The Hahnemannian monthly . on, stinging andburning pain ; oedema. Hepar sulph.—To promote or prevent suppuration. Other remedies which may be required are Euphorbium,Carbo veg., Lachesis, Lycopodium and Sulphur. When pyaemia results from erysipelas, the treatment mustbe adapted to that complication. Alcohol as a remedy and as a food may be required, as inpuerperal cases and others where the vital powers are rapidlydepressed. Given early, alcohol probably acts, not only as astimulant to the vital forces, but as an antidote to the poisonwhich feeds the disease. In ordinary simple cases, however,


The Hahnemannian monthly . on, stinging andburning pain ; oedema. Hepar sulph.—To promote or prevent suppuration. Other remedies which may be required are Euphorbium,Carbo veg., Lachesis, Lycopodium and Sulphur. When pyaemia results from erysipelas, the treatment mustbe adapted to that complication. Alcohol as a remedy and as a food may be required, as inpuerperal cases and others where the vital powers are rapidlydepressed. Given early, alcohol probably acts, not only as astimulant to the vital forces, but as an antidote to the poisonwhich feeds the disease. In ordinary simple cases, however,it is not vi.—15 226 The Hahnemannian Monthly. [April, I-Htecellaneotis OTontnbutions. JOSEPH HYPPOLYTE PULTE, At four oclock on the morning of February 24th, 1884,Dr. Joseph Hyppolyte Pulte, the pioneer of homoeopathy westof the Allegheny Mountains, departed this life in the seventy-third year of his age. The subject of this sketch was bornOctober 6th, 1811, at Meschede, in the Prussian Province of. Westphalia. His father, Hermann Joseph Pulte, , wasthe medical director of one of the government institutions forthe education of mid wives, and as these institutions had to beorganized all over the newly-acquired provinces, he was espe-cially deputed for that purpose, besides presiding over the in-stitution confided to his care. He was also one of the co-editors of the Manual for the In-struction of Midwives Throughout the Whole Kingdom, a workwhich in its sphere became famous, and a model for similarones in other States. 1884] Joseph Hyppolyte Pulte, 227 Joseph H., in his early youth, was so impressed with theworth of his lather that he often, in his childish fancy, literally followed in his fathers footsteps by stepping inhis traeks while walking behind him. No wonder that theyouth should so early have a predilection for that professionof which he saw his revered father to be such a respectedmember; especially was this the ease when he was remind


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhomopath, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, bookyear1865