IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3) 1.0 I.I ^ m iiiiii 1.8 1.25 1.4 1.6 „ 6" - i %• ^l (9m "^ » Photographic Sdences Corporation 23 WEST MAIN STREET WEBSTER, N.Y. 145^0 (716) 872-4503 V V "% V :\ \ % 6^ 5t'/ ^ ;^ CIHM/ICMH Microfiche Series. CIHM/ICMH Collection de microfiches. Canadian Institute for Historical Microreproductions / Institut Canadian de microreproductlons historiquas I Technical and Bibliographic Notes/Notes technic les at bibliographiquas The Institute has attempted to obtain the best original copy available for filming. Features of this copy which may be bibliographically unique, which may alter any of the images in the reproduction, or which may significantly change the usual method of filming, are checked below. D D D D D D n D □ n Coloured covers/ Couverture de couleur Covers damaged/ Couverture endommagde Covers restored and/or laminated/ Couverture restaur^e et/ou pellicul^e Cover title missing/ Le titre de couverture manque Coloured maps/ Cartes gAographiques en couleur Coloured ink (i.e. other than blue or black)/ Encre de couleur (i.e. autre que bleue ou noire) Coloured plates and/or illustrations/ Planches et/ou illustrations en couleur Bound with other material/ Relii avec d'autres documents Tight binding may cause shadows or distortion along interior margin/ Lareliure serree peut causer de I'ombre ou de la distorsion le long da la marge intdrieuie Blank leaves added during restoration may appear within the text. Whenever possible, these have been omitted from filming/ It se peut que certaines pages blanches ajouties lors d'une restauration apparaissent dans le texte, mais, lorsque cela dtait possible, ces pages n'ont pas iti filmies. Additional comments:/ Commentaires suppldmentaires; L'Institut a microfilm^ le meilleur exemplaire qu'il lui a et^ possible de se procurer. Les details de cet exemplaire qui sont peut-dtre uniques du point de vue bibliographique, qui peuvent modifier une image reproduite, ou qui peuvent exiger une modification dans la m^thode normale de filmage sont indiqu^s ci-dessous. □ Coloured pages/ Pages de couleur □ Pages damaged/ Pages andommagees n Pages restored and/or laminated/ Pages n Pages restaurees et/ou pelliculees Pages discoloured, stained or foxet Pages ddcolor^es, tachetdes ou piquees Pages detached/ Pages d^tachees Showthroughy Transparence r~| Pages discoloured, stained or foxed/ I I Pages detached/ ["^ Showthrough/ □ Quality of pri Qualit^ iniga nt varies/ ndgale de I'impression I I Includes supplementary material/ Comprend du materiel supplementaire Only edition available/ Seule Edition disponible Pages wholly or partially obscured by errata slips, tissues, etc., have been refilmed to ensure the best possible image/ Les pages totalement ou partiellement obscurcies par un feuillet d'errata, une pelure, etc., cnt it^ fiim^es ^ nouveau de facon a obtenir la meilleure image possible. This item is filmed at the reduction ratio checked below/ Ce document est film^ au taux de reduction indiqu^ ci-dessous. 10X 14X 18X 22X 26X 30X -i i i 12X 16X 20X 24X 28X 32X The copy filmed here has been reproduced thanks to the generosity of: La BIbllothdque de la Viile de Montrtet L'exemplaire film6 fut reproduit grAce 6 la g6n4rositA de: La Bibliothdque de la Villa de Montrtei The images appearing here are the best quality possible considering the condition and legibility of the original copy and in keeping with the filming contract specifications. Les images suivantes ont 6td reproduites avec le plus grand soin, compte tenu de la condition et de la nettaii.6 de l'exemplaire filmd, et en conformity avec les conditions du contrat de filmage. Original copies in printed paper covers are filmed beginning with the front cover and ending on the last page with a printed or illustrated impres- sion, or the back cover when appropriate. All other original copies are filmed beginning rnt the first page with a printed or illustrated impres- sion, and ending on the last page with a printed or illustrated impression. Les exemplaires originaux dont la couverture en papier est imprim6e sont film6s en commenpant par le premier plat et en terminant soit par la dernidre page qui comporte une empreinte d'impression ou d'illustration, soit par le second plat, salon le cas. Tous les autres exemplaires originaux sont film^s en commengant par la premidre page qui comporte une empreinte d'impression ou d'illustration et en terminant par la dernidi-e page qui comporte une telle empreinte. The last recorded frame on each microfiche shall contain the symbol —^(meaning "CON- TINUED "), or the symbol V (meaning "END"), whichever applies. Un des symboles suivants apparaitra sur la dernidre image de cheque microfiche, selon le cas: le symbole — ► signifie "A SUIVRE ", le symbols V signifie "FIN". Maps, plates, charts, etc., may be filmed at different reduction ratios. Those too large to be entirely included in one exposure are filmed beginning in the upper left hand corner, left to right and toe to button-., as many frames as required. The following diagrams illustrate the method: Les cartes, planches, tableaux, etc., peuvent Atre fiimAs A des taux de reduction diffArents. Lorsque le document est trop grand pour dtre reproduit en un seul cfich6, il est filmd A partir de I'angle supdrieur gauche, de gauche A droite, et de haut en bas, en prenant le nombre d'images ndcessaire. Les diagrammes suivants illustrent la mdthode. 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 5 6 I ^ti~ /yi ^. <4. /O^ ELECTRICITY, jSTatuee's tonic. BT DR. J. ADAMS. in 1 TORONTO, DUDLEY & BURNS, PRINTERS, 11 COLBORNE STREET. i i I 1 I ELECTRICITY; yt* MODE OF ACTION UPON THK HUMAN FRAME, AM' TMK DISEASES I^^ WHICH IT HAS PROVED BENEFICJIAL, WllJl VALUABLE HINTS RKSPKCTlNCi DIET, c\:c., ^;t"., « e as t ' » t « t ■-■ t s a ■« » < K t t «Oif»lv « •* , •.'■*• . " • t » . «f. »t£ t't J- f » = ■ ■ C ' i, 1 V c < ■ > J. ADAMS, M.D., M.C.P.S. Hom(X'u]jalhic CousulUng Physician and Medical Elcctriciii 58 BAY STREET, TORONTO, ONT. ^ ,a I pf^'. ■t tr> V BY THE SAME AUTHOR. PAMPHLET OK "RUPTURE," Containing valiiabJe information respecting the various kinds of Trusses in use, and advice to those desirous of obtaining a Radical Curk. Sent free / '■5 J4?l) DEDICATION. I DEDICATE thi. book to Suffering humanity in Gen- eral, and to those laboring under impaired nervous energy i„ particular; trusting tl,at it may not only open their eyes to some of the causes of their ailments but also direct them to the n.eans of obtaining relief and cure. THE AUTHOR. •^« Bay St, TukoxNto. i i PREFACE. I HAVE frequently been requested to write a small work that would explain, in short and concise terms, the nature of Electricity in its action upon the human frame and the diseases in which it has been found to act beneficially. There is now no lack of elaborate treatises on the subject, to be found in the book-stores, but the sight of the large volumes, to say nothing of the technical terms so freely used in them, is sufficient to deter a healthy man, much more a sick one, xrom endeavoring to discover whether Electricity would be likely to relieve his individual ailments. In these few pages I shall confine myself to absolute essentials, omitting all theories ; and as I consider that I am writing for the sick and not for the profession, shall endeavor to reduce what I have to say to the utmost simplicity, and show : 1st. That cis Electricity is the principal motive power in Nature, it is easy to understand why it should be considered by those acquainted with its wonderful effects, as Nature's own most appropriate REMEDY for restoring the Human Frame to Health • • • vui PREFACE. when ,ts natural stan.lard has l,een reduced, as is too n.quentlv the ca«e in our days, by o..