1 and relief was immediate. Spasmodic irritability of the pneumogastric nerve is a keynote which has happily enabled me to perceive an ipecac totality in cases in which the symptoms were more obscure than in this instance.
R. E. S. Hayes
Retained placenta
Mrs. W.A. Japanese, aged about 30, mother of several children, mis- carriage at about the third month. I was not called at once, but as the flow continued rather more than normal, and there was considerable nausea, I was asked, several days after the miscarriage, to prescribe. They were positive that “everything” had come away, the placenta as well as the foetus. Ipecac was given with considerable relief to the patient. A day or two later I was informed that “something large” had passed, and they were alarmed. Upon examination it proved to be the placenta, which had been retained for eight days, with not the slightest ill effect. I do not believe she would have made a better recovery had I used the curette. Surgery could not have improved matters, for she is now, several months later, in perfect health.
H. W. Schwartz
Epistaxis
I remember the first two powders of Ipecac that I ever gave. I was interne in a hospital at the time. Each powder cured a violent case of epistaxis. Each cure confirmed the teaching I had received in college from Drs. Geo. Dienst, A. H. Grimmer and James Tyler Kent, et al. The first was a ward case of typhoid fever in a girl of eighteen. The hemorrhage started at two P. M. and kept up till five. I was out at the time, but the other interne had packed the nasal cavity and, it seemed, done every conceivable thing but give a homoeopathic remedy. At once I called up the head doctor on the medical staff for orders. As usual, he was too busy to come up, but said, “You get a head mirror, throw a light into the nasal cavity, find the bleeding point and cauterize it.” The poor girl s nose had been packed and repacked until she was almost exhausted, pale, weak, and looked as if she would die. Instead of subjecting her to further punishment,