ALLEN AND LIPPE



These two great physicians belonged to a race that is gradually passing from the face of the earth. At this day we have many sincere and skillful physicians in our midst, but none quite the equal of Allen and Lippe. Let us emulate them, study their writings, the accounts of their successes and learn how it was that Lippe (and Allen, and Boger, and Hayes) “did it.” Hahnemann, throughout his entire career, was searching for a rational and scientific method for curing the sick. For he said: “God is too merciful to permit his creatures to suffer without providing the remedy.” When his long search was crowned with success, he made this dramatic statement: “THEN DAWNED TO ME THE FIRST RAY OF THAT METHOD OF CURING WHICH WAS TO SOON BRIGHTEN INTO THE MOST SPLENDID DAY!”.

2525 PARK LANE

GLENVIEW, ILL.

Harvey Farrington
FARRINGTON, HARVEY, Chicago, Illinois, was born June 12, 1872, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, son of Ernest Albert and Elizabeth Aitken Farrington. In 1881 he entered the Academy of the New Church, Philadelphia, and continued there until 1893, when he graduated with the degree of B. A. He then took up the study of medicine at the Hahnemann College of Philadelphia and graduated in 1896 with the M. D. degree. He took post-graduate studies at the Post-Graduate School of Homœopathics, Philadelphia, Pa., and received the degree of H. M. After one year of dispensary work he began practice in Philadelphia, but in 1900 removed to Chicago and has continued there since. He was professor of materia medica in the Hahnemann Medical College of Chicago, and was formerly the same at Dunham Medical College of Chicago. He was a member of the Illinois Homœopathic Association and of the alumni association of Hahnemann Medical College of Philadelphia.