those we now know as "den-
tists." Incidentally he rakes his brethren for trying to make
money by patenting devices, and by going into stock companies
vending things of their profession in which too often they lose
in reputation and financially. Like the doctors, they would be
wise if they put their little piles in safe securities and would leave
the glittering "companies" alone.
Is It a Plagiarism? — We had a talk the other day with a
doctor whose degree hails from Europe. In the run of the talk
he said, "I see you Americans credit Oliver Wendell Holmes
with the saying that if all the medicines were thrown in the sea
it would be better for men but worse for fishes. That was said,
long before Holmes flourished, by Broussais, of Paris, a con-
temporary of Hahnemann." Broussais tried desperately to cure
a friend and when his friend died, bitterly admitted that he had
drugged him to death ; then followed the assertion about it being
better for man but worse for the fishes if all drugs were to be
thrown into the sea.
Editorials. 425
Article Wanted. — A subscriber in his letter of remittance,
says : "Could you ask some of your correspondents to write a
good plain article on malaria and its treatment?" If any reader
has a few helpful things to say on this subject the Recorder will
take pleasure in printing them.
A Conium Symptom. — In his lectures on Conium, Hughes, in
his Knowledge of the Physician, tells how Dr. Edward Curtis,
after taking a half drachm of the drug "could not walk across the
room with his eyes open without giddiness, reeling, and feeling
as he would vomit; but directly he closed his eyes all the symp-
toms passed off and he could move safely. This explains the
benefit obtained in threatened sea-sickness from shutting the
eyes, or, at any rate, not looking at the swaying boat and waves."
Papa vans (Bell). — This ethical remedy which is largely ad-
vertised in medical journals "for the treatment of dyspepsia,
flatulence, nausea, vertigo, hyper-acidity, palpitation and other
symptoms of indigestion," has been analyzed by the A. M. A.'s
Council of Pharmacy who "find that the tablets consist essentially
of Sodium bicarbonate and charcoal, with a little flavoring mat-
ter." It seems that advertising can make a preparation go among
many doctors as well as among the laity. Indeed The Journal
prints a parallel column of the Bell Company's advertisement
to the profession and those of the "Father John" to the people
and the wording is practically the same. However, if the Bell
Company (and others, "Father John" included) will continue
to advertise the Council will not hurt them in the least. An
"Ad." can go before the reader every month — as long as it is
paid — while "the Council's" fulmination will appear but once
and is forgotten before the end of the month. The Mephisto-
phelian advice is, Keep on Advertising.
Corrections. — Several very annoying errors crept into the
letter from Dr. Fornias, published on page 359 of the August
number of the Recorder. On 20th line from the bottom of the
page for "mass" read "mess ;" on 10th line for "demoralization"
read "dematerialization" and on 2d line (all counting from bot-
tom) for "revision" read "reservoir." While on the subject, and
426 Editorials.
in order that the doctor may not be held responsible for the er-
rors of the Recorder's type-setters and proof-readers, we would
mention that in the paper by him. July, page 314. 7th line from
the bottom, "hyperchlorhydria" should read "hypo-chlorhydria."
The Medical Faddists. — The N. Y. State Journal of Medi-
cine is allopathic, but level headed. In its leading editorial for
August it touches up the "germ." "microscopic" and "bacterio-
logic fiends" with their scare methods and supreme contempt
for anything but their own very limited wisdom. Concerning
tuberculosis, it says :
"Look a moment at what is being done about the 'white plague.'
so-called. How foolish, unwise, wrong, a great deal of it all
really is. Is tuberculosis contagious, or rather transmissible?
Yes, slightly so. under certain conditions, but these can very
easily and with very little expense, relatively, be absolutely guard-
ed against in many instances. In numerous other instances, alas,
it will make practically very little difference how careful we are,,
because sooner or later, given the soil and conditions which are
unsanitary, or unhealthy, the disease will almost inevitably de-
velop. A few germs, with the real noxa which some of them
carrv. will be encountered and they will begin their work of
destruction, simply because the opportunity is offered for their
attack and development."
"Therefore, treat people in their own homes as far as may be,
and make these homes as far as possible, what they should be,
and cease spending large amounts of public funds building sana-
toria in a vain and senseless crusade against tuberculosis."
One thing is certain, and it is. that as long as money can be
scared out of the public this "senseless crusade" will be whooped
up for all it is worth.
Serum. — Serum is regarded by many as one of the new, but
fixed stars in medicine. It may be but one may also be pardoned
for doubting. Dr. James Dundas recently had an article in The
Hospital in which he states that "certain sequelae" may follow its
exhibition ; even some deaths have been observed. These se-
Editorials. 427
qualse ''may be surprising and very alarming unless one is pre-
pared for it." Among those most common is : making the patient
very sick ; a general rash ; enlargement of the glands ; local
oedema; albumen in the urine; joint pains that ''might suggest
acute rheumatism ;' ' lethargy ; somnolence. Against these and
other manifestations "it is well to safe-guard oneself by warning
parents of their probable occurrence." "50 per cent, of the
cases" will show these bad effects more or less. With such se-
quela?, with an occasional death, following the use of an healing
agent one may be pardoned for harboring a "reasonable doubt"
concerning its efficacy.
Homoeopathic Domestic Books. — After mentioning the
names of three English publishing firms, Dr. T. W. Burwood, in
his Address to the British Homoeopathic Congress, says : "These
three firms alone have published over 2,031,000 copies. It is by
such publications that Homoeopathy is promulgated, and I for
one am glad when I find such works on the bookshelves of the
people. It is one of the greatest factors in the spread of Ho-
moeopathy among the very public we want to reach, and is a
form of propagandism bound to succeed."
The Germ Theory. — This theory is receiving some quiet
knocks these days. Dr. C. S. Grulee, of Chicago, recently read a
paper on the summer diarrhoea of children, or cholera infantum.
He does not think that the bacillus dysenteric us, or the b. acidoph-
ilus, b. entcrctidis, b. pyocyaneus, or b. coli communis, are any
of them the cause even though the learned bacteriologists have
so asserted. Dr. Grulee said : "Usually, although the onset ap-
parently is very sudden, still if we inquire more closely we will
find that there have been present for days, weeks and even
months, symptoms which point more or less directly to derange-
ment of the gastrointestinal functions and the normal metabol-
ism of the child. Why should we resort to infection to explain
a condition which is more easily explained by a graver error of
the same sort or a continuation of the same error past the point
of tolerance ?" Also : "At present it seems to me that the in-
fection nature of summer diarrhoea has not been proved; in
428 Editorials.
fact, quite the contrary." Probably the same thing will some
day be said of all the germ diseases, i. e., that the "germ" has
nothing to do with the cause of the disease.
Medical Examinations. — In a paper read before the "Nine-
teenth Annual Convention of the National Confederation of
State Medical Examining and Licensing Boards" Dr. W. T.
Councilman, of Harvard, said of the Examining Board questions
of the past four years, as found in a recently published book :
"The first impression on going over the questions is that they
are rarely so framed as to bring out any exact knowledge in the
answers." They are compiled from text-books "which are them-
selves compilations." "Many of the questions would really de-
mand rather a discussion of the subject." Dr. Councilman closes
with the usual apology for his temerity in advising so learned a
body and then adds : "But it has seemed to me that by a some-
what radical change in the method a very much greater amount
of good can be accomplished." This looks a little like what the
men who have a turn for the classics would term "a Parthian
arrow" — with a sharp business end.
"Serum Disease/' — Dr. G. H. Weaver has an article under
this title in the Archives of Internal Medicine. He prefers the
term "serum disease" to other expressions that are used to desig-
nate this new form of sickness. The interval between the injec-
tion and the appearance of the disease varies from a few minutes
to three weeks ; the majority appear before the eleventh day. Dr.
Weaver thinks that for the protection of other members of the
profession "all fatal cases should be reported." This would lead
one to infer that such cases were not reported as being due to
the serum.
Errata. — In the paper by Dr. W. L. Morgan, August Re-
corder,, p. 339, 4th line from bottom for "restlessness" read
"recklessness ;" the same also on p. 340, 3d line from top. Page
341, 1st line for "presented" read "perverted;" same page 18th
line from top for "constitutionally" read "constructively." Page
342 4th line from top "belladonna pains" should be "belladonna
berries;" same page 5th line for "what" read "which."
News Items. 429
NEWS ITEMS.
We have received from Mr. Jacob Hertzler, Belleville, Pa., a
paper signed by forty-one citizens of that place who would
patronize a homoeopathic physician if he would locate there. Any
inquiry may be addressed to Mr. Hertzler.
Germany is credited with 15 cases of small-pox, June 1-19, of
this year.
Dr. C. E. Fisher is at work on the transportation question to
Los Angeles for the next meeting of the Institute. Dr. T. E.
Costain, the Secretary of the Committee, sends us a circular let-
ter containing details of what has been done so far.
Dr. George Francis Shears, President of the Homoeopathic
Medical College of Chicago, died on August 27th, aged 53, his
birthday being September 16, 1856. His death was the result of
a nervous disease centering in the spinal cord. Dr. Shears was
born at Aurora, 111., and received his degree from the colllege of
which he was president, in 1880.
The Homoeopathic Medical Society of Pennsylvania will hold
its 46th session at Scranton on September 21, 22 and 23.
Los Angeles, Cal., July 11-16, 1910.
The Transportation Committee, through its Chairman, Dr.
Chas. E. Fisher, has called on all the railroads going West from
Chicago, and all are anxious to do their best in equipment, time,
etc., to take us West.
We have had tentative plans of the trip offering all sorts of
schedules, etc. As yet the committee has made no choice of
road, and will not do so until a rate is made, but in order to show
the members what we have in mind we present a tentative sched-
ule handed in by one of the roads. This is given solely because
it gives all details more fully than some of the others :
"My Dear Sir:
Referring to our recent conversation in reference to the above meeting
to be held in Los Angeles during July, 1910.
I beg to submit herewith itinerary of special train for the accommoda-
tion of your delegation. You will note same is to be scheduled to ac-
commodate all delegates who will arrive in Chicago during the day, July
6th. It also provides for a five hour lay-over at Denver and about the
same lay-over at Salt Lake City, and is so scheduled to take in the prin-
cipal scenic points of interest through scenic Colorado.
430 Editorials.
Schedule as follows :
Via Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific railroad.
Wednesday. July 6th, leave Chicago, 9:15 A. M.
Thursday, July 7th, leave Rock Island. 1 :2o A. M.
Thursday, July 7th. leave Davenport. 1 135 A. M.
Thursday, July 7th, leave Iowa City, 4:35 A. M.
Thursday, July 7th, leave Des Moines, 7:10 A. M.
Thursday, July 7th. leave Omaha, 11:30 A. M.
Thursday, July 7th, leave Lincoln, 1 :55 P. M,
Friday, July 8th, arrive Denver, 6 130 A. Mj.
Stop at Denver from 6:30 A. M. until 11:30. noon. Via Denver and
Rio Grande railroad.
Friday, July 8th, leave Denver, 11:30 A. M.
Friday. July 8th. leave Colorado Springs, 2 :oo P. M.
Friday. July 8th, leave Pueblo, 3:10 P. M.
Saturday, July 9th, leave Salt Lake City, 4:50 P. M.
Stop at Salt Lake City from 4:50 P. M>. until 9:30 P, M. Via San
Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt Lake railroad.
Saturday, July 9th, leave Salt Lake City, 9:15 P. Ml
Sunday, July 10th, arrive Los Angeles, 9:00 P. M.
Special train to consist of the highest class, modern, up-to-date equip-
ment, to include buffet-library car. dining car for all meals, with sufficient
high class standard Pullman sleepers to comfortably take care of your
party, also to include observation sleeper to be used for special purposes.
You will appreciate that it is a little early at this time to advise what
fares will be authorized for the meeting, however, it is safe to say that the
fares authorized will be such as to induce a large attendance.
The diverse route privileges authorized on California tourist tickets
are such as to give your delegation an opportunity of going one route
and returning another. For instance, going through Denver. Scenic
Colorado and Utah, direct to Los Angeles via the San Pedro Route and
returning optional, either via San Francisco through Utah and Colorado
or via San Francisco, Portland, Seattle and the Canadian Rockies via St.
Pauk, or via San Francisco, returning again through Los Angeles and
the Grand Canyon of Arizona. For those desiring to take in Yellowstone
Park at the time of your meeting, tickets may be so routed as to bring
them back via Livingston, Mont., or Yellowstone, Mont., for the side
trip through the Park.
At a later date when the rates are settled, I will be very glad to quote
you further details regarding "your special train arrangements and will
issue the necessary itineraries or any other printed matter to circularize
among the members of your association, advising them in detail condi-
tions of rates, diverse routes, etc.
There comes to our mind the question whether the profession
prefer to remain in Denver so that an excursion can be made
News Items. 43 l
to Moffat Road. If so, now is the time to acquaint the Com-
mittee with your views.
Does this schedule meet with the approval of the Eastern mem-
bers ? If not, now is the time to make your views known. You
see we want to go on a special train, and we are anxious that you
shall enjoy the entertainment on the way out that is being ar-
ranged between the profession of the various cities and the Com-
mittee.
Does the date of leaving please you, or would a day later, or a
day earlier, be better? Remember, the Committee wants to
please all and are anxious that all go, together.
T. E. Costaix,
Secretary of the Transportation Committee.
Xow, reader, it is up to you to write. Address Dr. T. E. Cos-
tain, 1404-42 Madison St., Chicago, 111.
CONSTIPATION WITH INFANTS.
The worst cases of constipation are found in infants and suck-
lings. Many children suffer unspeakably from this cause, espe-
cially as the ordinary treatment with laxatives only aggravates the
situation. A considerable improvement may often be attained by
dietetic measures, but an actual cure is usually only attained by
the use of the specifically acting remedy, selected according to the
laws of similars, and this will then not only act upon the intestines
but also on other morbid symptoms of the body. Children who
suffer from glands in the abdomen tend to the most obstinate con-
stipations. These cases are usually cured by Plumbum, and espe-
cially by Plumbum acet.
With a delicate child suffering from an obstinate constipation
and prolapsus of the rectum. Silicea gave immediate relief.
Another case, that of a little girl, two and a half years of age,
who first suffered from bloody evacuations, and afterwards with
constipation attended with a white coating of the tongue and lack
of appetite, Lycopodium brought great relief. — Translated from
Horn. Monatsblaetter, May, 1909.
PERSONAL.
The fact that fish are brain food may account for the heated imagination
of fishermen.
Many a self-made man marries and is then made over by his wife.
. It took a doctor to discover that pole.
They wouldn't admit the skunk to the animal's circus because he only
had a scent and that a bad one.
The"Toot ball candidate was rejected for the bad habit of studying.
It is said that hash is the connecting link between animals and vege-
tables.
When your blood boils it is not necessarily sterilized in consequence.
"Good habits in America make any man rich," wrote John Jacob Astor.
How about it. you men of bad habits?
A lemon is merely a melon with letters misplaced.
Advice to authors : If you do not want your story returned do not
inclose stamps.
When a bookkeeper takes a bite of his sandwich it has been called the
bite of an adder.
Hiram, at the hotel register, refused to sign his name until he had
read the document.
If it were known that "all neurasthenics are constipated" perhaps that
ill would no longer be fashionable.
It would hardly do for a doctor to say he takes life easy.
The Manayunk man gave a piece of his mind and then was held to
keep the peace.
What is that word to the wise that is sufficient?
Whisky improves with age. but it is seldom given the opportunity.
Well, we are to try again to make every one rich by taxing him heavier.
A professional man should never turn farmer until he has enough
money to decently support the farm.
The sinecure is the cure all men want.
Man wants but little here below — only the earth.
Bacillus fusiformis, know him?
It isn't proper to say "cream," say top-milk.
The average man thinks sin isn't so bad if indulged in with moderation.
A reform doctor won't believe in God because He created tobacco,
something fit for hell only.
Another doctor said "the fragrance of real Havana rests and refreshes
me." Lucky to get the real stuff.
The new pennies look like foreign coins.
Now look out for "germ carriers" which bid fair to be the next fad.
Also subscribe for the Homoeopathic Recorder.
THE
HOMCEOPATHIC RECORDER
Vol. XXIV Lancaster, Pa., October, 1909 No. 10
PESSIMIST OR OPTIMIST?
In a conversation not long ago one of the talkers said that the
"old school," ''allopathic,*'' "scientific physicians," as you please,
were all, and by various roads, converging to Homoeopathy. He
demonstrated his point by many statements of what this, that,
and the other laboratory worker had done or was doing. The
other talker denied that they were approaching Homoeopathy,
whereat the first said that the second was "a pessimist."
If the deductions the first drew from his statements are correct
the second is a pessimist, or, at least, a poor observer. If other-
wise he is not a pessimist. The solution depends on the answer
to the question — Are they (the aforementioned medical bodies)
converging towards Homoeopathy?
The optimist cited an allopathic author to the effect that large
doses of Ipecac will cause nausea while a minute dose will cure
it ; that Dr. So and So "recognizes" the power of the "small
dose." He thinks this means a "converging towards Homoe-
opathy," while the pessimist regards it as merely one of the pass-
ing vagaries of those who deny the Law. He who denies the
Law cannot be a homoeopath any more than a man could deny
the Koran and be a Mahommedan. "They are scientifically dem-
onstrating the truth of Homoeopathy in the laboratory." There
is the microbe under many names and aliases ; there is the toxin
he secretes that causes the disease and, by some means, an anti-
toxin is evolved, that is somehow homoeopathic (in the eyes of
the optimist) to the toxin and — there you are.
The pessimist contended that the alleged scientific fact that
the microbe, or "bug," is the cause of the disease is a theory and
not a demonstrated fact. At first he, the microbe, was said to be
434 Pessimist or Optimist.7
the cause, but now it is not he, but the toxin, that is said to be
the cause. This, too, is but a theory and not a demonstrated
scientific fact, even if it is quite generally believed and acted upon
as though it were a mathematical truth. \\ nen pneumonia
strikes it is said that the cause is the pneumococcus (if that is
the right name) — the pneumococcus having landed on "suscep-
tible soil." This proviso would cause some men to think that the
''soil" was the cause, especially as it can only be proved that the
pneumococcus ''invaded" the lungs by the theory that he must
have done so, as otherwise how did the disease originate?
The whole thing rests on the assertion, that the microbe se-
cretes the toxin causing the disease, for which an anti-toxin
must be found. But the assertion that he produces the toxin is
nothing but theory ; it is not science ; neither is it Homoeopathy.
It is quite as reasonable to say that the disease produces the
toxin and the microbe is merely present as bacilli always are in
decaying matter. An animal killed by a bullet and left to decay
will develop in his carcass, perhaps, quite as many bacilli as one
that died of disease.
The researches of Prof. Karl Pearson recently caused The
Journal of the American Medical Association to write concern-
ing tuberculosis " and further, we may, perhaps, consider
the advocacy of the infection theory as somewhat prompted by
ideas of expediency," etc. Pearson favors the older idea of
heredity being the dominant factor in the disease. If tubercu-
losis is not caused by its microbes it is safe to assume that neither
are other diseases.
From all this, and more, the pessimist argued that there is
not the least approach to Homoeopathy in the laboratories, where
disease is regarded as a foreign body that enters into the human
organism and is so treated, which is to say : The foe must be
expelled, or killed, for it is the all and all of disease, the patient
being merely the battle-field. That is not even an approach to
Homoeopathy.
High Potencies. 435
HIGH POTENCIES.
By B. C. Woodbury, M. D.
I have chosen this subject as the basis of a paper, not that
I am an exclusively high dilutionist, but having witnessed the
wonderfully curative power of these medicines, when administer-
ed according to the law of similars, I feel it a duty to give the
profession the result of my experience in their use.
My first acquaintance with high potencies was while a student
at the old Homoeopathic College of Pennsylvania — since become
the Hahnemann Medical College of Philadelphia, — in the years
1864-5 and 1865-6. Among the professors at that time were
Constantine Hering, Adolph Lippe, H. N. Guernsey and C. G.
Raue, all high dilutionists. At that time my faith in such small
doses was very small, indeed; I may say that it was only after I
had seen a number of cases successfully treated that came to our
clinics after they had been the rounds of hospitals and doctors,
that I was convinced against my will, but not "of the same opinion
still."
One case that I remember very distinctly was that of a man
who came to Dr. Guernsey's clinic with chronic diarrhoea, from
which he had suffered three years. He stated that he had been
to several hospitals and had been treated by a number of doctors
without benefit. After a brief examination, the doctor found the
"keynote" of the case, which was, if I remember, chilliness dur-
ing and after stool, and gave him a dose of Arsenicum 8,000 on
his tongue, and sent him down stairs to the dispensary for pow-
ders of Sac. lac, sufficient to last a week, at the end of which
time he was to call again and report. At the appointed time he
appeared and reported some improvement. He was given more
Sac. lac. and told to report again at the end of another week.
The same process was gone through with for six weeks with
steady improvement until when, the last time he came, he re-
ported himself well. As he turned to go out the doctor said to
him, "When will you come and see us again?" He replied,
"When I get sick." This "brought down the house."
I will now give some cases that occurred in my own practice :
Case i. — On my return from Philadelphia, and before I had
436 High Potencies.
decided where I should put out my shingle, I stopped for a short
time in Bangor. While there, a lady of my acquaintance ap-
plied to me for treatment for some of the remaining effects of an
abortion which had occurred a short time previous. At the time
I saw her, she was having some haemorrhage of dark, stringy
blood, with the sensation of bounding in the abdomen as of
something alive. I put a single dose of Crocus 200 on her tongue
and her troubles disappeared "as if by magic," as she told me
afterwards.
Case 2. — Shortly after this I went to the town of Bradford
where I practiced for awhile. Soon after I arrived there I was
summoned to see a lady who had a very severe attack of colic.
She had been taken sick early in the morning, and I was called
at about 2 p. m., but as I was staying at some distance from
where she lived, I did not arrive until about four o'clock p. m.
When I stepped into the room where my patient was lying, it
smelled as though I was going into a doctor's shop. They had
used every sort of bath that they could think of or their neighbors
could suggest, without any relief to the poor woman who was
suffering the most intense agony.
Upon examination I found a swelling of the transverse colon
"like a pad." This was the "keynote" for Bell., and I accord-
ingly gave her a dose of the medicine in the 200th potency on her
tongue and sat down by the bedside and waited. Her relief was
apparent as soon as the medicine touched her tongue, and in
not more than ten minutes she was entirely relieved and asleep.
I left her a solution of Sac. lac. in half a glass of water with the
directions to give her a teaspoonful once in two hours after she
awoke. I did not repeat the medicine, nor did she need more, but
when she awoke she was entirely free from pain and had no
further trouble.
Case 3. — This was a case of mastitis. The lady had been con-
fined about a week previous and mastitis followed. I was called
at about four a. m., and found her walking the floor and suffer-
ing intense pain in the breast, which was inflamed and swollen
to nearly twice its normal size and extremely tender to the touch.
The axillary glands were also very sensitive and painful. She
told me that the only relief she could get was by walking the
floor, which she had been doing all night. Rhus was evidently
High Pot oicies. 43/
the remedy, and our Professor of Obstetrics had taught us that
when the deep seated glands of the axilla were involved, Rhus
rod. acted better than Rhus to. v. I accordingly put a dose of
Rhus rod. 200 on her tongue, which was followed by immediate
relief, and in about ten minutes she was entirely relieved and
asleep. The next day the abscess opened spontaneously and soon
healed and she had no further trouble from it. I did not re-
peat the medicine as there was no occasion for it.
Case 4. — This was the case of an Irishman who came to me
with an ulcer on his leg. He told me that the ulcer had been
there for three years and that he had tried various remedies and
consulted several doctors without relief. It looked like a very
unpromising case. The leg was swollen to twice its natural size,
and the ulcer, which was. at least, two inches in diameter by a
half inch or more in depth, was in a highly inflamed and irri-
table condition. He had been at work on a railroad, and was
then engaged in threshing with a flail for parties who had thresh-
ing to do, and travelling about in the cold from one town to
another ; add to this the fact that he was at least seventy years
old and in the habit of getting drunk every time he could get
enough cheap whiskey, and I think it will be admitted that it
was not a case that promised much glory to the doctor. I had
seen similar cases treated in a hospital, and the limb was kept
bandaged and the ulcer supported by adhesive straps, while the
limb was kept in an elevated position : with these helps, the prog-
ress towards a cure was extremely slow. I concluded that I did
not want anything to do with the case and told him that I could
not do anything for him. He insisted that I could, and said that
the "old woman said I could cure his leg." I had treated his
wife the previous spring for constipation and some other troubles,
and she had great faith in my ability to cure her husband. He
urged me so hard that I very relunctantly put up some medicine
for him. more to get rid of him than with the expectation of do-
ing him any good, which, in fact, it did not. He came back,
however, after he had taken up the medicine and reported no im-
provement. I was not disappointed any. He went on to tell me
that the ulcer would apparently almost heal over and then sud-
denly break out again worse than ever. This symptom, accord-
ing to Guernsey, was a "keynote" for Kreosote, and made me
43$ High Potencies.
prick up my cars. I thought to myself, "if there is anything in
the keynote system, here is a good chance to test it." I accord-
ingly put a dose of Kreosote, in the 200th potency, on the man's
tongue, and gave him plenty of blank powders to last two weeks
and sent him away. I ordered no change in his diet nor mode of
life, no bandages nor adhesive straps ; did not even forbid his
drinking all the cheap whiskey he chose, but simply gave him
the single dose of Kreosote 200. I saw no more of him for two
months, when, one day, as I was driving through the village, I
saw the old fellow sitting in a carriage. He hailed me with "Ah,
dochtor, that last medicine you gave me raised the divil wid
me!" "Did," said I, "what did it do to yon?" "It cured me
leg," he replied. To say that I was astonished would hardly
describe the effect his words produced on me. He told me that
before he had taken all the "powders" I gave him his leg healed
up sound. It continued so during the remainder of his life.
To think that a single dose of such a highly potentized medi-
cine could accomplish so much under unfavorable conditions
was almost too much to believe.
Case 5. — Mrs. C. was a lady eighty years of age and had
suffered for a long time with pruritus vulvae, and whose husband
applied to me for some medicine to relieve her. He stated that
the itching was so troublesome that it deprived her of sleep and
that her health was breaking down in consequence. He told me
also that he had consulted a number of physicians and that she
had used all kinds of washes and salves without relief. I called
to see her and questioned her as to her general symptoms and
decided that Sulphur was the remedy. I left her three powders
of Sulphur 55 m, with directions to take one powder every six
hours until she had taken them all and to report in one week.
At the end of that time she reported that she took only two
powders, as they made her sick, that she could not take the third
one; "vomited all night after. taking two of the powders,'' but
that the pruritus was gone and that she could sleep all night in
comfort, which she had not been able to do for years before.
I met the old gentleman, her husband, about two months later
and he told me that he and his wife were about going away and
that if either of them were sick, he should send for me and
wanted me to promise to come, no matter what expense. He
High Potencies. 439
praised so warmly what I had done for his wife that it made me
blush before the crowd in the post office. He said that he had
consulted nearly all the doctors in his section of the State, and
after paying out five hundred dollars, he had been unable to get
any help for his wife until he consulted me ; that I had given her
three little powders that had made a well woman of her.
It is incredible that the medicine could have acted in the man-
ner above described, but I give it as it was reported to me. I
left the place soon after this and never heard anything more
from them. I wish to add in conclusion, that the medicines used
in all the cases I have cited here were the so-called Jenichen
high potencies, which have always been regarded with distrust
by the homoeopathic profession. Without attempting a defense
of the genuineness of these medicines, I have only to say that if
they are not what they purport to be, but are only the third or
sixth dilution with an extra number of succussions, as some
suppose them to be, and inasmuch as all the cures that I have
here recorded were, with one exception, made with a single
dose, it is evident that, as a rule, we give too much medicine, as
no such brilliant results follow where the dose is repeated once
in one to four hours, as is the practice with the majority of phy-
sicians. We can take whichever dilemma we choose.
I am aware that it requires a large amount of credulity on the
part of physicians who have not witnessed such marvellous re-
sults from such infinitesiaml doses, and when I remember my
own skepticism and the amount of practical demonstration it
took to convince me of the power of such minute doses, I cease
to wonder that they are inclined to doubt the truthfulness of those
who claim to have witnessed such cases. I can only say in de-
fense of what I have written that it is true, and if anyone is in-
clined to doubt, let them try these medicines faithfully in their
own practice, and they will be convinced of their wonderful
power.
As stated at the beginning of this paper, I am not an exclusively
high dilutionist. I have seen good results follow the administra-
tion of the potencies from the first decimal up, but from my
experience I am convinced that if we carefully study our cases
we shall get better results from the higher dilutions.
Houlston, Maine.
440 Purpose of Nature and Law of Cure.
THE PURPOSE OF NATURE AND THE LAW
OF CURE.
By E. R. Mclntyre, M. D.
Nature does nothing without law. It knows no anarchy. All
its works are definite ; begun, carried out and completed ac-
cording to fixed purpose. It never employs different means to
perforin a single task; but the same thing is always done in the
same manner. It has a definite beginning, course and ending.
I take it that few will deny these statements, notwithstanding
our friend, Dr. S. W. Lehman, of Dixon, Illinois, tells us in his
article entitled "From Rationalism to Law. A Step Higher in
Therapeutics, or The Homoeopathic Law of Nature and Its
Philosophy," published in The Advance for June : "Nature has
no aim nor art, and makes no products, and has no aim nor art
in its formations and transformations. Nature does not purpose
anything. It acts according to environment, not to purpose, al-
ways in mathematical precision." If there were no other state-
ments in his article that are contradictory to this (and there are
many), it is contradictory to itself. Because Nature could not
act "always in mathematical precision" and not at the same time
be acting according to a purpose. Even chemical affinity, of
which he speaks, is part of Nature, and always unites elements
in definite proportions, according to a purpose ; and this purpose
is the resulting compound.
He said many things that were valuable, but spoiled it by
knocking out the only prop that supports the Law, thus rendering
it but a chaotic jumble without any purpose, seemingly having
forgotten that the law which he is discussing is more rational
than the rationalism of old school medicine.
If he will look at the flower on the geranium in his garden, and
study its structure, he can scarcely escape the conviction that it
lives according to a purpose or object of Nature. Formed in all
its beauty, it lives that another geranium may live. If he will
go into the forest, and study the old oak tree, he will find the
purpose of Nature, as demonstrated in it, is the growth of acorns
for the production of other oak trees. Come with me, doctor,
down the old lane. Let us study that wild rose flower. It is a
Purpose of Nature and Lazv of Cure. 441
most beautiful flower, and helps to beautify the place; but that
is not its most important office. It fills the air with fragrance ;
but that is not its main object. It contains a drop of honey to
feed the insects ; but that is a means to an end. Now look care-
fully at the bottom, and behold a most beautiful casket full of
seeds. The bright color and fragrance tell the insects where to
find the honey. And as they stoop to sip the nectar, they de-
posit the pollen which has adhered to their legs from other wild
rose flowers. This enters the casket of seeds through a micro-
scopical opening to fertilize the seeds in order that other rose
bushes may grow. This is the purpose of Nature in forming
that flower. Indeed, Nature is all object or purpose.
Then every morbific agent that we introduce into the human
body as a medicine must act according to a definite and fixed
purpose. It must have a definite point of beginning, a definite
route of extension and a definite mode and piace of ending, or
final result ; or else we have no law of drug action at all.
Each medicine must have its own individual mode of action.
It must be as much an individual as is each group of symptoms
that may appear in the same disease, or as the different persons
who are sick. There can be no place in the art of healing for
mere generalizations. Every prescription must have its own
definite object, just as all things in Nature have their objects
and purposes.
Our remedies have been divided into two great classes known
as chronic and acute, or deep and superficial, according to their
action. But so far as I know no one has ever attempted to find
the reason why they act as they do. No attempt has been made
to trace the action of either class. Indeed, the teaching has been
that such tracings are impossible. While speaking to a profes-
sional friend of the direction of action of the different remedies,
he said, "that is the rule with exceptions." On being asked to
state an exception, he said, we are not always able to trace drug
action. Perhaps I am somewhat obtuse ; but I confess that I
cannot see the logic of confusing our inability to learn the lessons
of Nature with the works of Nature themselves. If we are not
able to trace out her works, it certainly could not be an exception
to her laws.
During more than a quarter of a century of experience I
442 Purpose of Nature and Law of Cure.
have observed man}" cases of cutaneous eruptions in which Sul-
phur or Arsenicum was the curative remedy. But I have never
seen such a case where a careful examination would not reveal
weeks, months, or years of bad health before the skin symptoms
appeared. I have also seen many patients in which the cutaneous
symptoms called for Rhus, Bell, or Bry. But never one in which
these were not among the first manifestations of disease. I have
seen many cases of intestinal trouble calling for Psor., Sil. or
Calc. But never one in which the intestinal disturbance was ar»
early symptom. I have also seen many in which Aeon., Bry.,
Nux v., Bell, or Pod. was curative. But never one of them but
the gastro-enteric symptoms were among the first to appear. I
refer to these remedies, simply as types of the two great classes
of remedies. The same applies to all other remedies. In my ex-
perience, it has been an invariable rule that the patients requir-
ing our so-called antipsoric remedies have been sick long before
the symptoms showed at the peripheral endings of the sympa-
thetic nerves. And those calling for the acute remedies, the
earliest manifestations were at the periphery, the more central
symptoms appearing later. In other words, the antipsorics be-
gin their action in the cells of the central portion of the sympa-
thetic system, and extend toward the periphery, while the acute
remedies first disturb the periphery and extend toward the cen-
ter.
This leads to the question, what is meant by peripheral and
central? If we refer to the cerebro-spinal system the brain and
spinal cord are central ; but these are peripheral with regard to
the sympathetic system.
Sickness is disturbed nutrition. And since nutrition depends
upon force, it is primarily disturbed force. All functions of
nutrition are the result of ganglionic rhythm. Therefore all
sickness and all remedial action must come through the gang-
glionic system. True, bacteria are present in many kinds of
sickness. But they are also present in those who are not sick.
It is not uncommon to find the characteristic tubercle bacillus in
the sputum of healthy individuals. And the same may be said of
the Klebs-Loeffler bacillus of diphtheria. But their presence is
temporary. In a little while they disappear, and the patient does
not sicken with tuberculosis or diphtheria. Why? Because the
Purpose of Nature and Law of Cure. 443
so-called disease bacteria cannot live in the healthy secretions
of the body.
This being true, and no one denies it, should be a lesson to us.
We should learn from it that while certain characteristic bacteria
are found to be present in, and are peculiar to, certain diseases,
they are rather a result than the cause; the real cause being act-
ive before they can live in the secretions. If this were not true,
all persons in which the bacteria are found would sicken with
that peculiar disease to which the germ belongs. But they don't
do so.
Then the logical treatment of the patient is toward establish-
ing normal nutrition in the organs involved. But in our at-
tempts to establish normal nutrition in organs we must never
lose sight of the fact that it is not merely local manifestations
with which we have to deal. But in order to effect a cure of
these we must cure the whole patient. A purely local disease is
an impossibility, except in very recent cases of traumatic injury.
This must be plain to every one who has investigated the inti-
mate relationship existing between each organ and tissue and
all others. Because of this relation, any disturbance in one part
must affect all other organs and tissues ; as in a chain of tele-
graph instruments. Close one and all others in connection with
it are disturbed. But the one first closed receives the first shock,
and the wires connecting them remain as they were before the
disturbance.
A short time since the question was asked me where the first
shock is received in sickness resulting from bad news. When I
replied in the brain cells, he asked how it reaches them? I re-
plied that if the news is heard it is over the auditory nerve ; but if
it is read, over the optic. He then asked what effect is left on
the nerve that conveyed it. And when I told him none whatever,
he did not seem to understand it. In fact, I doubt if he believed
it.