-.^;.,^; ^rndor body, by ai^..es of a dehUiUUUu, nature, by the pem,«^o^,. use oj viole^U s. or by ea^^e. Of any land. 2nd. That it is particularly i„ the diseases termed Chronic or ,.f /or,, .,/„«,/;,,, ,,,„,, „, .^^^^^^ ^^^._ He the ordinary modes of treatment, that Electricity has proved so valuable, owing to its strengthening -fl-u-nce upon the Nervous System, as well as its l'"nfymg and vitali.inj,. ert'.cts upon the blood l-a^tly ; ! shall indicate n.or<. particularly the .lis eases in which it has been found effective, so that any mmd of ordinary capacity may be able to judge how far ,t would be judicious or advisable to undergo a course of Eleotrie treatment. I ELECTRICITY. TN the Human Frame, as well as in the whole of J- Nature, Electricity plays a prominent part. Whe- ther it be in the growth of a blade of grass, or in the upheaving of an earthquake, Electricity is the motive power. It is a well-understood fact, that the things which Nature has produced in the greatest abundance, are those of the greatest use to mankind ; such, for in- stance, as Salt, which not only saturates the' oceans, but is found everywhere on land; or Oxygen, the active agent of life, light, heat and water; but Elec- tricity occupies more prominent space still, and must consequently be the highest of all the elements of Na- ture. It controls al 1 the actions and phenomena of the Universe; it produces light, heat, magnetism, attraction, repulsion, decomposition and .-composition. It is an element, volatile and imponderable, the purest, the most refined. In speaking of the science of Electricity, we say that it is in its infancy, but Electricity itself is as old as fhe Sun. It existed before vegetation ornamented our 2 Electricity, globe with its varied p id rich productions, and it is without doubt the most important element of the human organism, indeed of the whole world. It pre- sidas over all the functions of the body, from the hi^h- est to the lowest ; it is the medium between the spirit of man and the matter he is made of, for it is the instrument of volition, transmitting his will to all parts of the body under the control of the voluntary nerves. There are in Nature two kinds of Electricity, viz. : the Atmospheric Electricity, so-called because it comes directly from the atmosphere, and produces all the external phenomena on the surface of the o-lobe and the Gi^LVANic, Dynamic or Thermic Electricity, because it is the result of decomposition. A little reflection will suffice to make it understood how the human organism is acted upon by both kinds of Electricity. The air by which we are surrounded being laden with Atmospheric Electricity, we cannot breathe without receiving a constant supply of atmospheric Electricity into the lungs; and as this kind of Elec- tricity is the greatest promoter of life existing in all the productions of Nature, either vegetable or animal, it is evident we cannot take any article of food with- Nature's Tonic. 3 out swallowing the Electricity it contains ; thus we receive, through the medium of the lungs and stomach, a constant supply of Atmospheric Electricity. On the other hand, all our experiments have un- •loubtedly established the fact, that chemical decompo- sition cannot take place without evolving Electricity, and as the body is undergoing a constant chemical decomposition— from birth to death— when each ele- ment returns to its primitive condition, it is quite evident that Galvanic, Dynamic or Thermic Elec- tricity is being constantly generated within the body. An eminent French Electrician states that, "In a perfect state of health the nervous fluid pervades the whole organism ; a constant slight current flows from the extremities to the brain, from which it is trans- mitted along the great nervous centre, or spinal mar- row, to the whole nervous system." Be this as it may, there is no doubt that the power that pervades the brain and nervous system, and which is doubtless the proximate cause of all vital and vol- untary motion and secretion, is dectrical in its nature, and it requires therefore but very little reflec- tion to consider that Electricity must i)lay the princi- pal part in restoring the human frame, when its func- 3 — ai,,vv{xOcvi xji iuaciuciuately periormed. m * Electricity, Were it not for the electro-nervous force, proceeding from the brain as its chief physical centre, we should have no adequate cause to account for the distribution of the animal fluids. That the circulation of the blood is the result of electric action, rather than hydraulic pressure, is being gradually acknowledged. If the circulation of the blood be examined under the microscope in transparent parts, the corpuscles in the capillaries may be observed to have a repulsion to each other. This is quite the contrary to what occurs in the arteries and veins, where tliey have an attrac- tion to each other, and are repelled from the walls. I refer to the colored corpuscles ; the colorless corpus- cles seem to be unelectrified bodies, and are merely moved by the power of the circulation, whereas the colored corpuscles are electrified bodies, having attrac- tive and repulsive eflects upon one another and the walls of the vessels through which they pass. On reviewing the evidence of the impoi'tant office and the mysterious power of Electricity, which, per- vading the brain and nervous system, is doubtless the proximate cause of its vital, voluntary and involuntary motions, we can only conclude, that as Electricity is the great electro-motive power in Health, it must be Nature's own remedy in restoring the human frame Nature's Tonic. 