Critique . THE KEY TO SUCCESSFUL PRESCRIBING. Letters to a Young Homeopath. Letter No. 5. Finding the Indicated Remedy—Illustrative Cases. {Copyrighted, March, igio. All rights reserved.) Y DEAR DOCTOR: 1 must call your attentionto the pernicious, though popular and general ex-ternal mode of treatment, whether by medicinaldaubing or some scientific machine. The younghomeopath who has not had the advantages of ahomeopathic training, may conclude that his ofifice will not im-press the people w ith the dignity of an M. D. unless their eyesare made to look wonderingly at various and strange machin
Critique . THE KEY TO SUCCESSFUL PRESCRIBING. Letters to a Young Homeopath. Letter No. 5. Finding the Indicated Remedy—Illustrative Cases. {Copyrighted, March, igio. All rights reserved.) Y DEAR DOCTOR: 1 must call your attentionto the pernicious, though popular and general ex-ternal mode of treatment, whether by medicinaldaubing or some scientific machine. The younghomeopath who has not had the advantages of ahomeopathic training, may conclude that his ofifice will not im-press the people w ith the dignity of an M. D. unless their eyesare made to look wonderingly at various and strange machines,and their nostrils forced to inhale the evidences of an old-school stink-shop. Be not deceived. The almost unlimiteddevices for local treatment, such as electricity, a vibrator, aliigh power lamp, an ozone generating machine, a hot air bak-ing apparatus, certain combinations of oil of pine needles andeucalyptus, etc., together with all the no-medicine cults, wereinvented for those doctors who do not kn
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