The Hahnemannian monthly . ; dry and inflamed fauces; cough caused principally by the sharp stitches in thethroat, accompanied by tearing pain in the throat; cough, with an eruption of smalltumors on the neck; bleeding at the lungs, with glandular swellings and ulcers onvarious parts of the body, and other scrofulous symptoms ; scratchy and itchy feel-ing in the larynx, with pain in the trachea; feeling as if the trachea were beingcompressed; great pressure on the chest; on lying down at night an attack resem-bling that of asthma came on, causing a loud wheezing on inspiration. The above sympt


The Hahnemannian monthly . ; dry and inflamed fauces; cough caused principally by the sharp stitches in thethroat, accompanied by tearing pain in the throat; cough, with an eruption of smalltumors on the neck; bleeding at the lungs, with glandular swellings and ulcers onvarious parts of the body, and other scrofulous symptoms ; scratchy and itchy feel-ing in the larynx, with pain in the trachea; feeling as if the trachea were beingcompressed; great pressure on the chest; on lying down at night an attack resem-bling that of asthma came on, causing a loud wheezing on inspiration. The above symptoms are worse in the morning, with the exception of the dry-ness of the throat, which is more severe, between noon and midnight. Cistus canadensis is of great service in catarrh of the larynx and trachea; it isone of the most valuable remedies we possess in affections of a scrofulous nature,especially those characterized by glandular swellings, idcers, abscesses, and bleed-ing at the lungs —HomozcpAhic World, Jan., mm MOMTILI APRIL, 1894. INFANTILE TYPHOID FEVER. N. TOOKER, , CHICAGO, ILL.(Professor of Diseases of Children, Chicago Homoeopathic Medical College.) Definition.—According to the best authorities, the definition oftvphoid fever is: an acute infectious disease, lasting from ten totwelve days, or longer, characterized by gastro-intestinal catarrh,febrile movement of continued type, marked prostration, rapidwasting, mild nervous symptoms, and, in a certain proportion ofcases, a scanty and scattered eruption of rose-colored spots, whichdisappear on pressure and are developed in successive crops. But the folly of considering and treating disease by name is no-where better illustrated than in the fevers which are so common inearly life, the symptoms of which are in many cases totally unlikethose ascribed to typhoid fever in adult life. A typical case of typhoid in the adult is almost unmistakable. Noother disease runs a more regular course. The prodromal symp


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhomopath, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, bookyear1865