5 to its normal coDdition, when debilitated by mental, moral or physical excesses, or affected by lingering disease that tends to its ultimate cjstruction. Were physicians less prone to frown down every- thing new, thereby rendering improvement so slow, many a useful discovery, that now lies dormant in the grave with its originator, would have been unfolded to the world for the benefit of suffering humanity. Electricity has long been known to a few learned and scientific men, but their endeavors to bring it into general use were treated with contempt or vitupera- tion, and it is only within the last few years that it has obtained such a hold upon the public mind as to compel medical men to treat it with respect, even while trying to persuade their patients that it was unsuited for their individual cases. Another science which has not yet recovered fi-om the unmerited contumely into which it had fallen, owing to its having been employed by itinerant pre- tendei-s for the purpose of drawing a crowd and amus- ing the thoughtless multitude for an hour, is Phre- nology ; but a day will surely come when its merits will be acknowledged ; for, whatever may be alleged to the contrary, it is the only means we possess of forming an estimate of the innate mental and moral tendencies of man. " ' Electricity, Mr. DoDovan, the late distinguished phrenologist of London, England, to whoso kind instructions I am deeply indebted for much of my success as a consult- ing physician in constitutional diseases, carried the science a step further, and after many years of careful investigation, clearly proved that not only the mental and moral, but also the physical constitution of man might be determined by the conformation of the head, and the few medical men who have become conver- sant with the subject have borne testimony t(* its value in the treatment of disease , as by the aid of phrenological diagnosis we are enabled at once to determine the original constitutional condition of a patient's stomach, heart and hmgs, and form a correct estimate respecting the amount of general vitality which he possesses. When the merits of Phrenology shall be fully recog- nized, parents will take their children to well-qualified men and obtain their advice as to the employment for which they are mentally adapted, and then we shall not meet with so many men of undoubted tahnt whose lives have proved failures, owing to their hav- ing been educated to trades or professions for which they had neither the mental nor physical qualifications. TJ.o study of Phrenology will then be considered a^ Nature's Tonic. 7 indispensable a part of the education of a teacher as anatomy and physiology are now held to be with the medical student. And, in like manner, when " Constitutional Phre- nology," if I may so call it, has established its claims, parents will be glad to avail themselves of the advice of competent men as to the course of life to be pursued by their offspring in order to eradicate constitutional defects from their systems. But to return to the subject of Electricity, its study and successful application must ever require time and attention. Many uneducated persons labor under the delusion that in order to test its value in any disease, it is merely necessary to obtain a battery, no matter what kind, hold the two handles, causing a current to pass through the arms and " take a shock:' This is one of the mistaken notions which have brought Elec- tricity into disrepute. What sensible person would imagine, that in order to cut out and fit a garment it were only necessary to purchase a pair of scissors and cut away at the cloth ? In order to understand how it is that Electricity acts so beneficially in Chronic Diseases, by which we understand Diseases of long standing, it will be neces- sary to explain how diseases become chronic or lin- gering. I Electricity, Let us suppose that two individuals are overtaken m a storm, get thoroughly drenched and have to remain for some time in their wet garments. The result would ia all probability be what is commonly termed "a cold." But while in the one person the effects might be thrown off in a few davs and healt'i completely restored, in the other they might hang on for months, settling in the joints in the form of Rheu- matism, or perhaps on the lungs in the form of Con- sumption. The reason of this is, that whereas in the first case the individual was, at the time he took the cold in good health, with a system free from any lurking impurities, the other must have been suffering, at the time, either from a deteriorated state of the nervous system, incapable of restoring the frame to health or his blood must have been vitiated by some moi'bid tamt which prevented his return to his former state of health and caused his disease to become chronic or lingering. It will therefore be evident that all chronic diseases are the result of Innervation, comuionly termed Ner- xous Debility or a taint in the blood. By Innervation or Jfervous DebUity we understand a deficiency in the nervous power necessary for the Natures Tonio. I proper performance of the functions of any part of the human system, and by a taint in the Mood, some impurity in the system, such as Salt-rheum, Scrofula, Cancer or the like. Frequently the two causes are found combined in the same case, when it requires all the more time to effect a cure. Bearing these facts in mind, it will be easy to ex- plain why Electricity should play such a prominent part in restoring the human frame to health ; for, exerting as it does over the nervous system a greater power than any other known agent, it must be con- sidered as the first and best Constitutional Tonic. Again, when we consider that the labors of Davy, WoUaston, Remak and many others have proved be- yond a doubt that Electricity in the form of the Gal- vanic Bath, when properly applied, can not only eliminate from the system metallic poisons and other deleterious agents, but also eradicate from the frame those pernicious taints, which, becoming located upon internal organs prevent their performing their normal functions, thereby causing the destruction of the organs themselves and eventually producing pre- mature decay and death ;--when we consider all this, we can only conclude that Electricity in its varied i<^ MectHcity, forms and applications would seem to be Nature's own remedy for restoring deficient tone to the Ner- vous System as well as for relieving the human frame from its impurities. It must not be supposed that Electricity will ren- der medication unnecessary. All really remedial agents work hand in hand. Medicines have their places in restoring health, just as well as Air, Light, Food, Exercise and Rest, and were these latter more* carefully considered in the treatment of disease, we should not see so many helpless human wrecks around us. Other reasons ^hy Electricity, as a remedy, is so little used, are that, firstly, its real nature and effects are so little understood, and secondly, because medical men in general practice have rarely the time to apply it properly ; besides which, it is only within the last few years that instruments have been constructed suitable for office practice. Many persons are greatly in dread of Electricity, being under the impression that its application iJ painful and somewhat connected with a violent shock. Nothing can be more erroneous than this idea; for, so far from its application being connected with pain, the "Dry Treatment" imparts a sensation of warmth, Natures Tonic. 