CANCER



Creosote. There is veg great fetor; excitation and prostration. the fetor has a pungent effect.

Hellebores. The evacuations from the bladder settle and look like coffee grounds.

Muriatic acid. Varices of the anus which are exceeding sore to the least touch. Much prostration.

Phosphorus. Great sense of sinking in the abdomen and heat in back. Particularly indicated in tall and slender persons.

Sabina. There is a distressed sensation in the sacrum and pubes. A quivering as if of a living substance in the abdomen.

Secale corn. The patient is of a passive character; of a thin, scrawny appearance;l and subject to passive hemorrhages.

For GANGRENE DURING CONFINEMENT; See also the remedies mentioned dander gangrene.

H.N. Guernsey
Henry Newell Guernsey (1817-1885) was born in Rochester, Vermont in 1817. He earned his medical degree from New York University in 1842, and in 1856 moved to Philadelphia and subsequently became professor of Obstetrics at the Homeopathic Medical College of Pennsylvania (which merged with the Hahnemann Medical College in 1869). His writings include The Application of the Principles and Practice of Homoeopathy to Obstetrics, and Keynotes to the Materia Medica.