BILIOUSNESS



Well indeed, is it, that Homoeopathy has come in vogue to change, at least to some degree, this vicious system. The milder method, with the specialization of cases, has done much toward breaking up the random, haphazard plan of securing the interior- “cleansing the primae viae,” as our Old-School friends have had it-ad nauseam, and still there is much to do in this direction. Routinism is still the evil of the day; individualization, a special feature in Homoeopathic practice, is the method of the advanced school and of the future. Let us avoid the empirical snare of hobbyism and follow the index of scientific specialization; so shall succeed in dealing with even this protean disorder-biliousness.

F H Orme