11 vigor and energy to the frame, while the " Galvanic Bath," by its purifying influence upon the system, produces a feeling of ease and comfort difficult to express in words. Another very common error is to suppose that ex- tremely weak persons, very young or very old people are unfit for the electric treatment, whereas these rr the very patients for whom it is most suitable; of course, bearing in mind the strength of the patient, the nature of the case, and adjusting the current ac- cordingly. The justly celebrated Professor Remak of Berlin asserts that he has found it of the greatest value to aged and infirm persons, particularly prematurely old men and tuomen. The term Electricity is employed to cover all the difi'erent forms, viz. : 1st. The Galvanic, Voltaic, Direct or Dynamic CURRENT. > * • 2nd. The FARA.pic,'. I^dUcqd, .Electro-Magnetic • • -^ ••• . . • • * . or MAG^^fiyO-ELfeCTRIG, OURREN-^. • •* / . 3rd. lW;:^ANKLiNic, Statiu .or Friction^l .cur- rent. •••*••••.:•;•••. In this pamphlet'? shall ^m'^i^eljs.iifefeir, to the two first, the third form being now rarely, if ever, used for medical purposes. 12 Mecti I icity, At th( the present time Electricity is em,)Ioved treatment of disease by means of the so-called and the ^^^ ™EATMENT GALVANO-ELECTRIC BATH. Under the head of Dhv Treatment we include the application ofElectricity by means of The FARADIC or INDUCED CURRENT and the GALVANIC or DIRECT CURRENT. T ON, as .t .s also termed, after the lately deceased plnlosopher Faraday who discovered it, being small in .l"ant,ty but great in tension, has proved most suita- I'le for imparting Tone and Strength to the frame in general or to any weak organ in particular. Its action may be considered in the light of a Tonic l^>e G,.vANic. or niBBc^ C.K..Nr, on the other hand, .s laager „ quantity bufof;le.ss tension It acts more deeply upon th^ constitution, cforr,^ ^l^aotorilif the ^rental o'r physical Ant.es of Ufe. It would require too uu.ch tin.e and space to enter fully into the various tbrn.s of this common ailment, the sympton.s of which are, besides too evnlent to require further .leseription. A very large proportion of eh-omc or lingerinn a^ments are the result of Innervation or impaired vital energy. I„ one person this n.ay take the form 01 sick-headache, in another of Dyspepsia or indiges- tion ; a third may sufter from Palpitation of the heart while in a fourth Constipation may be the principal complaint; and yet in all, innervation or want of nerve-power may be the principal cnn.<,„ »nd ■"•^-i 16 SUl/ her Electricity in Debility. 17 the standard of the nervous system be raised by chanj;3 of air, rest, the water-cure or Electricity, if only the system he really strengthened, the distressing symptoms will disappear. The first step towards the successful treatment of Debility is to discover the cause, for there is no such thing as debility without a cause. " Tolle causam" (remove the cause) has ever been the maxim of the thoughtful physician, but unfortunately all medical men cannot be called thoughtful, and to the thoughtless one, too careless or too indolent to seek out and remove the cause of debility, the favorite prescription of " a tonic" comes very handy, as it is sometimes followed by excitement and temporary relief, — to be however too frequently followed by increased debility. Or, if the physician should belong to that class of men who prescribe " stimulants" in the shape of bitter ale, porter, wine, brandy or whiskey with reckless disregard for the moral as well as phy- sical welfare of their patients, then woe to the unfor- tunate sufferer who follows this pernicious advice, for so far from obtaining real strength the result is in- creased, debility. How well did the celebrated Sir Astley Cooper explain thn trup. action of stimulants ! His words in>^ I: ^8 Electricity in DehUity. should constantly ring i„ the ears of those reckless phys.c.ans who, regardless of the fearful consequences so frequently engender a love of stimulants in their patients to their ultimate destruction. "We have all been in error," said he, "in prescribing wine as a tonic; ardent spirits and poison are cont vertible terms." The sti^rul^ given is not strength and ,s invariably followed by increased prostration. The inevitable reaction leaves the system worse than it was before. Were those lines duly appreciated, we should not see so many drunkards around us ;-drunkards, made so by the very men to whom they applied for relief i That stimulation is invariably followed by increased prostration is now thoroughly acknowledged as a rule of Nature, and hence it applies just as well to tea and coffee as to alcoholic stimulants, and to their free and constant use may be attributed much of the debility we see around us. Many a woman will smile iucredulouslv at this " What, tea debilitating ? Never heard of such noii sense. Only try it and see how a good cup of tea refreshes you when you are tired." But let me ask you whether a glass of wine is not still considered by many to be refreshing to the tired Electi^ity in Debility. 19 man ; and yet science and experience have proved that however pleasant the primary exhilaration may be, increased lassitude is the invariable result. Dr. Lettsom, a physician of great celebrity in his day, published a small work on tea about one hundred years ago, in which he strongly warned people against its use as having a tendency to produce Nervous Debility. I quote his own words : " It has contri- " buted more or less its share towards the production " of those low nervous diseases which are now so fre- " quent. Amongst these causes, excess in spirituous " liquors is one of the most considerable ; but the first " rise of this pernicious custom is often owing to the " weakness and debility of the system, brought on by '• tlie daily habit of drinking tea ; the trembling hand " seeks a temporary relief in some cordial, in order to ^' refresh and excite again the enfeebled system; where- " by such almost of necessity fall into a habit of intem- " perance, and frequently entail upon their offspring a " variety of distempers, which otherwise would not " probably have occurred." If Tea, Coffee and Alcoholic Stimulants are so ex- hausting to the nervous system, is it to be wondered at that we see so many suffering from Nervous Debility? God never intended woman to be the i I- i 11 f I 111 20 Electi i-ty in Debility. debilitated creature slie now i, ■ so f„ll „f i. What U ,., a rare thing to meet with a thorough] v n t':;:; T ^^^^ -^^ ^erignoraneeVd neglect of the laws of health. Not that our «en are an, better for they are just as much wedded tole tobacco and stimulants as women are to tea ; and many lows h.s tea with all the avidity of an old woma^ Before a person can ever hope to recover from Ne- V J D.Ba„v, he or she must be wiUing to ba^S; for a. these have an enervating influence, it is useless a„ent wdl produce p, manent benefit while such dehhtatmg articles of cat are in daily use Ignorant physicians and quacks may, for a time, make the.r pataents believe, that under their methods of treatment health may be restored and strenlh regamed without any restrictions to diet; but Z pomtment and pro'^aeted suffering must invariabi; bj the result, and they wiU have to learn the truth of th old adage that " Health, like Godliness, has to be livM for." ^^s a consequence of General Debility we find. Electricity in Dyspepsia. 