Let us study a case of this kind. A strong, healthy lady about
thirty years of age, with a quick, active mind, and all her organs
in the best of health, action of heart regular and normal, men-
struation regular. In fact, she was the perfect type of a healthy
woman until she was told of the death of a very dear friend.
She was at once seized in the grasp of the most profound melan-
444 Purpose of Nature and Law of Cure.
cholia ; could not bear the consolations of her friends, but wanted
them to let her alone. She constantly brooded over her loss ;
could not concentrate her mind or attend to any duties requir-
ing mental effort; had dull, heavy pains in the head and neck,
with intense prostration of the whole muscular system and
tremor of the whole body. The heart became irregular, slow and
so feeble that its beats could not.be felt; pulse, soft, weak and
hardly perceptible, intermittent, with a sensation as if the heart
would stop beating if she did not keep moving. Nervous chills,
but the skin remained warm. Menstruation, which had just be-
gun, suppressed; but in its stead severe pains of a spasmodic
nature in the uterus. This was accompanied with vomiting and
bearing down pains which seemed to begin in the uterus and
bowel and extend up the back. The urine was profuse and clear,
and urinating seemed to afford temporary relief to the head
symptoms. Jaundiced skin with clay-colored diarrhoea stools.
Her hearing was not impaired. The function of the auditory
nerve was in no way disturbed, notwithstanding the profound
disturbance in other organs. The impulse had left no trace in
the road over which it travelled. But its first shock was re-
ceived at the termination of that road in the brain cells. These
were so profoundly disturbed that they were disabled from per-
forming their normal functions, as indicated by the change in
mentality. Yet I take it no one would claim that there was any
perceptible organic change at this time, in the cells. Neither
would any deny that these cells are in a pathological condition.
There is pathology but no morbid anatomy ; perverted function
but no change of structure.
Now let us see if we can get at the reason for the other symp-
toms. This irritation of the brain cells disturbed the rhythm in
the ganglionic endings of the sympathetic nerves controlling the
nutrition and circulation of the cells, and this disturbed rhythm
was communicated to the cavernous and carotid plexuses, thus
interfering with cerebral circulation, and consequently nutrition.
From these plexuses it travels down over the cervical and dorsal
ganglia and abdominal splanchnics to the greater center or brain
of this system, the solar plexus and semilunar ganglia. But part
of it was deflected from the main route, to the cardiac splanchnics,
over which it reached the automatic cardiac eaneflia in the walls
Water as a Vehicle in Homoeopathy. 445
of the heart, as indicated by the disturbance in the action of that
organ. After reaching the solar plexus, it is reorganized and
sent to other organs, whose rhythm it disturbs, the gastric plexus
to the gastric ganglia in the walls of the stomach, as indicated
by the vomiting ; the hepatic plexus to the hepatic ganglia, check-
ing the secretion of bile, as shown by the jaundiced skin and clay-
colored stoois ; the renal plexus to the renal ganglia, as shown by
the profuse secretion of urine ; the superior mesenteric, aortic
and inferior mesenteric plexuses to Auerbach's and Billroth-
Meisner's plexuses resulting in the spasmodic pains in the bowel
with diarrhoea. From the inferior mesenteric over the pelvic
plexus to the automatic menstrual ganglia in the uterus and
ovaries, disturbing their rhythm, thus producing the spasmodic
pains in the uterus and suppression of the menses. But in every
organ or part whose rhythm w°<= disturbed nutrition was also
disturbed.
Gelscmium is the curative remedy. But suppose there had
been some latent miasm or chronic disturbed force, I care not
what you call it, that had reduced the power of the cells of the
central ganglia, and interfered with that force we call nutrition
in them, and it had extended toward the periphery before she
heard the bad news, and the acute symptoms were the same.
•Would anybody expect to cure that patient with Gelscmium? If
he does, he is doomed to failure. He can only hope for temporary
relief. It could not cure. Kali phos. would be the remedy, pro-
vided history revealed no indications for some other deep acting
remedy. In any case it must be a remedy whose action begins
where the original sickness began, extends in the same direction,
and over the same route, as indicated by the course of the symp-
toms, and is capable of producing similar disturbances.
Masonic Temple, Chicago.
WATER AS A VEHICLE IN HOMCEOPATHY.
By Dr. Eduardo Fornias.
If we are to follow the advices of Hahnemann as to the purity
of our remedies, we must admit that the only water fit for our
purposes is the one obtained by the chemical process of distilla-
446 Water as a Vehicle in Homoeopathy.
tion. Distilled water, as every educated physician knows, does
not contain any mineral substances, organic matter, or animal or-
ganisms, present, invariably, in all natural waters, even when
boiled and filtered. Were these substances and organisms to re-
main in the best selected water, we could never expect any pure
remedy from its use, for these impurities would necessarily alter
its character and constitution. Distilled waiter is obtained by
rapid evaporations and condensations. When water containing
solid matters in solution is evaporated, the solids remain in the
vessel, while the water only is given off. By means of this fact
we are able to prepare perfectly pure water by distillation.
Owing to its great solvent power, pure water is never met with
in nature, and this is the reason why, when we are in need of
this vehicle, we have to resort to the process of distillation to ob-
tain it. It is, however, by no means an easy matter to prepare
absolutely pure water, even by this process, unless we take great
precautions and care. Even its keeping and handling after it is
obtained, if improperly done, renders this vehicle unfit again for
our pharmaceutical purposes, for there are comparatively few
substances which are totally insoluble in water and contamina-
tion is thus often unavoidable. Think for a moment of the
filthy containers, funnels and stoppers used by unscrupulous
hands, and the great caution required in attenuating drugs with
this vehicle. Xo less important is the atmospheric medium or
place where the process is conducted, as we know well how cer-
tain substances exhibit a marked tendency to combine with water,
or to absorb it from the air, and which often arise from materials
used in laboratorv work, either as drying agents or for other pur-
poses.
Then, again, wre should not endeavor to obtain chemically pure
water, but from the most reliable sources. Bear always in mind
that filtered water, passed through a Pasteur-Chamberland filter,
is as clear as distilled water, but clearness, as I have stated some-
where, does not necessarily prove that there are not impurities
present. All that heating could do in this case is to destroy the
germs contained in the water, but this water would remain still
impure. In a general way it may be stated, that the number of
microbes per cc. of water is proportioned to the percentage of
organic filth present. Examination of distilled water used for
Water as a Vehicle in Homoeopathy. 447
pharmaceutical purposes has shown from 5,000 to 15,000 mi-
crobes per cc. and there is no doubt that contaminated distilled
water would give the same, or nearly the same, results.
In our pharmacies distilled water is used, either to dilute the
alcohol with which the lowest solutions are made, or to replace
the alcohol in the preparation of the higher dilutions. Some of
our ultra-dilutioiiists, on the other hand, called into requisition the
natural waters, which are all contaminated, either at their sources
or in the channels of supply, and the contamination is effected
by absorption or by coming in contact with substances of vege-
table, mineral and animal origin. As seen above, neither boil-
ing nor filtering can render it suitable, and yet they use it
and claim impossibilities. I think it is time to correct this error
and be more consistent with Homoeopathy.
And in order to support my assertions, I proceed now to
analyze those potable waters, so indiscriminately used by men,
who, though falling often into error and ignoring certain pre-
cepts of the Master, would feel highly offended if you call them
anything but Hahneniannians.
Chemistry, as we all know, divides Natural waters into pot-
able (or drinkable), mineral and saline; none of them are ever
free from dissolved impurities. They contain gaseous, liquid
and solid impurities, varying according to the source from whence
derived ; the temperature, the nature of the soil or rocks over
which they have flown or the state of the air at the time have a
marked influence in their constitution. However, we are con-
cerned here only with potable waters, which include well and
spring waters, river water, lake water and ice water. But the
purest natural waters are rain and snozv water from mountainous
and country districts. Of course, the purity of rain water varies
with the locality where it falls. In the neighborhood of large
cities, where the air is charged with the products of large fac-
tories, etc., it will contain whatever of these can be washed out of
the air. Suphuric acid, for example, is comparatively abundant
in the air of large cities. Its source is mostly from the com-
bustion of coal containing Sulphur. The Chlorides in rain water,
principally sodium chloride, vary with the distance from the sea
coast. Ammonium nitrate and nitrite are also found in small
quantity ; they are derived from decomposing organic matter and
448 Water as a Vehicle in Homoeopathy.
from the combustion of coal. Another source of these compounds
is the oxidation of a small quantity of nitrogen of the air by
ozone generated by lightning in its passage through it.
Rain water also contains more or less dust and organic matter,
which it washes out of the air in falling. The gases found in
rain water are carbon dioxide (C02), nitrogen, oxygen, and
sometimes, in cities, Sulphur dioxide (S02) and hydrogen sul-
phide (H2S). Finally rain water, as ordinarily collected on roofs
of houses, is very much contaminated with both organic and
mineral matter washed from the roof on which it falls. It is
very liable to become putrid from the decomposition of this or-
ganic matter, and to breed the larva? of certain insects.
Rain water is sometimes stored in cisterns, covered in and
protected from heat and cold. Being fairly pure and soft for
drinking purposes, it should not be stored in leaden cisterns. The
waste water pipe of cisterns should never pass from the cistern
to the drain, or sewers, unbroken ; as, if the communication is
unsevered, at some point or other sewer gas is apt to find its
way into the cistern.
Melted snow furnishes a water even purer than rain water,
especially if we collect that which falls toward the end of a
storm.
Ice water varies very much in purity, according to the purity
of the water from which the ice is obtained. Ice, of course, is
always purer than the water from which it is formed, and when
obtained from clear lakes or rivers it is often the purest of nat-
ural waters, owing to the fact that in crystallization of water, or
freezing, it leaves part of the dissolved solids and gases in the
remaining water. The absence of the usual gases, however,
renders ice water flat to the taste.
Spring and well waters are simply rain water which has been
filtered through a more or less thick layer of soil. The nature
and quality of the dissolved matters, of course, will depend upon
the nature of the soil and rock through which it percolates or
over which it flows. In large cities, where the soil is saturated
with filth, the well zvaters are very impure; while in well-drained
and mountainous country districts they are much purer. Dan-
gerous organic matter may filter through many feet of soil and
poison the water of a well or spring. Shallow wells usually con-
Water as a Vehicle in Homoeopathy. 449
tain much more organic and less mineral matter than deep wells,
and are, therefore, more likely to contain dangerous or unwhole-
some matters. Shallow wells are essentially a pit for the reception
and accummulation of the drainage from the surrounding soil. For
convenience they are usually situated near the dwelling, where
the soil receives more or less household waste of various kinds,
and are often placed near a cesspool or privy vault. The effect
of the geological character of the soil is almost entirely obliterat-
ed by this local impurity. Such waters are very deceiving, for
even when disgustingly impure, are usually bright, sparkling
and palatable, and are often much approved by those accustomed
to their use. Deep wells may be regarded as artificial springs, as
both are subjected to the same conditions. Water derived from
artesian wells is determined by the nature of the rocks in which
it is found.
I have left the discussion of river water for the last, because
it is the vehicle usually employed by the ignorant, and the one
which offers the poorest guarantee of purity in laboratory work.
As we all know, river water is, like pond, lake and sea water, a
surface water, and, like them, consists of spring water, and rain
water, which has fallen upon a considerable surface of country.
We know, likewise, that the chief water supply of large cities is
taken from this source. Public hygiene is more concerned with
river waters than with any other waters known, and this on ac-
count of their frequent contamination by the discharging of
sewage and refuse into them, principally from city drains and
from manufactories along the river banks. There is no other
class of water containing a larger proportion of organic and
mineral matters than surface water. Surface water, draining
from a cultivated district, contains more organic and mineral
matter than that from uncultivated regions, and the character of
it is considerably influenced by the application of fertilizers to
the land.
River water, of course, is more or less pure, according to the
soil and watershed from which it is derived. If from peat it is
dark and unpalatable ; if from mountains it is usually clear and
fairly pure. If it rains heavy, especially in arable districts, the
water which falls as rain and percolates through the soil be-
comes highly charged with carbonic acid, which makes it fresh
450 Water as a Vehicle in Homoeopathy.
and sparkling. "Where it runs over lime or chalk it becomes ex-
tremely hard by taking up carbonate of lime. The hardness is
removed by boiling, the lime salts encrusting the kettle or pan ;
and in persons liable to vesicle calculus and gravel, such boiling
is necessary. Exposure to air also relieves hardness. But in
general, we may well say that river water is the most impure
water we have. Even when filtered and carefully manipulated,
the softer and purer it becomes, the more deleteriously it acts
upon lead pipes.
From wherever water is collected, it is usually conducted into
large water works, and there exposed to the air in settling ponds,
where any impurities of a solid character may fall; after which it
is filtered through filtering beds, and then distributed through iron
and lead pipes to the different divisions of towns. But even with
all these precautions zymotic poisons are there in sufficient quan-
tity to cause febrile affections and diseases of the intestinal canal,
and there is not the least doubt that these poisons are distinctly
associated with the question of sewage and the contamination
of the water by animal excreta. Filtration, then, has only a
relative value, and is important from a sanitary point of view,
but no filtered- water, even boiled before or after filtration, is
suitable for chemical and medical purposes. The handling and
care of filters and filtration beds is moreover a matter for serious
consideration ; the filters become clogged up and filthy, and the
chemicals usually employed for the purification of these apparatus
increase the difficulty. However, while not concerned here with
the character of good drinking -water, nor with water analysis,
one word may profitably be said of each one of these subjects.
In regard to chemical analysis we ma}- assert, without fear of
contradiction, that while it can tell pure from impure -water, it
cannot detect the disease-producing element. Only the biologist,
armed with a microscope, has been able to follow the evolution,
behavior, and reproduction of minute organisms and germs of
poisonous character, chiefly the unicellular type, known under the
name of protozoa, found in all waters polluted or not.
The pollution of rivers, we all must admit, is a most serious
affair, bearing heavily on the matter of public health, especially
in manufacturing districts like Philadelphia, where town follows
town aloncr the banks of the Schuylkill and Delaware, and where
Amputation- vs. Calendula. 451
the sewerage of one town, almost of necessity, pollutes the water
supply of the next. Then comes drainage, which also affects
rivers with zvaste and excreta; and it must be borne in mind that
waste includes not only our excreta, but those of our domestic
animals, the refuse of our food, and the disposal of the water
requisite for domestic uses.
By a careful review of all the preceding facts any intelligent
person can readily see. that there is much difference in the water
derived from various sources, that all potable waters are more or
less contaminated, and that the only pure water fit for chemical
and medical purposes is that obtained by the conversion of water
into steam and then its recondensation by cooling.
This is a resume of the history of distilled and potable waters,
which I hope will prove sufficient to convince my critics of the
errors in which they have frequently fallen, by employing noxious
vehicles in the preparation of their neo-potencies.
Moreover, why run such risks, and waste precious time in
the preparation of 'air high dilutions, when we have pharmacies
like those of Boericke & Tafel. that are better prepared and
know better than we do what a pure remedy is. and what vehicles
are the appropriate ones. Shoemaker, to your shoes.
706 W. York St.. Philadelphia.
AMPUTATION vs. CALENDULA.
For an outsider to chip in where the modern surgeon works
is, probably, a case of the fool rushing in where angels fear to
tread, but still the haunting idea persists that even the great
surgeon might sometimes have done better had he used simple
means. It will do no harm, however, to anyone to take a
look-in.
Dr. G. Paul La Roque writes ( Jour. Am. M. A., Sept. 4) of
a hand crushed, "infected with gas-bacillus." amputation and re-
covery. He writes : "Were it not for the fact that the patient
recovered from an infection which is alleged to be almost uni-
formly fatal, a single case report of an extremely rare infection
would scarcely be worth while." He had only seen one case be-
fore so infected, in Philadelphia, a young woman with compound
fracture of the ankle, who died within three days "in spite of
amputation at the hip joint."
452 Amputation vs. Calendula.
The case reported that recovered was that of a colored man
whose hand had been crushed in a machine. A diagnosis of gas-
bacillus wras mad from a smear which "showed the characteristic
organism of malignant edema, together with some mixed infec-
tion." "Amputation of the middle forearm was at once per-
formed." The next day the stump was examined and the same
bacillus was found. A higher amputation was at once considered
but as the patient's general health was good this was not per-
formed, the stump was dressed and — the patient recovered.
The query arises whether in this case, and similar cases, too
much faith is not put in the microscope and the alleged fatal ef-
fect of this or that bacillus ? Do these things come from without
or within? Would not this case have fared as well if the hope-
lessly damaged parts had been cut away and the remaining parts
washed with Calendula and water and dressed with the pure
juice of the Calendula — the succus Calendula ? The great Hel-
muth wrote in his Surgery that pus cannot live in the presence
of this agent and if pus cannot neither, probably, can the gas-
bacillus.
This treatment with Calendula is nothing new, or untried ; it
has been successfully employed in a countless number of cases
in the past. It is not a poison, while the agents largely employed
in its place are deadly poisons.
In a sub-rosa talk the other day with a man who does much
surgical work it was said that the bichloride was applied in
order to say, in case of things going wrong, that it had been em-
ployed, but the main dependence was on Calendula "because it is
a better antiseptic, and is also healing."
Fashion — custom — authority — rules with an iron rod in medi-
cine, as in hats : if you do the "proper" thing you are held blame-
less though the patient dies. Do the unsanctioned thing and
though you save fifty in consequence, should the fifty-first die
you may be pilloried for not following "the plain teachings of
modern medical science."
Man must of necessity, in his youth, be guided by the experi-
ence of his elders, but in medicine he should remember that each
age rejects the practice of the preceding age and sets up a new
fashion, or authority, to be, in turn, discarded and kicked aside
by the succeeding age and so on ; this is the rule, save in Ho-
moeopathy, which, being truth, changeth not.
The Seamy Side of Antitoxin. 453
THE SEAMY SIDE OF ANTITOXIN.
The report of a death from diphtheria antitoxin which had
been administered with a view to benefiting a case of asthma,
that was published in The Journal A. M. A., Jan. 4, 1908, led Dr.
H. F. Gillette, of Cuba, N. Y., to make an extended investigation
of the "untoward results from diphtheria antitoxin." The re-
sults of this investigation he embodied in a paper read before
the Medical Society of Xew York. It was published in the
N. Y. State Journal of Medicine, September. The following is
a summary of its contents :
The number of cases investigated was thirty; of these sixteen
died, while the others came so near dying as to give their phy-
sicians a very bad half hour.
The death seems to come from asphyxiation in the majority
of cases, or, as Dr. Gillette puts it, "twenty-two of the cases give
a history of respiratory distress." "The human subject dies
from respiratory crisis. He ceases to breathe and the cessation
is final."
"He has but a momentary warning of the crisis, and, as a rule,
the subject is dead in ten minutes after receiving the injection."
In patients subject to asthma, asthmatic condition, hay fever,
bronchitis, acute or chronic ; angino-neurotic edema and neuras-
thenic subjects, "we should inform the subject who is to receive
the serum and persons interested in the outcome of the case, and
avoid its use, if possible."
The thirty cases given in more or less detail are very interest-
ing. A composite picture of the "untoward effects" of serum
would show : Gasping for breath, protruding eyes, cyanosis,
frothing at the mouth, face ghastly or purple, bloated, convulsions
and the like.
One of the cases that recovered was that of a physician who
injected into himself 2,000 units of antitoxin in hopes of relief
from asthma, from which he suffered. In ten minutes he experi-
enced terrible dyspnoea with an over-shadowing feeling of im-
pending death. He was able to reach an easy chair and remained
in it unable to leave it for seven hours. His throat was so swoll-
en that he could hardly swallow or talk. A severe urticaria
broke out. (This is probably nature's means of giving relief.)
454 The Pharmacopoeia Question.
"He says nothing would induce him to take another dose of
antitoxin, nor give it to anyone with asthma."
Taking everything into consideration it looks as if the old
"indicated homoeopathic remedy" was still preferable to this
product of modern scientific, and laboratory, medicine concern-
ing which so little is known. Indeed, Dr. Gillette says of the
sera in general, ''it must be understood that there are many prob-
lems concerning them which are unsolved and that we are still
in the experimental stage of their use."
"Still in the experimental stage," says he, but when one reads
the many learned papers published monthly on the subject one
would be "led to the belief that serum was one of the few things
in therapeutics about which we are on firm ground.
THE PHARMACOPCEIA QUESTION.
Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder:
Pursuant to making the Homoeopathic Pharmacopoeia of the
United States official with the Government, a bill was introduced
into and passed by United States Senate and it now lies in com-
mittee in the House.
From his report, given on page 360, August number of the
Journal of the American Institute of Homoeopathy, it will be
seen that Dr. Carmichael, chairman of the Committee on Phar-
macopoeia, ascribes the opposition he has met with to improper
motives.
As a typographical production the Homoeopathic Pharmaco-
poeia of the United States is first-class. In its arithmetical as
well as in its pharmaceutical aspects it is discreditable. There
is not an alcoholic preparation provided for in the work that cor-
responds to what it is professed to be, — not one. P>ecause of
these faults I requested the Hon. J. R. Mann, who has the bill
in charge, to withhold action until the Institute could act upon it.
My suggestion to Dr. Carmichael to bring the situation before
the Institute brought his repeated request for my endorsement
of the work. I then suggested to the late president. Dr. Foster,
to do so. He turned my letter over to the secretary, and the
secretary turned it over to Dr. Carmichael. which were proper
The Fie us Religiosa Controversy. 455
and correct proceedings. That Dr. Carmichael turned the mat-
ter, in the aspect that I presented, over to the Institute I am not
able to affirm.
Using the work for the good that is in it is one thing. Adopt-
ing or endorsing it as a whole is quite another affair.
Cleveland, O., Sept. 6, 1909.
L. H. Witte.
THE FICUS RELIGIOSA CONTROVERSY.
Editor of the Homceopathic Recorder:
Sir: — I have perused the lines which you have written in con-
nection with the controversy relating to Ficus religiosa, and also
the lines which you have quoted from the remarks of the editor
of the Calcutta Journal of Medicine, in the "Editorial Brevities''
of Homceopathic Recorder of June, 1909. In reply, I hasten
to write the following lines which will, I dare say, dispel the
mist of misconception that prevails in the minds of both of you
regarding this plant :
(1) I have proved Ficus religiosa, but not Ficus infectoria
(Pakur). It is quite true that the native name of Ficus religiosa
is Ashwatha, but not Pakur. In Dr. Clarke's "Dictionary of
Materia Medica" the name of the plant has been published to be
Pakur through mistake, for which I was alone responsible.
This mistake was rectified by me in all of my subsequent articles
and writings dealing with Ficus religiosa.
{Vide Homoeopathic Recorder, June, 1904; Medical Ad-
vance, August, 1904: Journal of the British Homoeopathic So-
ciety, July, 1904: Indian Homoeopathic Reporter, edited by me,
April, 1904.)
The first volume of Dr. Clarke's Materia Medica was pub-
lished in 1900. At the request of Messrs. Boericke & Tafel, I
wrote an article dealing with this plant which was published by
you in the Recorder of June, 1904. It will be found in that
paper that the name Ashwatha, but not Pakur. has been given
to Ficus religiosa.
(2) The present editor of the Calcutta Journal of Medicine
has also stated that Ficus religiosa does not possess the virtue
456 The Ficus Religiosa Controversy.
of stopping haemorrhage from the bowels and the lungs. I
don't know how to characterize this statement on his part. I
cannot but confess that I have read it with a good deal of sur-
prise. It becomes all the more reprehensible when I see that he
has gone astray from the path of duty and has ruthlessly sacri-
ficed truth before the Moloch of ignorance. He has published
this amazingly erroneous statement without having consulted the
General and Aymvedic Medical Works of India regarding this
plant.
Sabdakalpadruma is the most learned and comprehensive Sans-
krit Encyclopaedia of India, and was edited by the late Raja, Sir
Radhakanta Deb. If we consult the word Ashwatha in this
book and translate the Sanskrit text, we shall find that it has the
virtue of stopping haemorrhage, not only from the bowels and
the lungs, but also from the uterus and the bladder.
Biswakosa, another Encyclopaedia in Bengali, attributed the
same virtue to Ashwatha.
Rajnirghanta, Vabaprakasha, Charaka and Susruta are the
foremost Aymvedic medical books, and their names are known to
all of us, and specially to every Kaviraj of India. I" these great
medical books of our country we can very easily find that Ash-
watha has been recommended as a remedy of great value for
stopping haemorrhage from the bowel, lungs, uterus and bladder.
In Banasadhidarpana or the Aymvedic Materia Medica, by
Kaviraj Biraja Charan Gupta Kavibhusana, Vol. I., p. 55. and
also in the Materia Medica of India, by R. N. Khory, Part II., p.
559, we find that the above-mentioned virtue is attributed to
Ashwatha.
These conclusive and authoritative opinions will, no doubt,
silence him and will go a long way to prove that Ashwatha is
a valuable remedy of Aymvedic Materia Medica possessing
marvellous anti-haemorrhagic properties. I challenge him to
quote a single verse or sentence from any of these text-books to
prove the contrary of what I have asserted in this letter.
(3) The editor of the Calcutta Journal of Medicine has writ-
ten that Pakur is Ficus religiosa. But in spite of my laborious
search of this most Latin name of Pakur, I could not find it
in any of the standard books dealing with Indian plants.
David Prain, in his ''Bengal Plants/' Vol. II., p. 981 ; Rox-
The Ficus Religiosa Controversy. 457
burgh, in his "Flora Indica" hi. 550; Sir Dietrich Brandis, K. C.
S. I., in his "India Trees," p. 602 ; Sir Joseph Hooker, in his
"Flora of British India;' Y.. 515, and Dr. George Watt, in his
"Dictionary of the Economic Products of India,''' F. 216, have
published the Latin name of Pakur to be Ficus mfectoria. It
will thus be apparent that the editor of the Calcutta Journal of
Medicine has committed a sad error in publishing this false name
of Pakur. We are sadly eager to behold the mote in our
brother's eye, and don't pay the slightest possible attention to
our own condition. This carping propensity should not be dis-
played by any self-respecting member of our profession. It is
not possible for me to enumerate all the cases that have been
radically cured by me and by other homoeopaths with the help
of Ficus religiosa in this short letter. I have a mind to do so
later on. I don't know why the editor of the Calcutta Journal
of Medicine has tried to mislead the minds of my colleagues by
the totally erroneous remarks.
He, who has the audacity to write anything disparagingly
against a known remedy, must not do so without rhyme or reason ;
but should substantiate his statement with well-authenticated and
authoritative opinions. In a serious controversy vague state-
ments are of no avail and they generally fall flat on the ears of
those for whom they are intended.
I am fully conscious of the responsibility of my position and
know very well how to prove drugs.
Xo one can fail to read between the lines with which he has
concluded his article without detecting his deliberate purpose to
pour ridicule upon the head of a tried remedy and his admoni-
tion to the future compilers of our materia medica is not only
ill-timed, but also ill-conceived.
In conclusion, I request my colleagues to rise to the height of
their responsibilities, to dive deep to the bottom of the matter and
to arrive at a true conclusion.
Sarat Chandra Ghose, M. D..
Editor of the Indian Homoeopathic Reporter,
Bhowanipore, Calcutta, India.
458 The Treatment of Malaria.
THE TREATMENT OF MALARIA.
Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder:
In the Recorder of the 15th inst., page 425, you ask for help-
ful things on malaria.
If it will heip, I am willing to state my experience in treating
intermittent fever.
I cannot arrest a paroxysm or prevent recurrence with any
potentized remedy, and after long and disappointing efforts along
such lines I have given up trying.
Massive doses of sulphate of quinine will not (neither will
anything else) break up a paroxysm after it sets in, but it cer-
tainly will prevent recurrence if given at the golden moment.
This "golden moment" is as important as the remedy itself. It
comes first after the whole paroxysm — chill, fever ?nd sweat has
been completed. Just then — when the storm is entirely over —
give one dose, the size of which I will indicate later.
The goeden moment comes again three (3) hours before the
next paroxysm is due ; always remembering that the recurrence —
in a tertian or quotidian — is to be expected one hour earlier than
the last attack. If the last attack occurred at 12 m., the next
may be expected at 11 a. m. Therefore, to ward it off, it is neces-
sary that the dose be given at 8 a. m. Now, as to the size of the
dose : If your patient has not habitually used quinine, give 3
capsules of 5 grains each. If he is a user of the drug — moderate-
ly— give 25 grains. If he has used a great deal of it, give him a
dose of 40 grains. Don't be afraid of it. The intensity of the
malarial toxaemia will prevent marked physiological effects of the
quinine, and should such physiological phenomena — as tinnitus
aurium — follow, combat it by the physiological use of any bro-
mide, preferably the bromide of sodium in 5 or 10 grain doses.
The paroxysm itself never arrives. The patient is thankful.
You are happy. Perhaps your conscience accuses you of a de-
parture from the straight road of the Law ; but a moment's re-
flection will reassure you that you have done nothing of the
kind ; sulphate of quinine being homoeopathic to the disease, ma-
larial intermittent fever, beyond a peradventure.
Following such treatment, when fully assured that the acute
Concerning Dr. Mclutyres Contribution. 459
condition has been pretty positively blotted out. I put the pa-
tient on Arsenicum 30.x, two or three times a day for a week.
By this course I have never yet failed to break up "chills" in
regular, typical cases : whereas, by the system of trying to find
the potentized similiad, my patients usually left me after repeated
failures and took up permanent relations with my "regular"
brethren, who could and did "stop the chills.''
If one wants to be doubly sure that the seizure will not recur,
I do not know that any harm would come from availing your-
self of both of the "golden moments:" giving — say — 15 grains
at the one following the attack and 20 grains at the one pre-
ceding the expected attack.
This I once did when I myself was the patient, with satis-
factory results and not a recurrence in now over ten years.
As to the treatment of irregular forms of this disease, made so
in every instance by the careless use of quinine at wrong times,
may have something to say later.
John F. Keen ax, M. D.
Brentz^ood, Md., Sept. 22, 1909.
CONCERNING DR. McINTYRE'S CONTRIBUTIONS.
Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder:
I have just finished reading the article on "Kali phos.," by E.
R. Mclntyre. M. D., Chicago, 111., in which he expresses dis-
couragement in writing papers for our journals, and would like
an "Expression from members of the profession." etc.
Allow me to say, that, while I have not the honor of ac-
quaintance of Dr. M., I have always read his articles, whenever
I have met them, with great profit and pleasure. I, for one, sin-
cerely hope he will continue in his excellent, thorough work of
analysis and detail.
Prescriptions made under the law of Homoeopathy are so
peculiar, and, when accurate, are so reliable, and the younger
practitioners seem to be so absorbed in the spectacular modali-
ties outside of our particular field of work, that there cannot be
too many articles written (and I hope. read), and 'printed, that
shall have materia medica pura for their subject and exposition.
460 Confusion of the Law of Similitude.
Let no one, then, who is able to expound our homoeopathic
drugs, ever fail to express in writing his fullest knowledge and
experience to the profession at large, and, through it. to hu-
manity. The older I grow and the more I practice, the firmer
believer I am in the efficacy of drugs homceopathically adminis-
tered. I admire the aids we have in Roentgen ray, high fre-
quency, static electricity, leucoclescent lamps, vibrators, etc., etc.,
and at the same time my admiration for the accurate homoeo-
pathic prescription grows apace. I pray Dr. Mclntyre to con-
tinue his excellent studies and writings.
Lam son Allen, M. D.
20 Elm St., Worcester, Mass.
DR. McINTYRE'S PAPERS.
Editor of the Homceopathic Recorder:
I just finished reading Dr. E. R. Mclntyre's paper in August
number of Recorder, and will say I always read them with in-
terest and profit. I have two volumes of the Hahnemannian
Advocate, in which he has a number of good articles. Don't get
discouraged, doubtless there are a great number of physicians
who turn to articles with your name attached.
Yours Frat,
Dr. B. L. Gordon.
Roanoke, Ind., August 20, 1909.
CONFUSION OF THE LAW OF SIMILITUDE WITH
THE CHANNELS OF INTRODUCTION AND
DOSES OF THE REMEDIES.
A Reply to Dr. C. M. Boger, of Parkersburg, and Dr. Pompe,,
of Vancouver.
Editor of the Homceopathic Recorder:
In the July number of the Recorder, pages 317, 318 and 313,
appeared a few objections and questions relative to a paper of
mine published in the previous number of the same journal On
the Hypodermic Injections of Remedies Selected in Accordance
With the Law of Similitude.
Confusion of the Laz^> of Similitude. 461
Dr. Pompe starts his criticism by saying, without giving a rea-
son why. that my procedure savors much of allopathic methods,
appearing to ignore that Homoeopathy does not consist in the
material act of introducing a remedy by the mouth, neither any
other outlet of the body, but in the relation of similtuide existing
between the pathogenic picture of a remedy and the complex of
symptoms of a given disease. And so we have that, either if we
administer a remedy by olfaction, as Hahnemann so frequently
did, or by the mouth, rectum, or hypodermically. such a second-
ary matter would not altar its homceopathicity. AYhat is an in-
dispensable condition in Homoeopathy is strict individualization,
as stated in my anterior papers.
Commenting on the methods employed by Hahnemann for the
administration of remedies. Dr. Leon Simon. Sr.. says : "These
various ways of administration to which many others can be
added, and will be added with time, constitute a series of experi-
ments and trials, indispensable experiments in a new therapeutics.
nnavoidable trials, when we endeavor to establish this thera-
peutics with the precision demanded by the truth it involves.
(Commentaries on the Organon, page 600.) Of course, it is un-
necessary to mention that Leon Simon was one of the most illus-
trious homoeopathic practitioners of Paris.
It is routinery. indeed, to pretend that only one way or channel
is the scientific one for the administration of remedies. And
here. I repeat, the way of medicinal penetration has absolutely
nothing to do with the governing law of Homoeopathy. Amyl
nitrite is., in its individual cases, homoeopathic, whether it is intro-
duced by the mouth, by olfaction or hypodermically. Baptisia 0,
Chininum sulph. and Hamamelis 3X are homoeopathic to various
morbid processes, whether they are administered by rectal in-
jections or by the mouth. Hahnemann says that Homoeopathy
does not prescribe medicinal enemas (Preface of the Organon).
although he recommends the endermic method, for he asserts that
remedies by friction, together with doses by the mouth, cure
more rapidly than only by the mouth. ( Doctr. and Treat, of
Chronic Diseases, Preface, page VII.)
When we introduce a remedy in the organism ( mouth, in-
testines, skin) we do no more, no less, than to bring it in contact
with an absorbent surface, and. according to my views. Homceop-
462 Confusion of the Law of Similitude.
athy can follow its law and remain always immaculate, whether
the remedy is given by the mouth or subcutaneously. Why could
not the one who gives remedies by olfaction and friction admin-
ister them in enema or hypodermic injections? Are the buccal
and pituitary mucosas and the skin better absorbent surfaces than
the intestinal mucous membrane and the subcutaneous tissues?
I do not believe there is a physician who would dare to support
this position. If Homoeopathy does not reject olfaction and
friction, why should it be so illogical as to repudiate enemas and
injections? Moreover, as I have already stated, Homoeopathy
has nothing to do with manner of penetration of the remedy.
Our colleague, Dr. Pompe, asserts that the remedies intro-
duced subcutaneously do not act as rapidly as by the mouth, and
although he gives no reason for such an assertion, neither he tells
us if he has already experimented with the injections of our
remedies, only way of being able to judge of their value, I will
mention here a rigorous scientific fact which appeared in the
Hahnemannian Monthly, December. 1908, pages 887-888 : It
refers to a lady who entered the homoeopathic hospital of Massa-
chusetts suffering from chronic diarrhoea. Her index to colon
bacillus was .45. Being relieved by Natrnm sulph. at the begin-
ning of the treatment it was decided to repeat the remedy, which
continued indicated. It was administered by the mouth. She
was a month under observation without any change in the opsonic
index. Upon June 16th she was given, hypodermatically, Xatrum
sulph. 200X, and upon the 22d this dose was repeated. June 26th
index was found to have risen from .45 to .7. June 28th it was
.88. On this day a third dose of the same medicine was given.
