cal chief, an orthodox physician of diagnostic ability. All the staff regularly inquired concerning the condition of the patient and after more than one weeks illness the attending physician accosted the writer in the hall and stated, I am afraid the superintendent is slip- ping away; his pneumonia is not resolving, his cough, temperature, respiration and pulse are unsatisfactory. Have you as a Homoeo- path anything to suggest? The chart showed that the patient had been ill ten days, had received codeine for the cough, digitalis to support the heart and whisky as a diffusible stimulant. Beef tea and other inappropriate foods were in the dietary. He was placed in a semi-recumbent position to help his respiration and had excellent nursing care. An examination of the chart showed the typing to be III and this knowledge appeared to dampen the spirits of the attending physician. We advised suspending the codeine, digitalis and whisky at once. The particular symptoms presented by this patient for ho- moeopathic analyses were the following: Patient was anxious and nervous, scolding about his food, claiming it was not satisfying-al- ways hungry. He had dyspnoea, a dry cough with sharp pains when coughing. Stethoscopic examination showed complete involvement of the right lung. Patient craved air, wanted the bed clothes lifted and aired, he objected to being warm. The indicated remedy, Io- dine, was selected on these symptoms. Two drops of the tincture of iodine in a glass of warmed raw milk to be given thus every two hours until further notice. The patient responded and in one week was ambulant.
William H Dieffenbach
Pneumonia
A young man, 22 years old, had a chill in the night, followed by a severe pain directly over the heart coming in paroxysms, worse from deep breathing and from lying on the left (painful) side, not worse from motion, with soreness to pressure along the intercostal nerve all the way around to the back. Slight cough at intervals, which also brought on the pain. Temperature 102. Pulse 96. Watery diarrhoea, five or six stools a day for three days. Although there were no objec- tive signs of typhoid fever, I feared it might be that disease develop-