21 sooner or later that the organ, or organs, that are constitutionally the weakest become seriously im- paired ; first functionally and later organically. For instance, let us suppose that a man's general health has been lowered by some cause, and that his stomach and digestive organs are constitutionally weak, — the result will be, that the debility will be manifested principally by weakness of digestion, flatulence, con- stipation, and th8,t string of ailments known under the appellation of DYSPEPSIA. For this complaint no remedy has yet been found equal to Electricity, as quickly evinced by a more healthy appearance of the complexion, the improved appetite, the removal of the distressing weight after meals, flatulence, depression of spirits, feeble pulse* confined state of the bowels, etc. Such a result, however, must not be expected if the patient will continue to holt his food, or make his meals off" cake, pie, pastry or pickles and similar abomi- nations ; for no man ought to be more careful respect- ing his diet than the dyspeptic : it should be good and {substantial, but quite plain. no^oci/^tiollv wp finrl f.lip dlspa.sft take a nurelv ner- I i; 1 it j - !• ill li-ilS i 22 Electricity in Constipation. rous form, and this is most frequently met with in clergymen and others whose occupation is connected with great mental strain. One case of the kind I remember in a clergyman who suffered from " crawl- ing hke worms in the stomach" after a hard Sunday's work A course of Electricity and a reduction of the length of his sermons from an hour to half an hour- very materially relieved his sufferings.* For the removal of habitual CONSTIPATION with us train of distressing ailments, such as head- ache, flaulence, piles, etc., etc. Electricity has almost invanabj. proved effectual, not only by producing regular daily action, but in maintaining that action^ provided the most ordinaiy rules respecting diet be observed. A gentkman, who was sent to me for incipient paralysis of the lower extremities, after being about en days under treatment, remarked one morning, WeU, Doctor, if you don't cure me of the paralysis you have anyhow made my bowels act quite regu- Electricity in Jaundice. 23 larly, which is more than they have done for years." In a very short time he found that the treatment was equally effectual in restoring the use of his limbs. In JAUNDICE the "dry treatment" has not proved effectual, but the Galvano-Electric Bath rarely fails to effect a cure in fresh cases free from organic diseases of the liver, sometimes even relieving the trouble with a single bath, as the following can well prove : Miss W., aged 35, had been suffering for several weeks from jaundice, accompanied by a most distress- ing itching of the skin of her whole body, great drow- siness and depression of spirits. A similar attack the preceding year had lasted for six months, notwith- standing the most energetic treatment. Of late she had been taking some acid mixture (probably nitric acid) and aloes, but without deriving any benefit. As her means were limited, I tried one or two of our Homoeopathic remedies that seemed indicated, being desirous of saving her the expense of the baths, but finding that improvement was very slow I felt com- pelled to urge a course of baths, and to her great satis- faction the very first one sufficed not only to remove the distressing itching, but every trace of jaundice disappeared within the next few days. Ill 24 Electricity in Liver-Complaint. i S. LIVKR-COMPLAINT. In connexion with Dyspepsia, Constipation, etc., we frequently find a string of ailments known by the name of " Liver-Complaint." which consists of more or less distress, pain or weight in the region of the liver extending up to the right shoulder and down the same' •side even to the foot, with inability to lie on that side. It IS occasionally accompanied by cough and expec- toration, leading many to consider themselves con- sumptive, when the liver is the true seat of the dis- ease. Sooner or later the countenance assumes the yellow jaundiced appearance so characteristic of a dis- ordered state of the liver. Here Electricity, in the form of the dry treatment combined with the Galvanw Bath has been used with signal advantage ; the bath relieving the engor^^ed state of the liver, the dry treatment toning up Tnd restoring the organ to its normal condition ; which result becomes quickly evident in the clearer com- ple.-ion, the regular action of the bowels, the natural How of urine and above all the returning buoyancy of spirits. How .seriously the mind may be affected by a dis- ordered state of the liver, the following ,-»»» wip .!,„„ home time since one of our wholesale merchants walked Electricity in Liver-Complair,l. 25 into my office with a long, woe-begone face and drop- ping into a chair said, " Doctor, I want some of your Electric Baths." " What for," said I ; " Don't know," was his laconic reply. "What is the matter with you ?" was my next question, but to that and all fur- ther enquiries I could only elicit the same lugubrious answer, "Don't know," given with a most doleful shake of the head. From his family I afterwards learned that for two years he had been troubled with o-reat despondency, without any apparent cause. Hav- ing had him under my care, some years previously, for an affection of the heart, I thought it possible that his mental condition might be in some way connected with his former complaint, but on closer examination could find nothing wrong with that organ, but on passing the sponge over the region of the liver, he started off the stool exclaiming, "Can't stand that, Doctor," which at once led me to the source of his trouble, and a short course of Electricity, applied to the liver, so completely removed the depression of spirits, that one morning after rocking backwards and forwards in a chair and laughing heartily at some ridiculous story he had been telling me, he suddenly jumped up as if the idea had only just struck him, exclaiming: "Why, •r\ _i.-_- T _..-,11— i-l,;^!