The Hahnemannian monthly . chronic laryngeal catarrh, with dull stitchingpain on empty swallowing. He cites Heinigke that it is to be used in painsjumping from one joint to the other, especially in the heels, 30 that thepatient cannot tolerate the least pressure on the heels. (Achillodynia ofAlbert; in such a case it might be well to suspect gonorrhoeal rheumatism.) Frank H. Pritchard, A Few Remedies in Gastric Ulcer.—In the Ilomceo pettish Tidskrift ofDenmark, in an article on this affection, the editor recommends treating theassociated gastric catarrh with natr. mur., nux vom., puis., a


The Hahnemannian monthly . chronic laryngeal catarrh, with dull stitchingpain on empty swallowing. He cites Heinigke that it is to be used in painsjumping from one joint to the other, especially in the heels, 30 that thepatient cannot tolerate the least pressure on the heels. (Achillodynia ofAlbert; in such a case it might be well to suspect gonorrhoeal rheumatism.) Frank H. Pritchard, A Few Remedies in Gastric Ulcer.—In the Ilomceo pettish Tidskrift ofDenmark, in an article on this affection, the editor recommends treating theassociated gastric catarrh with natr. mur., nux vom., puis., ars., carbo veg.,sulph. or lycop. Atropine 4x is useful for the severe pains. Sulph. and ar-senicum are the chief remedies to effect a radical cure. Phosphor, and have a curative influence, the latter in the second or third is serviceable more where there are so-called nervous pains in thestomach. Carbo veg. is indicated where the pains appear when the stomachis empty. Frank H. Pritchard. MfiWiAH MOUTHY. MAY, 1900. SLEEP. BY W. A. SEIBERT. , EASTON, PA.(Read before the Homoeopathic Medical Society of Pa., Philadelphia, September, 1899.) What is Sleep ? What causes Sleep ? What preventsSleep ? And, How shall the causes that prevent Sleep be re-moved ? Four conundrums easier to propound than to us consider them briefly seriatim. First, What is Sleep ? A most familiar affection of the nerv-ous system that defies satisfactory explanation or know that without it we die. In early English historycriminals condemned to death by being prevented from sleep-ing died^soon in a raving insane condition. Physiologists con-tent themselves by enumerating the physical phenomena thatattend sleep when they do not, like Dal ton, evade the subjectentirely. They speak of the circumstances under which itoccurs, the effects of it on the body, the depth of it, etc., with-out defining it at all. Psychologists, like physiologists, eitherevad


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhomopath, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, bookyear1865