Upon July 1st the index was .96, and upon July 4th 1.6. At this
time one dose of Natrum sulph. 30X was given in water and so
repeated at intervals of a few days thereafter. The index upon
July 12th, was 1.3; July 24th, .6; July 29th, .9. Here again one
cannot draw conclusions from a single case, but it seems that the
drug given hypo dermic ally in the indicated strength exerted a
more potent effect upon the index than when it was given in an-
other potency by the mouth. In August the pateint was sent
home cured.
And I summon now Dr. Pompe to state if this is Homoeopathy
or allopathy. (This datum was taken from the excellent paper of
Confusion of the Laze of Similitude. 463
Dr. Watters, of Boston, entitled "The Laic of Immunity and
Homceopathy")
The rest of Dr. Pompe's paper is too puerile to be seriously
refuted. Any physician knows quite well that before using
syringe and needle these must be sterilized with alcohol first and
then by boiling. Even in the most urgent cases this can be ac-
complished and without fear of admixtures.
And I now pass to reply Dr. C. M. Roger, of Parkersburg, by
saying that only the note of paragraph 244 is in apparent opposi-
tion to what I say in my paper referring to the administration of
Quinine in massive doses. Textually, the note says : "Larger
and oft repeated doses of Peruvian hark and of Sulphate of
quinine, may indeed rid such patients of the typical attacks of
marsh intermittents, but those who were deceived in this respect
will remain diseased in another manner unless relieved by anti-
psoric remedies.
Now, Hahnemann says that unless antipsoric remedies are ad-
ministered, the patient does not get well ; but we know also that any
remedy may be antipsoric if it has a relation of similitude with
the malady, or better still, with the patient, and if Quinine or its
sulphate are administered without being indicated by the totality
of the symptoms there is no doubt that instead of curing the case
it will be spoiled, just as it would happen with any other remedies,
whether given in strong, feeble and even infinitesimal. What is
said of Quinine is applicable also to Arsenicum, a drug so much
abused by the old school in the treatment of malaria.
From these statements we infer that there are cases of inter-
mittent fever needing Quinine for their cure without the aid of
any other remedy, and if indicated, the question of dosage or
attenuation is exclusively under the domain of experience. A
homoeopathic physician does not cease to be such for giving
strong doses, just as a disciple of Galen will not become a ho-
moeopath by using infinitesimal doses, if not guided by the law of
Similitude. For, although the attenuation of our remedies is a
general consequence of pathological physiology, there are a certain
number of drugs which act better in the lower dilutions and even
in the mother tinctures. Bryonia can be used from the lowest to
the higher attenuation, Berberis vulg. is only used in the mother
tincture, Hamamclis is chiefly employed in the mother tincture,
and Mercury is administered in ponderous doses in syphilis.
464 Confusion of the Law of Similitude.
Clinical experience teaches us that dosage should vary with the
remedies and with the diseases in which they are employed. For
instance, Mercury is given in ponderous doses in syphilis, but in
dysentery it should be administered in dilution. Sulphate of
quinine should be prescribed in massive doses when we intend to
combat malaria. Nux vomica and the poisons when indicated
here act much better in infinitesimal doses. Moreover in the
Nouvelles Lecons de Clinique Medicate, page 13, by Dr. P.
Jousset, we may find the clinical demonstration of the selection of
the doses. No one has given us so far a law to choose the doses,
and clinical experience only can relatively solve this difficult
problem.
It is a sign of obstructionism to pretend to impose on us a single
mode of administering remedies. Homoeopathy will never pre-
vent its followers to employ the way they may judge more con-
ducive to good results. But this fact does not make a homoeopath
a follower of Galen, or vice versa, for the manner of introduc-
tion of the remedy in the body does not exclusively belong to any
school of medicine. Neither does the bulk of a medicinal sub-
stance determine the methods of any school of therapeutics.
What characterizes our school is the observance of the law of
Similars, when selecting the remedy.
Commenting on the pretensions of certain homoeopaths to dic-
tate to their confreres the only way they claim to be proper for
the attenuation of our remedies, our illustrious friend from Lyon,
France, says : "It is singular, indeed, to observe that under these
circumstances, some of our colleagues, while rejecting the name
of Hahncmaunians, become Hahnonannians at once, and invoke
the authority of Hahnemann when they wish to reproach other
homoeopaths, who, for following the example of the master, are
under other circumstances called Haliucmannians without dis-
dain. Did not Hahnemann accept certain modifications proposed
by his disciples, and did he ever recommend his followers to
remain inactive, and sunken in routine." (Des z'rais caractcrs de
la therapeutique experimentale, pag. 67-68. — J. Gallavardin.)
This can equally well be applied to the administration and
dosage of remedies.
Dr. Rafael Romero.
Merida, Yuc, Mexico, 64 Sur. 581.
New Itch and Possibly New Remedy. 465
A NEW ITCH AND POSSIBLY A NEW REMEDY.
The following is taken from the N. Y. Medical Times for
October. It seems to be a good proving (externally) of cement.
Whether a good trituration of cement would possess any virtues
in certain skin diseases is a question that trial alone can solve.
Here is the paper in full :
"Cement maker's itch is a new disease of occupation, entirely
distinct from ordinary itch ; being neither parasitic nor con-
tagious, but produced by the chemical or mechanical action of the
cement upon the skin. Some physicians have attributed the cor-
rosive action to calcium carbonate and to sulphuric acid. Fresh
cement, however, does not contain calcium carbonate ; and it is
questioned whether slaked lime or even partly slaked lime will
produce this effect, for masons working with lime mortar are
seldom if ever attacked with cement maker's itch. The quantity
of sulphuric acid in cement is very small. Possibly the effect may
be explained by mechanical friction between the skin and very fine
but hard particles of cement. Briquette makers, observes Scien-
tific American, are subject to a similar but less serious annoyance.
Cement maker's itch and ordinary itch have one symptom in com-
mon— intense itching, especially at night. The itching appears to
be increased by the heat of the bed, and is also more annoying in
summer than in winter. Scratching may produce infected wounds
and swelling. Cement maker's itch is an occupational disease ;
true itch is seldom ^uch. The latter can be cured comparatively
easily, but not so cement maker's itch, which is likely to be follow-
ed by eczema and other complications. The managers of cement
works should always require their workmen to wear cotton gloves
and garments tightly fastened at the neck and at the wrists.
Cement workers on arches or ceilings should wear masks. Both
gloves and masks should frequently be washed."
At the request of the editor Messrs. Boericke & Tafel have
made a trituration of Cement up to the 3X. If you have any
intractable skin cases it might be useful to see what it will do for
them and report.
466 Therapeutic Pointers.
THERAPEUTIC POINTERS.
At a hotel this summer one of the guests mentioned the fact
that he was very subject to nose-bleed ; the landlord spoke up and
said, "Rag weed will cure every case." A few days after hear-
ing this comes the Medical Summary (Sept.) with an article by
Dr. J. A. Ward, of Troy, Mo., in which he claims that Ambrosia
artemesicc folia is a specific for nose-bleed. "When up against a
dangerous case don't stop to plug up but make a decoction of the
rag weed, if it is handy (or use the tincture), and give it in
strong doses internally." Several clinical cases are given ; one
which had been going on for forty-eight hours was stopped with
the second dose.
"I want just here to condemn the increasing list of laxatives
with fancy names, all of which are the same old racket — Aloin,
Strychnia and Belladonna. Aloin does great harm to folks who
have tender rectums or piles, and it will give tender rectums to
those who have tough ones in a short time. The Belladonna
simply paralyzes peristaltic energy, and adds to the constipation
in time. The Strychnia is not needed at all, so the whole formula
is bad ; but there is a big profit in the thing, and the manufactur-
ers keep right on doing harm instead of good. — Dr. H. R. D.
Blackwood, Phila., in Med. Summary.
Dr. L. Merch {Horn. E., E. and T. /., Sept.), of Brussels, Bel-
gium, finds Chromo-kali sulphuric urn, in the ix, 2x or 3X tritura-
tion, a good remedy for hay fever, both as a cure and preventive.
He gives nine cases, in eight of which it proved to be more or less
effective, while the one in which it failed was a woman who for
years had used a strong local application of cocain. Some slight
provings by Dr. Merch and a colleague developed red, swollen
mucous membranes, sneezing and pricking sensations in the eyes.
('Calcarea is a more universally needed remedy, perhaps the
most valuable of all the general remedies for tuberculosis, espe-
cially in pretubercular conditions — the fat, flabby, pale children
with tonsils and adenoids, and enlarged glands, with cold feet and
sweating of the head at night, with the dyspepsia that is so often
the first symptom of phthisis, with its dislike of fat and milk, sour
eructations, the aggravation of symptoms from cold and damp,
Book Notices. 467
dislike of open air, desire for warmth." — Dr. B. D. Wheeler,
British Horn. Review.
The Indian Homoeopathic Review (May, '09) tells of a case of
diabetes cured, remaining so for six years, by Picric acid 30.
Dr. P. C. Majumdar (Indian Horn. Rev., May) relates four
cases of very severe small-pox, one confluent and black, that
made brilliant recovery under Malandrinum 200th.
"For the pain of orchitis give five drop doses of Pulsatilla
every two hours," is a floating item in our esteemed "regular"
journals. Now where did they get on to that?
Drs. Comet and Pinert at the First National Congress of
Tuberculosis, at Saragossa, Spain, said : "After a careful review
of all the chiefly accepted Tuberculins we consider ours (the ho-
moeopathic) the most useful." — Fomias' Hahn. Monthly.
BOOK NOTICES.
A Text-Book of Materia Medica and Therapeutics. Charac-
teristic, Analytical and Comparative. By A. C. Cowperth-
waite, M. D., Ph. D., LL. D., Professor of Materia Medica
and Therapeutics in Hahnemann Medical College and Hos-
pital of Chicago, etc. Tenth edition, with an Appendix, en-
larged, including new remedies. 864 pages, 8vo ; canvas, $5.00 ;
half morocco, $6.00 ; postage , 28 cents. Philadelphia : Boericke
& Tafel, 1909.
In its make-up — paper, printing and binding — this is a fine,
satisfactory book. The paper is the light, spongy "rag" variety,
the paper favored by the publishers of England. It is strong, binds
well, takes a good type impression, and, above all, is very easy on
the eyes of the reader. The "cloth" binding is what is known to
the trade as "canvas," pleasing to the eye and exceedingly dur-
able.
As for the book itself nearly everybody knows about "Cowper-
thwaite's Materia Medica/' this is the tenth edition, a fact that
tells the tale of the usefulness of a medical work. The "Pro-
nouncing Index" requires eight pages, embracing in the neigh-
468 Book Notices.
borhood of three hundred remedies. In this Index the name and
pronunciation of each drug is given in full, with, of course, the
page on which it is found. This part is credited to Dr. Gross.
The book is rounded out with a very useful "Clinical Index,"
where, after the name of each ailment, or organ of the body, will
be found the drugs used or indicated.
As for the text matter the author writes in his "Preface to the
First Edition : "Up to the present time even the most condensed
works on materia medica present to the mind of the student only
a vast array of unmeaning symptoms, with nothing to point out
their comparative value, or to assist in their practical applica-
tion." So the student is apt to be discouraged. Cowperthwaite
starts in by giving the general, or physiological action of each
drug, which, being easily mastered, gives a firm foundation for
the detailed, and intelligent study of its homoeopathic symptom-
atology. This symptomatology our author, in general, divides
into two groups. 1st. Those symptoms which occur very often in
the provings, and which have been verified beyond question in
practice, these, the "grand characteristics," are printed in italics.
The second group are those symptoms which occur less frequently
in the provings, but have been equally positively verified in clini-
cal work ; these are termed characteristic, and are printed in the
regular type of the book. The remaining symptoms of the ma-
teria medica, he holds, have their place in the encyclopaedia, or
unabridged materia medica, but not in a practical, working book.
"In presenting the therapeutic range of each drug, only those dis-
eases or morbid conditions have been named in which the symp-
toms of the drug are most apt to occur, and in which clinical ex-
perience has most often verified its use, yet it must ever be re-
membered that diseases are not treated by name, and that it is
only when the totality of the symptoms presented by the patient
corresponds to those of the drug that its use becomes homoeo-
pathic." In subsequent editions, notably the 6th, the entire work
was carefully revised and largely rewritten, though there was no
deviation from the plan outlined in the first edition. The chief
change made was that of enlarging the brief "therapeutic range"
of the earlier editions to the "Therapeutics" as they now stand,
which cover the entire therapeutic action of the drugs so far as they
have been discovered up to date. The author has endeavored to
include everything reliable in therapeutics, as found in homoeo-
Book Notices. 469
pathic literature ; in this he has drawn on all books and current
literature.
The whole book is a masterly summary of what is verified and
practical in Homoeopathy, so arranged as to be of the greatest
convenience to the man who has to treat the sick. That the
author hits the bull's eye with his literary arrow is proved by the
fact of this, the Tenth Edition, being now before us. The world
knows what it wants.
The Scientific Reasonableness of Homoeopathy. By Royal S.
Copeland, A. M., M. D. 57 pages. Cloth, 50 cents.
This monograph is, as it were, the active principle of a number
of addresses delivered during the past few years by the author
and presented in one brilliant whole. The monograph is true to
its title. It places Homoeopathy and its Law in the same category
with the isms that are accepted as science in medicine ; demon-
strates to the unprejudiced that by the same rules it is quite as
scientific as the best of them, while to the esoteric it is plain that
it is far ahead of all of them as a real science. It is a good book
to read to gather therefrom data with which to rout the ultra
and smug men who flout Homoeopathy and say they are very
scientific.
BARTLETT'S DIAGNOSIS.
The Recorder is indebted to Dr. Fornias for the following in-
teresting translation from the Revista Horn. Brazeleira:
"In a controversy between the Gazeta Clinic® de S. Paulo (allo-
pathic) and Dr. Faust von Ebeling, of Brazil, a homoeopathic
physician, among the many good points made by our confrere in
defense of homoeopathic medical knowledge, he extolled highly
the Text-Book of Clinical Medicine (Principles of Diagnosis) of
Prof. Clarence Bartlett, stating, that if the critic of the Clinic
Gazette, of S. Paulo, had reviewed and consulted this work, he
certainly would not have dared to say that the homoeopaths do
not know how to diagnose a case, and completely ignored the
A, B, C of contemporaneous semoitics. Dr. von Ebeling also
says that a conscientious allopath of Rio had declared that in re-
gard to the semeilogy of the blood he did not know a better
book than Prof. Bartlett's Diagnosis."
Homoeopathic Recorder
PUBLISHED MONTHLY AT LANCASTER, PA.
By BOERICKE & TAFEL
Subscription $1.00, To Foreign Countries $1.24, Per Annum
Address communications, books for review, exchanges, etc.,
tor the editor, to
E. P. ANSHUTZ, M. D., P. O. Box 921, Philadelphia, Pa.
EDITORIAL BREVITIES.
Progress. — The leading editorial of the Journal A. M. A.,
September nth, is noteworthy. It is on "Infant Mortality." It
opens as follows : "Probably nothing is more fatal to real progress
than a mistaken idea that such progress has already been ac-
complished." Many cherish the belief that medical science has
greatly lessened infant mortality, but what little decrease there
has been seems to be due ''chiefly to the improvement in general
living conditions." Figures are then cited in proof from many
countries. Take our own country by decades, the death per
thousand under one year of age run: i860, 207; 1870, 200; 1880,
231; 1890, 234; 1900, 191. In the years intervening they have
risen and fallen. In Europe the countries run about the same
save in Switzerland and Italy, especially the latter country, "the
last one from which it would be expected," as it does not enjoy
the benefits of modern medical science so much as the others.
Prussia, the home of that science, hows but little change, i. e.,
205 against 199. The chief hope that the Journal sees is in
hygiene and "the proper instruction of mothers," etc. Why not
try plain Homoeopathy? We heard of an eight month child this
summer who had unlimited money and a very highly educated
and scientific physician, called in June, in September the kid was
still under treatment. This proves nothing. Neither does the
fact that infant mortality is about the same as it was in the medi-
cal dark ages of i860. But it makes one think that there is a
screw loose somewhere, or else this age is not as "brilliant" as it
says it is.
Editorials. 471
Tuberculous ''Literature/' — After reading some of the con-
descending matter sent out by learned bodies for the "education
of the public" on matters pertaining to consumption one is in-
clined to the belief that the spirit of "Sanford and Merton" must
have been reincarnated. For instance: "What is pulmonary
tuberculosis or tuberculosis of the lungs?" Answer: "Tuber-
culosis is a very common and fatal disease of the lungs, which is
given by the sick to the well." The first part of the answer is
Sanford and Merton, the second part is balderdash. The cause of
tuberculosis is "a tiny living germ.'' To avoid the disease you
must "keep strong and healthy.'' Bully ! Avoid "eating candy
or chewing gum which other children have had in their mouths"
is commendable advice, as is "go to a doctor" when a cough per-
sists. If you accidentally spit where you should not, gather up
the sputum and burn it with fire, or cover it with "lye and water."
Don't kiss or shake hands. "Don't spit," or "let others spit."
The last bit of advice should be qualified, for the spitter might
he a scrapper. There are good intentions in all this literature,
but its style leaves much to be desired. There is too obvious a
"writing down" to the public. Writers should use care to conceal
the fact that they are a superior race to "the herd."
Why Is It? — Year after year, year after year, we read of the
discovery of this, that and the other agent, or substance, or what
not; its chemistry cannot be questioned, and theoretically its ac-
tion must be scientific. Disease should cease in its sphere of
action. Year after year, year after year the list of these chemi-
cally scientific things increases — increases so greatly that no man
can compass them — yet disease holds its own, giving way to sani-
tation and better living only. The only things in medicine that
disease has to fear are the remedies of the homoeopathic physician :
the others come and go and change, are discovered and forgotten,
while disease pursues its unruffled way. Why is it that the world
does not accept Homoeopathy?
A HiNTj Mercury and Iodine. — A European professor,
Yvert, warned his hearers not to use an ointment of yellow oxide
of mercury, or calomel, in the eyes, or elsewhere, on patients who
are taking iodine in any from, else violent irritation will result.
Fortunately homoeopathic physicians have no need for using
these drugs in material quantities.
472 Editorials.
More Vaccination. — The anti-vaccinationists are working-
like beavers to put an end to cow-pox vaccination- and succeed-
ing to a considerable extent — yet here are the "dominant" ones
breaking out in a new, in many new, vaccinations.. Russell, in
the Military Surgeon, dwelling on the great things to be expected
from typhoid vaccination, says that about 35.000 men in the army
have been treated to this new form with "magnificent results as
regards protection" and with no untoward results. At present no
one can dispute these claims, but sound leason will not assent to
them. It is not reasonable to believe that the blood of a man can
be inoculated with vaccine after vaccine without "untoward re-
sults." The effect is not superficial, but sooner or later it will
crop out and it will not be pleasant.
Sausages. — In the August issue of the Medical Review of
Reviews we find an abstract credited to "Signer" (Annali d' I gene
Sperimentale, Vol. XIX, 1909), "On the viability of certain micro-
organisms in sausage," which might be rendered into street lingo,
"On the ability of bugs to live in sausages." The conclusion is
gratifying to all lovers of this sometime ridiculed edible. To make
a long story short it was found that the anthrax bacillus, the
pneumococcus, the glanders bacillus, the staphylococcus pyro-
genes, the bacillus prodigeosus, the streptothrix, and the bacillus
of pseudo-tuberculosis, all succumbed when caged in the sausage.
The hardiest held out for twenty-two days, while some of the
frailer gave up inside of two days. Thus it seems that the
sausage may be regarded, scientifically, as a culinary harbor of
refuge from the bacilli.
More New Words. — In a communication to "The Journal"
Dr. T. L. Hazzard, of Pittsburg, states that in writing a paper he
wanted a word for diseases that give immunity from a second at-
tack but finding none in the dictionaries had recourse to "sem-
elincident," meaning "happening but once." It is not to be found
in the dictionaries. To this the editor suggests that in his humble
opinion the word "immunifacient," also not in the word book,
would be better. Words are used to conceal your meaning ; to
express your meaning ; also to reveal your feelings, and for some
other purpose ; for instance, to convey the impression that you
Editorials. 473
are very learned. It seems to us that "happening but once" would
be clearer to the average doctor than "semelincident" or "immuni-
facient," even though it does not give the vague impression of pro-
fundity. However, Drs. Hazzard and Simmons have quite as
much right to coin new words as the men of the past. If the
verbal dance gets much faster it will require all the student's
gray matter to master the words alone leaving none for weightier
things. Then another von Hohenheim will be needed.
Is it Worth the Price? — The Proceedings, Transactions, etc.,
of the late Congress on Tuberculosis have been printed — 7,000
sets of eight volumes to the set. They are printed in English,
German, French and Spanish. It required seventy-five tons of
paper to print this stuff, and $5,000 for distribution in the United
States alone. What the cost of composition, press work, binding,
etc.. was is not given in the report before us, but it must have
been a goodly sum. Whether the money could not have been
expended to better purpose is a question the reader can answer
for himself. With a few literary exceptions this mass of printed
matter very likely will soon be sold for waste to the paper mills,
for no one will read it or preserve it. Probably the next Con-
gress will prove that it is all bosh anyway, for thereby is an ad-
vancing tendency most easily demonstrated.
Small-pox and Its Origin. — On this point the Monthly Bul-
letin of the New York State Health Department tells us that :
"Small-pox is not caused by impure water supplies, bad drainage,
uncleanliness, or any insanitary condition ; it is a disease which
develops only in susceptible persons, who catch it from small-pox
patients directly or indirectly." If this can be verified then it
follows that small-pox is an entity, as much so as the potato bug
or the gypsy moth. Undoubtedly every case of disease has a
cause, and the question is : Is the cause of disease an entity or
result of the violation of the laws of nature ?
The Verbalist Abroad. — The verbalist has broken loose in
medicine, and if he is not caged soon he can have a merry time,
for few can escape him. The following letter from "The Jour-
nal," September 11, tells the tale:
474 Editorials.
To the Editor: — I agree with Dr. Keen's contention in ''The
Journal" (August 14, p. 572) that the use of "data is" is a viola-
tion of an obvious rule of grammar; yet I doubt very much
whether this practice prevails on a larger scale than that of the
unwarranted promiscuous use of "ought" and ''should," of which
Dr. Keen himself is guilty, when in the closing sentence of his
second paragraph he says, "But it ought never to occur."
"Ought" is a defective verb and denotes a moral or a personal
obligation ; and "should" is the imperfect form of "shall," and
may, though it does not always, imply a social obligation. Thus,
we ought to obey the laws : but we should not give offense. We
should be good grammarians ; but ought to be honest. Besides,
the use of the neuter impersonal pronoun "it," in connection with
the verb "ought," is an incongruous combination, and the sen-
tence referred to should, therefore, read, "But it should never
occur."
Thomas J. Mays, Philadelphia.
Jarring the Specialists. — Dr. Burdic relieves his feelings
(perhaps some will say "amen!") as follows: "I have often won-
dered, what mental process leads the specialist to write a paper
upon some unheard of subject, when attending a medical conven-
tion in the country, and who strolls out into the ante-room, or
holds a conversation with some acquaintance, while some country
doctor is laboring with a paper on some practical, even-day dis-
ease. Is it superior wisdom, or would he have the convention be-
lieve that he is so well posted upon common topics, that they no
longer interest him. Why the patronizing air that he assumes in
meeting country physicians or in debate? Possibly the specialist
knows it all ; but there is a well-grounded suspicion that the coun-
try physician knows more in one minute about the real theory and
practice of medicine than this gentleman will in his whole life."
Down at the root of the matter it will be found that there are
specialists and — "specialists." It is also to be noted that Dr.
Burdick not being a homoeopath is not referring to our ho-
moeopathic men.
The "Emmanuals." — Dr. F. F. Casseday thus lets go at the
"Emmanuals," or one of them, in the H7isconsiii Medical Re-
Editorials. 475
c order: "A recent addition to the ranks of the cult is a clergy-
man and his methods are typical of those of a majority of the
practitioners of this latest mind cure fad. He is evidently out for
the coin as he charges good stiff prices, and expects the poor as
well as the rich to pay for his valuable (?) services. He has no
license to pay, has never expended any time or money on a medi-
cal, anatomical or physiological education, has never studied
psychology, has sneered at Christian science and its votaries, has
no office rent to pay as he uses the church for his work, and all
things considered has a nice, fat, juicy graft, in addition to his
salary from church for ministerial work. He is so flushed with
success that now he is treating abdominal tumors by his peculiar
( ?) method, and continues his treatments as long as the patient's
money, faith and credulity hold out." "What fools these mortals
be !"
A Pathologist on Homceopathy. — Dr. W..H. Watters in his
paper read before the American Institute of Homceopathy (New
England Med. Gazette, Sept.) states that at the beginning of his
career he was very skeptical towards Homceopathy. Twelve
years of laboratory work (he is professor of pathology, Boston
University), however, has wrought a change: "The result is that
the skepticism has entirely disappeared to be replaced by a firm
and steadfast belief that the statements made by Samuel Hahne-
mann scores of years ago are in their essential features not only
true but are now becoming capable of actual laboratory demon-
stration. In other words, I have by laboratory and* allied study
become convinced that the phrase sindlia similibus curentur stands
for a great principle not only in connection with drug therapy but
probably applicable to many other remedial agencies as well. I
believe that the production of immunity, that goal so ardently
striven for by the dominant school in medicine, has been, is now,
and will be in the future attained largely, if not entirely, by ap-
plication of the same principle that underlies the homoeopathic
faith." Young men heading toward allopathy ought to re-read
the foregoing, indicating, as it does, that the very acme of
"modern scientific medicine" consists in old Homceopathy, the
science of therapeutics.
Trichinosis. — The Chicago Medical Times, September, con-
476 Editorials.
tains a paper on this subject by Dr. C. N. Brown, of Fairmount,
Ind., who recently attended four cases, one of which died.
Autopsy revealed the cause of the death, trichinae. Before her
death the girl confessed to eating a little raw sausage that the
family, farmers, were making. Further inquiry revealed the fact
that numerous rats had been caught and were disposed of by feed-
ing them to the hogs. This is a point worth noting by any reader
having a country clientele. The hog, contrary to the common be-
lief, is by nature and preference a cleanly animal, but he is often
given a raw deal in his food, and the result is trichinosis, or some
other disease for which man is responsible.
That Tuberculin Test. — This test seems to be universally
accepted by the "regular" profession, yet if you were to ask the
next man whom you meet who practices it what are the scientific
grounds for its acceptance he would probably be unable to give a
satisfacory answer; he accepts it on — tradition. Dr. Franz
(Weiner Klinische Wochenschrift, July 15) relates seven years'
experience with-it on 1,000 soldiers; 575 positively responded.
"Only a small proportion of those giving a positive response have
shown any signs of tuberculosis during the years since.'' He
advocates bigger doses for the "test." Oh, you scientific medical
world !
Are Idiots x\ll Blondes ? — In a letter to the Medical Record,
August 21, Dr. Bertha C. Downing, of Lexington, Mass., writes
that in the past twelve years 3,000 feeble minded and epileptic
children have come under her observation. "The congenital
feeble minded in this 3,000 were, with few exceptions, blondes,
and those exceptions were not true brunettes." Another peculi-
arity is that in many the forefinger is longer than the third finger.
It does not follow from this that every blonde is feeble minded or
that every brunette is strong minded.
Mortality. — Dr. G. R. Turner, The Lancet. July 24, advises
early operation when a diagnosis of appendicitis is made, and at-
tributes "the present mortality of operations during attacks almost
entirely to delay." From this it might be inferred that there is
considerable mortality. "Bis" we believe, stands for inflamma-
tion, and there be men who think that inflammation belongs
Editorials. 477
rather to medicine than to the operating table. Then. too. it is
said that unless a man is a good diagnostician he may mistake old
fashioned bellyache for the more formidable disease, which some
men say is of rather infrequent occurrence. There is so much to
learn in this world that all have their limitations, though not all
will admit it.
Anopheles Not in This Epidemic. — The London letter of
the Journal A. M. A. tells of official reports received from the
Governor of the Seychelles Archipelago, 750 miles northeast of
Madagascar, describing an outbreak of an epidemic of malaria
which was remarkable from the fact that the closest investigation
failed to reveal a trace of the anophele mosquito. The epidemic
started in the dry season. "Further search for the anopheles dur-
ing and after the rainy season was made for five months, but it
could not be found." Apparently a conservative skepticism is
desirable towards the too much heralded discoveries of to-day,
which are too often a confusing mixture of fact and hasty theory.
Testing the Patient. — One of the leading papers in the
Medical Record, August 7, is devoted to the "Ocular Tuberculin
Reaction." For four days the patient's face is washed with soap
and water three times a day and a 1/8,000 solution of bichloride
of mercury is dropped into the eye after each washing. After six
days a culture is taken, and if any bacteria are found the operation
is resumed for two days ; after this the eyes, or eye, is irrigated
for two days with a saline solution to wash away the bichloride
and any organism remaining. Then another culture is taken, in-
cubated for twenty-four hours, and if no organism is found, the
eyes are bandaged for an afternoon, and "the tuberculin test is
made in the usual way." This procedure is probably very satis-
factory if the patient be rich and confiding. The actual value of
the tuberculin test is generally placed in the "doubtful" category
after it is made.
Dr. W. Osler Again. — The British Medical Journal July, has
for its leading paper "The Treatment of Disease," by Dr. Osier.
It is chiefly advice to students. Among the many things the stu-
dent should do is to personally give a syphilitic baby daily inunc-
tions of mercury and "he should give deep injections of calomel."
The homoeopath naturally asks, "But how about the patient?"
478 Editorials.
Medicine as She Is Practiced. — One of our esteemed con-
temporaries has opened its pages to a discussion as to how to give
painless injections of Lobelia. One correspondent has solved the
problem. He takes twenty minims of Lobelia and to it adds five
drops of a 4 per cent, solution of cocaine. ''This injection is
followed by no pain whatever in ordinary cases." Why not
chloroform the patient before injecting the twenty minims of the
Lobelia f
Some Gentle Irony. — President Foster in his address at De-
troit noted the fact that in the decade ending 1900 "bacteriology
made a brilliant record. The antitoxins and specific serums were
all highly exploited," but during the same period, according to the
United States Census Bureau, "the death rate materially in-
creased in the Uinted States." We'll bet a Pedro Murias against
a Pittsburg stogie that the increase did not occur in the practice
of our practicians who stick to plain Homoeopathy, without too
many frills thrown in.
The Pot and the Kettle. — For years English physicians
have been kicking with British obstinacy against pharmacists pre-
scribing medicine. Now the members of the British Pharmaceuti-
cal Conference have made a united kick against the doctors for
dispensing medicine without the intervention of the pharmacist.
While this kicking match is going on patients are wandering oft
into other fields, where he can be "amused" at lower rates, and, in
many cases, quite as effectively. If homoeopathic practicians
would stick to their distinctive pellets and "powders" they would
display the wisdom of the serpent.
There's Much in a Name. — "The truth is that we Americans
who have not travelled in foreign countries are apt to 'kow-tow'
to some foreign Von Bang der Schlam and attribute great weight
to his words and deeds when some ordinary Dr. John Smith, of
Texas, or Montana, is really a better operator and one who has
already 'delivered the goods.' " — E. P. S. Miller, M. D., in Wis-
consin Medical Recorder.
Concerning Names. — The following from The Zoological
Bulletin of the State of Pennsylvania expresses the sentiment of
so many men that we give it unchanged, only adding that the best
News Items. 479
way is to have printed letter heads: "It again becomes necessary
to call attention to the remarkable ease and rapidity with which
every person can write his own name. He is so familiar with it
that he knows it whether he sees it upside down, backwards, or
otherwise distorted. We are good at guessing and at reading
poor writing, because we have experience with our own, but it is
impossible to guess correctly a proper name when poorly written.
We desire to be courteous and send replies promptly and in such
way that they will reach the inquirer, but owing to insufficient or
careless address, this is not always possible.''
The Old Doctor. — It is now said that the first physician of
whom we have any knowledge and precious little of it, was named
I-em-Hetep. He was an Egyptian who lived and practiced any-
where from 4,500 to 6,000 years B. C. After he died he became
a god. His revenue was probably next to that of the king.
Probably he mixed religion with his physic as our present day
Emmanuel movers do. Doctoring was evidently a profitable occu-
pation in those days, and will become so again in the future if it
can be combined, or reunited with its original D. D. part. Mrs.
Eddy shows the financial possibilities of the combination. When
reunited the doctor can tell the patient to do thus and so or be
damned.
NEWS ITEMS.
At the meeting of the Board of Trustees of the American In-
stitute of Homoeopathy held at Washington on October 6, the
contract with the Medical Century Company was annulled. After
the end of this year there will be no official journal of the In-
stitute.
The Medical Century Co. announce removal of their N. Y
office to St. James Building, 1133 Broadway.
Dr. A. B. Caro, Hahnemann, '08, has located at Merida, Yuca-
tan, Mexico.
Since the filtration system of Philadelphia was put in operation
cases of typhoid have decreased nearly 80 per cent. Score a big
point for filtration.
Dr. Thomas G. Roberts has changed his residence from 229 to
814 E. 42d St., Chicago. Office, J2 Madison St 1001.
PERSONAL.
The civilization of any country could be measured by the number of its
homoeopathic physicians, said Dudgeon.
The real reason why men assemble is to have a good time.
" — uric acidaemia, a polite scientific nomenclature that really means
gluttony and gonococci." — Z. T. Miller.
Health boards ought to insist on "individual oceans for bathing," says a
sarcastic writer.
"Properly vaccinated persons cannot become a care on the counties," says
an optimistic Montana health board.
A contemporary has an article on "Team Work by Clergymen and
Physicians." The signals are not revealed.
They say there is a demand for the "untrained nurse."
Many a prejudiced man bitterly laments the prejudces of his fellowmen.
It has come ! To "typhoid carriers" now add "diphtheria carriers." It
will only stop at the end of the disease list.
Surgery is being "cut up into little pieces," they say.
That downward revision. "Liners lose in race to avoid Aldrich tariff's
high duties." "Will lose $100,000." Head line in daily paper, August 6th.
"An income tax is unfair to the rich ; make 'the people' pay." Sarcastic
proletariat.
The Society for the Suppression of Noise should turn its attention to the
piano.
No poet uses the gas meter more than he can avoid.
Wagner's Gotterdammerung has a familiar sound to the western steam-
boat mate.
The papers report a detective in Chicago who was buncoed by a crook.
"The lad died of respiratory failure." — Dale.
"Psychasthenia" ranges from excentricity to dementia. Most men must
have it.
"Yes, dear, go to the Thousand Islands and stay a month on each."
Accommodating husband.
A short sighted man recently mistook a shredded wheat biscuit for the
whisk broom.
California Examining Board question: "What is meant by 'typhoid
carriers?' "
" 'Prosperity' means the gathering of many little $ piles into a few big
ones." Grouchy one.
When a writer tells you "how to succeed'' put him down as a writer-
fakir.
There is no East, no West, no North at the Pole — it's all Dixie-ward
there.
Not all progress is commendable — in counterfeiting, for instance.
The small boy defined ground-hog "sausage."
"If the shoe fits" some women (and men) won't wear it; want a smaller
THE
Homeopathic Recorder
Vol. XXIV Lancaster, Pa., November, 1909 No. 11
A VERY REMOTE SIMILITUDE.