^ »^,r rii^ii'Ifa q !'n mnnVi Kp+l.pr fn fin J/OCLOr, i ruaiiy l/iimx^. mj opixil.3 cti " ..,,,.,., — I 20 Eledvicity in Sick- Headache. Ill It 9 ! they used to be." In this case a few applications of Electricity, by removing the torpidity of the liver, freed him from a despondent state of mind most dis- tressing to himself, and which had caused considerable uneasiness to his family. SICK-HEADACHE is usually considered a disease of the stomach, wherea^s It is much more frequently connected with a debili- tated state of the nervous system, and is most com- monly met with in women accustomed to take "a good cup of tea" whenever they feel tired or worried. It is useless for such persons to expect a cure, under any treatment, unless they abandon the use of their enticing beverage; and even then they must expect an aggravation of their sufferings for several days after they have given it up ; when a steady improvement may be safely relied on, the attacks coming on less fre- quently and less violently until they disappear alto- gether. Many persons have entirely recovered from periodical sick-headache by merely abstaining from the use of tea, and no physician ever yet permanently cured a patient suffering in this manner while the use of tea was continued. To those who are willing to sacrifice the momentary gratification for thft n,irnn«« ^f Electricity in Neuralgia. 27 eventually obtaining comnlete relief, Electricity holds out every prospect of success, as by me-^ns of a few applicatic^ns the tone of the nervous system is raised and a speedy cure effected. Another most distressing complaint, which is but too frequently the result of an over-taxed nervous system, goaded on by stimulants and stupified by the injudicious use of narcotics, is NEURALGIA. Where it is purely nervous, and the pain seems to dart along the course of a nerve, it may frequently be removed by Electricity as by a charm. Unfortunately it is too frequently connected with a deteriorated state of the nervous system or the result of some irritating taint in the blood, when the relief will only be tern. - porary, unless combined with proper constitutional and hygienic treatment. Of the pui nervous form, the following case is an illustration. Mr. S., whose occupation as a salesman kept him closely confined to the store all day, had for several years been subject to violent attacks of Neuralgia in the spring of the year, lasting from two to three weeks. These attacks would commence every morning about _• _ v-i— '- T^ui^ o rjiill qoHincp nver the left evebrow. Ill h I i IN 28 Electricity in Lmnhaf/o or Backache. runuing along the course of the supra-orbital nerve, gradually extending over the left side of the forehead and increasing in severity till noon, when the eye would be bloodshot and suffused with tears. After noon the pain would gradually decrease until five o'clock, when it would cease altogether. He came to my office about the middle of the day, just when the paroxysm was at iS height. I applied the direct current to the part for about three minutes, when the p^m disappeared like a charm and did not return. In Neuralgia, the Faradic current is of little or no use, the direct Galvanic current being necessary to produce the desired effect, and when this is scientifi- cally applied a failure is very rare. Some of the forms of so-called central Neuralgia such as LUMBAGO OR BACKACHE, are treated with equally satisfactory results ; so much so, that I do not remember a single instance in wliich Klectricity has not produced either temporary or per- manent benefit; one of the most gratifying results being the immediate relief that is afforded ; the patient walking into the office with constrained and careful motions and leaving with that free and easy step that denotes complete release from pain. So lona- as there EledHcity in Catarrh. 29 is no inflammatory action going on, when Electricity should not be used, relief may surely be relied on, and a few consecutive applications generally ^juflice to render the cure permanent. CATARRH. This Chronic inflammation of the mucous membrane of the nostrils may be materially benefited by the application of Electricity, but it is rarely cured with- out appropriate constitutional treatment. It is greatly to be regretted that medical men of good standing should still persist in treating this affection with in- jections and other local remedies. One case that came under my own immediate observation should be a warning to those physicians who will apply local treatment for constitutional diseases. A middle-aged man came from a considerable distance to obtain my advice respecting a stupid feeling in his head, that completely prevented him from attending to his busi- ness as a watchmaker. On enquiring into the cause, I learned that it was the result of stopping a catarrh with an injection, or snuff, I am not certain which. I told him that his only chance was to remain in tow.i for a while till, by means of Electricity, the dis^^harge could be restored, but having been for several months n 30 Electricity in Catarrh. f«i 1^ out of work his means would not permit of his remain- ing, and he was thert^fore compelled to return home, and I have not heard from him since. Another case of the kind was a young printer, who for several years had been labouring under a most distressing pressure just above the forehead, which, though it did not ac- tually prevent his working, hindered him from read- ing, particularly anything that required thought or reflection. As in the former instance, it was the result of arrested catarrh, the best proof of which was, that just in proportion as the discharge returned, the pres- sure on the head was relieved, though it required several months to etfc( t a cure. One more case was that of a gentleman I was introduced to thi-ee or four years ago. Learning that he was a sufferer from Catarrh, I advised him to avoid the use of ^-^ 1 reme- dies ; but he laughed at my suggestions, telling me that he took a good pinch of some kind of catarrh snufi" every morning early, which cleared out his nos- trils and gave him complete relief for the day. Find- ing that my advice was not appreciated, I, as a matter of course, desisted from urging it; now, when too late, I hear that he regrets having declined my friendly advice, being a constant sufferer from a very distress- ing pain in the forehead, iust above thft mot of thp Electricity in Anosmia. 