CARRIWITCHETS


The cutaneous eruptions alone are sufficient to show the uselessness of those lines of demarcation. For years past I have ceased to consider the similarity of the cutaneous symptoms as of any consequence. How could a drug produce a herpetic eruption in a prover, if the herpes did not already exist in him? A remedy cures herpes, if it suits the whole organism, not otherwise.


SIT DOWN, DOCTOR, AND WRITE US YOUR ANSWERS TO THESE.

QUESTIONS.

17. Will some reader give the average temperature of the seasons in zone?- J.N.HAZRA.

18. A farm worker comes into the office and shows a wound made by a manure fork. The skin and deep fascia have been divided and there is slight laceration of the superficial muscles. The patient is apparently healthy and has no symptoms apart from those due to the wound, which is obviously contaminated with manner. Now, beside any surgical treatment:.

1. What lotion should one use for cleaning the wound?.

2. What dressing should be applied to the wound?.

3. What internal remedy should be given?-A.H.MARSHALL.

19. Here is a point in philosophy that needs some clarification: The symptoms are supposed to disappear from above downward, from within outward and in the reverse order of their coming. Now do the last symptoms go first or do the chronic mental symptoms go first? In other words are the are symptoms, say of a catarrh, first to go or are the old mental symptoms of poor memory the first to leave? Another example: Should the symptoms of hectic fever which are of later development go first or should the old but inner symptoms of painful menses or dysmenorrhoea go first?.

Which is more important, the order or the direction of the symptoms?-M.D.BAIG.

ANSWER TO QUESTIONS IN DECEMBER 1928 ISSUE

Can you give me a list of books on homoeopathic remedies in children’s diseases?.

– The following list is presented in answer to the above question:.

Duncan, Children Acid and Alkaline.

Edwards, Disease of Children (Recorder, January 15, 1929, p. 58).

Fischer, C.E., Diseases of Children, Chicago. (1895).

Guernsey, H.N., Traite dobstetrique et des maladies speciales aux femmes et aux enfants, base sur les principles et la pratique de l’Homoeopathie.

Traduit par le Dr. F.Chauvet, sur la 3me ed. amer.

Paris, J.B.Baillere et Fils 1880.

Grand Vol. 66f4 p. (p. 461-645).

Guernsey, H.N., The Application of the principles and Practice of Homoeopathy to Obstetrics and the Disorders Peculiar to Woman and Young Children, H.J.Guernsey, illustrated.

3d ed. revised, 1883.

1004 p. (p.750-1000).

Ed. Boericke, Philadelphia.

Hartmann, Fr., Therapeutique Homoeopathique des Maladies des Enfants.

Traduit de lallemand par L. Simon fils.

1853, 668 pages.

Ed. Baillere, Paris.

Hartmann, F., Diseases of Children and Their Homoeopathic Treatment.

Traduit par Ch.Hempel.

1853, 516 pages.

Radde, New York ed.

Jahr, G.H.G., Du Traitement Homoeopathique des Maladies des Femmes et des Jeunes Enfants.

1856, 496 pages (pg. 463-487).

Ed. Baillere, Paris.

Jahr, G.H.G., The Homoeopathic Treatment of the Diseases of Females and Infants at the Breast.

Traduit par Hempel. 1856, 422 pages (p. 391-408).

Ed.W.Radde, New York.

Leadam, R., Homoeopathy as Applied to the Diseases of Females and the Most Important Diseases of Early Childhood. 1851, 407 pages (p. 307-401).

Ed. Leath, London.

Nichol, Th., Diseases of the Nares, Larynx and Trachea in Childhood.

1885, 308 p.

Chatterton Publishing Co., New York.

Raue, G., Diseases of Childhood.

3me ed.

1922, 657 pages.

Ed. B. Tafel, Philadelphia.,.

Teste, A., Traite Homoeopathique des Maladies Aigues et Chroniques des Enfants.

2me edition.

1856, 414 pages.

Ed. Baillere, Paris.

Teste, A., Diseases, of Children.

Transduction.

Tooker, R.N., Diseases of Children.

Ed. Gross & Delbridge 1895.

Underwood, B.J., The Diseases of Childhood with Therapeutic Indications.

1882, 216 pages. Ed. Chatterton Pub. Co., New York.- PIERRE SCHMIDT.

Practitioners who stand with me upon common ground, and who have made it their study to point out both the common and the individual character of our symptoms have necessarily receded more and more from those few symptoms which consist of organic transformations as the results of poisoning. Such symptoms were gradually found to be useless, and have fallen into disrepute.- C.HERING, M.D., 1847.

The cutaneous eruptions alone are sufficient to show the uselessness of those lines of demarcation. For years past I have ceased to consider the similarity of the cutaneous symptoms as of any consequence. How could a drug produce a herpetic eruption in a prover, if the herpes did not already exist in him? A remedy cures herpes, if it suits the whole organism, not otherwise.- C. HERING,.

Allan D. Sutherland
Dr. Sutherland graduated from the Hahnemann Medical College in Philadelphia and was editor of the Homeopathic Recorder and the Journal of the American Institute of Homeopathy.
Allan D. Sutherland was born in Northfield, Vermont in 1897, delivered by the local homeopathic physician. The son of a Canadian Episcopalian minister, his father had arrived there to lead the local parish five years earlier and met his mother, who was the daughter of the president of the University of Norwich. Four years after Allan’s birth, ministerial work lead the family first to North Carolina and then to Connecticut a few years afterward.
Starting in 1920, Sutherland began his premedical studies and a year later, he began his medical education at Hahnemann Medical School in Philadelphia.
Sutherland graduated in 1925 and went on to intern at both Children’s Homeopathic Hospital and St. Luke’s Homeopathic Hospital. He then was appointed the chief resident at Children’s. With the conclusion of his residency and 2 years of clinical experience under his belt, Sutherland opened his own practice in Philadelphia while retaining a position at Children’s in the Obstetrics and Gynecology Department.
In 1928, Sutherland decided to set up practice in Brattleboro.