Strange as it may seem, to some, man has his limitations. He
cannot violate the law — the law not made by man — with im-
punity, nor fully know its innermost working.
Man cannot create, or change, or fully comprehend, what for
want of a clearer term, is called a "natural law."
If man follows its known workings, it is well with him; if he
goes contrary, it is ill with him.
The remote similitude it is here sought to sketch is shadowy.
Some readers may think it fantastic — perhaps it is. Either way
the thing is worth considering.
Not long ago (where, and who, they were, is immaterial)
some men were talking "shop." There was no dispute, or argu-
ment. One of them referred to the Organon as authority for
something he had said ; another replied, a little regretfully, one
could imagine, that he had never studied the book, or even read
it. He was a very busy man, he said ; it required all of the little
spare time he had, to keep abreast of modern medicine ; he feared
that he even fell short in that respect, for he could hardly keep
up with the numerous advances in modern medicine. "Really
I have no time to read ancient literature, though I have no doubt
but that the Organon is excellent, and was very useful in its
day." This was about all that was said on the subject.
* * * * * *
A good many years ago there lived a herdsman named Abra-
ham. If we were to meet his near-kind today probably we would
regard him as a barbarian, one on whom we should have to
keep a wary eye, and we would not be very- wrong in doing so.
• The times in which Abraham lived were primitive. The law
482 A Very Remote Similitude.
of physical might prevailed. The same law prevails today, but
in a more refined manner. It prevails among nations rather than
among individuals ; a good police force makes it powerless
among the people. In Abraham's day if a man wanted his neigh-
bor's property he went and took it, if he were able. If he wanted
his neighbor's wife he killed her husband and took her. This
is evident from the accounts of the misrepresentations made by
Abraham on various occasions that have come down to us in the
books of Moses. In a general way every man took what he
could with safety to his life. It was the standard of the time to
do so. It was an evil time.
The people created their own gods out of wood, stone or metal.
All of the intelligence of these gods necessarily came from their
creators. It was not very remarkable. One god, Molech by
name, had a sort of fiery adjunct. He was worshipped by cast-
ing men into the fire appertaining to him and there letting them
writhe in agony and roast to death. Some of the ultra worship-
pers cast their own children in the fire of Molech. This is histori-
cal fact. They were not a very high-grade people ; in fact, it
might be said (save by the very tender hearted) that the world
would be better if they wTere put away, which, as there were no
penitentiaries, could be done only by the prevailing, primitive
and direct method of killing them and their progeny. This may
seem to be cruel, but the people were like animals in that the
young possessed the characteristics of their sires when they grew
up.
God appeared to Abraham, told him certain things and made
conditional promises to him. Our most learned present-day
medical scientists reason that Abraham, and many men who had
similar experiences after him, were epileptics. That is a matter
which never can be scientifically settled. It must rest on sur-
mise. If it was epilepsy, then that disease is one on which the
medical profession should bestow great study, for wonderful
things followed it. Perhaps thence arose the saying "Genius is
akin to insanity."
In time the descendants of Abraham dwelt in Egypt. We are
now where "fable," or "revelation,'' (choose for yourself), and
"profane" history meet. This people were surely there, many of
them working as slaves in the brick-yards of Pharaoh.
A Very Remote Similitude. 483
Another cattle herder (though he had been raised in the Egypt-
ian court), Moses by name, had an experience similar, or some-
what akin, to that of his then remote ancestor, Abraham. God
appeared to him — or he had an epileptic fit — according to your
point of view.
Then Moses led these people out from Egypt — some say
they were driven out as pests, but this is immaterial. They left
Egypt- They were a people without a country.
At a place called Mount Sinai there was revealed to Moses a
code of laws that were summarized in what we know today as
the 'Ten Commandments/' or the Decalogue. The world had
nothing like them before. They were new. They were vitally
different from the old rules of life.
The people who followed Moses, were told that if they obey-
ed the Book of the Law it would be well with them and they
should possess the country promised to Abraham — the "promis-
ed land," but if they disobeyed they would be dispersed and
made slaves again. The effect would follow the cause. Their
history has long been before all who care to read it. With
many fallings away, with the attendant evil consequences, these
people, after about the time that would reach from the landing
of Columbus to our day, became, under King David, a great
and strong nation, the most powerful existing at the time. They
possessed the "promised land." David's son, and successor,
Solomon, aided by Hiram, Tyrian, "a widow's son," (of whom
some readers have heard), built the great Temple. That was
the zenith of the nation. But in their power they forgot what
had led them to it. One can imagine the men of Jerusalem
proudly pointing to the city and Temple, as the "work of our
hands" — which in one point of view they were with a profound
difference. One can fancy the solid men smiling at the "fables,
and ancient literature of our forefathers," and busily "investi-
gating" the gods of their neighbors which they did with great
assiduity, even Solomon joining in as we read.
In time the nation split into two kingdoms, Israel and Judah.
The Assyrians carried away the first named and there is no
record of their coming back. They are "the lost tribes." Some
men say their descendants are the Afghans who bother the
English so in the East today. Years later the King of Babylon,
484 A Very Remote Similitude.
Nebuchadnezzar, carried off the remaining nation, Judah, of the
descendants of the herder, Abraham.
The Book of the Law had been completely ignored by them
in their power. Its existence was forgotten. We read that in
the latter days, when Josiah was King of Judah, the high priest
(offices are things that men never forget) was searching one
day in the lumber rooms of the dilapidated Temple. He found
there the book, the Book of the Law. He took it to the king,
and his councillors, and it evidently was a curious old thing, to
them. They knew nothing about it. But it was too late. They
had turned completely away.
In time the Book, the Ten Commandments, with "a new com-
mandment" added, passed to the barbarians who roamed where
Paris, London and Berlin, now stand. These men had remained
barbarians from the beginning. Afterwards they grew as did
the descendents of Abraham, when they were custodians of the
Book of the Law. This, broadly speaking, is history. A latter day
psalmist wrote something that momentarily arrested the attention
of all of us living today. The burden of it is :
"Lest we forget."
It seems that in the slow moving drama of the nations Ef-
fect follows Cause quite regardless of what man would do to
have it otherwise. It is so in everything.
^c ijj >!< sj« :•: ^
In the medical dark ages, not long since passed, men sacrificed
their fellows on the altar of venesection. Was not one, George
Washington, taken ill? The doctor was called, and bled him;
getting no better, greater doctors were called, and they bled
him until there was no more blood left in his veins and then he
was gathered unto his fathers. They had other rites, that of
mercury, for example, in which the sufferings of those sacrificed
were lengthened.
Into this dark age came a book called the Organon. It did not
come as did the Book of the Law to Moses, but it came. Some
men followed the teachings contained therein. The results they
obtained were close to the borderland of miracles. Here was a
new Law. The great pest came from Asia and was upon the
people, and they died in greater numbers than ever fell before
A Very Remote Similitude 485
an armed Asiatic horde. Where the pest was met by obedience
to the new Law of the Organon, it was stayed, and became as
other diseases. So with many other pests and physical in-
iquities. The devotees of venesection raged, but they prevailed
not. Yet it was not religion, nor was it miracle. It was the im-
mutable working of a "natural law," of effect following its cause.
A mighty medical nation, as it were, grew up, with great
buildings, and ever increasing power, acquired by following the
teachings of this book, the Organon. Without those teachings
there would have been no medical nation, or temples. Logic-
ally, if those teachings are forgotten the reason for being of the
nation, and the temples, (or, less figuratively, colleges), ceases.
The law will go to others. It remains regardless of what men
do.
Does not this limit progress? That may be answered by
another question. Does the following of the Ten Laws of the
Book of Moses limit progress? Those who followed the Book
of the Law, saw the Temple of Solomon. Their posterity turn-
ed to more up-to-date gods and the unchangeable working of
cause and effect made them slaves, for a turn-coat can never be
as to the manor born. Man may rise to higher things, with
added freedom, but he cannot descend to lower tilings without
loss.
The medical gods of the other nations today are changed so
rapidly that those who try to keep tab of them become bewilder-
ed and are derisively dubbed "back numbers." The philosopher,
however, has but to glance at the "rubbish heap" to see the god
of yesterday, whom all men were compelled to worship, lying
there, forgotten and dishonored, yet probably he was as potent
as the god of today, or the god of tomorrow. It is grim
comedy. It has been played since the days of Moses. It ever
and always reeks of fresh paint. It is always "the latest." That
seems to be its name. Science steadily builds the great temple
of knowledge and it is permanent, but the therapeutic gods are
ever being changed.
:■; ;-c ;f: ^ ^ *
Perhaps to some all this may seem but a fantastic lot of com-
parisons ; to some may appear a remote similitude ; to others it
may loom up very large. But, if we forget, and our book is lost
486 Tuberculosis Not Transmissible.
in the lumber rooms of our temples what will be the reply to
the wayfaring' man who in days to come asks "Why were these
temples built?"
BOVINE TUBERCULOSIS NOT TRANSMISSIBLE
TO MAN.
By W. B. Clarke, M. D., Indianapolis.
Consumption, as we used to call it, is now more fashionably
termed tuberculosis. It is also poetically or imaginatively desig-
nated or fantastically misnamed "The Great White Plague," an
unscientific appellation, for the gay denizens of "The Great White
Way" are nowhere near such sufferers from it as the dwellers of
the slums, and as Indians and Japanese are freely dying of it,
and it is about twice as prevalent and fatal, statistically, among
the blacks as among the whites.
Discovery of the Bacillus Tuberculosis and Tuberculin.
The cause of tuberculosis is now by pretty general consent con-
sidered to be an infection by the absorption of an infinitely small
object called the bacillus tuberculosis (though a respectable mi-
nority state that here the cart is placed before the horse — that the
disease causes the bacillus instead of the bacillus causing the
disease).
This bacillus was discovered by Dr. Robert Koch, of Germany,
who first announced the discovery on August 10, 1882. This
bacillus (a rod-shaped body) had long been looked for, and its
smallness (10,000th of an inch in length, requiring a magnifying
of nearly 500 times in order to see it) was not what had prevented
its earlier discovery ; it is transparent under the microscope, and
so was overlooked. The great secret of Dr. Koch's discovery was
that he devised staining fluids, one of which he found colored the
bacilli, but not its surroundings, thus enabling them to be seen.
Dr. Koch, in honor of this discovery, wras then taken under the
patronage of the German Government, with orders to discover a
cure for the bacillus or the disease it caused, being granted all the
funds and assistants he needed in the work. Eight years after,
November, 1890, he announced his "cure," but would not then
disclose its composition or source.
Tuberculosis Not Transmissible. 487
I was interviewed on the subject by the Indianapolis Sentinel
of November 17, 1890, in which interview these words appear:
"The Koch injection will be proved to be animal matter, probably
tuberculous matter itself, since its introduction causes increased
temperature, which is not likely to happen from medicinal agents."
This probably was the first opinion published in the United States
regarding the actual composition of the remedy.
The newspapers of the United States first published the tele-
graphic news of the actual composition of the remedy two months
later, on January 16, 1891, on Dr. Koch's authority, with his
apology that the announcement of the "cure" was made prema-
turely, before its perfection, by especial order of the German Gov-
ernment, in response to popular interest and demand. And the
"perfection" has not yet arrived.
Soon after this a small vial of the "precious fluid," as the In-
dianapolis papers called it, came to the Indianapolis City Hos-
pital, contributed by the then President Benjamin Harrison, and
was kept locked in the safe until used with great eclat on the few
misguided patients who would voluntarily receive it via hypo-
dermic injection.
The natural hope among the bugologists after the germ of tuber-
culosis had been discovered and the nosode tuberculin introduced
was that the latter would prove the "sure cure" for tuberculosis,
but it soon degenerated to the position of diagnostic agent only,
and in many cases in this role acted as the lighter-up of quiescent
disease that otherwise might never have developed. Its danger to
human beings soon became apparent, and its use was abandoned
on them. To cite one instance of its unjustifiable use I may say
that Franz tested with it two Austrian regiments in good health,
with the result that 61 per cent, of the regiment in first year of
service, and 68 per cent, of the one in second year service "re-
acted."
Boards of Health Monopolize Tuberculin.
The boards of health of the country were quick to see the great
utility and advantage the official use of tuberculin as a diagnostic
agent would have in continuing their "police power" hold on the
people along the line of "State medicine," brass-buttons medicine,
somewhat analogous to their manipulation of the valueless, odious
and dangerous vaccination-for-smallpox scheme, with which they
488 Tuberculosis Not Transmissible.
have so long pestered communities the country over (except
where the people have learned better and will not submit).
It was new and mysterious enough to be attractive to the public,
and served admirably as one of the great "scares'' which the
"health" boards, for "business" reasons, are so fond at regular
intervals of catering to the public, and, incidentally, manufactur-
ing patronage and "honor" for its own favored few.
So they began — with their usual official tendency to false en-
thusiasm and magnify their own importance and exaggerate
necessities, and without the brains, judgment and experience nec-
essary to intelligently use it or correctly interpret its effects — the
really unwarranted practice of forcibly "testing" dairy cows with
this tuberculin and condemning to instant death all that "reacted."
Through this action valuable dairy herds were exterminated
($30,000 worth from one herd, forty cows from another), busi-
nesses abandoned (one in which $100,000 was invested), and by
it, in some cases, "the richest blood of heredity forever lost,
though it had cost lifetimes and fortunes to obtain" — and with
no resultant benefit to the human race.
But, thanks to the vigorous onslaughts and remorseless ex-
posures of a few able and determined men and newspapers in
regard to this unjust and unreasonable tuberculin practice, and the
rebellion of the farmers, resulting in some States in relieving
legislation — to apply words of a great late lamented practical
politician — this "pernicious activity" is fast falling into "innocuous
desuetude," and the people are beginning to better understand the
"true inwardness" of the situation.
The People Frightened.
The professional alarmist and "health board" side of the tuber-
culosis-from-cattle question was so often and so oracnlarl) pre-
sented that public confidence was rankly abused, and many con-
fiding people became afraid to eat beef or drink milk, for fear of
"catching" tuberculosis, something that no one ever can do in that
way, for reasons that I shall later show. Add to this the health
boards' terrifying announcements regarding the virulent con-
tagiousness of tuberculosis, and their proceedings and onerous
requirements and crude and arbitrary rules in consonance with
that idea.
Tuberculosis Not Transmissible. 489
The result of this constant cry of "wolf!" is that the general
public was kept in a constant state of alarm, nearly a panic at
times, and a consumptive person (who now must be reported to
the board of health, like a smallpox case) is now being regarded
with great dread, as a sanitary pariah of society, one to be ostra-
cized, Oslerized, or entirely avoided, whose very breath is poison-
ous and death-dealing. And in many instances positive cruelty,
neglect and consequent injury follow, instead of the sympathy
that is the peculiar right of this class of unfortunates, some of
whom have in the past been veritable angels of sweetness and
light at the bedsides of others in many cases of these and other
kinds of sickness and suffering.
True, "compared with tuberculosis, all the pestilences that send
nations shivering to their prayers are but the mild pastimes in
which Death indulges when he has nothing serious on hand." But
if you want to avoid or resist tuberculosis the best way is to
develop the ability to eat and dispose of and assimilate twice as
much beef (au jus and fat) and milk as you are now doing,
regardless of all health board talk to the contrary, and also re-
membering that the United States Government maintains an ex-
tensive and expensive system for a thorough microscopical and
macroscopical examination of beef at the abattoirs, inspecting
ten billion pounds last year.
Dr. Knopf and Dr. Huber, tuberculosis essayists and lecturers
of great repute, declare that one tuberculosis patient could spit
seven billions of tubercle bacilli in one day. So we have enough
human bacilli to look out for instead of hunting up and dragging
into the question the immaterial bovine kind. For, according to
the State Board of Health reports, 16,570 human beings died of
tuberculosis in Xew York State in 1907. and 4,522 in Indiana,
and about 150,000 in the whole United States.
Dr. Koch's Voice of Warning.
Dr. Koch, seeing or foreseeing the dangers threatening the
people through his medical Frankenstein, then made a special
study of the relation between human and bovine tuberculosis, and
found that they were separate and distinct diseases, and that in-
dividuals or products of one race were incapable of transmitting
the disease to the other race. For instance, he inoculated many
490 Tuberculosis Not Transmissible.
cattle with human tubercular virus, with the result of producing
only slight local sores, soon healing, without other effects. He
made this momentous announcement before the Tuberculosis
Congress in London in July, 1901. This announcement served as
a bombshell in the ranks of the alarmist breed of tuberculinists,
and strenuous exertions were made by them to repair damages.
But Dr. Koch has steadily and repeatedly maintained this position
against all opposition, the last time in his paper at the Tuberculo-
sis Congress at Washington October, 1908, and at the national
conference at Washington last spring. He explained that of late
years he is paying the most attention to other diseases, notably in
Africa, but will be prepared with a full exposition of our im-
munity from bovine tuberculosis for presentation at the next
Tuberculosis Congress. A part of the intervening time will be
spent in Japan studying tuberculosis — in a country now severely
affected, but where cow's milk is not used as food. Whose word
had you rather take — that of Discoverer Koch or that of a place-
holding "health" officer?
That the human and bovine bacilli are coincidental only, inde-
pendent of each other, and each incapable of transmitting tuber-
culosis to the other race, is now the opinion of many skilled in-
vestigators working along bacteriological and microscopical lines
(to say nothing of many practical cattle men of great observation
and experience, but who modestly pretend to know little of the
"science" of the thing, but do know and assert that cattle, meat or
milk do not transmit tuberculosis) ; and their bacilli are morpho-
logically and microscopically much unlike.
For example, in description, the human bacilli are twice as
long as the bovine, slenderer, often curved and beaded, while the
bovine are short, straight, plump and without beading, and their
degrees of virulence are much unlike. And the human bacilli and
tubercle have acquired individual characteristics that unfit them
for more than temporary foothold, much less existence, in the
cow. And while the bovine bacilli may very rarely and accident-
ally gain simple, temporary foothold in man, its results are only
localized, soon becoming encased or encapsulated as quiescent
nodules, and hence harmless, never becoming generalized (scat-
tered in the blood) or dangerous unless reinforced by the human
germ, or when some animal injection, directly into the blood, is
afterward used, like tuberculin or fresh cowpox vaccine.
Tuberculosis Arot Transmissible. 491
Darwin observed that man has given rise to many races, some
so different that they have been marked by naturalists as distinct
species, from monkeys up, differing in constitution and liability to
certain diseases. By this same principle micro-organisms are
modified by conditions.
Again, the bovine and human races are so different. The hu-
man is omnivorous, the bovine herbivorous ; the human pulse is
72, the bovine 40; the human temperature is 98^2°, the bovine
100^2°. All these and other elements and race peculiarities that
could be mentioned make up a condition protecting each race from
the other in the matter of tuberculosis, just as we know that the
tapeworm affecting fowls and certain animals are harmless to
man. Then, too, the disease in man is almost always in the
lungs, and in the bovine rarely.
And so we can confidently declare that of the millions of cases
of daily exposure of human beings to bovine tuberculosis it-
self or the products of the bovine race there is no positive and
direct evidence of a generalized (scattered in the blood) case of
such infection, the slight evidence even of a mild and harmless
case being only indirect and negative. Anything more than that
is invariably caused by the simultaneous or accidental mixture of
the human germ with the bovine germ, a proceeding easy of ac-
complishment but difficult and expensive of plain proof.
Heat and Lactic Acid Kill the Bacilli.
Even granting, for the purpose of argument, that the bovine
tuberculosis bacilli could be capable of causing true generalized
tuberculosis in human beings, it would yet be impossible to so
transmit the disease by the way of the ordinary use of meat or
milk. For no fact in sanitary science is better known or estab-
lished than that heat for a short period will destroy the life of the
bacillus tuberculosis, and not a high degree of heat is needed,
170 ° being enough. Meat usually gets two or three times that
much heat, and for a long period, and milk gets that much heat in
pasteurizing.
But pasteurization for milk is objectionable in many ways, as it
injures the food value of milk, depriving it of some of its nutritive
powers, destroying, decomposing or weakening some of its in-
herent digestive elements, coagulating the caseine, and may dis-
492 Tuberculosis Xot Transmissible.
solve the fat globules by too much heat, and makes it harder of
digestion and assimilation ; consequently babies do not thrive on
it as they would on fresh, pure and clean milk.
But milk has a much better safeguard within itself, for lactic
acid attacks and kills the bacillus tuberculosis. This lactic acid is
produced in the process of digestion from the fermentation of the
sugar of the milk. This fact has been conclusively proved by my
friend. Charles H. Gage, in his extensive San Francisco bacteri-
ological, microscopical and chemical laboratory, by bacillus cul-
ture and microscopic photographs of the cultures every six hours
for seven days. This is probably the first medical society present-
ment of the important intelligence that milk contains within itself
this effective weapon of defense against tuberculosis. For the
purpose of reference I append the chemical composition of milk,
which shows the base of lactic acid to be more than any other
element :
Milk sugar 4.70
Casein 3.65
Butter 3.55
Salts 80
Water 87.30 — 100
Tuberculosis Described.
Tuberculosis is, after all. purely a disease of nutrition, or mal-
nutrition, rather, and generally follows physical excesses, wrong
living, indoor life, grief, and a run-down condition : in short, al-
most any letting down, neglect, or animal poisoning of the system,
which renders it susceptible to the infection. It comes in protean
forms, though usually settling in the lungs because of the delicacy
of their make-up and abundant blood supply. Its approach is in-
sidious, and its advance relentless, while the majority of its
victims are, as a rule, persons of superior mental and moral char-
acter. Its development is slow naturally, the organs often being
able, by immediate and intelligent fortifying measures, to reject
and expel the infection (even if the natural fluids have not pre-
viously neutralized it), on account of their strength and high
health.
Indeed, with all the learned talk about germs, bacilli, infection,
Tuberculosis N ot Transmissible. -}'
etc, few :old us how or why the disease has taken hold
ertain person, why the expert is taken and the ignoramus
left — in short, the real causes for the operation of the infection.
The tuberculosis sharps are very insistent on their claim that the
bacillus is quickly killed by sunlight and fresh air, and that the
disease is often curable in human patients by plenty of sunlight,
out-door pure air, perfect rest, and abundant food and sleep, etc.,
Xow let them pay more attention to antecedent conditions,
and insist on reversing the operation, securing all these before the
Lse appears, and watch the improved results. As in all dis-
eases, statistically, the watchword must be. "keep your eyes on
the death 'rate," so in tubercui sis :ch for the bacilli,
for their appearance can safely be regarded as always '.ate mani-
festation, as the are never ejected until destruction of tissue has
: :ct:rred.
Often the trouble is localized in even a single gland, or
rent nodule, or a caseation, where it may remain undis-
turbed through life — a powder magazine that is harmless until
touched off by the imection of some fulminating animal tuber-
culin, serum, cowpox vaccine, or what-not, and the resultant ex-
plosion blows the ship out of the harbor. For, in strict accord-
ance with the old utterance of Cohnheim, the great German army
:ian. surgeon and pathologist, after many years' experience
in r;:s:-::::r:e:::s. :.:: ' verir.ee by the 'est men :: ::-day in their
dissecting experiences: "Jeder Mann is am ende ein bischen
ruberculose" (every one is some time or other a little bit tuber-
cuhus .
For when the "testing." "diagnostic" or "preventive" agent is
forcibly introduced into a system already quivering on the balance
subcutaneous inoculation or intravenous injection the latent
se is stirred in:-: ?.c:ivi:y the £ : :s: are
severely shecked :.: : :':: iymyhati: sys: .' ■ . s ieerdy atrec:-
edj a necr ..used, and the resisting powers often overcome
because the protection barrier? are broken down.
Omitting these blood assassinations, the bacilli may freeh
harmlessly obtain entrance to the bod}' (in fact, are always there,
even in health), and yet by the liquids of the body be neutralized
:r prevented from doing harm. In normal good health the
no danger from these floaters, this flotsam and jetsam, as
494 Tuberculosis Not Transmissible.
nasal and stomach secretions will destroy all bacilli breathed or so
swallowed. Suppose there are tubercle bacilli in the air and in
dust? They are not really in the circulation of the body, even if
inhaled or swallowed, for the bronchial mucus will entangle and
expel them, and digestive secretions will destroy them if the body
is normally healthy. If this were not so we would all die of the
disease. Normal nerve tone and natural resistance must be main-
tained if health is to be secure.
Thus we see the variegated foolishness of a board of health law
that makes a man a tuberculosis victim and a criminal, subject to
a $500 fine, because he spits, as far as a real sanitary repressive
measure is concerned. For the spitter is free to spit in the street
or when crossing at intersections, but not on the sidewalk. As
the germ is killed by ten minutes' exposure to strong sunlight, the
chances are that the "gob" would be safer if flattened out on a
dry sidewalk, in the sunlight, than in the moist and filthy condi-
tion of the street, as it must dry out sometime somewhere. So
the board's vaunted tuberculosis "protective" measure resolves it-
self into a mere protective of cleanliness of dry goods trains.
The cause of anti-vivisection, now becoming more popular, and
the prevention of disease, animal and human, as well, would, it
seems to me, get its strongest impetus by securing an absolute in-
terdiction of all animal injections, inoculations and vaccinations
of all animals, human as well as others. Who shall say that many
of the newer and severer diseases of cattle (of which tuberculosis
is the worst) are not really caused by the "fooling with" they
have been subjected to by "vaccine," "tuberculin" and "serum"
makers? And the human race is suffering physically and
financially as a consequence, of course.
The latest exemplification of this point was made in the spirited
discussion in the United States Senate last February to regulate
the transportation and sale of cowpox virus, on account of the
demonstration of the fact there made that such virus was the
cause of the great epidemic of foot-and-mouth disease among the
cattle of several States, the eradication of which had cost the
government hundreds of thousands of dollars, and which led to
the introduction of a bill in the Pennsylvania Legislature prohibit-
ing the manufacture of cowpox virus in that State.
Tuberculosis Xot Transmissible. 495
Relation of Vaccination to Tuberculosis.
A phase of this subject that the people are or should be much
interested in is that of the ''State medicine,'' brass buttons medi-
cine, control of their children in the way of vaccines, serums and
tuberculin. While, for the reasons above given, I do not believe
that in any ordinary way we contract tuberculosis from meat or
milk, can we not do it by direct inoculation, those assassinations
of the blood, where the natural resisting powers of the body are
circumvented and the very citadel of life, the blood, is attacked
direct, as we see oftenest exemplified in vaccination, then in
serum therapy, "Detre tests" and others? Even now it fairly
makes one dizzy to with the mind's eye even attempt to follow the
mad flights of these indirigible medical aviators along their un-
obstructed pathway of animal matter injections.
And the official tendency, even in ''health" board lines, is un-
doubtedly toward the compulsory introduction of "preventive"
and "curative" animal matter inoculations of many kinds, for
many diseases, and for all people, young or old — and any further
trampling upon of our cherished personal rights should be resist-
ed at once before it is too late to prevent the wholesale and
''epidemic" poisoning that is sure to follow. The latest of these
is thus outlined by Dr. Ravenel, one of the men "honored" at the
last Tuberculosis Congress at Washington, Oct., 1908, and who
addressed an audience in this city last May, viz. : "The vaccina-
tion of cattle against tuberculosis may be looked upon as an ac-
complished fact, and the importance of this achievement cannot be
too much magnified. Is it too much to hope that a similar process
will be devised for the protection of mankind ?"
If our "health" and school boards adhere to their seeming be-
lief that the bovine race's main mission in life is to transmit tuber-
culosis to human beings, are they not particeps criminis, or. at
least, inconsistent, in enforcing their superstitious abracadabra or
fetish, vaccination, on our children? For vaccine is nothing but
pus, or near-pus, from a sore on a cow's udder or calf's belly !
The danger of contracting tuberculosis through vaccination
was officially recognized by the International Congress of Hy-
giene and Demography (vital statistics) at its Madrid session in
the following resolution, as published in the New York Medical
Record: "Inasmuch as tuberculosis is easilv transmitted bv vac-
496 Tuberculosis Not Transmissible.
cination when it is done directly from the calf, we ask that in all
nations represented at this meeting the practice should be adopted
of using only the lymph of calves which have been examined
post-mortem and pronounced to be free from tuberculosis." Only
the lack of time and space just now prevents the adducing of
abundant testimony along the line of the production of tuberculo-
sis through vaccination. And as for other troubles caused, it is
sufficient only to quote the report of the health committee of the
New York State Medical Society at its annual meeting of 1907 at
Albany : "It is a matter of common observation that the impurity
of vaccine virus obtained in the market is the source of great
suffering and danger."
Talk of the Boards of Health.
The health boards are not necessarily the sole repositories of all
the knowledge regarding health and sanitary matters. The whole
subject of the powers and duties of the boards of health ought to
receive journalistic ventilation and legal disinfection. For the
peculiar, politically-made-up organization called board of health
easily becomes despotic unless closely scrutinized by a higher
power, the people. For all power comes from and abides in the
people, and whatever is right, true and honest for and on behalf
of the people must be done by their trustees and agents in the
conduct of their affairs. The State cannot make war upon the
man. and if it does he would be justified in repelling violence by
violence.
If there is anything in this world that a man really owns it is
his own blood, and who shall deny him the right to resistance to
all onslaughts against it, from the highwayman's butcher knife to
the vaccinator's lancet, or that of his children, whose natural pro-
tector he is? No man, not even a "health" officer, has the right to
disease another against his will. And the child's right to pure
and uncontaminated blood should not be disputed by his education
purveyors, nor his natural right, privilege and duty to education
in the public schools.
Our health boards may well ponder these words from the
Medical Reviezv: "In any contest between the health board and
the people, the people are sure to win, and such conflict must be
avoided by a careful consideration of all phases of the question
under discussion."
Some Idea of Materia Medica. 497
SOME IDEAS OF MATERIA MEDICA.
By A. M. Cushing, M. D., Springfield, Mass.
From thirty to forty years ago or more I took some part in
nearly every meeting of this Society (Massachusetts), but for
a number of years I have been a silent member. I am glad of
an invitation to come here to say something on the most import-
ant branch of medical and perhaps of any science. "The Ho-
moeopathic Materia Medica."
It is made up mostly by proving remedies upon healthy hu-
man beings. Still it is imperfect and incomplete. Some rem-
edies are too dangerous in any attenuation and others so un-
pleasant in their action we cannot bring out their whole range
of symptoms in that way and must rely much upon clinical ex-
perience. To illustrate this, I shall confine myself to personal
experience.
About fifty-six years ago one of the doctors with whom I
studied asked me to take a small glass-stoppered vial labeled
Glonoine and prepare some of the second decimal attenuation.
He wanted it for educational purposes, which were needed in
those days. As I poured some from the vial a little ran down
upon the outside of the vial and curiosity led me to touch my
tongue to it, and I was so surprised at its sweetness I asked
a classmate to taste it. He did so and said it was very sweet.
Within two minutes we were suffering such severe headache
we dared not taste it again. That developed a fascination for
proving remedies knowing I could have a pain and not be sick.
Try it and be happy.
A case to illustrate the quick action of Glonoine well at-
tenuated. I was called to see a middle-aged lady suffering
from a severe, throbbing headache, had been unable to leave
her bed for several hours. Both Belladonna and Glonoine
seemed indicated, but Belladonna is worse lying down. I pre-
pared some Glonoine, the two-hundredth attenuation, in water,
and gave her one teaspoonful, requesting her to take one tea-
spoonful once in fifteen minutes till relieved, then take no more.
Later, she told me when fifteen minutes had expired and she
raised up to take the medicine the pain had disappeared and
did not return.
498 Some Idea of Materia Medica. .
Then we got characteristic and clinical symptoms. I should
fear to attempt a thorough proving of that remedy in any at-
tenuation.
In proving Artemesia abrotanum there soon appeared symp-
toms of paralysis of arms and limbs, which stopped the prov-
ing. I have seen it do surprising work in that line. Dr. J. T.
Kent, of Chicago, has written me that it is a valuable remedy
in affections of the lower limbs.
When I made a proving of Dioscorein I began with five-grain
doses of the first decimal, several doses a day, increasing to
twenty, thirty and eighty a day for a number of days, then
raising it gradually to the eighth, when I took six to eight
ounces prepared in water at a dose. Later I made a proving
of Dioscorea, taking five-drop doses of the mother tincture, then
ten-drop doses of' the second decimal, then ten and twenty drops
of tincture for a few days, followed by doses of twenty-five
and fifty drops of first attenuation ; then the second ; then
twenty-five-drop doses of the tenth and twentieth.
At another time I made a similar proving of Dioscorea, re-
cording the symptoms of each proving for six weeks, the record
taken from The Homoeopathic Observer covering about thirty-
five pages, I believe, in Allen's Materia Medica Many of the
symptoms were corroborated by short provings by Drs. Bur*.
Paine and Nichols, and verified thousands of times by phy-
sicians. In all the provings of this remedy I did not notice
one apparently immediately dangerous or frightful symptom.
When I made a proving of Rha\tania it soon produced such
an itching of the rectum I was obliged to stop the test, but
clinical experience proves it to be our best remedy for rectal
troubles.
In proving Verbascnm, called Mullein Oil. it produced in-
voluntary and sometimes unconscious urination (an unpleasant
condition for a busy doctor), and it has cured similar cases
which had resisted both schools' treatment.
I was called to see a middle-aged lady suffering' from uterine
cancer, bloated the worst of any patient I ever saw. I had no
hope of even relieving her with any remedy I had ever given.
I had read of steeping the pods of the common field white bean
(Phaseohts nana) and giving the tea for dropsy, so I steeped
Some Idea of Materia Medica. 499
some and gave the tea and the effect in relieving the dropsical
swelling was surprising, but in about three days she died sud-
denly from supposed apoplexy.
A little later I had a patient, about sixty-five, suffering from
dropsy, badly bloated, and I gave him the bean tea, which re-
lieved the dropsy but he soon complained of headache, saying,
"You must give me something for this headache or I shall be
crazy.'' I stopped the remedy and the headache soon disap-
peared.
This led me to make a proving of the remedy. I triturated
the whole bean with Sugar of Milk, believing that better than
made in tincture, and took the fourth decimal attenuation. I
expected urinary disturbance and headache. I had no headache,
but considerable urinary disturbance, but in a few days I found
myself nearly pulseless. For once during a proving I was fright-
ened.
The Professor of Materia Medica in one college has told me
two other Professors have written me. They have told their
students of its surprising work in diseases of the heart. The
first time I gave it was in consultation with an old school doctor
in a case of confinement, patient badly bloated, urine full of al-
bumen. I delivered the child during a frightful convulsion.
An hour or two later the doctor informed me the patient's heart
was failing rapidly and his medicine did no good. We gave her
a dose of Phaseolus, ninth attenuation, and in ten minutes the
patient's pulse was beating to the satisfaction of us both. She
had no more convulsions. The albumen quickly disappeared.
That led us to give it in Albuminuria and Bright's disease.
That was clinical experience and I doubt if any one will ever
dare make a thorough proving of it, for I never gave a remedy
that would as quickly produce headache in any attenuation I
have ever given it.
I have told you all this to show that provings have not been
fancied illusions as I wish to call your attention to a remedy I
hope you will be interested in, — Homarus, — the gastric juice of
the lobster, believing it will prove one of the most important
remedies in our Materia Medica.
Noticing that a crab is taken to designate cancer in the signs
o"f the zodiac, I tried to learn why : The German name for Crab
500 Some Idea of Materia Medico,
is Krebs and lobster is Krebs sickness, cancer, gangrene, etc.
I decided to test the substance ; first, to learn why lobster and
milk when eaten together has caused sickness and deaths have
been reported. Added to cold milk its action is slow, but with
warm milk (as it would be in the stomach) it is soon curdled.
If any alcoholic liquid is added, it becomes almost solid. I be-
lieve there is where most of the danger lies. In preparing it for
proving I mixed it with Sugar of Milk and triturated it to the
fourth decimal, which I used in my proving.