31 nose, which has hitherto baffled every remedy that he has tried. Catarrh is one of the commonest complaints of Canada. At first it is considered a mere cold in the head and treated carelessly, under the impression that it will soon wear off. When it becomes chronic, the cause lies either in a deficiency of the nerve-power required to restore the parts to their normal condition, or in some constitutional dyscrasia, or impurity in the blood. Should the case be one of mere deficiency of nervous tone. Electricity will soon relieve and cure ; but unfortunately the latter cause is almost invariably present, and appro |>riate constitutional remedies must be resorted to, in order to produce a favorable and permanent result. Though Chronic Catarrh is not usually considered dangerous, still it will occasionally creep down to the lungs, resulting in Laryngitis, Bronchitis and even Consumption. One of the commonest results of Chronic Catarrh is ANOSMIA (Loss of Smell), which may be partial or complete, from simple and hardly perceptible deficiency of smell to absolute ina- bility to detect the most powerful odor. In the milder forms of this ailment, Electricity may 'mmmmmmmm 32 Electricity in Sleeplessness. t i I I 1 I I be relied upon, but a cure is rarely effected where the sense of smell has been entirely lost for a length of time, SLEEPLESSNESS. Among the numerous ailments consequent upon Nervous Debility, Sleeplessness is one of the most common, the most distressing, and I may add, the most dangerous, as it is frequently one of the premonitory symptoms of Insanity. Many a life has been spent in an asylum that might have been saved by a few ap- plications of Electricity, when the disease of the brain was merely functional, as the two following cases will serve to illustrate : Mrs. D., aged 35, of fair average constitution, and mother of three childrc.i, suffered for several years from distressing pain in the upper part of the spine extending to the back of the head, with sensations of fulness and weight. The pains were so distressing as to prevent sleep, resulting in loss of appetite and gen- eral prostration. A state of settled melancholy caused her to be confined in a lunatic asylum, from which her husband was persuaded to withdraw her in order to test the efficacy of Electricity. The positive pole was applied to the back of the head, and the negative held f i ir . Electricity in Sleeplessness. 33 in the hand, a moderate Galvanic current being em- ployed. After the first application she felt her head relieved and slept soundly, the melancholy soon dis- appeared, her appetite returned, and in two or three wcieks she considered herself cured, though the treat- ment was continued occasionally for some time longer. The other case was one in which the melancholy had degenerated into acute mania and where the opinion of her medical attendants was most unfavora- ble, her brain being considered organically affected. The effect of Galvanization was to produce refreshing sleep, and to the surprise of her friends she soon regained her health and strength. Another instance in which the action of Electricity, though less prompt than in the former cases, was equally satisfactory in the end, was Mr. D. M., whose position on the railway was one of more responsibility than his nervous temperament could well stand, the consequence of which was a failure in general health, owing in a great measure to sleeplessness. He was unable to obtain more than two or three hours' fair sleep during the night, and the efiect it had upon him was to cause great irritability, so much so that he found the greatest difficulty in controlling his temper. The Faradic current was used to tone up the nervous 34 Electricity in Chronic Bronchitis. ?fi I !f system, and the effect was to gradually lengthen the duration of sleep till he could sleep soundly for six hours every night, when he declined to continue the treatment, expressing himself quite satisfied with the result, being fully equal to his work. He has remained well ever since. CHRONIC BRONCHITIS. With the exception of General Nei^ous Prostration, there is perhaps no disease in which the beneficial re- sults of Electricity are more strikingly manifest than in Chronic Bronchitis. Generally, it is the result of a neglected cold, that has left the bronchial tubes in such a debilitated state tha^ every fresh attack aggra- vates the symptoms, gradually contracting the tubes and producing a distressing shortness of breath, which incapacitates a person more and more for anything like active exertion. It is also frequently met with in children, in whom the rounded shoulders, the caved- in chest, the racking cough, and wheezing, rattling breathing at the slightest fresh cold, at once proclaim the nature of the complaint. Occasionally it is confounded with Asthma, with which it has many symptoms in common ; the pecu- liar characteristics are however e^enerallv sufficip.ntlv Electricity in Winter Cough. 35 marked to enable the observant physician to form a correct diagnosis. Under the most careful allopathic treatment, tem- porary relief is all that can be obtained, whilst under the combined treatment of Electricity and Homoeopa- thy, each successive attack becomes less violent until they cease altogether, the improvement being more strikingly manifested in children by the lowered shoulders, the expanding chest and the loss of that distressing expression of face so peculiar to habitual sufferers from Chronic Bronchitis and Asthma. WINTER COUGH IS an affection frequently met with in elderly people, and may be considered as a form of Chronic Bron- chitis. During the Summer months they experience a certain amount of freedom from cough and distress of breathing, but the first raw day of the Fall reminds them of their weak parts and the " Chest-protectors" are at once applied to ward off the impending attack. Here, Electricity in the form of Faradism, combined with the appropriate constitutional treatment, acts like a perfect Godsend, toning up the system gener- ally and the chest in particular, rendering the frame ir..., .,„-^v/v,j.v-irjiT= 1,0 aiiiiiuopm^ric lauuuiiue. ic irecjuentiy 36 Electricity in Asthma. ■I happens that elderly persons, who for years have had either to confine themselves to a warm room all Win- ter, or go round muffled up in shawls and wrappers with respirators over their mouths, find to their great astonishment that a course of Electricity in the Fall enables them to enjoy the bracing Winter weather, instead of dreading it as heretofore. ASTHMA. This distressing disease consists in a spasmodic con- traction of the bronchial tubes, caused by reflex irri- tation of the pneumo-gastric nerves. Although it may occasionally depend upon a debilitated state of the nervous system, I have almost invariably found it connected with some taint in the blood, as the fol- lowing case will clearly demonstrate : — Mrs. S., 35 years of age, a stout, healthy-looking woman, was subject to most violent attacks of Asthma, which would sometimes last for several weeks, coming on without any apparent cause, though she thought she could sometimes trace them to standing in a draught when heated by exertion. After a few applications of the Faradic current, she entered my office one day with the joyful exclamation; "Doctor, I am quite well, 1 Cclll 1 UU. UjJ aiiu. v^uwii oucbiio Ilivb a ixi-wtou, uUt l «»-". ElectHcity in Asthma. 37 I must show you something that has come out on my chest.