The American Homoeopathist, Volume 15Chatterton-Peck., 1889 - Homeopathy |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
abdomen acid aconite action albuminuria allopathic AMERICAN HOMEOPATHIST American Institute applied attention baryta believe better blood Board body Bright's disease bryonia Bureau called cause child chloroform chronic Cincinnati clinical cold condition constipation cough cure death diagnosis diphtheria diplopia disease doses drug dura mater effect enlarged especially examination experience eyes fact fever frequent give given gonorrhoea Hahnemann hand head heart homœo homœopathic Hospital indicated injection Institute of Homœopathy journal kali kidney labor Lake Minnetonka less liver lycopodium Materia Medica medicine membrane menses ment mucus muscles nephritis never night Organon organs pain paper patient perinæum perineum physician potency practice practitioner prescribed present profession pulse remedy scarlatina session skin small-pox Society stomach symptoms syphilis therapeutics throat tion tissues treated treatment tumor urine uterine uterus vaccination woman York
Popular passages
Page 238 - Army, has consented to take charge of the Report on the Mortality and Vital Statistics of the United States as returned by the Eleventh Census. As the United...
Page xxvi - DIOVIBURNIA.. the cornpotent parts of which are well known to -any and all physicians who desire to know the same, and therefore have no relation to proprietary or quack remedies. I have employed this medicine in cases of dysmenorrhea, suppression of the eatamenln, and in excessive leucorrhea, and have been much pleased with Its use.
Page 326 - School; and whereas the state of the materia medica in both schools is such as imperatively to demand a more satisfactory arrangement and greater purity of observation, which can only be obtained by associate action on the part of those who seek diligently for truth alone; and inasmuch as the state of the public information respecting the principles and practice of Homoeopathy is so defective as to make it easy for mere pretenders to this very difficult branch of the healing art to acquire credit...
Page 388 - It may be readily conceived that no theoretical conjecture will furnish an answer to this problem, and that it is not by such means we can establish, in respect to each individual medicine, the quantity of the dose that suffices to produce the homoeopathic effect and accomplish a prompt and gentle cure. No reasonings, however ingenious, will avail in this instance. It is by pure experiments only, and precise observations, that this object can be attained.
Page xvii - ... preparation. By one of the most ingenious of these mechanical processes the greatest degree of fineness is secured without the sacrifice of the attractive and beautiful red color which is characteristic of an absolutely pure and natural cocoa. W. Baker & Co., Dorchester, Mass.