I will take your time only to mention two symptoms : a sore
throat that looked much like diphtheria and a heavy, dull pain
in stomach that nothing relieved.
I was called to see a middle-aged lady that was expected to
die soon following two operations for cancer of the breast. She
was very weak; wounds had not healed; complete loss of ap-
petite— unable to eat but little ; constant, dull, heavy pain in
stomach ; liver extended near to navel ; her whole skin a yellow-
ish-brown color. Medicines had given no relief ; neither did
mine. On account of the dull, heavy pain in stomach I gave her
Homarus, the fourth trituration, and every symptom was re-
lieved ; the appetite returned and she ate three good meals each
day for six weeks, and the skin turned to its natural coloi, but
she died from general debility and ascites.
Dr. S. H. Sparhawk, of St. Johnsbury, Vermont, a specialist
in chronic diseases, became interested in the remedy and had
such surprising success with it in stomach troubles he prepared
some of the two-hundredth attenuation and sent me. Being
badly troubled with indigestion, I took a dose on two successive
days and it gave me great relief. And I believe if properly di-
luted, on account of its digestive power, it will prove to be our
best remedy in dyspeptic cases, cancer and ptomaine poisoning.
But here is the result. Some four years ago there appeared over
the center of my left scapula a tormenting spot that increased in
size till it was about the size of a teaspoon bowl and about as
deep, filled with a scurfy substance, and the itching was ex-
ceedingly annoying. If I scratched or rubbed it, it would burn
like a coal of fire. I did not dare touch it and feared it might
prove to be a cancer. Homarus and nothing else was taken or
done but in ten days it was as smooth as any part of my body,
and not an itch or burn for a year.
Internal Vaccination and the Pa. Laze. 501
Investigation and experience led me to wish to try it in cancer
hospitals, internally and locally, but an injury nearly four years
ago that was expected to prove fatal has prevented.
Trypsin has been recommended for cancer on account of its
digestive power, but it cannot be compared with Honiarus in
that line.
'When lobsters are first caught the stomach is often found full
of sea-weed, shells, etc. ; examined a few hours after being
caught, it is all digested. Trypsin cannot do that. To find it
in any quantity we must wait till they have been caught three or
four days.
As I am now over eighty years of age I cannot expect nor be
expected to do much more in this way, but I hope the younger
members will carefully test it, for I believe it may prove to be
a wonderful remedy, and I want to live to know that the ho-
moeopathic physicians of Massachusetts have brought out a
remedy superior to all known remedies for the cure of cancer.
INTERNAL VACCINATION AND THE PA. LAW.
The following which explains itself is from the columns of
the Pittsburgh Times Gazette of October 15 :
''Judge J. J. Miller, in the equity suit brought by Harry S.
Lee in behalf of his nine-year-old daughter, Dorothy M. Lee,
against Prof. W. E. Berger, principal of the Edgewood schools,
decides that the State Board of Health has the right to regulate
vaccination of students in the public schools of Pennsylvania.7'
"The suit was filed by Lee after Prof. Berger had refused to
admit his daughter to the school, alleging that her vaccination
certificate was not sufficient and did not show scarification. The
pupil presented a certificate signed by Dr. WT. R. Stephens, stat-
ing she had been successfully vaccinated. She had been vacci-
nated by the internal method of the Homoeopathic school of
medicine, which Prof. Berger declared did not meet the require-
ments of the State Department of Health."
"The Department of Health requires a certificate to be issued
containing this clause : T find a resulting sore which, in my
opinion, means a successful vaccination.' The certificate issued
by Dr. Stephens merely stated she had been successfully vacci-
nated."
502 The Chiropractic.
"Judge Miller did not go into the question as to which was
the proper method of vaccination from a medical standpoint. He
merely decided the matter from a legal standpoint, and held that
the law requiring a certificate showing scarification was valid.
The Court in its opinion said :"
"We are not concerned with difficulties that may exist in
theories or modes of vaccination as held or practiced by different
schools of medicine. The great merits of the various schools
are well recognized by all thinking persons. If the Department
of Health, under its present powers as defined or reasonably in-
ferred from the Act of 1905, had adopted regulations requiring
successful vaccination to be performed by the internal or in-
gestive methods, it would be our duty to sustain the regula-
tions."
"It is the duty of the local Board of Health authorities to
furnish principals or other persons in charge of the schools and
to physicians the necessary certificates for the purpose set forth
in the law. The rules and regulations adopted by the Depart-
ment of Health are within the powers conferred upon it by the
act creating it."
"The suit was dismissed at the cost of the plaintiff."
The law is that children must be vaccinated before they are
to be admitted into the public school, but it says nothing of the
method by which that operation is to be performed. From the
wording of the Court's decision quoted above it would seem that
•tfie judge recognized this and threw the responsibility on the
Board of Health. What they say, goes, to use non- judicial
phraseology. If they say there must be a sore arm, well. If
they permit internal cowination (that is the English of the
word vaccination), well. So it stands, apparently. 1st. There
must be vaccination, whether you want it or not. 2d. The
Board of Health can interpret the word to suit itself.
THE CHIROPRACTIC.
If you ask the first doctor you meet "What is a chiropractic?'
he will reply that he is "a fakir," some may even say "a
fakir.'' But this, while it may be quite true, does not answer
'Anxious Inquirer" who writes to his journal for information,
The Chiropractic. 503
or asks you in person. Probably the best way to answer the
question, or to get at the truth of the matter, is to let the chiro-
practics answer first. Here is their official definition taken from
their official journal — at least that is where the Critic and Guide
takes it and we clip some from their pages :
''Chiropractic is a philosophy of biology, theology, health, dis-
ease, death, the cause of disease and art of adjusting the relations
between them to harmonious quantities and qualities, by hand,
thus correcting all subluxations of the three hundred articulators
of the human skeleton frame, more especially those of the spinal
column, for the purpose of re-establishing the normal current
through impinged nerves, as they emanate through intervertebral
foramina, which were formerly excessive or lacking, named dis-
ease."
"All movements, whether normal or abnormal, of, or in the
body (including blood circulation) are but the personification
of mental equivalents — mental functions guided by Innate-In-
telligence, creating physical expression. An ache or pain is but
the Intellectual Inherent interpretation placed upon impressions
received from the periphery proving the abnormal physical con-
ditions."
The chiropractic ('tis an awkward word) then, is ? person
who with his hand corrects your theology, disease, death, etc.,
or establishes "harmonious quantities in you." Truly, according
to this definition, if "he is not a pretender, he is a wonder. The
idea of correcting theology by hand is especially fascinating,
though it is not new, Mahomet having tried it on a very exten-
sive scale, though his correction of theological faults is open to
argument.
The origin of the disease is a question that has been much
discussed by wise men and by men who thought themselves wise.
It was first attributed to man's disobedience ; afterwards to vari-
ous causes, the last being bacilli of many names, summed up by
the modern sons of Belial as "bugs." The chiropractic inctdly
explains it as follows : "Diseases are caused by a lack of cur-
rent of Innate mental impulses." This definition may not be
very lucid to the average hard working M. D., but doesn't he
know that when a thing is clear to the human mind it generally
ceases to attract, which is disastrous, financially speaking?
504 Something About Pellagra.
There is one point in their definition to which we would re-
spectfully call the attention of the high priest of chiropracticity
(oh, that word!), namely, the reference to "innate impulses."
"Innate" waeans "inborn." How, then, can they supply the in-
nate?
To us the real problem is to determine whether the originator
of this absurdity was a man beset by fantasies or whether he
was merely an ordinary medical impostor.
SOMETHING ABOUT PELLAGRA.
This comparatively old disease, that is very prevalent in certain
-sections of Europe, seems to have gained foot-hold in the United
States, and of late has been reported from various sections, espe-
•cially in the South.
The word "pellagra'' does not give much information in itself
being compounded from two Greek words which, translated, stand
for "skin" and "seizure." It is defined as "a scaly afTection of the
skin, with severe constitutional symptoms." Dunglison seems to
come nearer the truth when he gives as a synonym "Italian
leprosy," though he says it is "of toxic origin."
Better, however, than dictionary definitions is a description of
an actual case of the disease. This is given in detail by Dr. J. H.
Hewitt, of Lynchburg, Va., in the Journal A. M. A., October 2.
Here it is — the patient aged 56, white and a widower :
"Present Illness. — The patient is now a very poor man and for
the last three years has been living in cheap boarding houses or
keeping bachelor's quarters in which he did his own cooking.
During the latter part of last fall, owing to the scarcity of work
and the high price of flour, he was compelled to eat more and
more corn meal. About the middle of last December his present
diarrhoea began, very mild at first, but slowly and steadily in-
creasing in intensity till about six weeks ago, when he had from
ten to twelve movements per day, with agonizing tenesmus and
distressful abdominal pain and nausea. For the last month he has
ceased to use corn meal in any form and the diarrhoea has con-
siderably abated. Since December he has lost about thirty-five
pounds in weight, and has been reduced from a robust, virile
workingman to a puny, weak, sickly individual, to whom life
Something About Pellagra. 505
itself is almost a burden. About ten weeks ago, while picking
strawberries, the back of his neck became red and burned, as if
sun-burnt. At the same time he suffered with intense headache
which was confined to the region "behind his ears and extended
across from ear to ear." This continued for about ten days. Dur-
ing this period the skin on the back of his neck began to peel off.
About the same time the skin over the bridge of his nose and the
side of his face, after having been red and painful, likewise began
to desquamate in small and large dry scales and bran-like par-
ticles. About six weeks ago the skin on the back of his hands be-
gan to look as if they were blistered, being swollen, red and pain-
ful, and scattered vesicles filled with serous exudate were formed.
The surface then became quite dry and hardened, cracking at all
the joints and in between the fingers. Both hands were similarly
affected and about the same extent of surface on each involved.
In about a week the skin on the back of the hands, fingers and
lower one-third of his forearms began to desquamate in the same
manner as that on his neck and nose. About the same time all of
the toes of both feet became swollen and red. They burned
slightly and itched in a most intense manner. This, however,
disappeared within a week, and there was never any induration of
.desquamation of any portion of the skin. About five weeks ago
the gums of his upper jaw became swollen and red. There was
slight salivation for a few days, but this soon disappeared, and has
not since recurred. Since December he has vomited only once
that he remembers, but has repeated attacks of nausea every day.
During the last ten weeks he has had repeated attacks of vertigo ;
often becomes dizzy on rising from a sitting to a standing position,
or on rising frdm a recumbent position, and everything becomes
black before his eyes."
Dr. Lewis J. Pollock, of the Cooks County Institution, writes of
the origin of the disease :
"Aside from the predisposing cause of alcoholism, previous ill-
ness, poor hygienic surroundings, poverty, venereal excess, etc.,
it is the accepted opinion of most Italian students that pellagra
is a disease caused by the eating of spoiled maize, constituting an
intoxication from the toxin produced by the growth of fungi in
corn."
The theory, however, that the disease originates from the
506 Ferrum Phosphoricum.
fungi in corn is disputed, but the facts seem to point to it as hav-
ing something to do with it.
Probably if the disease could be traced to its roots the}' would
be found in abject poverty, like so many other ills that afflict
humanity. When you find collections oi human beings who have
no choice in their food must accept the poorest, and often do not
get enough oi that, with surroundings in keeping, you will mid
disease and will not have far to look for the real etiology. This
line of pessimism, however, does not preclude a disease originat-
ing from a specific cause among such people, and the theory that
tin.- one comes from diseased or spoiled corn seems to have con-
siderable foundation. In the April. 190S. issue of the Recorder,
page 125. we published an extract from a correspondent in Xorth
Carolina, who stated that in the last three years about 1.000 horses
had died in that State from "a disease called "staggers" here."
'"Just before the corn comes in it sometimes heats and then
moulds, and such corn causes the disease.'*
There may be a remedy homoeopathic to pellagra, but no one so
far as we know has written concerning its treatment. Ustilago
))iaydis would be the remedy on an isopathic basis.
FERRUM PHOSPHORICUM IN ARTICULAR RHEU-
MATISM.
By Dr. Kesselring, Muellheim.
Among the functional remedies of Schuessler there is. as is
well known, also Ferrum phosphoricum, and a considerable ac-
tion is ascribed to it in inflammations and congestive conditions at
the beginning, because of its contractive powers exercised over
the annular muscles of the blood vessels. Ferrum phosphoricum
has largely come up to all that has been claimed for it. and it is.
therefore, to-day one of the remedies frequently used in Ho-
moeopathy, and this not only in acute, but also in chronic inflam-
matory conditions. Among the general indications which, ac-
cording to Schuessler. justify the use of this remedy are conges-
tion of the blood with aggravation of the pains through motion :
therefore, it is used in rheumatic pains which have this pecu-
liarity, and in articular rheumatism, so long as the joints are not
much swollen. My experience in former years confirms this.
Ferrum Phosphoficuni. 507
Also in earlier Homoeopathy cures of articular rheumatism by
means of it have been recorded in our literature. Later on this
remedy seems to have been overlooked in the treatment of this
disease, while its use in rheumatism of the shoulder, where
Ferrum in general seems to be a sort of specific, is well thi night
of by many practitioners.
Ferritin phosphoricum can. of course, be as little regarded as a
universal specihe in articular rheumatism as any other remedy.
But that it has a brilliant effect in this disease at times, even
where the acute stage has already passed. I saw in the following
case:
Two years ago a woman sixty years of age was seized with a
violent attack of articular rheumatism. When the patient after
thirteen weeks came under homoeopathic treatment her condi
in spite of massive doses of Salicylic acid, which she had received,
was not improved, especially the upper extremities were severely
affected. The shoulder joints and also the neck were severely
affected, painful and stiff, as well as the left hip joint. The
tearing, lancinating pains raged night and day. and the least
motion aggravated them to the highest point. The patient, could
not eat and was on that account much reduced. In some parts of
the limbs affected the muscles had already begun to consume
away. In the next three weeks, while giving two homoeopathic
remedies, her condition remained the same : the case seemed
desperate. In my perplexity I gave her Ferrum phosphoricum
6 trit, a dose every two hours. It is probable that I came to
select this remedy particularly because the shoulders were chiefly
affected, though the acute stage of the dise; se had already
passed. I well remember that in prescribing it I had little con-
fidence within me as to the effect - if this remedy. But my doubts
were not justified, for in a few days the pains diminished, and
from that time her convalescence regularly advanced under the
continued use of the remedy, until finally A 3 dil..
given on account of a remaining stiffness of the shoulder, gave
the finishing touch. Since that time the woman has been attend-
ing without hindrance to her domestic and agricultural work. —
Translated from Horn. Monatsblatter, April, 1909.
508 Hahnemann's Potencies.
HAHNEMANN'S POTENCIES.
Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder:
The use of high potencies during Hahnemann's last years has
been so frequently discussed that it seems hardly worth while
calling attention to what he says on p. 649 of the Materia Medica
Pura. I will nevertheless quote it here :
"As the fig-wart gonorrhoea is one of the few permanent mias-
matic diseases, I was able to test in the most certain manner the
degree of efficacy of the higher dilutions of Thuja juice. Thus
I found, that even the higher dilutions, e. g., the decillion-fold or
even the vigesillion-fold dilution (i/xx, made with sixty diluting
phials, each of 100 drops), if each diluting phial were succussed
ten times and oftener (that is, with ten or more shakes of a
powerful arm), was not weaker in power than the less diluted
preparations, nor, on account of the enormously diminished
arithmetical fraction, had it sunk to complete powerlessness, to
nothing, but, on the contrary, it had rather become even more in-
tensely charged* with the medicinal virtue of Thuja."
This is what Boenninghausen says on the subject. Aphorisms
of Hippocrates, p. 380 :
"Hahnemann hat nicht nur in seinen letzten Lebensjahren an
seinen hohen Potenzirungen und feinsten Gaben immer entschied-
ener festgehalten (wie zahlreiche Briefe bis kurz vor seinem
Tode bezeugen), sondern sich auch einer nenen Art von Poten-
zirung bedient, wodurch er unseren gegenwsertigen Hochpoten-
zen nahe kam. Sein Verfahren wird in der naechsten, hoffentlich
bald erscheinenden, sechsten Auflage des Organons Mitgetheilt
werden, da wir selbst durch Ehrenwort an die ( reheimhaltung
dieser uns bekannten Prozedur bis dahin sfebnnden sind."
*"The discovery that crude medicinal substances (dry and fluid) unfold
their medicinal power ever more and more by trituration or succussion
with non-medical things, and in greater extent the further, the longer, and
the stronger this trituration or succussion is carried on, so that all their
material substance seems gradually to be dissolved and resolved into pure
medicinal spirit; this discovery, unheard of till made by me, is of unspeak-
able value, and so undeniable, that the skeptics, who, from ignorance of the
inexhaustible resources of nature in the homoeopathic dilutions, see noth-
ing but mechanical division and diminution until nothing remains (there-
fore, annihilation of their medicinal power), must see their error as soon
as they appeal to experiment."
Hahnemann's Potencies. 509
In another place Bcenninghausen vouches for the accuracy and
reliability of the Jenichen high potencies.
It may be just as well to say here that we value our potencies
for what they will do, not for what materialists reason out or
compute they should not or can not possibly do. Bacon says:
"Axioms determined upon in argument can never assist in the
discovery of new effects ; for the subtilty of nature is vastly
superior to that of argument. (Aphorism 24.) In sciences
formed upon opinion and dogmas, it is right to make use of
anticipations and logic if you wish to force consent rather than
things (Ibid. 29). There is no small difference between the
idols of the human mind and the ideas of the divine mind — that
is to say, between certain idle dogmas and the real stamp and
impression of created things as they are found in nature. (Ibid.
23.) The human mind resembles those uneven mirrors which
impart their own properties to different objects, from which rays
are emitted and distort and disfigure them. (Ibid. 41.)
When Hahnemann speaks of the conversion of energy as the
"resolution of medicinal substance into pure medicinal spirit," he
sees far into modern science. His discoveries rest not only upon
his demonstrations and quotations but also countless confirma-
tions now made with all kinds of preparations and potencies.
Some of them may be poorly made, yet they have shown certain
individual values which but confirm the naturalness of the law.
The operation of law is definite but not narrow.
For the benefit of some of the readers of the Recorder, ]
wish to call your attention to the following quotations from the
Organon of Hahnemann (Dudgeon's translation).
Section 244 — p. 170 — footnote 1.
"Large, oft-repeated doses of cinchona bark, as also concen-
trated cinchonic remedies, such as sulphate of quinine, have cer-
tainly the power of freeing such patients from the periodical
fits of marsh ague: but those thus deceived into the belief that
they arc cured remain diseased in another way without anti-
psoric aid."
Hear what the late Dr. P. P. Wells has to say on this subject.
"If — after this — (the homoeopathic remedy) is, in most cases
quinine, the prescriber may. without hesitation, pronounce on
himself sentence of incompetency to deal with the problem be-
510 The Treatment of Malaria.
fore him. His patients and the public may safely join in the
confirmation of this sentence." "Intermitent Fever," p. 31.
Section 246 — p. 172, line 34, et seq.
"The best dose of the properly selected remedy is always the
very smallest one in one of the high potencies (X), as well
for chronic as for acute diseases — a truth that is the inestimable
property of pure Homoeopathy and which, as long as allopathy
(and the new mongrel sect, whose treatment is a mixture of
allopathic and homoeopathic processes, is not much better) con-
tinues to gnaw like a cancer at the life of sick human beings,
and to ruin them by large and ever larger doses of drugs, that
w7ill keep pure Homoeopathy separated from these spurious arts
as by an impassable gulf."
Section 276 — footnote 2.
"The praise bestowed of late years by some few homceopath-
ists on the larger doses is owing to this, either that they chose
low dynamizations of the medicine to be administered, as I my-
self used to do twenty years ago, from not knowing any better,
or that the medicines selected were not perfectly homoeopathic."
I can not leave this subject without calling attention to the fact
that most of the questions of modern Homoeopathy have been
fully answered by the fathers of our science, but the student of
to-day knows nothing of all this, and goes forth with a confidence
which his equipment can't possibly substantiate, and we all know
the result.
C. M. Boger.
Parkersburg, W. Va.
THE TREATMENT OF MALARIA.
Editor of the Homceopathic Recorder:
In response to your request for helpful things on malaria, my
experience may be of interest.
I spent the first five years of my practice in the central part of
New York State, on the banks of the Erie Canal, and saw many
cases of intermittent fever. I studied my cases carefully ; gave
the remedies that seemed indicated from the totality of the symp-
toms, with the result that, with one exception, no case ever had
a fourth chill after I commenced prescribing: and the majority
Malaria. 5 1 1
of them never had a second one. The remedies most frequently
indicated were Eupatorium perf., Natrum mur.} Nux vom.,
Ipecac, and occasionally, Arsenicum. They were usually given
in the two hundredth potency, occasionally higher; sometimes in
the third. In one case only was there recurrence the following
year. That one had recovered promptly the first year, after
Nux vom., two thousandth. He received one dose of the same
after one paroxysm the second year, and never had another chill.
The one case which did not yield promptly to the first pre-
scription seemed to call for China, so I gave China off. in the
two hundredth potency ; then in the third ; then in the first ;
then three or four other remedies that seemed as though they
might be indicated, allowing each to act for four days. All with-
out result.
My patient's patience was good, she held to me for fully three
weeks, and the paroxysms were unusually severe. Then I de-
cided that it was her due to get some kind of relief, and gave
her five grains of Quinine immediately after a paroxysm, follow-
ed by two three-grain doses at intervals of six hours. That end-
ed the trouble.
Perhaps a more careful study of the Materia Medica would
have shown that Chin. sul. instead of China off. was the remedy,
and the former might have cured her in a high potency. Perhaps
she had the proper "potency."
E. P. Hussey, M. D.
Buffalo, N. Y '., October 22, 1909.
MALARIA.
(Nota bene.)
Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder :
In the Recorder of the present month, page 458, I have read
the humiliating acknowledgment of Dr. Keenan, of Brentwood,
Md., as to his failure to treat malaria with the indicated homoeo-
pathic remedy, and his necessity of resorting to heavy doses of
quinine. I would not endeavor to express my feelings about this
antiquated subject, if it were not that Dr. Keenan's paper is so
positive and enticing, as to lead astray many of our young phy-
sicians. Fortunately our opponents are at present acknowledg-
512 Malaria.
ing the pernicious results of massive doses of quinine, such as
Dr. Keenan endorses, and pointing out the injury that has been
done by a remedy capable only of arresting the paroxysm, but
which return again with increased intensity, until the organism
has to struggle in vain against the combined effects of quinine
and malaria. These are not speculations, but facts, which the
constant and unsuccessful endeavors of the old school to find
substitutes for quinine, abundantly confirm.
I do not agree with Dr Keenan, that the intensity of the
malarial toxaemia will prevent marked physiological effects of
quinine, and that any Bromide of Sodium, or any other Bromide
has ever corrected or arrested the evolution of paludism in any
of its manifestation (intermittent, remittent, pernicious, masked,
etc.), and much less in those intermediate forms which do not
conform exactly with the common clinical aspects of malarial
fever. The patients may be thankful, the physician may be
happy, after attacking the disease with such powerful weapons,
but this is only a temporary expedient, well known to those who
have had the advantage of observing and studying malaria in
the tropics.
We know today that malarial cachexia is not only the condi-
tion of ill-health produced by continued exposure to malaria, but
a depraved state in which Quinine is responsible for many of
the lesions observed in the worst forms of the disease. And
how could it be otherwise now that we thoroughly know the
toxic effects of its massive and prolonged doses. Ague-cake is
the name of the permanently large spleen observed in malaria,
and is associated with that state of which melanccmia and anccmia
are the chief signs. Melanccmia may blacken the brain, the liver,
the lymphatic glands, the mucous membranes, and the skin, and
the black pigment, giving the name to it, may occur in isolated
particles, or massed together, or included in white corpuscles.
One form of chronic atrophy of the liver may result from it.
The characteristic features of malarial cachexia are: a sallow
complexion, voluminous abdomen, weakness, and various func-
tional disorders, such as dyspepsia, neuralgia, or pains in the
muscles and joints. All these symptoms persist .after repeated
attacks of malarial fever, which have been reported cured.
Malaria. 513
And how about that syndrome known by the old school
under the name of Cinchonism, a pathological state due to the
too long continued use of Quinine, or to an overdose of that
drug? Some authorities have included permanent hyperplasia
of the splenic and hepatic substances. But the nervous system
is the most markedly affected. The first warning is usually a
humming or buzzing noise in the ears, accompanied by more or
less deafness; sometimes the deafness is almost complete, and
persists after all other symptoms have passed off. Frontal and
temporal headache is generally present, and may be very severe,
and similar to clavus, so-called because the sufferer feels as if a
nail were being driven. Giddiness is also a common symptom.
Dimness of sight is tolerably common, and may amount to com-
plete blindness; it is associated with pallor of the optic discs,
narrowing of the branches of the retinal artery, and contraction
of the fields of vision. There is also a tendency for the heart's
action to be weakened, a fact that should be borne in mind in the
treatment of such a case, and the patient warned against any
sudden effort which might induce syncope. After very large
doses collapse has been noticed (Fowler).
So far I have given nothing new, recently, however, Prof.
Plehn, of Berlin, has called our attention to a toxic neurosis of
the heart, characterized by frequent and irregular palpitations
and resembling that produced by the abuse of tobacco and ob-
served sometimes in malarial patients returning from tropical
countries.
There is no doubt, says Prof. Plehn, that when Quinine is
given by the mouth, it is first taken by the portal circulation,
then carried to the liver and there partially destroyed. But,
what may surprise Dr Keenan is that recent researches have
brought to light the fact that Quinine, when given in large doses,
alters the blood globules, while, when given in small doses, it
only kills the parasite {hcematozoon). "With only 0.20 centi-
grammes, and even less, one can obtain this result, provided the
hcematozoon is met with at the moment of segmentation for, at
this period of its evolution, the young parasite is incapable of re-
sisting the specific action of Quinine. This moment is easily
selected, as it corresponds to the actual paroxysm, or the at-
514 Malaria.
tack properly so-called. With a systematic distribution of time,
the "golden mom^nfJ of Dr. Keenan, so as to meet the parasitary
segmentation, and with a regularly retarded administration of
the remedy, after a few days' treatment, we can place the or-
ganism under the influence of the drug almost hourly, giving the
frail, immature parasite little chance to do much harm. Finally,
with a well conducted treatment, established on scientific basis,
one is capable of successfully combatting the most severe cases
of malaria with small doses of Quinine, and this without ex-
posing the patient to the evils of drug-intoxication."
This is the manner in which the dosage of Quinine is now dis-
cussed by men of experience, whose observations and researches
are worth considering, and, I do believe, that the time for such
doses as Dr. Keenan advises with so much confidence is
past. The simple reason for the change is, that much harm has
already been done by massive doses, and, certainly, there is no
better evidence of the correctness of my assertion than the in-
creasing number of allopaths daily converted to the small doses
of Quinine, and now seriously engaged in the study and applica
tion of other salts of Quinine, with the hope of avoiding the ill-
effects of the classic salt.
Fuster and Bertin, of France, are employing the bichlor-
hydrate, the tannate, and the ethyl carbon ate of Quinine; the
last also called euquinine, a vaguely known salt, more expen-
sive than the Sulphate, and whose only advantage seems to be,
that like the tannate, has hardly any taste. Prof. Plehn and
Bois-Raymond, of Germany, have not been inactive in this di-
rection. The Chlorhydrate and principally the Bichlorhydrate is
now extensively used in Germany. The latter salt, recommended
by Prof. Plehn, contains 80 per cent, of the alkaloid, and is not
only the richest, but the most soluble. The Tannate, on the
other hand, a salt, so far, poorly defined and considered the poor-
est of all, has recently been brought into some prominence by the
observations of Prof. Angelo Celli, of Italy. Gaglio and Cer-
vello, also of Italy, have been able to establish that the Tannate
under the influence of the bile and of the pancreatic juice, is
easily absorbed and thusly, having a more retarded action, it
may prove beneficial in the preventive treatment of malaria.
Malaria. 515
These are some of the most recent propositions advanced by
those who have lost confidence in the classical alkaloid of Cin-
chona. But is this all? Not by any means. Like disappointed
children, many of those who have extensively combatted malaria
in its different aspects have come to the conclusion that they
must have new toys to play with. Other means must be found
to extirpate the protozoa, which, during the intervals of quies-
cence, seems to remain in abeyance, ready to germinate and split
whenever the organism is stirred up by a recurrence of dor-
mant lesions, or by any other unknown influences. For there is
no doubt that no cure of malaria has ever been effected, without
leaving behind relics for future trouble. Even after apparently
recovering from malarial cachexia, the patient may be subject
to recurrences of fever, which, for their presence, do not neces-
sarily require new exposure to malarial influence ; he seems to
carry the seeds about with him, and the periodic character may
imprint itself upon other diseases to which he is predisposed, as
rheumatism or neuralgia. And as the distinguished Dr. Govantes,
of Havana, used to say in those days of bulky doses of
quinine : "The paludic remains always paludic, he is the vic-
tim of both cachexia and cinchonism."
So much are these results feared by high authorities in this
class of fever that they have exhausted chemistry in order to
find substitutes which may offer better results, but in vain.
Malaria keeps on claiming its customary share of victims, just
as when Quinine was given entirely by the mouth, and was so
badly supported by the stomach. The hypodermic injections of
the chlorhydrate , bromohydrate and sulphovinate of quinine have
only been able to increase suffering by the inevitable formation
of abscesses. Other more radical means have been proposed by
eminent pyretologists, but without positive results. Not long
ago Dr. Xibilia, of Italy, suggested a method which consists in
the hypodermic injection of Quinine until it produces an ab-
scess. This theory being that an abscess draws to it all the
infectious elements in the system, and annihilates them by means
of its* suppuration. A more daring experiment has been actually
tried in Europe, which essays to relieve chronic victims of ma-
laria by the extirpation of the spleen.
516 The Treatment of Malaria. A Reply.
The above facts will explain why I cannot agree with Dr.
Keenan, and before I close these pages, I pertinently declare
that although I have seen more than one paroxysm arrested by
massive doses of Quinine, the attack in malarial districts has
always returned with increased intensity and serious results.
Under the combined effects of drug and poison, the organism
soon enters into a hopeless condition, in vain struggling to
eliminate the morbific agents, which, probably, have already in-
duced the most profound anaemia, permanent enlargement of the
spleen and liver, with serious gastric, intestinal, and nervous
disorders. A comparative improvement can only be attained by
total abandonment of the infected centers.
Of course, I have something very interesting to say about my
success in treating malaria with strictly homoeopathic remedies,
but I leave that for another occasion.
Eduardo For x ias. M. D.
706 West York St, Philadelphia.
''THE TREATMENT OF MALARIA."— A REPLY.
Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder:
On page 458 of the October number of your excellent journal
is an article called "The Treatment of Malaria," which deserves
unfavorable comment. It is true that the author of it has wisely
omitted the word ''Homoeopathic" from its title, and that he
gives his testimony in an entirely personal manner, saying "I
cannot arrest a paroxysm by any potentized remedy ;" but why
he should ignore the indisputable evidence of others who have
and do accomplish this quite ordinary deed is a mystery only
solved by his declaration that he has "given up trying'' and then
entering into praise of that lazy man's remedy, the much abused
and empirically misused bark.
I must trust that the doctor will not look upon this as a per-
sonal attack for my sole motive in offering the protest is the
fear that many who are but faint believers in the actual practice
of Homoeopathy may become still weaker in the Faith. It is very
right and proper for us to acknowledge our many dismal fail-
ures. All of these have been personal faults and have nothing
to do with the great system.
The Treatment of Malaria. A Reply
oV
From Hahnemann down, all of his true followers have cured
cases of intermittent fever with the properly selected remedy,
and if Homoeopathy could not cure that, and every other curable
disease it would be unworthy of its rank as a Law of Nature.
The late Adolph Lippe often spoke to me of his early experi-
ences with this disease, and it was his ability to cure just this
condition with a few doses of a high potency in an epidemic of
it in Allentown that gave him prestige as a prescriber.
The author of this letter claims that quinine is homoeopathic
to chills. If so why does he advocate the administration of a
succeeding treatment by Arsenicum? Routine prescribing of any
one drug for a given disease is not homoeopathic and here are
two suggested without any symptomatic indications.
The "Golden Moment" that he refers to is a reiteration of
Hahnemann's own statement except that he (Hahnemann) ad-
vised the administration of the Jwmo'opatJiic remedy at this time.
This point is fully entered into under the title of "When to
Give the Remedy" in the prefatory pages of that excellent work
by the late Henry C. Allen, The Therapeutics of Fever (Boericke
& Tafel), and those who have been unable to cure this condi-
tion by the school of medicine which they profess to represent
should read this book and discover why they may not do what
others can.
"Taking the case" is too well described by Dr. Allen to need
repetition here except to allude to its primary importance. If no
remedy then appears to be indicated it is safer to wait over one
or two chills and to make the selection with due care. Too
much of a medicine will spoil the case, and should be guarded
against. When one is not absolutely sure as to what should be
done there is but one safe procedure and that is to wait until
one is.
A violent case of this disease came to me this summer. It
was a young man who had lately returned from a camping ex-
pedition and exhibited symptoms that made me suspicious of
having a typhoid case on hand. I could not find the remedy for
him until, after some delay and much study, I discovered that he
"had decided numbness as though dead, in the fingers, during the
chill, and this made me wonder why I had been so stupid as not
to have seen the other indications for Sepia. These little sug-
518 A Case of Intermittent Fever.
gestions for a remedy are often thrown out to us, if we wait for
them, as though Nature was ashamed of our shortsightedness
and anxious to help us in our childish ignorance.
There is always one medicine indicated in every curable case.
It is not merely a question of holding the patient as a customer,
but we must consider his or her physical good and this may
only be done by a close adherence to the one and only law of
cure, and I believe that any departure from it — the checking of a
diseased condition by other means — will lay up for that patient
a troublesome account for future settlement.
Wm. Jefferson Guernsey.
Frank ford, Philadelphia, Oct. 27, 1909.
A CASE OF INTERMITTENT FEVER.
Editor of the Homceopathic Recorder:
In the Recorder of Oct. 15, 1909, I see an article on the
"Treatment of Malaria." Perhaps the following case may be
of interest to your readers :
July 22, 1909, I was called to see a five-year-old girl, who
had been under the care of three different physicians — one at a
time — for a couple of weeks. Her ailment was variously diag-
nosed, "worms," "stomach trouble," "the lining of her stomach
was all eaten out ;" at least so I was informed by members of
the family. I found the little patient lying upon her side in a
sort of convulsion, thrusting the buttocks forward and back,
with lower extremities drawn up ; she was covered up with
blankets, lips and nails blue ; screaming if touched ; semi-con-
scious ; very anaemic ; spleen considerably enlarged ; temperature
102 ° F. I watched the case awhile, questioning the mother and
several friends and neighbors who were present, and learned
that she had a paroxysm like this every day about 2 o'clock p.
m. for two weeks, with high fever, followed by profuse perspira-
tion, after which she seemed very weak and slept. Appetite poor,
bowels constipated. I then took her temperature again and
found it 1060 F. Here was a typical case of intermittent fever,
with the "chill (convulsion), fever and sweat," occurring daily
at the same hour. I gave Veratrum viride 2x during paroxysm,
to be followed by Eupat perf. 0.
The Dangers of Antitoxin. 519
July 23, she had another paroxysm, but not quite so severe
or long-lasting. Gave Ver. vir. as before, to be followed by
Cinchona sulph. until next paroxysm.
July 24. Had the usual paroxysm. Continued same treat-
ment.
July 25. Slight convulsion, temperature 1010 F. Continued
Cinch, sulph.
July 26. Xo paroxysm, appetite improving, but very anaemic.
