. The American homoeopathist. as made no attempt to catch the publiceye by any advertisement beyond that legitimateform—the cure of its patients. It is pleasing tonote the disposition of the managers to be con-servative and cautious. They do not pose asgreat lights in surgery, but neither are they lac Ic-ing in ability when the exigencies of the casedemand the more heroic forms of death rate is truly astonishing in its unpre-cedented mildness, and bespeaks great care andability, since in the more than three years ofexistence this sanatorium has had but twodeaths, the one from teta


. The American homoeopathist. as made no attempt to catch the publiceye by any advertisement beyond that legitimateform—the cure of its patients. It is pleasing tonote the disposition of the managers to be con-servative and cautious. They do not pose asgreat lights in surgery, but neither are they lac Ic-ing in ability when the exigencies of the casedemand the more heroic forms of death rate is truly astonishing in its unpre-cedented mildness, and bespeaks great care andability, since in the more than three years ofexistence this sanatorium has had but twodeaths, the one from tetanus, the other fromshock. WIT AND WISDOM a new department see page X. The American Homeopathist. hsutii /-< irna] is published for its sub- no free list. Sample « opics are never sentupturns are not discontinued until so ordered. A. CHATT1 K 1 ON ft CO., Publishers, New Yoik. , RAHWAY, N. .1. Vol. XXIV. Zhe Hmctican Ibomeopatbtst NEW YORK, FEBRUARY r, 1898. FRANK KRAFT, M. D., Cleveland, Ohio, Editor. OUR Frederick L. Santway, M. D.,Theresa, N. Y. POISONS IN MEDICINES/ UNDER this heading a morning paper ofrecent date prints an editorial in which itdeprecates the action of the Ohio Food Com-misioner who is applying a certain poison lawwith an impartial hand, having now reached thepatent medicines which have been flooding—almost literally flooding—the State of Ohio foryears past, under handsome covers and gaudylabels. This law, in brief, requires that any medi-cine sold in this State, containing poison, musthave a poison label—i. e., a skull-and-cross-bones label—upon the package. Now, it would seemto almost any right-thinking person that the dueand rigorous administration of this law, havingfor its avowed and very evident object the goodof all the people of the Ohio commonwealth,and one that can result in naught but good to allconcerned, would be a most delightful oppor-tunity for editorial writing of the impassionedand eloquent kind. Instead, howev


Size: 1390px × 1798px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1885