Continued Cinch, sulph., and gave peptonate of iron and man-
ganese with milk.
July 29. Xo recurrence. Gave Natrum mar. 6x, continued
peptonate of iron and manganese.
I again saw her August 25, and hardly knew her. Her cheeks
were becoming rosy, and she felt strong. Heard from her again
October 18, 1909, and she remains well.
There is nothing new in the treatment of the above case, but
it illustrates the importance of taking time and pains to thor-
oughly examine the patient, instead of guessing at a diagnosis.
It should be remembered that a convulsion frequently takes the
place of the chill in cases of intermittent fever in children.
Albra W. Baker, M. D.
Bloomshurg, Pa., Oct. 25, 1909.
THE DANGERS OF ANTITOXIN.
Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder:
I thank you for the copy of "N. Y. State Med. Journal" just
received.
The cases of "untoward" results of antitoxin injection reported
therein only further confirm a conviction that has long been de-
veloping in my mind that, as between this vaunted "remedy"
and diphtheria, the remedy is about four times more dangerous
than the disease.
I have just passed through an epidemic of diphtheria here,
without a single death, my chief reliance being Cyanide of Mer-
cury 30X, with occasional Belladonna 6x where indicated. Bel-
ladonna seems to go well with Merc, cyanat. in the beginning
of most cases, and the two worked together in this epidemic so
satisfactorily that it was evident that they represented the genus
epidemicus. No other remedy was administered except that as
520 Therapeutic Notes.
a prophylactic measure I put all the children within my circle
of practice on diphtherinum, 30th centesimal, once a day, as soon
as I realized that the numerous widely-disconnected cases meant
that an epidemic was upon us.
As to the value of such prophylaxis, I can only say that many
children who were undoubtedly exposed by intimate association
with those ill with the disease did not contract it, and that none
of the children who were attacked after getting the diphtherinum
30c, presented the well known features of the malignant type ;
whereas those cases that had not had the prophylactic were al-
most without exception, of malignant character.
I am strongly inclined to believe that early administration of
the diphtherinum, if it does not actually prevent the attack,
certainly modifies the disease. It does this by raising the op-
sonic index.
In not one of the cases treated as above indicated has palatial,
pharyngeal or other paralysis in any degree appeared.
Every recovery has been complete, without pathological se-
quelae of any sort.
No local applications of any kind were permitted in my cases.
John F. Keenan, M. D.
Brentwood, Md., Oct. 22, 1909.
THERAPEUTIC NOTES.
In two cases of rhus poisoning that occurred this summer it
was found that the application of Hieracium venosum 6 at once
allayed the itching and other disagreeable features. The cases
were those of two men who gathered the green rhus for a ho-
moeopathic pharmacy.
Dr. Picard relates a case of subacute inflammation of the
kidneys (Revue Horn. F., June) successfully treated with Eel
serum. The urine was scanty, dark and highly charged with
albumen. The remedy was given internally, first centesimal
potency.
Dr. G. Seiffert, Paris, reports a case of influenza in which the
heart became affected in which Crataegus ox. 1 acted very well.
In another case of the same disease, acute pains followed ex-
tending from the eye to chin ; this neuralgia yielded after other
remedies had failed to Chininum ars. 4. Also a case of painful
spleen that yielded to Ceanothus Americana 6.
Homoeopathic Recorder
PUBLISHED MONTHLY AT LANCASTER, PA.
By BOERICKE Sz TAFEL
Subscription $1.00, To Foreign Countries $1.24, Per Annum
Address communications, books for review, exchanges, etc.,
tor the editor, to
E. P. ANSHUTZ, M. D., P. O. Box 921, Philadelphia, Pa.
EDITORIAL BREVITIES.
Each Cancer a Law Unto Itself. — According to the
Seventh Annual Report of the Imperial Research Fund, as
quoted in Monthly Homoeopathic Review, cancers seem to be
like men — each a distinct proposition. Cancers, histologically
alike, differ widely biologically. This fact "makes it improbable
that there can be any universally acting remedy applicable to
all cancers."' This strengthens the reports published from time
to time, by homoeopaths, of the cure of cancers (generally not
believed by the sceptical) by means of this, that and the other
''indicated'' remedy. Incidentally it also backs up the Hahne-
mannian rule of ignoring the name of the disease in treating a
case.
What is the Answer? — The estimable Dr. Dunglison in his
great dictionary defines :
Allopathy (alios, another; pathos, disease). Method of treatment in
which remedial agents are employed the action of which produces symp-
toms different from those observed in the sick person ; opposite to Ho-
moeopathy. A term incorrectly employed as a name for rational or reg-
ular medication, by those who do not understand the principles of the
latter.
The first part of this definition is correct according to com-
mon belief. But the addenda is a bit puzzling. What are those
principles — boiled down as Dr. Porter boiled down the definition
of "what is a homoeopathic physician?" This isn't a jibe, but an
honest inquiry. What is a regular physician?
522 Editorials.
The "Booster's Club." — Some one has sent a circular letter
to the medical journals advocating the formation of a "Booster
Club," with a club button which each member is to wear. Many
journals published the letter. At first reading the plan seems to
be rather amiable and praiseworthy, but it will not bear critical
examination. No gentleman slanders other men, neither does
he endorse the unworthy. Above all men the physician should
be the gentleman, fearlessly honest. A characteristic of the
gentleman is that he minds his own business ; his business is not
to proclaim the failings of other men, neither is it to "boost"
them. If the club, and its button, get in evidnece the news-
paper wits may welcome it with open arms.
Another New Word Proposed. — Dr. E. W. Robertson, of
Onancock, Va., proposes a new name for that which the world
knows as "malaria." In the Virginia Semi-Monthly he argues
that the anophele is the sine qua non of malaria and therefore,
to be accurate, we should term the disease of which he, or she,
is the sole cause "anophelesis." Granting his premises Dr.
Robertson would be correct, but there are so many exceptions
to the rule that it is doubtful if the word will come into general
use.
Flood-Tide of Surgery Said to Have Been Reached. — The
Monthly Homoeopathic Review, October, notes that there is
the beginning of a strong revolt among the people of England
against the surgical craze in that country. They see so many
"of those whose physique has been wrecked by surgical inter-
ference." They feel the pinch of the big fees, and the heavy
after expenses so much that they are beginning to look about
for some other means of treatment than that of the knife. The
Review rightly thinks that now is the golden moment for propa-
ganda work for Homoeopathy, else the discontented ones will
drift off into Christian Science "and other quasi-religious de-
lusions which germinate so freely in America." If the revolt
starts in England it will spread to this country and the general
practitioner may come to the fore again as in the olden times.
Immunization. — In an article published by the Medical Re-
view of Review's, September, Dr. H. D. Pease, of the N. Y.
Editorials. 523
State Hygienic Laboratory, at Albany, quotes Trudeau as fol-
lows : "Trudeau within a few days has summarized the entire
situation in the following words : 'Experimental evidence shows
that vaccination with living cultures of the tubercle bacillus alone
produces any real immunity to subsequent tuberculous infection,
and no specific anti-bacterial immunity worthy of the name can
be brought about in animals by the injections of dead germs or
the chemical products derived from cultures of tubercle bacilli.' '
That means a lot, doesn't it? If it applies to tuberculosis it is
likely to apply to other diseases. It means that the enormous
number of "immunizations" are useless, and, probably, worse
than useless. Then, too, isn't it curious that the living tubercle
alone will cause immunity? Against what? Themselves ap-
parently. Verily, it is a mess.
Arnica and the Law. — Dr. D. E. Coleman contributes an
interesting paper to the Chironian, October. Hospital men ought
to read it. The paper tells of a case in which three toes were
crushed. The patient was a young man, aged 17. Amputation
was performed on April 17 and the stumps dressed according
to the approved methods. But the wound would not heal ; so the
patient suffered greatly. On July 8 a second amputation seem-
ed inevitable. Dr. Coleman was asked to prescribe. He "took
the case," found Arnica clearly indicated; and he gave it in
30th potency, with 1-100 of same drug applied locally. The pa-
tient at once felt relief, and made good and speedy recovery. A
skillful prescriber of the similimum could be made very useful
in all surgical cases.
The Latest Medical Fad. — "Grey oil" has become some-
thing of a fad among the French doctors, according to the
Monthly Homoeopathic Review. "Grey oil" is prepared from
Mercury and, needless to add, is administered hypodermically.
Several fatal cases of gangrenous stomatitis have occurred, at-
tributed to this treatment; also many cases of mercurial fever,
with the usual symptoms of mercurial poisoning. All of this
doesn't look much like advancing in medicine ; or, at least, in
the art of cure, or science of cure, as you like.
The Origin of "Clap." — Whether you call it "gonorrhoea,"
"urethritis" or just plain old fashioned "clap," the thing is very
524 Editorials.
much the same to the patient. The name ''clap" seems to be the
oldest of the lot. It probably originated in a popular joke, or
superstition, for it comes from the "clap-dish*' that the lepers
once used to warn others that they, the lepers, were infected.
The "leper with a clap-dish, to give notice he is infectious'' writes
Massinger. Perhaps old time health boards wanted the gonor-
rhceic to carry a clap-board. Civilization would be a noisy place
if such a rule were to be enforced today if all reports are true.
Journalistic Hazing. — The following is a specimen of what
might be taken for journalistic hazing, taken from the pages of
the ironic, and sometimes sarcastic, American Journal of Derma-
tology: "Venereal disease is the long suit of the medical stu-
dent and what he does not know about them has not been dis-
covered. He is the modern medical Columbus and claims to
be superior even to the bartender and to the barber who are
well known oracles to all callow youths." Never mind, oh stu-
dent, some day you, too, can stand on the upper balcony and
make comments on the sap that is flowing.
The Wonderful Remedy. — Theoretically, every doctor re-
pudiates secret remedies, because they are not scientific ; he
knows nothing about them — science, at bottom, simply means
"that which is known." Practically it is different. Many cir-
culars and handsomely printed booklets and leaflets are dropped
in the waste basket, but on an idle day one is dipped into. At
once the hypnotic influence begins to work. You realize the
absurd claims and the ignorance displayed, but there comes over
you the query, "I wonder if after all these fellow:, havn t got
hold of something good?" Then the chances are that you
buy a bottle, try it and behold ! you are no more scien-
tific than you were before, nor are you healed as
you were hypnotized into hoping you, or your patient, would be.
In nine times out of ten the drug that is active is a drug with
which you are familiar — or ought to be — and it will do no more
coming out of the gaily lithographed bottle than it will from
your own tincture bottle. How could it? The tenth one, the
one of merit, is where the proprietor has got hold of a drug
new to the dispensatory, as was once Haniamclis, and some
Editorials. 525
others, or of some neglected drug of merit — there are many of
them. But even with the tenth, a knowledge of the drug is
preferable to the vague and over-reaching claims on the label.
Don't despise a little known drug because it is not among the
elect in the materia niedica. nor expect a drug under a fanciful
name will do more than under its right name, whether it be from
the chemical shop or nature.
Benzoate of Soda. — In days of old a man asked a scientist
why it was that if you put a live fish in a bowl level full of
water the level of the water would not be raised nor none would
spill over. The scientist formulated a theory which, when pro-
mulgated, was disputed by other scientists who advanced con-
flicting theories. Finally a prosaic man filled a bowl of water
level full and put a live fish in it. The water spilled over and
the controversy was thereby terminated. The American people
were told that Benzoate of Soda was used on rotten vegetables
to make them palatable, to "disguise"' them, etc., therefore it was
anathema. At the recent meeting of the Board of Trustees of
the American Institute of Homoeopathy, the experiment was
made on some decayed fruit and vegetables and it was found
that it had no effect on them. Therefore it was advised that the
recent vote of the institution be reconsidered. Some say that
strong spice is the thing for questionable stuff. Benzoate of
Soda merely prevents fermentation.
j
The Roentgen Ray and the Chicken. — The October num-
ber of the N. Y. Medical Times contains as its leading paper one
on the Roentgen ray, by Dr. Albert C. Geyser, read before the
International Medical Congress, recently held at Buda-Pesth.
From it we clip the following :
"At Cornell University Medical College we even went so far
as to study the effect of the Roentgen ray upon eggs during the
process of hatching. The hen sitting upon the eggs was daily
exposed to the ray, during each exposure some of the eggs were
taken away, properly marked and later replaced, so that at the
end of three weeks out of twelve eggs seven chicks were hatched,
the remaining five eggs were examined, and the process of evolu-
tion had been arrested at various stages of development. Out of
526 Editorials.
the seven chicks that were hatched, one had practically no
feathers at all, another had feathers over the body, but could
grow no heavy tail or wing feathers. Both of these died during
the first week in spite of all the care that could be given them.
Still others seemed small and remained stunted, then died at the
end of four and six weeks. One pullet, and especially one
iooster, seemed to thrive and promised to do well. In fact, the
rooster did too well. He not only acquired his normal size, bul:
never seemed to s-.-.p growing; he deve!o**eil very long legs air!
a very long neck and bill and appeared while walking rather un-
gainly and awkward. One could almoci. say that he was top
heavy or seemed ataxic. He lived for seven months, and one
day without apparent reason fell over and expired.''
This reminds us of a scientific romance published a few years
ago in which a certain substance caused everything with which
it came in contact to grow abnormally, bees becoming as large
as turkey buzzards and rats like elephants, etc. There are quee*
things in store, but whether desirable is the question.
Backward, Turn Backward. — Once upon a time it was said
that the man who neglected to resort to venesection, to blood-
letting, was guilty of ''murder by indirection." Now they say,
tempered a little, "That every physician who does not use anti-
toxin on every case diagnosed as diphtheria, should be prose-
cuted for malpractice." This goes toward showing that super-
heated imagination is as prevalent today as it was in the days of
the medical dark ages. Perhaps, though, shades of those days
still linger?
A Prediction. — "I believe that before another fifteen years
have passed we shall see the treatment of diphtheria by antitoxin
practically abandoned, and if I am alive in twenty-five years I
shall expect to see our friends, the allopaths, 'right about face,'
again, as they have so many times in the past, and saying that
'anyone using antitoxin as we use it for the treatment of diph-
theria should be prosecuted for malpractice.' " — Dr. E. S. Ab-
bott, New England Medical Gazette, Oct.
Where Surgery Was Needed. — "This patient (Mrs. A. E.
H., aged 65) had been a victim of so-called 'dyspepsia* for a
' News Items. 527
period of thirty years or more. She exhausted the resources of
the local physicians, took 'treatments' from various advertising
fakirs, ran through the subtleties of Christian Science, finally go-
ing to Boston, where she consulted 'specialists.' She was pump-
ed out by stomach (and otherwise), had test breakfasts and more
pumpings, her blood was examined, urine analyzed, faeces search-
ed, etc., ad infinitum, ad nauseam (for she had the means to
pay), and yet she had a stomach and knew all about it. Practi-
cally all her symptoms were referred to the stomach. The recital
of her symptoms would only be a repetition of that large class
of cases with which you are all so familiar, and from which you
would all like to be delivered. She finally fell into the hands of
the writer. I had a very strong suspicion that there were gall-
stones in her interior and told her so, advising operation. She
consented, and was operated upon September 25th, 1908. The
result was magical. Her dyspepsia disappeared at once. From
a nervous, irritable dyspeptic she has become in these few
months a fat. well woman, who sleeps well, knows not the mean-
ing of nerves, has an appetite which she says she 'would not sell
for a thousand dollars,' and the digestion of an ostrich. I found
153 stones which are here for inspection." — Dr. W. V. Hans-
comb. Rockland, Me,. N. E. Med. Gazette, October.
NEWS ITEMS.
Dr. Chas. H. Evans, Chicago, departed this life Oct. 7.
Dr. H. M. Holverson, of Boise, Idaho, writes : "Our Idaho
Homoeopathic Society was formed Oct. 7, 1909, with Dr. R. S.
Gregory, of Boise, President: Dr. Susan Bruce, of Lewiston,
Vice President: Dr. H. M. Holverson, of Boise, Secretary, and
Dr. Fred. Pittenger, of Boise, Treasurer. Drs. Gregory and
Holverson were appointed Delegates to the A. I. H. "There are
many good openings in the State and we are desirous of getting
good homoeopaths to locate here."
Dr. J. Lopez Cardozo has removed from 848 Park Place to
635 St. Mark's Ave., near Nostrand Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Dr. C. F. Dail has removed from Eureka, to 1814 Beech St.,
San Diego. Cal.
PERSONAL.
The Freshman said the office of the gastric juice is the stomach. Added
that he didn't know the office hours.
The next Cook-book, they say, will be devoted to ices.
A Western town unanimously Resolved that . . . discovered the
Pole.
Polar dashes have enormously increased since "that said
that he "
The Wall St. melon is a Rocky-ford reached over a rocky road on
which your wagon generally breaks down.
The Lancet finds bacteria and contagion in the sand in which children
play. Heigh ho !
Let us admit bacteria and danger in everything and be at rest!
"The advocates of laboratory practice — are groping blindly in the
labyrinth of absurdity." — Ec. Med. Jour.
"Tuberculosis day was observed" in a certain community. Why not
have a "grip day," also?
When the women folk go away from home for a time man returns to
his natural state.
"Glory enough for us all" seems to hypnotize the American people.
The Christian Scientist sat on a tack — then she got up, just like you
and I!
"The surgeon requires his sight, touch, hearing, nose, tongue and in-
tellect." Jacobi. How about other men?
"The pathology of Hippocrates was humorous," answered the little
Freshman. Not so far off.
"The surgeon should consider the patient," says an Eminent Author-
ity. Well, doesn't he?
Doctor Luther Trant said, "Boo!" to the man in the chair and at
once his guilt was apparent, to the jury.
"R. N. Regular Nurse, or Regular Nuisance" is the heading of an edi-
torial in the Ar. A. Jour. Horn.
The best thing for many cases is a big dose of "Quit-it !"
Glad we're not a king, compelled to kiss other kings. If it were .
But enough !
"Mawnin," said the trembling old colored man. as Wright's aero-
plane dropped in the field, "how'd yo leave de folks in hebben ?"
Why is it, O wise man ! that women dread mice, yet take kindly to
rats?
Contrary to their name the "Dreadnaught" seems to cause more dread.
"Successful men never fail." exclaimed an "esteemed," etc. Neither
are fat men thin, we shout!
THE
Homeopathic Recorder
Vol. XXIV Lancaster, Pa., December, 1909 No. 12
WHAT IS "SCIENTIFIC?"
In the good old days when medicine was bleeding and salivat-
ing its patients, its practitioners were just as cock-sure that they
were the people, and that wisdom would perish with them, as are
their descendants to-day. To them Homoeopathy has always been
anathema ; it is not "scientific/' therefore it is unworthy of con-
sideration by scientific minds. When a thing is scientific it is
absolutely sure; the scientist can calculate to the second the ap-
pearance of an eclipse, the strength of a given metal, or the power
of a gun. Can the gentlemen who say that Homoeopathy is
merely "Hahnemann's law," "Hahnemann's dogma/' etc., and
claim to be "scientific" medicine men, give the world one scien-
tific, i. e., sure, cure for a single human disease ? Until they can
do so are they not open to the suspicion of not comprehending the
meaning of the word "scientific" so frequently used to-day?
One of our homoeopathic journals for November gives up nine-
teen pages to a paper devoted to proving that Homoeopathy is not
a natural law, but "Hahnemann's law," and that it is "unscien-
tific." The writer proves his point to his own satisfaction but
probably not to that of all of his readers. His demonstrations are
also sometimes rather difficult of comprehension by the average
mind; but, still, such expressions as the following are plain to
all ; they are quoted to show the attitude of medical minds, claim-
ing to be scientific towards Homoeopathy, which has revolution-
ized the practice of medicine.
"That unnumbered substances — shall be applied for the cure of
disease alone by virtue of one universal law of nature is possible
— only for minds which have not accepted the principles of evo-
lution." We respectfully submit that evolution is not science but
a theory spun from a few facts, a theory as unsubstantial as the
530 What Is Scientific?
gossamer threads that float in the summer sunshine. You cannot
create something from nothing (that is rugged and basic
science), consequently you cannot evolve that which has not been
previously involved. You may take the wild peach and develop
to the lucious fruit we have to-day — but it is always a peach.
So with monkeys or anything else, you can develop but you can-
not change their involved nature.
''Naturally, if Hahnemann's law is a natural law, Homoeopathy
is a natural science. Contrast its means, application and results
with those of the newest natural science, that of bacteriology."
Well ? Homoeopathy cures disease, while bacteriology does what ?
Aids diagnosis, and prevention, but what has it to do with cure?
Bacteriology is a useful but subordinate thing to Homoeopathy;
also as a "science" it is a bit shaky on its pins at times and covers
its prophets with confusion, as when Pettenkofer swallowed thou-
sands of the cholera bacilli and did not get the cholera, as he
should according to theory.
"Serum-therapy is based on the natural science of bacteriology
and not on the homoeopathic art." Correct ! And remember this
when the cumulative effect of serum is seen in the human race — ■
seen with dismay most likely, and then classed with things of the
dark ages. Even now serums are playing queer pranks with
patients, that worry those who use them, at times. "Serum dis-
eases" are to the fore.
Concerning the unreliability of provings : "Psychology can
teach us much regarding the liability to error of purely human
testimony," etc. Sure thing! though that has been known from
the beginning of things from Solomon, from Holy Writ ; for in-
stance ; the same authority also gives a very good, if not scientific,
working rule for judging human testimony, i. e., "its fruits."
Homoeopathy can well rest its case on this test. The end of medi-
cine is the healing of the sick ; when that which claims the name
of "scientific medicine" can show better fruits than Homoeopathy
these will be accepted. Up to present writing the better fruits
have not been produced
We have no quarrel with our scientific readers and friends, be-
lieving that they are "seeking the truth" to the best of their ability,
but when they put their feet on Homoepathy we do not think it
is well for their scientific regeneration — hence this remonstrance.
Is There Such a Disease as Hydrophobia? 531
IS THERE SUCH A DISEASE AS HYDROPHOBIA?
"Rabies" is a Latin word signifying "to rave," "to rage," "mad-
ness." It implies the possession of a mind. It is something apart
from the loss of temper. It is accepted as a disease of the body
and mentality of man. When a dog is said to be rabid his bite
is believed by the many to convey the madness to human beings ;
a transfer of dog insanity to man.
Hydrophobia is, according to the "harmless drudge," as Dr.
Johnson dubbed the maker of dictionaries, "A preternatural fear
of water ; a symptom of canine madness," caused by the inocula-
tion with saliva of a rabid animal, and characterized by dryness
of the throat, a fear of water, or "a horror of liquids," and so on.
Some men believe that this disease is one of pure suggestion.
They believe that if man had not been possessed by it through
tradition there would never be a case. One man, a physician, told
us he saw a case with all the typical symptoms, really near death.
He investigated, found the dog still alive and well, frisky and
playful ; he convinced the apparently dying patient of this and
the disease left him. Another physician told us of a case he had
seen, characterized by terrible fear of water, etc. This case died.
The first didn't believe in the disease, the second did. There
you are.
For several years a Philadelphia physician, connected with the
University of Pensnylvania, has offered a reward for a case of
authenticated and undisputable rabies ; the reward has never been
claimed. The man who offers it says there is no such disease.
Drs. Kerr and Stimson, on the other hand, contribute a paper
to the Journal A. M. A., September 25th, on "The Prevalence of
Rabies in the United States." In the year 1908 they found 534
cases with in deaths. They print a dotted map, the dots show-
ing the number of cases. New Jersey, the land of the "wild
man," the "terrible unknown monster," the "gink," is the most
severely dotted. Indiana, the home of poetry and romance, comes
next. The disease first appeared in New England about the time
the witchcraft scare was subsiding. The further west you get the
fewer are the dots. Colorado has one dot, but the States north,
south and west of it are dotless.
"The reports thus far secured indicate that nearly 1,500 persons
532 Is There Such a Disease as Hydrophobia?
took the Pasteur treatment during 1908." There are twenty-three
of the Institutes in the United States. In some the patients are
treated "at cost." In others they apparently pay a stiff fee.
From the discussion following the reading of Drs. Kerr and
Stimson paper it appears that the map is very erroneous. A
doctor from Minnesota said there were as many cases there as in
India, while a man from Texas said there have been 1,350 cases
treated in one institute in that State in the past few years, six of
them dying. "The patients who died were invariably "bitten fear-
fully, lacerated, many bitten as frequently as from twenty-five to
fifty times." One might think, with some justification, that a
child (they seem to have been children) "lacerated and macerat-
ed" fifty times had cause enough for dying in that fact alone
without charging the death to hydrophobia. This gentleman be-
longed to an institue that constantly had from twenty-two to
thirty-two cases at a time. He said the uniform fee for treatment
was $25.00.
Another speaker said rabies was a striking disease on account
of its "uniform fatality." The fatality in Texas, at le^st, does
not seem to have been very uniform. An Indiana man said the
disease proceeded from cats and dogs only, but the man from
Texas said that skunks and wolves were responsible for many
cases.
A Tennessee doctor said that prior to 1900 the disease was un-
known in that State, but now it is rapidly increasing, over a hun-
dred cases a year. He condenmed the use of the madstone. He
told of a child bitten by a dog ; it was proved that the dog was not
mad, but the child died from hydrophobia, acquired, he believed,
from an infected madstone applied.
Dr. Abbott, the health man of Philadelphia, thought there was
no use wasting time discussing the Pasteur treatment ; it was the
only thing to do. "We pay $25 for material enough to treat a
single case."
A bite or skin puncture of any kind from animal or insect is not
a health measure, and deaths have followed such bites, but the
question remains : Is there a distinct disease, hydrophobia or
rabies, resulting from such bites? Some of the French medical
cynics say the disease increases in proportion to the "institutes"
for its cure.
Biochemical Phthisiotherapy. 533
BIOCHEMICAL PHTHISIOTHERAPY.
By Eric Graef Von Der Goltz, M. D.
It is wonderful how the formulated opinion of the late Dr.
Wm. Schuessler (dead now since 1898) is accepted more and
more from day to day, viz., that the constitutional weakness of
the organization gives the bacillus the chance to work the fatality
of the disease.
Many years after Schuessler's death the New York Medical
Record, Vol. 62, Xo. IX, brought this opinion, and again to-day
we find the same idea supreme as expressed in the editorial of
the August issue of the New York State Journal of Medicine,
1909. It is for this reason that this paper presents the treatment
of phthisis as result of Schuessler's wonderful and scientific
recognition of the inner working of the course of phthisis.
It is, therefore, that Schuessler's fundamental work, "the
abridged therapy,'' still gives the best and most satisfactory w ay
of treatment and cure, especially with the aid of other remedies
added to Schuessler's primary remedies according to the progress
of the chemical analysis of the human tissues, if those tissue reme-
dies are used according to pure and simple biochemical considera-
tion as the basis of treatment.
So soon the diagnosis phthisis pulmonum is made out the pri-
mary remedy will be Arsenicum iodatum, but (as the author has
found out clinically) must be given at least in the 30th regular
centesimal potency.
The clinical experience has further brought out the following
rule that parallel to the use of Ars. iodat. according to circum-
stances to be studied in Schuessler's original in the author's
manual: Calc. phos., Kali mur., Calc. silico fluoric a, Xat. mur.,
Natr. silicofluoricum. Kali phos. or Natr. phos. must be used in-
dividually.
The corresponding alternating remedy must be used in a corre-
sponding high or low potency.
Often in desperate cases the following plan has worked well :
Ars. iodat. and Calc. phos., for instance, on one day and Ars.
iodat. and Kali mur. on the following day in alternation — here
as always where alternating remedies have been used by the
author the alternation is made even* three hours.
534 Biochemical Phthisiotherapy.
The unswerving use of Ars. iod. with or without alternating-
remedies has so far always broken the fever, lessened the con-
sistency and putrescent state of the sputum even in hopeless cases.
It must not be forgotten that many cases of consumption must
be treated first in the advised way by Schuessler (25th ed.). But
here again as soon as the original tissue remedies have worked to
their natural limitations, Ars. iod. must be brought to the front.
Other remedies — Manganese, Calc. iod., Natr. cacodyl., Phos.
iod., Natr. iod. — must be used sometimes according to arising
emergencies, taking them in a transitory way the place of Ars.
iod.
Further, it is self-evident that any arising eventuality must be
treated accordingly; as this described treatment here gives the
fundamental structure on which a successful phthisiotherapy is
based.
It is unnecessary to go into the details of dietetic, hygienic,
prophylactic rules, to well known end, therefore, here to be
omitted.
The author only wishes to touch on one point, the general utter
prostration of the whole digestive tract of nearly every new pa-
tient. This prostration is already heralded with the first visit of
the patient before any word has been spoken, before any physical
examination has been made — by the penetrating odor of the
hundred and one Creosote preparations (the fetish of the scientific
treatment !) .
It must be stated that in the longer or shorter run the pre-
mature death of the consumptive patient is brought on by starva-
tion based on the ruined stomach by the influence of Creosote in
whatever form in even minimum allopathic (scientific) doses.
Formerly the treatment was highly handicapped, and the result
often frustrated in the hands of the author to not a small percent-
age by this obstinate "weak stomach" until a suitable food could
be found.
The author presents the biochemical treatment of phthisis
puhnonuin to show how simply phthisis can be handled at home,
especially when even from Germany come the depressing re-
ports that the great hope of the sanatorium treatment for con-
sumption has again proved — a failure. To this in reference the
New York State Journal of Medicine in the August issue of 1909
Symptom Covering. 535
writes : "Therefore, treat people in their own homes as far as
may be, and make these homes as far as possible what they should
be, and cease spending large amounts of public funds building
sanatoria in a vain and senseless crusade against tuberculosis."
New York, Dec, 1909, 247 East 72d St.
"SYMPTOM COVERING."
By T. L. Bradford, M. D.
In the arduous efforts of the professional bacteriologists to
discover a new small critter yclept germ with a big name, there
seems to be some slight tendency to overlook the fact that to the
sick person the return to health is more important than the name
of the disease or the germ that is supposed to cause the disease.
And also to the sick person there comes betimes the thought that
it has not been altogether proven that the germ does cause the
disease, the germ never having been captured in the healthy
body just as it was about to begin its lethal campaign. And if
we find the germ in the sick person — why may not that germ be
the result instead of the cause of the disease? In the super-
abundance of scientific so-called investigation have we not lost
sight of that old notion and which was so cleverly expressed by a
very learned man some years since: "The physician's high and
only mission is to restore the sick to health, to cure, as it is term-
ed. His mission is not, however, to construct so-called systems
by interweaving empty ideas and hypotheses concerning the in-
ternal vital processes, and consequently the actual mode in which
diseases are produced in the interior of the organism wherein so
many physicians have hitherto ambitiously wasted their talents
and their time ; nor is it to attempt to give countless explanations
regarding the phenomena in diseases and their proximate cause
(which must ever remain concealed), wrapped in unintelligible
wrords, and an inflated abstract made of expression, which should
sound very learned, in order to amaze the ignorant, whilst sick
humanity sighs in vain for aid. Of such learned reveries (to
which the name of theoretic medicine is given and for which
peculiar professorships are instituted), we have had quite enough,
and it is now high time that all who call themselves physicians
536 Symptom Covering.
should at length cease to deceive suffering mankind with mere
talk, and begin now, instead, for once to act, that is, really to aid
and to cure."
True all this, as true now as when the words were written a
hundred years ago !
Since the first arbitrary classification of diseases by names,
known as nosology, there have been many efforts by many medi-
cal schools to get at the cause or reason of each disease. The
great pathway of Time is lined with the moss grown relics of
medical systems, for the most part founded, as Hahnemann truly
said, "of empty ideas and hypotheses concerning the internal vital
processes." To-day the germ is king-medical, and every disease
must have its special microbe. Kill the microbe and, presto, there
is no more disease. You can not have consumption unless you
get the germ in you sometime after you are born. You can not
inherit the tubercle. Tuberculous cattle cause consumption in
man, ergo, all the cows are killed by force of law. The tubercle
of the cow does not affect the man, so now says the great and only
Koch. So after all we need not have killed the cows. The con-
sumption people are weakening a trifle regarding the non-hered-
ity of consumption. By and by, only give them time, they will
find out that Hahnemann's theory of psora explains all this.
That the newborn baby is born with many possibilities of dis-
ease in his little organism, inherited from many, many erratic an-
cestors. What profits it that cry after the germ ! When Hahne-
mann named for the people of Europe the few remedies that
would be successful in the cholera that came down from the
Xorth in 1832, he bothered himself in nowise about the germ of
the monster. He simply mentioned the medicines that taken in a
healthy system produced symptoms like those seen in cholera, in
a word, simply covered the symptoms of the disease by the symp-
toms obtained by provings, according to his law, and lo ! success
was immediate. And while certain ones of our school are
coquetting with the pharmaceutical products, certain other ones
with the toxin cure-alls, while some of us have welcomed the
Greeks bearing gifts, thank God there are a great many practi-
tioners of the school of Homoeopathy who believe that if we do
really get the remedy homoeopathic to the sickness, if the symp-
toms of the disease can be covered by the symptoms that the
Symptom Covering. 537
remedy will cause, that remedy will cure the disease whether or
not we know the name and habits of the special germ that goes
with the disease.
Dr. E. B. Nash is one of the men who still think that Ho-
moeopathy is as good as so-called modern medicine ; that there is
still truth in the teachings of Hahnemann ; that when we find the
symptoms that correspond with the disease we can cure the dis-
ease. He calls this method "covering symptoms." Within a
few years Dr Nash has given us several very valuable books upon
the methods of accurate prescribing. His latest, "Leaders in Re-
spiratory Organs," places those of us who believe in the law of
Homoeopathy under further obligation
It is a small book of but 188 pages, and is devoted to the treat-
ment of nasal catarrh, laryngitis, croup, bronchitis, asthma, per-
tussis, pneumonia, pleuritis, pulmonary tuberculosis, cough ; there
are also special repertories to cough, expectoration, respiration
and the chest. Cause, symptoms, diagnosis, in a few words, are
given, followed by the therapeutics of each disease. The reme-
dies are mentioned in much the conversational fashion that made
one reading Leaders in Homoeopathic Therapeutics (another
of Dr. Nash's books) think he was listening again to the talks of
Guernsey or Lippe.
He truly says, "by this symptom covering we are enabled to
cure many a disease which cannot with certainty be named, and
about which the best diagnosticians living would widely differ."
He also in mentioning consumption of the lungs quotes from
Rosenbach, of Berlin: "It would be more nearly correct and
would avoid misunderstanding not to use the term cause for the
role played by the microbes in the origin of disease, and to say
instead, the cause of the disease is the weak body, whereas the
impulse to affection, *. e., the production of an altered condition
of internal function, is given by the presence of certain micro-
organisms." He suggests in this book that the vital resistance to
disease is the important point, and that the exhibition of the right
medicine at the right time is th proper agent to establish this
vital resistance.
The therapeutic comparisons and instruction is most lucid, and
it is largely composed of keynote indications of the remedies. It
is a book for the desk, and has taken a place with my other books
538 Myrtus Checkan.
of reference used daily in trying to get the better of the awful
microbe !
It is a good thing that our school has such men as Dr. Xash,
who, instead of outgrowing truth, teaches it, plainly, simply and
perseveringly.
And it seems to the writer that if we do not wish to some day
become as a school, an adjunct of the so-called regular school, to
some day see that school discover the law of similia, without giv-
ing Hahnemann any credit, it would be wise for us to stop joining
allopathic societies and devote more of our time to the study of
homoeopathic materia medica, as outlined in the books of Dr.
Nash, and of the other of our men who also taught and prac-
ticed the law of homoeopathic similia, and who, through much
privation, by remaining true to their principles, made it possible
for us to show to the world our colleges and hospitals and our
clientele of the most intelligent people in the community.
Phila., Nov. 20, '09.
MYRTUS CHECKAN.
Not long ago we received a letter from a Presbyterian clergy-
man, who has been in the work for sixty-two years, stating that
he had been trying to get a tincture of a drug named Myrtus
checkan from the pharmacies but had been unable to do so ; he
asked us to use our influence to have them procure the drug.
Well, we did so, and the drug is now on hand. The following is
what our correspondent wrote, in substance, as he has a strong
aversion to clergymen mixing up recommendations of medicine
with religion, and did not write for publication :
"J desire to know about a drug named Myrtus checkan It is
an infallible remedy for facial neuralgia, at least, it is infallible in
my experience/' He then details how he had became acquainted
with the drug through a Chicago physician ; what it had done in
his case, and was reported to have done for several other cases ;
also that some medical journal had published a paper concerning
it, but when and where he did not know. This was the sum of
the letter beyond a reiteration of the drug's efficacy in his own
case.
How to Make Filters for Cisterns. 539
In looking the matter up no homoeopathic work consulted, not
even Burnett, mentions Myrtus checkan. Dunglison's Dictionary
gives: "M. Chekan, cheken, chekan, chequen; tree or shrub,
native of Chile ; leaves have been recommended in bronchitis."
The U. S. Dispensary says that this drug has been reported to be
useful by Murrell for chronic bronchitis. The drug is used in its
native country for ''chronic respiratory catarrh." The National
Dispensatory says the drug has been used for chronic catarrhal
inflammation of the respiratory, and of the genitourinary tract.
King's Dispensatory gives the uses already named, together with
the addition of its being of use for "winter coughs." In a later
note our correspondent says that the drug seems to increase the
flow of urine.
Our correspondent and the Chicago physician seem to be the
only ones who have used it in facial neuralgia, or, at least, writ-
ten to that effect. The foregoing is all we can learn concerning
the remedy save that the dosage runs from drachms down to
pellets medicated with the tincture. Any reader know anything
about it?
HOW TO MAKE FILTERS FOR CISTERNS.
Editor of the Homceopathic Recorder:
My attention was called to an essay published in your journal
about water to be obtained as pure as possible. Rain water as
ordinarily filtered for storage in cistern is incorrect. It is from
above downwards, and is really only a pretense of filtering, the
leaves, bird excrement, and pieces of shingles going part way
through at one rain time, slightly further at the next, decompos-
ing in the meantime, and eventually reach the cistern water any
way. That mode of "filtering is as allopathy practice, just de-
ception. While if a filter is constructed of cedar wood or gal-
vanized iron over the cistern of about three feet diameter, and
three feet high, with a perforated false bottom, eight inches from
the true base, and then one foot layer of cracked rock or clean
gravel, eight inches layer of lump charcoal, and six inches of
clean sharp sand, all of this filling this filter, above this false
bottom. The water from the roof gutter is conveyed by suitable
54-0 American Institute.
spout to the vacant space beneath the false perforated bottom.
There a correspondingly large opening opposite its entrance al-
lows the first water to wash off most of the excrement and trash.
Then insert a ping in this opening and the rain water rises UP
through the false perforated bottom, through the gravel, charcoal,
sand, and at the extreme top finds an opening spout that leads to
the cistern.
After the rain is over this plug is pulled out of the opening at
the base, and all detritis caught on this false bottom and in the
rocks is washed out cleanly by the water contained in this filter.
The rocks, charcoal and sand are clean and pure for use at the
next rain.
I had my cistern so arranged when I lived in Kentucky, and
after twelve years' use, thought it best to clean one of the cisterns ;
not a tablespoonfid of dirt of any kind was in that cistern. The
top of all cisterns should be sealed up with a large rock or cast
iron top, having a "manhole" therein, also arranged for close
closing, and never use planks (wood) of any kind for correct
reasons- John F. Edgar.
El Paso, Texas, Time 2y 25th de Octobre, igog.
AMERICAN INSTITUTE, 1911.
In accord with the By-Laws, Art. X., Sec. 9, invitations for the
place of meeting of the American Institute of Homoeopathy in
191 1 must be in the hands of the trustees April 10, 191 1. Mem-
bers of the Institute interested in the place of meeting in 191 1 are
requested to present their invitations as early as practicable to
some member of the committee.
Sarah M. Hobson, M. D., 700 Marshall Field Bldg., Chicago.
J. B. Gregg Custis, M. D., 912 15th St., Washington, D. C.
William O. Forbes, M. D., Hot Springs, Ark.
By-Laws, Art. X., Sec. 9:
The determination of the next place of meeting shall take place
as follows : All invitations for places of meeting shall be for-
warded to the Board of Trustees, at least ninety days before the
date of the annual session, whereupon the Board shall investi-
gate the various places, with reference to accommodations, hotel
Regarding Dr. Rafael Romeo. 541
rates, railroad facilities, and obtain all necessary information.
The Board's report shall be made to the Institute, when the loca-
tion shall be determined.
REGARDING DR. RAFAEL ROMEO.
Hypodermic Medication Recommendation.
Editor of the Homceopathic Recorder:
Since Dr. Rafael Romeo denies some sort of answer to his
communication in the October number and since he made some
statements which he claims I made, which I did not make, will
endeavor to make my position and ideas more plain.
I never wished to dispute and did not dispute any sort of man-
ner of administering homceopathic medicines except as far as the
desirability to have any firm manufacture homceopathic tablets
for the express purpose to be used hypodermically. Of course,
remedies will act any way. You introduce them into the sys-
tem, but to claim that such remedies would act quicker and bet-
ter hypodermically I dispute and deny ; besides, such methods do
smack of allopathy and allopathic display and is wholly unnec-
cessary, for most all high potency homoeopaths will agree with
me that the proper remedy will act and cure a patient often in
much shorter time than it would take Dr. Romeo to get his
"shot" ready.
It is simply marvelous how quickly the remedy given on the
tongue will act. A patient may be saved when given the proper
remedy per orem, while the loss of time to prepare such a dose
hypodermically might be fatal. Only the other day I was call-
ed to see Mr. D., at the Star Rooming House, who was suffer-
ing with extreme pain in his heart, tears streaming down his
face, claiming to be dying. Not getting any reply to my ques-
tion what sort of pain, opened and shut my hand as if I was
grasping something and he nodded his head. Immediately gave
one dose of Cactus grand., "the best guess," on his tongue and
it was not over twenty seconds and I believe only ten that he
was entirely relieved. He wished to be eased so I sat behind
him and he rested his head on my shoulder and became totally
limp. Feeling of his pulse felt reassured, for I thought maybe
542 Quinine and Malaria Again.
pain stopped because he was dead. He slept 2 or 3 minutes, then
opened his eyes, asked where he was. On being told in his
rooms, declared and said : "You saved my life." No hypoder-
mic could possibly have given quicker relief. So why resort to
such barbarous methods? Any sensitive patient shrinks from it.
Regarding my puerility about boiling and baking hypodermic
syringes and needles was not stated for the purpose to kiil possible
germs, but to annihilate any drug action which would remain
after each time the hypodermic a la Dr. Romeo's method of ad-
ministering homoeopathic remedies was used, else such follow-
ers would have to pack along a grip with several hundred hypo-
dermic syringes and needles all properly labelled and with given
potencies to correspond with the number of remedies carried by
the doctors.
There is no need for any firm to manufacture homceopathic
remedies, especially for the above purpose, as the liquid dilu-
tions are always ready for use.
It is not required to give massive doses to cure a syphilitic, if
curable by Mercury; such a patient can be readily cured by one
or two doses of Merc. sol. in the 200th or higher potencies.
Berberis vulgaris acts very well and promptly in the high po-
tencies; have also had prompt effect from Hammamelis in the m.
potency.
A. A. Pompe. M. D.. H. M.
Vancouver. Wash.
QUININE AND MALARIA AGAIN.
Editor of the Homceopathic Recorder:
I see that my homceopathic friends have trained their guns on
me for confessing my inability to stop an intermittent with po-
tentized remedies. I expected this when I bared my heart on
the subject. Some of them call my attention to dear old H. C.
Allen's book on fevers, a book that I have worn threadbare and
found worth its weight in gold to me more than once, but which
has not helped me along the line in question, I am sorry to say.
The trouble is that I am not a good prescriber. This truth hits
me a hard jolt every little while and awfully discourages me at
times ; but the miracle that happens when I do get the right rem-
Quinine and Malaria Again. 543
ery puts me on such good terms with myself that my enthusiasm
bulges until it sticks out through my clothes and gets in peoole's
way.
I wonder if the others, who publish their successes, have the
ups and downs that I do. I wonder what they do when called
to a poor sufferer coming out of a fever and ague paroxysm and
she pleads : ' 'Doctor, for God's sake, don't let it come back." I
know that I want to help her the worst way, and, perhaps, the
way I helped is the worst way. But this also I know, that when
I can say to her, "Madam, it shall not come back/' and proceed
to prevent its return in a way that is sure, it would require more
than a theory of possible minor harm to prevent me from using
that worst way ; and, although I am well aware of the possibili-
ties of such harm, especially where repeated massive doses are
given, I have yet to see a case wherein injury of a permanent
character — or of any sort not readily remediable — has actually
resulted from the shock to the S3'stem by a large dose, given be-
fore or after the seizure (or both, as I once did when I myself
was the patient, more than ten years ago, with no appreciable bad
effects to this day).
If my little confession may, as suggested by Dr. Guernsey,
put bad thoughts in the heads of our younger followers of the
Great Law, it seems also to have had the effect of bringing into
the arena some of the heavy artillery of this difficult cult, and
much good may result from the discussion invoked.
The scholarly paper of Dr. Fornias alone (to say nothing of
the one he promises later) is worth all the bumps and jolts and
whacks that I am getting out of it. Lay on, gentlemen. I am
from Missouri. (By the way, Mr. Editor, why did your printer
make me say "genus" for genius and "palatial" for palatal?
Who ever heard of palatial paralysis?)
Yours surely,
John F. Keenan, M. D.
Brentwood, Md.} Nov. 20, 1909.
(The Recorder can only plead guilty in the matter of the
proof reading and throw itself on the mercy of the court. Only
the immortals could control the well meaning compositor, who
often, in the goodness of his heart, corrects writers' errors, but
gets into deep water when he tackles medical terms.)
Editor of the Homoeopathic Recorder.
544 Doings and Sayings of the I. H. A.
DOINGS AND SAYINGS OF THE I. H. A.
The Proceedings of the 30th Annual Session of the Inter-
national Hahnemannian Association (Pittsburg, June 17-19,
1909) are at hand, in a goodly volume that makes one regret the
absence of the old-time Transactions of another body, that were
always so handy, easy of reference and shelf-room ; but we live
in an age of progress, "mebbe," as John Chinaman says.
One of the charms of the I. H. A. Proceedings is that that
body is so small that every one attends the sessions and ap-
parently expresses his mind just as though he were in his club —
and the faithful reporter puts it all down and prints it.
One of the definite things passed was this :
"Resolved, That the International Hahnemannian Association
in meeting assembled, re-affirm the established practice of vacci-
nation by internal variolation and declare it to be a sufficient
method of prophylaxis, and further that it is the only method
consistent with hygiene and the modern conception of asepsis."
It was stated that this was not a fight against vaccination, but
for the right to chose its method, i. e., the internal vaccination
or variolation. In discussing this resolution it was asked "Why
has the I. H. A. separated from the main body?" and some one
replied, "Because the A. I. H. has not lived up to the law." This,
of course, did not mean that the last named body was a male-
factor before the civil law. It might have been replied that no
big body can exist unless men be allowed mental elbow room
even if their elbows do stick out in a manner unseemly to some
You can sometimes lead men, but it is a deuce of a job to drive
him en masse.
From President Krichbaunr s Address we lift the following :
"What shall I do to be healed?"
"Smile," says the Christian Scientist, "and affirm your perfect
wholeness."
"Get into harmony with your environment, seize upon that il-
luminating precept, the oneness of God and man," says the Men-
tal Scientist.
"Pray for the health that God promises," says the clergyman.
"Diet, live out of doors, exercise, and consult a regular phy-
sician for further advice," says our friend the allopath.
Doings and Sayings of the I. H. A. 545
"Do each and every one of these things if you will," say we.
"Yes, but one thing more. Bring all that may be left of your
trouble to the man who should be able to put his finger upon the
spot,'' — and treat you homceopathically.
An Illustrative Homoeopathic Case.
This case is one of several taken from the paper by Dr. Richard
Blackmore. It is a case presenting the symptoms and their
''totality'' remedy :
"Case I. Wm. T., age 23. Occupation, clerk.
Consulted me, complaining of an impairment of speech which
had lasted for seventeen years. Xo cause could be learned al-
though his mother and others had been interviewed. The case as
taken presented the following:
Feb. 16. Mentally he is weak, indifferent for the most part,
with times of irritation and petulance. Aphonia < between 4
and 5 p. m.. at which time the voice is the merest whisper.
<in wet weather.
< in winter.
>by expectoration of a lump of black mucus. Three and a
half years ago he had typhoid fever under allopathic treatment,
since which time he is "nervous," with trembling of both arms.
This quite independent of whether or not he works.
Voice lost in the evening. Brom., Carbo z\, PJws.
< in winter. Carbo v., Phos.
< in wet weather. Carbo z\, Phos.
< _l and 5 p. m. (< p. m.) Carbo v.
Indifferent, apathetic mentally. Carbo v., PJws.
> by expectoration of black mucus disregarded as this is Pitts-
burgh.
Feb. 18. Gave Carbo veg. im. single dose.
Feb. 25. Improving: has some voice in the afternoon. S. L.
March 27. Improvement continued until a week ago. Re-
peated Carbo veg. this time 40m.
April 25. Practically well. Thinks 'it is wonderful since time
and money had been spent on all kinds of treatment hitLerto in
vain.' "
There you have a typical homoeopathic case — its symptoms col-
lected and the "totality" found by the repertory, with the usual
result, namely, the patient is cured.
546 Doings and Sayings of the I. H. A.
•' Signs and the Law."
This was the title of Dr. C. M. Boger's paper, in which the
vital difference between ''treating the disease," i. e., certain gen-
eral symptoms exhibited by the patient and "treating the pa-
tient."
"Symptoms tend to arrange themselves in groups ; the earlier
drug effects being coarser responses and the later, finer and more
individualistic. Among many sick we generally fail to find the
latter or grasp the state of the mind and soul that so faithfully
mirrors organism and holds up the true colors with which the
minutia must blend harmoniously. Hospitals serve a good pur-
pose, but they only throw the deep shadows of disease across our
path and rarely admit of a close individual study of the sick.
Symptoms remain but fragments until we learn their bearings
and see their reflection in the mind, where objective phases and
impulses stand uppermost ; and as similar causes may excite any
grade of reaction we must know the deciding value of indi-
vidualities, which are always clearest in the mind. If they seem
to spring from the mind itself and affect the understanding and
memory especially, they are mostly of miasmatic or concomitant
origin, and must be treated as such. The state of the emotions
is of the most fundamental importance."
The microbe is the same in men, but the men are not the same
who harbor the microbe. You can find out more about a man
from his mind than you can by putting little bits of him under
the microscope — and you are a doctor not a microbe-killer ! But
we are like those who heard the paper — putting our own inter-
pretation on it as they did. To all this Dr. Boger replied in the
discussion. Here is part of it:
"C. M. Boger: — I do not feel that any of these criticisms need
answering: careful reading of the paper itself will show that
all these questions are answered in the paper. One point I will
try to make a little clearer: you cannot cure cases by exclusive
symptom-covering or by exclusive individualization. The true
reflection of a disease is a single thing; it is one thing. Why do
you not cure with Lilium tigrinum unless the sexual sphere is
involved? Or why do you not cure with Aconite unless the men-
tal sphere is involved? Every remedy expresses a single con-
Doings and Sayings of the I. H. A. 547
crete entity and proper study will enable you to recognize it just
as you recognize the letter A when you see it. Every patient
presents also a distinct entity — a group of symptoms that you
must look at as a one. It is your business as physicians to find
out how closely you can fit your patient with curative remedies.
In order to do that, you must use repertories, but you must not
use them merely to cover the symptoms of the case and nothing
else."
Natrum Carb. and Some Other Things.
Dr. Z. T. Miller opened his paper in the following character-
istic manner :
"Boehme taught the doctrine of signatures. Swedenborg the
doctrine of correspondences. I can't tell you the difference.
Hemple taught that the influence in the botanical world which
produced the Belladonna plant would, if acting upon the indi-
vidual, produce the Belladonna disease. I take that to be an ex-
ample of correspondence. I may be wrong as to terms, but as
to facts there is no question.
Now if this is true of the Belladonna force, we are warranted
in concluding that somewhere in the outer kingdom there is a
correspondence for every deviation the human vital force ex-
periences. I am satisfied with that self-evident truth.
The business of the physician is to find that correspondence.
This has been said a thousand times, but I once heard a preacher
say that unless the coming of Christ was preached every Sunday
and prayed for on Wednesday, the people would forget it.
If correspondences are the things preached and prayed for, and
they materialize, then Natrum carb. is an enttiy that can enter
into communication with which that makes for muck — in women
especially".
We cannot follow this paper further, but will make one clip-
ping from it, which will cause strong dissent from many readers :
"Natrum carb. furnishes the alkaline basis of most soaps.
Living in Pittsburgh — said to be the dirtiest city on earth,
which you now know to be a gross misrepresentation — I declare
myself as opposed to soap. No one should get into a hot or cold
bath, then lather with soap. It's the worse if the water is hot.
A soak for ten minutes followed by brisk rubbing is all there is
548 Doings and Sayings of the I. H. A.
to a bath. The skin must be red after the rub to make the bath
effective. No soap."
Rupture Cured by the Internal Remedy.
This was the title of a paper by Dr. Lee Norman. This action
of the remedy, even the Hahnemannian, could not all stand with-
out dissent.
A man came to Dr. Norman with the idea that he had "kidney
trouble." He had been to the allopaths and they did him no
good. Dr. Norman made not much progress in getting at the
case until he suggested an examination of the urine, which
loosened up the man and evidently made him think there would
now be something doing. In this state he gave what the doctor
was after — a picture of his symptoms and condition. These
pointed to a certain remedy which was prescribed. Now let Dr.
Norman tell the story :
"All this time he never said anything about being ruptured. I
gave him Phosphoric acid 200, 3 powders to be taken night and
morning, followed with Sac. lac, a powder every two hours."
"In a few days he came in smiling and said, 'That little bit of
sugar has helped me.' After being under treatment for about
two months, one day he called me up over the 'phone and asked
me if the medicine he was taking could have any effect on a
rupture? I asked him, 'Why, have you a rupture?' He re-
plied, 4Yes, I have two, one in my side and the other in the
testicles, and they haven't given me any trouble for several days.
I feel comfortable without my trusses.' I advised him not to
leave them off but to come in and tell me about the ruptures, as
things were getting interesting. He told me the inguinal hernia
was caused by lifting a heavy barrel about ten years ago. A few
years later the one in the scrotum developed. He continued to
improve under the Phosphoric acid and has not worn either of
his trusses for more than a year. He has had no other remedy.
When he seemed to lack in improvement, then I would change
the potency. He came faithfully once or twice a week for over
a year and I finally had to stop him, telling him I needed his
money but he did not need me."
Tn the discussion some believed and others didn't. One pointed
out the fact that von Boenninghausen maintains that rupture is
Doings and Sayings of the I. H. A. 549
a disease curable, by internal remedies, though not always cured.
Another related a case in a very young patient that he had ap-
parently cured with Lycopodium. Another said, "I believe every-
thing that has been said except that the remedy cured the rup-
ture"— the truss did it. he thought. Dr. Norman concluded by
saving that any of them could interview the patient who wished
to. as the man was willing. Why shouldn't rupture be healed
by medicine? Does any reader know of cases cured by medi-
cine, even plus the truss? It is a subjejct worthy of being writ-
ten up by men who have had experience in the complaint.
A Phosphorus Symptom.
Dr. Rabe's paper on this drug brought out the following
reminiscence from Dr. E. A. Taylor, and as these are always in-
teresting we give it entire :
"That paper brings back to me memories of long ago; before
I ever saw a medical college I had been reading medicine for
some time. A neighbor boy asked me if I could do something
for a bad backache that he had. There was nothing very definite
about the backache that I could see. I made a few prescriptions
and he got a crop of boils whereupon I prescribed Sulphur and
Silicea. The backache got no better. Then he told me that he
would get a terrific empty feeling inside, to use his own words
there seemed as if there was no gut in him. He said that he
felt better while he was eating, but that he could not keep eating
all die time. I gave him Phosphorus and it cured the whole
case."
Wrinkles.
Dr. 3d. W. Turner dwelt on this topic in his paper, and among
other things, said :
"Wrinkles are not found in the symptomatology of Syphili-
num, yet they are marked in many advanced syphilitics and es-
pecially show themselves in hereditary (congenital) cases and,
since curing this patient, I have made good use of the symptom —
deep wrinkles on the forehead. It is often the first suggestion
of the remedy to me, as the}- are in plain sight, and when sup-
ported by such characteristics as might <, mental or physical,
and the sense of physical uncleanliness, are not only indicative
of Syphilinum but also confirmatory of these other symptoms."
550 Doings and Sayings of the I. H. A.
Apropos of something in the discussion following "wrinkles/*
Dr. G. P. Waring said :
"The spiritualistic mediums who operate over the country by
alleged communications from the other world, are, I believe gen-
erally sycotic ; you will hardly find a medium who is not a sy-
cotic."
There are Limitations.
Dr. W. H. Freeman's paper on "Symptomatic Nomenclature
and Its Relationship to the Repertory and Homoeopathic Science,"
-occurs the following gentle warning :
"Even though the Hahnemannian can cure nearly everything
in the form of disease with correctly selected drugs, he needs to
keep his enthusiasm under moderate control, and not lose sight
■of the fact that there are exceptional cases needing a totality dif-
ferent method of treatment either solely or as an adjunct to his
remedies."
The Guaiacum Youth and Man.
Dr. P. E. Krichbaum's contribution was a paper on the old
remedy Guaiacum, drew the following picture :
"It is pre-eminently a remedy for gout and rheumaticm, if
the symptoms agree. A typical Guaiacum patient, if there be
such a thing, is one dark complexion, tall, angular, large frame,
with a not over active mind or body. Stupid at school, never
learned very rapidfty nor entered heartily or enthusiastically into
play. They are usually termed lazy. Can be only temporarily en-
thused— over anything. Would rather sit and dream — dreams
by the hour. Growing pains are complained of in childhood,
Unless this growing Guaiacum child is properly looked after in
youth, puberty may bring consumption, gout or rheumatism."
"I have dwelt to some extent upon the Guaiacum youth, that
we may be able to foresee and provide for the after picture, when
the joints become involved. As was the boy so is the man. He
sits yawning and stretching for hours. Is so exhausted that he
dreads to move. Dissatisfied, impatient and fault-finding with
every one. His whole body feels drawn up and contracted. His
sleep does not refresh him, and it takes most of the forenoon to
pull himself together. Feels better in the afternoon, when he is
liable to have some fever."
Mortality Statistics. 55 l
Mental Obsession.
In discussing a paper Dr. C. M. Boger made the following as-
sertion, which may cause a protest, but if it is true it is some-
thing that canont be too widely known. He said :
"I have come to the conclusion that mental suggestion cures
by obsession. What takes place in such a cure is mental obses-
sion. It is sufficiently strong to bring about a change which is a
recovery but is not a real cure. If you hypnotize a patient and
affect them so that their symptoms disappear at least for a time,
it is not a homoeopathic cure but it is a recovery effected by ob-
session. You have implanted your intentions upon the subcon-
scious mind of the patient with the result that the symptoms
have disappeared. If you watch them carefully you will notice
them take on a slow retrograde process which ends in degenera-
tion."
MORTALITY STATISTICS, 1908.
Bulletin 104, Department of Commerce and Labor, U. S.
Bureau of Census, is to hand, covering General Death rates,
Causes of Death and Occupational Mortality. The figures cover
the "registration area" only, which embraces 17 States, chiefly
northern and eastern, including, however, California, Colorado,
Washington and South Dakota.
Some general facts and figures gleaned from this interesting
Bulletin may be of interest to our readers. Remember that these
figures, unless otherwise stated, apply to the registration only.
The general death rate was 15.4 per 1,000 of estimated popula-
tion.
The year 1908 was a year of remarkably low mortality through-
out the United States.
"The figures for age show a somewhat increased per cent,
of deaths of infants under 1 year for 1908. but the ratio for each
of the individual years from 1 to 4 are identical for 1907 and
1908."
Out of a total of 691,574 deaths. 136,432 were under the 1
year age.
552 Mortality Statistics.
Among the States, California and Colorado head the list with
the largest death rate, but the Bulletin notes that this is due to
the fact that invalids from all other States go there for cure,
and the higher rate "is due to the mortality of recent residents."
The death-rate from typhoid fever decreased from 30.3 in
1907 to 25.3 in 1908, per 100,000 of estimated population.
From measles the death rate decreased from 10.3 to 10.2.
The death rate from scarlet fever was slightly higher over the
preceding year.
In whooping cough the rate declined from 11.6 to 1 1.
The percentage from diphtheria declined from 24.3 to 22.3.
"As it has been suggested that diphtheria might be taken as a
measure of sanitary efficiency, owing to the fact that deaths from
this disease are largely preventable, this disease may be con-
sidered a very satisfactory indication of the general sanitary con-
dition of the country." From this it seems that the satisfactory
reduction in the death rate of this disease is due to sanitation and
not to the horse serum. The Bulletin again impresses the state-
ment that " 'diphtheria and croup' does not refer to two distinct
diseases, but simply to one disease properly designated diphtheria.
The use of the word 'croup' is a relic of old-time pathology ; it is
chiefly employed by the less progressive class of physicians, and
by the laity who do not understand its identity with diphtheria."
While on this subject of terms it may be stated that the Bulletin
elsewhere states that "scrofula" is "a disease which should be
properly included with tuberculosis disease."
"The total number of deaths returned fom all forms of tuber-
culosis for 1908 exceeded the number returned for 1907, or for
any previous year of registration," but this is accounted for by
increased registration. "The death rates per 100,000 of popula-
tion show a considerable decline for 1908 (173.9) as compared
with 1907 (183.6). "It is probable that the great attention that
has been given to the prevention of tuberculosis, through the
International Congress on Tuberculosis held at Washington in
1908, and the organization of many State and local societies, has
already begun to have its effect upon the mortality from this dis-
ease, and though an abrupt diminution in the death rate can
hardly be expected, a moderate and continued decline from year to
year will be highly suggestive of the efficiency of the measures
now being actively employed."
Who Killed Cock Robin? 553
"The crude death rates from cancer continue to increase and
slightly higher rates are recorded for each main subdivision of
the registration area. For the year 1908, 33,465 deaths from this
disease were returned, and the death rate was 74.6 per 100,000 as
compared with 30.514 deaths and a death rate of 73.1 for 1907."
Heart diseases for 1908 contribute a total of 60,035 deaths, a
rate of 133.3 compared with 141. 7 for the preceding year. Com
cerning "pneumonia (all forms)" it is said: "The disease prop-
erly designated as pneumonia is the lobar or croupous form, but
many deaths from this cause are returned simply as 'pneumonia/
with no special qualification, so that it is uncertain whether they
are really deaths from lobar pneumonia or from bronchopneu-
monia. It is desirable that greater care should be used by physi-
cians in reporting bronchopneumonia and lobar pneumonia," etc.
The number of deaths was 61,259. The death rate was 136,
compared with 16 1.2 of 1907. This is the lowest in five years.
In diarrhoea and enteritis the rate was 116. as compared with
1 16.7 for last year.
Bright's disease decreased from a percentage of 94.6 to 87.1.
The number of deaths was 39.203 returned from presumably
chronic forms of the disease, excluding acute nephritis.
Deaths from suicide ominously increased ; were greater than in
any previous year, 8,332 in 1908, as compared with 6,745 in 1907.
What will stop that disease?
WHO KILLED COCK ROBIN ?
(The following spicy reading appeared in Medical Notes and
Queries, November. After reading it, and it is very easy reading,
we think you will agree that there is a very strong reaction set-
ting in. Remember what Lincoln said about "fooling the people."
In the long run the doctor must "deliver the goods." Straight
old Homoeopathy delivers the goods. — Recorder.)
Xot that the ancient bird. Cock Robin, M. D., is actually dtrid,
but many voices of late are proclaiming him sick unto death, and
it certainly looks that way. We are daily told that he has lost his
wits, for he can't diagnose diphtheria and scarlet fever, and also
his prestige, for the public have lost faith in him, and now, since
554 Who Killed Cock Robin ?
he is as good as dead, it is about time to ask the question, "Who
killed Cock Robin?"
Should we go very far astray in our search if we surmise tha"
the very ones who proclaim his decease have stabbed the poor
bird to death ? Have not the sycophants of the Tipperary Insti-
tution declared that he failed to recognize tuberculosis in that
early and curable stage, which, by the way, being non-existant,
they found readily curable? Have not high State officials read
over him their regretful panegyrics, and feelingly ascribed his
death to the stress and strain of modern life? Have not the
same officials lamented with hypocritic grief the loss of the dear
Public who with his decease will forever miss their most intimate
friend and counselor, who entered into their 'ives. who studied
their troubles, who was tender with their failings, whose mid-
night bell seldom failed to be answered? Yet surely th^se who
praise him now are the very ones who have done this evil deed,
I et knowing this we cringe before them, meet th^m with smiling
faces and ignore the dagger whose hilt peeps out of their belt.
But, to be serious, why should the prestige of the doctor have
waned? Obviously because there has been going on for years
against him a furtive and covert campaign of disparagement
conducted by the combination of the bacteriologist, the too
numerous specialists and the doctor who holds an official posi-
tion in State and civic health bureau, for there is an irrespressible
conflict between the man on a salary, supported by political
power, and the man who depends on what skill, energy and chance
gives him ; between the man who in his laboratory diagnoses
by test-tube and microscope and the man who uses experienced
eyes and hands and brain at the bedside. These two classes in
the profession are by the very circumstances of the case antag-
onistic, whether they own it and know it or not. The bacteriol-
ogist and pathologist, studying long and ardently at home and
abroad for years found no paying niche to reward them for their
years of toil. The profession as a body ignored them, yet grad-
ually they worked their way to notice. They could not be consid-
ered as practical physicians, they diagnosed but offered no cure
and studied no remedial measures, and the public when sick de-
manded medicines and a prospect at least of an attempt at cure.
Then came the wave of serums, and they strove to make serums
Who Killed Cock Robin? 555
for every ill, just as the surgeon strives to discover an operation
for everything, curing indigestion by removal of gall bladders
and appendices and stomachs, old age by snipping away the
colon, Bright's disease by denuding the kidneys, coryzas by
boring out the nose, stupidity by removing adenoids, pleurisy
by exsecting ribs and draining, typhoid fever by cutting out the
habitat of the peccant ulcers, and scores of other surgical devices
for scores of other diseases once the exclusive property of the
physician, and all these workers, surgeons, bacteriologist and
supercilious official ignored remedies and the study and use of
remedies. Eminent diagnosticians, too, went on record as view-
ing with suspicion any and all drugs (excepting, for very shame,
a very few and select ones which they avoided naming). All
these allied with the official bacteriologists and capitalists who
saw money in one serum anyway and pushed it for all it was
worth and "more, fought against the old practitioner all these
stars against Sisera, but with much more promising results.
True, real, actually curative serums for the hoi polloi of disease
were born slowly and died early deaths, as a rule, and still the
laboratory worker could not displace the doctor, for they had little
clinical experience. When confronted by many common diseases
they were strangers to him. He had met them in test-tubes and
incubators and looked them in the eye through the eyepiece of
his microscope; he had fed them in his home on jelly and potato
and blood serum and agar, but still he knew them not. and
he was by no means fitted for a nearer and more personal
acquaintance. He had no appliance for practice, no office for
patients, no auto for visits, no office hours, and he lived, if he
chose, away from the scene of his labors in remote city districts
or in the country. He could not supply the place of the doctor,
though he aspired to his place ; he could only bark at him and
disparage him, just because, while devoting his life to another
line of work, the doctor did not practically know that limited
field of research in which his disparager perambulated.
Then, too. the public saw that when your nose was sore the
nasal specialist professed knowledge and methods better than
the practitioner, methods around which he often drew a veil of
secrecy, so that even the man who referred patients to him, or
called him in consultation, could not find out what he was using.
556 The One Plan.
(This used to be unprofessional conduct, but there seems to be
very little unprofessional conduct now.) Ethics depend on how
one looks on them. Again, if a man had digestive disturbance
the stomach specialist allured him and awed him with test meal
and stomach tube, and an office fitted with all the appliances
of emesis, and spent hours over his case at a dollar a minute,
and prescribed — Xu.v vomica! which the doctor would have given
him in a minute.
And the lung man claimed to know ever so much more about
the lungs, and the kidney man more about kidneys, and the skin
specialist knew or claimed to know better how to diagnose small-
pox from chicken-pox and gave eczema strange and awful names,
and the tuberculosis expert after hours of listening discovered
wondrous things with which his mind filled the patient's thorax
and found tubercles, like God, everywhere, yet his remedies were
simple and always the same — milk and eggs — whether the
patient could digest them or not. And the best of it for him was
that everybody had tuberculosis, for he had scared the world of
men and women so that they all had it in imagination anyhow
and he made such wonderful cures that the world wondered how
any one could ever die of tuberculosis, till it found that the
deaths were really increasing.
Now this is only a small part of the blows that fell on Cock
Robin. Is it any wonder his prestige waned and his tail feathers
dropped and his little red breast lost its color and his eye its
jaunty glance, and they say he is dead? And now, need we ask,
"Who killed Cock Robin?"
Edward YYillard Watson, M. D.
THE ONE PLAN.
Lifted from at Address by O. S. Haines, M. D.
"I think you must have heard it said that the giving of a drug
in this way — Podophyllum for a diarrhoea, because it can cause a
diarrhoea, for example, was Homoeopathy. Just as we have heard
it said that modern serum therapy was Homoeopathy ; that Bier's
hyperemic therapy was Homoeopathy; and much else of a similar
sort. That is not so. It is not pleasant to think that no man
The One Plan. 557
may make an original investigation along therapeutic lines, but
that his new series of established facts shall be at once claimed
and dubbed Homoeopathy in her latest guise." * * *
"But there is no excuse for Homoeopathy squatting upon every
newly opened vista. She has no need to do this. The word
Homoeopathy is used too often in a figurative sense."
"Homoeopathy has to do with that department of medical
science that we term therapeutics. It, therefore, has to do solely
with the action of remedial agents upon the human organism,
both in health and in disease." * * *
"There is nothing transcendental about Homoeopathy. Our
recommendation of it we back up by a vast array of facts accumu-
lated in the clinical experience of thousands of qualified practi-
tioners. It is not simply that we wish to make Homoeopathy
supersede all other principles of medical practice. We simply
ask : — How can any physician refuse to avail himself of the added
power which Homoeopathy would give to his therapeutic effort!
And in conclusion : — There is but one feature of the technique of
our school, in which the most precise observer can discover no
improvement during the years. That one feature is the practical
application of the principle of similarity at the bedside." * * *
"Pathology has been substituted for pathogenesy ; two or more
similar remedies have been prescribed in alternation ; several sim-
ilar remedies have been administered in combination ; we have
gone all the way back to the beginning, to the dual action of
drugs for the key to the situation ; but it has invariably proven to
be, not progress, not improvement but retrogression."
"The plan of procedure, as it was offered to the medical world
in the Organon, remains the one perfect and dependable plan."
"Black eye," developing in an infant, without any history of in-
jury, should always arouse suspicion of scurvy (Barlow's dis-
ease). It is generally distinguished by lack of swelling, absence
of bruise or redness of lids, and rapid gravitation of the blue dis-
coloration to the lower lid and cheek. The orbital haemorrhage
may take place on the other side, after a short interval. — Ameri-
can Journal of Surgery.
558 Book Notices.
BOOK NOTICES.
The Food Tract. Its Ailments and Diseases of the Perito-
neum. By A. L. Blackwood, B. S., M. D., Professor of Clini-
cal Medicine and Materia Medica in the Hahnemann Medical
College, Chicago. Author of "A Manual of Materia Medica,
Therapeutics and Pharmacology," "Diseases of the Heart,"
"Diseases of the Lungs" and "Diseases of the Liver, Pancreas
and Ductless Glands." 359 pages. Cloth, $1.75. Postage,
9 cents. Philadelphia. Boericke & Tafel. 1909.
The Recorder's review, or "notice," if the hypercritical reader
prefer, is a little belated because it became psychologically side-
tracked, or, in plainer terms, was overlooked by the editor in the
last issue of the journal until too late. Such things will happen
as any one who has had any experience in running a publication
with its numberless details that must be kept in mind, can testify.
However, The Food Tract is a book that age does not wither.
It is a good book, on a subject, food and drink organs' ills, that
in its ultimates is the most important one to maintain in the ag-
gregate, one which finds its wisdom expressed in the proverbial
form, "self preservation is the first law of nature." Do not in-
fer from the foregoing that Blackwood's book is a manual on
food and drink ; on proteins, carbohydrates and learned things of
that sort, (you must go to King's Chemistry of Food for that) ;
it is a book that "follows the food" and takes note of the dis-
eases that come to the parts taking care of it, from lips to anus.
It covers a subject that confronts the general practitioner oftener
than any other and will be correspondingly helpful. Blackwood
gives the reader a description of each disease, what is known of
its origin, its pathology, how to diagnose it, what to look for-
ward to among the possibilities, and finally how to treat it, and,
at times, shrewd hints as to what food is best for the patient.
This book keeps up to the standard set by its author's previous
works and gives the buyer a solid "value received" for his money.
The Blackwood series (see title) have the advantages that each
subject is treated in a separate, yet complete in itself, volume
that is easy to handle; the reader can make himself comfortable
in his chair and easily hold the book.
Book Notices. 559
Necessarily, books of this nature cannot be entirely original
as to their matter, but in them the solid facts concerning the
subject treated are sifted, grouped and arranged in a manner
that is satisfactory to the reader because easy of comprehension
and practically useful.
Surgery of Children. By Sidney Freeman Wilcox, M. D.,
Professor of Clinical Surgery, New York Medical College
and Hospital for Women, etc. Profusely Illustrated. 395
pages. Cloth, $3.50, postpaid. Boericke & Runyon. New
York and Philadelphia. 1909.
In his modest Preface the author states that he has put into
this book the results of his experience covering a period of thirty
years and also reinforced it with the best opinions obtainable
from various sources. The subject matter is aptly described in
the title, 'The Surgery of Childhood," the best age when, if
desirable, operations may be performed for malformations, etc.
The book is purely surgical and remedies are only mentioned in-
cidentally ; if any one wants medical treatment for the diseases
for which Dr. Wilcox gives the surgical treatment, let him get
a copy of Raue's book, or that remarkable book for abnormalities,
Burnett's long-titled, Delicate, Backward, Puny and Stunted
Children. In describing operations, or what is to be done in a
given case, Dr. Wilcox does not use any superfluous words, but
goes directly to the point of the operator's work. Only a sur-
geon could give an expert opinion on such a book, but to us it
looks like a good one. The paper used is a heavy, coated paper.
The illustrations are numerous, and, like the book, are practical,
but not very elaborate. Now that we have a book on this sub-
ject by a man of our own ranks, why not get it instead of one by
an old school writer, when such a book is needed?
Fifty-Seven Varieties of VI ; 1 : 1
By George M. Gould, M. D., Ithaca, N. Y. 23 pages. Paper.
Published by the author.
As to the merits of the contention of this pamphlet only an
expert eye-man could decide — and he must be unprejudiced,
560 Book Notices.
which he isn't, always, according to Dr. Gould. The average
technical paper by an eye-man takes on a resemblance to an al-
gebraical problem to the outsider, but this is not a technical paper
but one hot from the heart of a man who is indignant at the
crassness of his fellows and does not mince his words. If we
have read aright, Dr. Gould contends that an eye strain lies at
the root of a vast horde of ills that afflict humanity ; that the
ophthalmologists could, and should, as honest professional men,
correct them, but they will not ; they, evidently, give glasses to
sharpen the vision, but, says Dr. Gould, "Spectacles to sharpen
vision is one of the greatest of ophthalmic follies. It is the chief
source of malignant myopia and has led millions to their undo-
ing. In the majority of cases my glasses give my patients for a
time, poorer distance vision than they had before. The oculist
who gives the sharpest vision ruins more eyes and nervous sys-
tems than ever he would care to realize." Dr. Gould maintains,
it appears, that it is the duty of the oculist to correct the ab-
normalities evidenced by eye-strain, by means of glasses, and
not to make it worse by accommodating the glasses to the ab-
normality. There are lots of quotable passages in this spicy
pamphlet, as, for instance :
'The1 conservatism of bigotry is for the conserving of the
bigot, and is not due to love or care for 'science.' As for author-
ity in medicine it is evident that the established or dominant
opinion must come from a dead, not from a progressive, science.
The rejection of authority is, therefore, the beginning of ad-
vance."
"Atheism, Materialism and Fatalism, weakly accepted by so
many leading physicians and oculists, result too frequently in
therapeutic nihilism."
' 'The rage for new fads and fancies' the 'up-to-dateness/
taken for progress is scornfully mentioned ; it is a 'vieing with
the Eddyites' and others of that ilk."
"Professional trades-unionism masking as professional ethics."
As intimated before, whether Dr. Gould is right or wrong is
a question this reviewer cannot determine, but it is plain that he
has an intense conviction that he is right. Certainly, what he
writes is interesting. As the pamphlet is "published by the
author," presumably it is free ; at least, no price is given.
Book Notices. 561
Life of Mahendra Lai Sircar. By Sarat Chandra Ghose.
M. D. 199 pages. Cloth. The Oriental Publishing Home, 11
Issurhakur Lane, Calcutta. India. 1909.
Dr. Sircar was to Homoeopathy in India what Hering was in
the Lnited States, as through him it was introduced to the great
East Indian region. He was born in 1833 and died in 1904. He
studied medicine for six years and received his degree in i860.
Like many another "regular" he started in to "smash* Homoe-
opathy, the occasion being the receipt of a copy of Morgan's
Philosophy of Homoeopathy for review in a journal. The
Indian Field. In this review he proposed proving the ab-
surdity and hollowness of the new medicine. Like the honest
man he was, he first grasped the full meaning of the new system
and. behold, he found it reasonable, and later, in practice, good.
He was not the pioneer practitioner of Homoeopathy in that part
of the world and he availed himself of the opportunity to watch
cases under practical treatment, with the result that in 1867 he
came out as an avowed follower of the new medical practice.
The usual result followed — he was medically excommunicated.
In 1868 The Calcutta Journal of Medicine was founded, of which
he was the editor, and which is still published. There are many
interesting things in this book — touches of universal human na-
ture and touches peculiar to the great Orient, that will repay
the man who cares to go far afield in his reading. The author,
Dr. Ghose. is an occasional contributor to the Homoeopathic
Recorder and to him we owe the Indian remedies Justicia ad-
hatoda, Xyctanthes arbor trista and Ficus rcligiosa. concerning
which there has been some controversy, but which many physi-
cians find to be a very valuable remedy in its sphere. There is
no price given to the book sent us, and should any reader want
a copy he will have to write his pharmacist and await several
months for the arrival of the books from India.
We may add that the book contains a number of half-tones of
the leading homoeopathic doctor of India, both of those living
and those gone to their reward.
Homoeopathic Recorder
PUBLISHED MONTHLY AT LANCASTER, PA.
By BOERICKE & TAFEL
Subscription $1.00, To Foreign Countries $1.24, Per Annum
Address communications, books for review, exchanges, etc.,
lor the editor, to
E. P. ANSHUTZ, M. D., P. O. Box 921, Philadelphia, Pa.
EDITORIAL BREVITIES.
With this, the December number, the Homoeopathic Re-
corder, completes the twenty-fourth year of uninterrupted pub-
lication, and completes it with the largest list of subscribers it
has had in its history. The policy of the future will be as in the
past — that of publishing a straight, square-toed homoeopathic
journal, frank and liberal. The other branches of medicine are
needed and are useful, but Homoeopathy is the crown of them
all for by it the sick are healed and that is the end of medicine.
It is hoped that old subscribers will be with us in the coming
year year with many new ones.
A Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to all !
An Old-Time Treatment of Medical Heretics. — In
August Recorder it was related that Professor Lancereaux, of
Paris, had read a paper before the Academy of Medicine, of
that city on the use of Cantharis in the treatment of nephritis.
Dr. E. A. Johnson, of St. Louis, takes the matter up in the In-
ter-State Medical Journal, from the homoeopathic point of view.
In this letter is to be found the following interesting statement :
"But already, before the appearance of the 'Fragmenta/ the em-
ployment of Cantharis for chronic nephritis had been advocated
by Groenvelt and Bartholin in the latter half of the i8th century,
a suggestion which boded ill for the former, as he was put in
Newgate at the instance of the London College for having had
the temerity to advocate a so paradoxical and heterodox treat-
Editorials. 563
ment, which proceeding, I opine, should make Prof. Lancereaux
thank his stars that he lives in the more tolerant days of the
20th century." "Newgate," gentle reader, as you doubtless know,
was the Lodon jail where desperate criminals were sent. It is
to be hoped that 'The Council" of the A. M. A. will not go to
this extreme with modern medical heretics. "The Council" is
an ominous title !
Raising the Price of Medicine. — "Everything is going
up !" is the well founded wail that arises on all sides. Where is
it to encl? On this point the following from the Berlin letter to
The Journal is apropos : "The demand of the pharmacists for an
increase in their charges for medicine on account of the general
increase in the cost of living is likely to be granted by the ministry.
In this way, however, the increase of expense, indeed, never
comes to an end for the increase of one item inovlves an increase
in others. If the price of medicines and medical service is raised,
the butcher and the grocer naturally demand more for their
wares and if the butchers receive more money, the doctors and
the pharmacists will naturally charge more for their services. It
is thus a vicious circle."
The question is : How is the world to be jolted out of this
circle and started on a straight road?
Gone the Way of All "Cures." — Many of the orthodox
medical journals have been commenting on the utter failure of
"the enzyme treatment of cancer." To save some reader the
trouble of referring to his dictionary it may be stated that
"enzyme" means "ferment." About four years ago this treat-
ment was suggested, "based on an embryologic hypothesis,"
needless to recapitulate now because it is admitted that the treat-
ment is a total failure, indeed, worse than a failure, after most
exhaustive trials. The treatment is condemned in a pamphlet is-
sued by the New York Skin and Cancer Hospital, based on one
hundred cases. It was found that the treatment may cause dan-
gerous injury, and is often unbearably painful. The whole is
summed up as follows :
"Looking back on the work of the last three years, the most
important lessons to be drawn from the enzyme treatment of
cancer is that the patient is a human being who, while suffering
564 Editorials.
from cancer, it is true, may at the same time be the subject of
any of the other ills to which flesh is heir, and who doubly de-
serves to be treated with all the careful scientific attention which
modern medicine and surgery command. By building up the nu-
trition, aiding the impaired function of elimination, treating com-
plications, giving the patient a better mental as well as physical
atmosphere — in other words, treating the patient and not the
'cancer case' — suffering can be wonderfully ameliorated and iifr,
in many instances, prolonged in comparative comfort and even
years."
In its heyday this enzyme treatment was supposed to be very
scientific, but it turns out to be — failure and worse. If it has
taught the gentlemen who lean towards what is known as "scien-
tific treatment" to "treat the patient" it has accomplished, at
least, one good. Everything of this sort leads to the conclusion
that in plain Homceooathy is to be found the one and onlv Scien-
tific Treatment.
A New Disease. — How many injections of tuberculin are
made every year for "diagnostic purposes" in men and beast,
no one knows, but they are many. The Recorder has several
times intimated that this wholesale injection into the blood of
this, and other, animal matter may become a fruitful cause of
disease and racial degeneration, for "the blood is the life."
Now comes a very timely paper by Dr. Rayevsky, of New
York (/. A. M. A., Nov. 20), on "The Treatment of Tuberculin
Reactions," or, it might be transposed, The Treatment of the
Treatment. "Tuberculin is a very treacherous agent," writes Dr.
Rayevsky. Some show but little of the effects of the "treacher-
ous stuff," but others exhibit "oppression of the chest," "pain in
almost all the bones of the body," as though "pounded in a mor-
tar," nausea, vomiting, "often a high fever," "tenderness in the
epigastrium," "cold perspiration," skin "cold and clammy" or "hot
and dry," face "flushed" or "cyanotic," "chill" or "rigors," as
effects of the injection of tuberculin. These conditions are
caused by "the action of the tuberculin as a toxic agent" or by
its action "in the foci of the disease." The therapeutic doses also
give the same train of symptoms, though not of so severe a char-
acter. Where the "reaction" follows diagnostic doses the treat-
Editorials. 565
ment must be eliminative — calomel, etc. — but when from thera-
peutic doses, stimulants to sustain heart and nerves are the
thing. In short, Dr. Rayevsky tells you how to "scientifically"
treat the treatment. It is not improbable that in time a treat-
ment of the treatment of the treatment may be required. Per-
haps this sort of "science" accounts for the fact that many
Englishmen in South Africa prefer when ill to consult the native
Hottentot medicine men rather than their own doctors, as is said
to be the case with many.
The Coroner and the Surgeon. — An English woman re-
cently died after a surgical operation, to which she and friends
had consented. A coroner insisted on his right to investigate
the case under the Act which directs that all deaths from "un-
natural causes" shall be looked into by the coroner. The sur-
geons were indignant and said that if this is to be a precedent
there would be 10,000 such cases to be investigated every year
in England alone. The British Medical Journal asserts that the
coroner who holds such inquests is unfit for his place, but admits
that the law allows such inquests. The discussion of the matter
(which is not a new one in England) was hot, and the question
is by no means settled.
The Cure of the Hook-Worm Disease. — In commenting on
John D. Rockafellow's big gift of $1,000,000 for the eradication
of the hook-worm disease from the South, the Charlotte Medical
Journal says : "And the treatment is so cheap, so short, so easily
applied, and so magical in its results that its very simplicity has
aroused the risibilities of many a lay news editor. A few
cents worth of Thymol and a dose of Epsom Salts turns the trick
and, presto ! the hitherto pale, stunted, anaemic, lazy, shiftless,
doleless, good-for-nothing, dirt-eating Southern white is trans-
formed into a useful and desirable citizen." This seems to be
the best treatment to clear out the worms, for it seems that there
are no "miasms" necessary for their presence, as they attack all
alike, according to those who study the disease. The C. M. J.
says that if the Southern States had been called on to raise this
amount of money for the purpose for which it is given, they
could not have done so because the tax payers would have kicked
against ; but Standard Oil can do it by a slight rise in the prices
of its products and nobody is the wiser.
566 Editorials.
This may be a bit ungracious, but it opens up the possibility
of the tax payers of the future crying : Let John Do It ?
The New Terror. — Pellagra is in the "lime-light," it occupies
the center of the stage and many scientific glasses are focussed
on it. The disease has assumed so great an importance in the
eyes of medical men that a convention has been held for it only
at which 350 delegates were present. The idea that spoiled corn
is the cause of the disease persists and has persisted for years
yet ever and anon something comes to the front that gives this
belief a blow in the solar plexus. In European and Asiatic coun-
tries the disease seems to be confined to the "lower classes/' to
the lowest of the low and has a leaning towards Cretins, and
mental and physical human derelicts. In the United States,
however, it seems disposed, at times, to reach out toward the up-
per strata of society. The observers agree that lowered phy-
sical, with its attendant mental, vitality, apparently caused by ex-
treme poverty, bad and insufficient food, bad housing, bad air,
bad clothing and many other bad things, are strong, predisposing
causes ; also that the disease resembles consumption in that if
taken in time, it is curable by means of that which money can
buy. The etiology of this class of diseases may be something
that political economists alone can treat. Sanitariums and
"charity" are of but limited use so long as great hordes of men,
women and children, live in abject poverty, breeding patients by
the myriad. The world is coming up against some big "prob-
lems." Each year the wealth of the world is coming into fewer
hands ; this may be for the best in the long run. The "roaring
loom of time" alone will reveal what is to come. In the mean-
time pellagra seems to be spreading, as wealth, while increasing,
shrinks into fewer hands.
The world has tried "big smashes," revolution, riot and an-
archy for this state of affairs, but no permanent cure has ever
followed ; indeed, these methods seem but to make matters worse.
Something else is needed, something that men term Utopian,
where one will consider the welfare of others at least on the same
plane as his own, where, if he has great wealth, he will not re-
gard it as his own by divine right, but, rather, will he regard
himself as a steward whose accounts must be audited some day.
Editorials. 567
While things remain as they are the philosopher may calmly
expect the coming of gaunt, or red, spectres, ever and anon
stalking over the world as they have since the beginning of re-
corded time. The men and surroundings change with each age,
but the cause that summons the spectres is always the same.
The State Society. — Under the heading, "Organization,"
Dr. D. C. Moriarta, whose name starts in as the Emerald Isle
and winds up with a flavor of Sunny Italy, discusses the State
meetings of our esteemed orthodox friends and laments that
many of the elect are not in the fold. To make things more in-
teresting, he suggests "a program for. and essentially by, the
general practitioner. As to the Honorable specialist's place in
such a programme he writes : "It may be asked how the knowl-
edge possessed by such men educated along special lines is to be
disseminated. I would say first the specialists would be most
useful and welcome at our meetings to discuss the papers of the
-general practitioners if they would temper their discussions with
mercy and consider the disadvantages under which many of us
work and the fact that we are obliged to form our conclusions
from clinical deductions, without laboratory findings." As is
said of certain remedies, ''further experience is required to
demonstrate," etc., the practicability of this plan.
Modern Therapeutics. — Down at the Atlantic City meeting
of the A. M. A., Dr. Geo. Dock read a paper with the very ironic
(perhaps, unintentional) title of 'The Advantage of Using Po-
tassium Iodide Until We Have Something Better." There is no
intention of giving an abstract of the paper here, only a few
therapeutic straws for the benefit of those whose mental vision
can see the straws a-flying. The title, given above, is one. The
opening paragraph is another : "Potassium iodide is a striking
example of the uncertainty, unrest and dissatisfaction so char-
acteristic of therapeutics at the present time." This unrest is all
right, but it is "hampered by ignorance, obscurantism, fallacious
statements as to the old. and questionable, if not actually mis-
leading, assertions, as to the new." This is quite different from
the "brilliant achievements" of modern medicine of which We hear
considerable to-day ! Here is one that might be read by those
who buy the drug by the barrel : "Potassium iodide is used by
568 Editorials.
many, probably by the majority of physicians, with a confidence
equal to that of the Eddyites in a mystic formula, or the disciple
of the Emanual movement in the unconscious conviction of the
omnipotency of the subliminal self." W lien it comes to giving
the drug very many are ''examples of imperfect preparation as
regards dosage." We cannot see that a young medic would be
much wiser after reading the paper entire, unless wisdom con-
sists of a conviction that you do not know much. The only
therapeutic rock in sight seems to be plain, everyday, old Ho-
moeopathy, writh its Aconite, Rhus, Mercurius and the others of
the old guard.
"Consistency Thou Art a Jewel/' — When one hears, or
reads of, the glowing and soul-stirring tributes paid to Homoe-
opathy in papers and speeches at our State or national meetings,
all seems well. But when we pick up our college announcements
and note how, in so many cases, the text-books by homoeopathic
writers are too3 often not even mentioned, or, if mentioned, are
put at the tail-end of the list, one wonders !
Therapeutists Scarce. — Dr. W. F. Waugh opens a paper in
the November Wisconsin Medical Recorder, as follows : "The
medical profession is over-abundantly supplied with surgeons,
fairly well with accomplished diagnosticians and occasionally de-
velops a therapeutist, a clinician." However well-intentioned, a
man cannot be a good therapeutist unless he knows the rules of
the art, which rules in the complex are known as Homoeopathy.
Vaccination By the Mouth. — H. Vallee presents to tru.
Annalcs de 7 Institut Pasteur, Paris, the conclusions of six years'
experiments at the veterinary college at Alfort. About 700 cows
and calves were experimented on with a view to immunization
against tuberculosis. Inoculation with dead bacilli did not pro-
duce good results, but ingestion of the living culture "vaccina-
tion by the mouth," as he terms it, seemed to show the best re-
sults and the younger the animal the better the result ; this
method permitted the young cattle to resist for a year, close con-
tact with other cattle with open lung tuberculous lesions ; even
after two years of this intimate intercourse with infected animals,
they presented only insignificant or hidden lesions. This is, at
Editorials. 5^9
least, an approach towards the "homoeopathic vaccination," prev-
alent in many parts of the United States, notably in Iowa, where
it has been sanctioned by the Supreme Court, that has proved so
satisfactory to patient and doctor — satisfactory to all save a few
radical health officers, who cling to the old and sometimes dan-
gerous, method.
Specialization. — In his address before the British Associa-
tion for the Advancement of Science, President J. J. Thompson
did not seem to think that the education of the day is quite what
it is cracked up to be. Among other things, he adds : "Prema-
ture specialization . . . injures the student by depriving
him of adequate literary culture, while, when it extends, as it
often does, to specialization in one or two branches of science, it
retards the progres.s of science by tending to isolate one science
from another. The boundaries between the science are arbitrary,
and tend to disappear as science progresses. The principles of
•one science often find most striking and suggestive illustrations
in the phenomena of another."
Effects of Iodide of Potassium. — It often seems to be a case
of the cure being worse than the disease sometimes. The paper
is by Dr. W. S. Gottheil on "Ioderma Bullosum Hsemorrhagi-
cum," read at Atlantic City, before Section on Dermatology (/.
A. M. A.), October 30. Quite a number of cases are cited, sev-
eral of which died from the effects of too much of the Iodide of
Potassium. In his conclusions, Dr. Gottheil says that he has
"made it a practice for a long time past to have regular urinalyses
made in patients undergoing the Iodide treatment,'' having ob-
served that even young and otherwise healthy patients' kidneys
"show signs of renal irritation" at times under this drug. Also,
"The intimate relationship of iodism and chronic nephritis has
long been recognized," etc. All this is a hint to the homoeopath
who has a liking for straying into "scientific" pastures.
The trouble with all the scientific drug treatment is that the
drugging is often as bad as the disease.
Intestinal Antiseptics. — Drs. A. Heinberg and Geo. Back-
man, of Jefferson, Philadelphia, contribute a paper on "The Ac-
tion of Intestinal Antiseptics On Peptic Digestion" to The Jour-
570 Editorials.
iial, October 30. The conclusion of it is that: "The uniformity
in the results of our experiments would seem to warrant the in-
ference that intestinal antiseptics interfere with digestion in the
stomach and, probably, in the intestines.'' So fades away an-
other great thing in the germicidal line. It would seem that you
cannot kill the "germs'' in a man without harming him, some-
times even putting him out of commission, so far as this mun-
dane life is concerned.
Death Rate In Cerebro-Spixal Meningitis. — Under the
old treatment by the "regulars" the death rate in this disease run
between 80 and 90 per cent. In the Journal A. M. A., October
30, Dr. Simon Flexner reports that out of 712 cases treated with
the Flexner serum the death rate fell to 31.4. This is a great re-
duction in the death rate, yet it still remains very high. Does
any reader have any data as to the death rate from this disease
when under homoeopathic treatment?
Concerning Medical Diplomas. — The following is typical
of many letters received by this journal and, doubtless, by our
college authorities, pharmaceutical houses and others :
"As I am studying Homoeopathy I am desirous of holding a
Diploma. I request, therefore, that you will kindly let me know
if you can furnish me with a Diploma and I shall be obliged if
you will send me all the details for furnishing me with a Diploma
and state the price you want me to pay for it."
This letter comes from India. To this writer, and to all, it
may be said that the only way to get a homoeopathic medical
diploma in the United States is to meet the college requirements
for students as a preliminary, and then to follow them up with
four years' of study, successfully passing examinations. There
are no "dispensations" to practice in foreign countries granted
by our homoeopathic colleges.
Stock In Medical Companies. — This journal has advised the
members of the medical profession several times against buying
stock in medical, pharmacal or chemical companies. Leaving out
all question of ethics in the matter, there remains the very good
reason against such purchases, that they are very unsafe. When
successful such companies are usually dependent on the brains of
Editorials. 571
one man ; when he dies, or quits, the thing usually dries up. Few
business men are so altruistic as to share with others on what
is aptly termed "the ground floor;" if they let you in it is on a
basis of "water" that brings the stock issued to a 6 per cent,
basis. Watered stock, capitalized up to the earning capacity and
the future possible increase discounted, is essentially unsafe. This
little rehash is caused by seeing an advertisement of stock in such
a company in which the holder wants a bid at any price for the
whole or any part of his holding. Buy safe railroad stocks or
bonds, or any other safe security, if you would retain your sav-
ings and get a return on them.
Isolating Pellagra Cases. — Under the heading "Pellagra.
and Pellagraphobia" the Charlotte Medical Journal criticizes the
action of the State Board of Health, of Tennessee, in ordering
the isolation of all cases of pellagra now existing, or that may be
discovered in the future. This action is regarded as an evidence
of "the tendency of humanity to fly to extremes." The frequent
preaching of ''danger" from so many things has generated a
species of phobia in the people and the preachers, generally real
and, perhaps, sometime assumed. It is a difficult thing to answer
for common sense in the matter is easily cried down by the
charge of being an "enemy to the public health." etc. If every
case that those laboring under phobia assert to be a "menace" is
to be isolated there must be a large increase in officials and in
taxation — and then the disease will go on about as before.
European countries do not quarantine pellagra, they say it is not
contagious. Probably not more so than poverty.
Argentum Xitrate In Ophthalmia Neonatorium. — Some
days ago a health officer asked the doctors of the X. Y. State
Medical Society to sign a pledge to treat the eyes of all infants
born under their care with a solution of Xitrate of Silver a la
Crede. King, of the Medical Advance, asks why any phy-
sician should be asked to sign a pledge to do a thing which he
ought to do if he believes in it without a pledge? The question
is very much to the point. However, it is intimated, it is but a
step from a pledge of this sort to compulsory law. giving State
medicine a firmer grip. If any one wants his therapeutics pre-
scribed by law let him by all means support such things.
572 Editorials.
A Question Concerning Tuberculin. — Has any competent
and absolutely unbiased man ever thoroughly tested the relia-
bility of the "tuberculin test" that is decimating the cattle of this
country ? It may be a good thing ; also, it may be a piece of the
rankest and most expensive folly. Certainly it aids in making
the cost of living ever higher and higher. Is the test reliable?
Are the men handling it competent? Men have ever been prone
to accept things on some one's say so, but this concerns the
world's food supply and should not be taken on the mere as-
sertion of State veterinarians. Is it not possible that if the of-
ficials would pay more attention to stables that correspond to the
human slums that they would be doing better work for the wel-
fare of humanity ?
The Therapeutics of Appendicitis. — The October 23 num-
ber of the Journal of the A. M. A. devotes four pages to the thera-
peutics of appendicitis. The writer of this paper seems to be at
sea in the matter. Here is an abstract of the treatment: 1st.
Rest is imperative ; on this there is no dispute. 2d. Catharsis
comes next in importance though "there is a wide variance of
opinion as to the advisability, value or necessity of purging." 3d.
Many cases are really "an irritation and inflammation of the
caecum ;" which should be washed out. 4th. There is a differ-
ence of opinion as to the advisability of using the ice bag. 5th.
Some believe in giving Morphine ; others do not ; the writer of
the article believes in it. 6th. "There is a great variation in the.
opinion of physicians and surgeons" as to whether food should
be given. 7th. "It seems advisable to operate if. in from 24 to 36
hours the pain has increased, the temperature gone up, the pulse
also; or if there is a sudden subsidence of pain. From 8th to
14th the directions are concerned with what is to be done in cer-
tain events. 15th reads "After complete recovery from a severe
attack of appendicitis a child surely, and an adult generally should
be operated on" because then "the mortality is, perhaps, less than
1 per cent." This is a summary of the therapeutics of appendi-
citis with the "regulars" today. It cannot be very satisfactory to
them.
What Kills In Consumptiok. — Dr. J. P. Scanlan writes to
the Medical Notes and Queries, of October, a letter from which
Editorials. 573
the following is taken: "In Volume III., 1909, of the Inter-
national Clinics, Doctor Francine's article on "Treatment of
Tuberculosis" leads me to inquire why the doctor ignores the
condition of secondary infection by the pus microbe, the offender
who makes hectic fever, chills, and the worst cough. I seldom,
if ever, see a case of consumption without secondary infection.
I believe it is the thing that kills the patient many times." This
seems to be a new phase of the matter, and it leads to the question
that if Tuberculin is efficacious in combatting the primary form
of the disease would not Sepsin be its complement in the hectic
later stages?
The Hospital. — Medical Notes and Queries indulges in a
parable. A respected doctor seeking a larger field and greater
income, with others, founded a hospital. At first there were
subscriptions and hope ; then debt and a State appropriation ; and
the doctor was the servant of the politician. A criminal opera-
tion. The police come to his house with the ante mortem testi-
mony of the dead girl. A moment's absence from the room.
The report of a pistol, and the doctor was no more. 'The hos-
pital, that strange congeries of contradictions, restoring health,
inflicting hopeless disability, promoting medical education, foster-
ing pauperism, a mingling of science and ignorance, skill and
conceit, altruism and selfishness, benevolence and graft, the hos-
pital continues its work of good and evil."
The moral? None is given.
To Medical Students. — At the opening exercises of the
Hahnemann Medical College, Chicago, Dr. S. H. Aurand ad-
dressed the classes. He gave the men much practical advice and
among other things, said : "Hard will it be for the student, and,
indeed, I could not vouch for his safe deliverance four years
hence, who is possessed with filthy habits, disrespect, dishonor,
overconfidence, carelessness, profanity, dudeism, boisterousness,
thoughtlessness, selfishness or anything of a vulgar, vile or sordid
nature." This pictures a very different man from the traditional
roystering student of medicine such as is depicted in Pickwick
by Dickens. Things are changing very fast these days ; men
must make good or get out. The roystering, swashbuckler isn't
wanted in the sick room. This doesn't mean that a man is to be
574 News Items.
a sanctimonious milk sop ; it only means that he should be a
gentleman in the real sense of that sadly abused term.
Modern Medicine and Homoeopathy. — "A woman with pal-
lor of the face and of the lips, with a lively and talkative manner,
with a peculiar menstrual now, with stitches in the abdomen and a
sensation of something alive there, may have a low opsonic in-
dex and probably does ; she may also give an affirmative answer
to the Wasserman test and thus show that she has latent syphilis,
the blood count would undoubtedly show anaemia ; all these are
interesting things about the patient and moreover they are factors
that could not be known were it not for the recent discoveries
in medical science. Nevertheless they have not the slightest
bearing upon the fact that Crocus is homceopathically indicated
as the sufficient remedy for that woman. This is true now when
so much is known — and it was true twenty years ago when we
knew so little, and it will be true fifty years from now, when our
knowledge will, no doubt, be prodigious.'' — Dr. J. B. S. King, in
Medical Advance.
NEWS ITEMS.
Dr. C. G. S. Austin has removed from Nantucket, to Mans-
field, Mass.
Dr. Charles F. Hastings has removed to Rosalind Court, 510
W. 144th St., New York City.
Dr. G. Forrest Martin and Dr. H. W. Jewett have removed to
Wyman's Exchange, Central and Merk, Lowell, Mass.
Following the Missouri Homoeopathic Medical College the
Denver College of Physicians and Surgeons has closed its doors.
There is too much "higher education" required for the purses
of the smaller colleges. Where the men to fill the placs of
the family, and country doctor, are to come from, no man know-
eth ; certainly not the drivers of "higher education."
The regular semiannual meeting of the Board of Trustees of
the American Institute of Homoeopathy has been ordered by
President Ward for December 18, 1909, at the Hollenden Hotel,
Cleveland, Ohio.
Baptisia Externally. 575
Dr. W. C. Butman has changed his location from Denver,
Col., to Eldorado, Kansas.
The old building of the first homoeopathic medical college in
the world, at Allentown, Pa., was recently torn down to make
way for other buildings. On opening the box in the stone it
was found to contain The Organon only. Dr. M.- A. Slough
sent the leaden box and its contents to Dr. T. L. Bradford.
Dr. S. Clarke has changed his address from Ashcroft to Kam-
loop's, B. C.
Dr. J. L. Nascher, New York, proposes a new department of
medicine to be called "Geriatrics." As we understand it a
"Geriatrist" would be a specialist in senility, or old age. His
paper is in Medical Council, November.
Dr. P. W. Shedd has added another remedy to the list from
his laboratory, namely, Staphylocin. We hope to have a paper
on it soon.
BAPTISIA EXTERNALLY.
"Baptisia as an external remedy is a pain reliever of great
value in a certain class of cases. A typical illustration of this
class is that of chronic tibia}, ulcers, old ulcerations on the legs,
where there is a constant dull piiu with a persistent aching sen-
sation, where the entire surface is of a dark, bluish color which
denotes passi/e venous engorgement or stagnation, with a con-
stant tendency to ulceration'.' ' The pain always present and es-
pecially preventing the patient '.from sleeping at night. I make
a solution of Eaptisia one part,' 'and water two parts. With this
I saturate asepsin lint and apply it to the entire diseased surface.
It is a stimulant to the nerves and capillaries. It assists in re-
storing the activity of the capillary circulation. It brings new
blood to the part ; it relieves pressure on the nerve, and pain
soon vanishes. Combined with other indicated remedies, I find
this an important agent in the cure of some of these stubborn
cases."— Dr. M. Wilkenloh, The Therapeutist.
PERSONAL.
"Turning on the search-light" is a catchy figure of speech, but it will
not bear the microscope.
Where, Oh, where, stands the man who drilled Volupuk into himself?
And there is a mightier now (they say) than Esperanto ! Vanity of
vanities !
"Mental assassination" is a Christian Science crime.
The Postal Savings Bank would give millions of men a practical con-
cern in good government. Good thing!
Men who fly are not necessarily angels.
Wait until "the latest" has shed its pin-feathers before you drop Ho-
moeopathy.
A very rich man can say what he thinks, though he doesn't — always.
The coin good Americans seek in Paris is the Latin quarters.
Ladies' Home Journal says Taft could give his seat to three ladies at
once. Naughty !
The departed banker was one, they say. who stopped when he had
enough. He had $25,000,000.00.
Most men prefer a favorable verdict to justice.
The small boy described the M'.ephitis Americana as "a small animal
that lived on asparagus."
"To be great is to be misunderstood," but not vice versa.
They say that perpetual motion has been achieved in the jaws of the
girl gum chewer.
No, Fresh, the grass widow isn't a vegetarian; it's bottle and bird for
hers. , ,
If we used Indian names how many "Ma"n-av"ra:d-of-wife" would be
found in the Blue-book?
Honestly, the- ether day we had to Lhink hard to recall, the name of
our Honorable Vice President of these U. S. A.
"It is safer' to raise h , than a check, ' remarked our friend Binks.
The family tree is noted for the faci that its giowth is either very
slow or very fast.
It is mean for Age to tell on a woman.
When religion is used as a cloak it insures its wearer a very warm
corner.
"Diplo-lanceo-bacillus-coccus" is what one explicit medical gentlemen
terms the pneumococcus.
The end of Volume XXIV. Hope to see you all next year. In the
meantime, A Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.