*' And there, surely enough, was the taint in the form of a small patch of Psoriasis or scaly tetter. On further enquiry, she remembered having noticed that there was no eruption visible as long as she suf- fered from the attacks. A course of suitable medicine gradually removed the taint from the blood, when the attacks and the eruption ceased altogether. Another illustrative case occurred some years ago in a Mr. J. M., 42 years old, wholesale merchant of this city. He had been declared by several physicians to be hopelessly consumptive, while others considered it an aggravated form of Chronic Bronchitis and Asthma combined. After some weeks' treatment his breathing became by degrees more free, the expectora- tion gradually ceased, and this gentleman, to the astonishment of his friends, recovered his health so as to be able to resume his place in the business. But, just in proportion as his general health improved, his hands, to his great mortification, began to show un- mistakable signs of Salt-rheum, in the shape of deep cracks in the bends of the joints. Before leaving him, I warned him to be most careful never to apply any local remedies to the hands, for if he succeeded in xjiii^ ujj i>uc v;icii;ii.a Lne anecDion 01 tne lungs would ^u ir I 38 Electricity in Asthma. be sure to re-appear; urging, at the same time, the necessity of treating the disease by constitutional means. Though he declined to follow my advice in this latter respect, he for some time abstained from using anything locally ; but hearing one day of some wonderful salve for the Salt-rheum, he could not re- frain from giving it a trial, if only to prove that I was in the wrong. In a short time he succeeded in closing the chaps or cracks on his fingers, but hardly had he time to congratulate himself upon the cure before his old disease of the lungs returned in full force. When he came to me, I felt annoyed with him for having acted contrary to my instructions and told him that it served him right, which so incensed him that he left my office in anger. For several months he tried in vain to obtain relief, and at last went to the south of France where, under the compressed-air treatment, he once more regained his health. On his return to Toronto, I happened to meet him one day and con- gratulated him on his improved appearance, when he held out his hands, saying : " You were right, Doctor, after all, for I never knew a day s health till my hands broke out again. You'll not catch me using any more salve this time." Sooner or later permanent contraction of the bron- Electricity in Consumption. 39 chial tubes and consequent narrowing of the air-pas- sages take place, and later still the lungs and heart become affected, when temporary relief is all that can be obtained, though life may, by judicious electric and medical treatment, be rendered comparatively com- fortable and its duration thereby considerably length- ened. In some cases, we find that organic diseases of the lungs and heart are the cause instead of the effect of Asthma, when the treatment has to be modified ac- cordingly. Although the Faradic current has frequently been employed with very satisfactory results in Asthma, still the Galvanic current is the one most in favor with electricians, owing to its extraordinary power in les- sening the irritability of the nervous system and its action in driving the taints of the blood to the ex- ternal surface of the body. By its judicious use, the paroxysms may be kept off for an indefinite length of time, affording an opportunity of applying the neces- sary constitutional treatment to the system in general. CONSUMPTION. Many who read this small work will no doubt be anxious to learn Whethfir DnnsHmnfinn ma^T V)o nnyorl Ml t'1 ^^' 40 Electricity in Consumption. or even arrested, by Electricity, but before I proceed to give the results of my experience, let me try to explain what I consider the true nature of this greatly dreaded disease. The terra Consumption is generally employed to denote an affection of the lungs, whereas it is, in the majority of cases, the result of some other disease that has undermined the constitution and ter- minated in disease of the lungs. The affection of the lungs is the end, not the beginning, of the disease. In the former part of this little work, I endeavored to explain the nature of Chronic, or lingering dis- eases, and to show t^iat very few persons are born with evenly-balanced organizations ; and that when the general health is lowered by any cause, the result of the debility is principally manifested in the weakest organ. In our northern climates, owing to the sudden atmospheric changes, the lungs, of all parts of our body, have the greater tendency to become diseased, just as in the south, from the intense heat that prevails during so many months of the year, the liver is more predisposed to disorder. Then again, • those employments that keep people confined in-doors for many hours during the day, working in cramped attitudes, have a natural tendency to weaken the luno-s and engender Consumption. This will account for V i ! Electricity in Consumption. 41 the fact, tliat while 17 to 18 per cent, of tailors die of Consumption, only 4 per cent, of market-gardeners fall victims to the disease. Occasionally we meet with persons of decidedly tuberculous type -by which we understand a consti- tutional tendency to the formation of tubercles in the lungs or other parts of the body, owing to a diseased 'state of the blood. If such persons lead sedentary or indoor lives, they are almost certain to die of con- sumption. With them, the seeds of the disease are inherited, and it is only when treated in youth or before the disease has become developed that there is any chance. Well do I remember a sweet girl between 17 and 18 years of age, who was brought to me by her mother. One glance at the formation of the head and a few simple questions satisfied me as to the hopeless- ness of the case. The mother was thunderstruck when I gave her my opinion, but a few months sufliiced to prove its correctness. In the premonitory stage of Consumption, that is, when the general health is running down but tuber- cles have not yet been formed in the lungs, Electricity may be used with great hopes of success ; but when once the tubercular deposit has taken place to any WAi._ri^i,.M.«,L-ii^ v..-^i;cjio, xLiieCtiioii^j, au ifcti" jrulu uoing good, II 42 Electricity in Consuruptlon. hastens on the ultimate end. This is the incurable stage of the disease — incurable only in ho far as Elec- tricity is concerned, for there are many well-authen- ticated cases of persons recovering from consumption after they had been given up by physicians of un- doubted ability. Such cures, or recoveries, are usu- ally the result of a complete change in the mode of life, such as from a quiet in-door life to an active out- door occupation. Some years ago I had a case under my care that was very illustrative of the action of out-door occupation in arresting consumption : — D. S., aged 82, a printer by trade, of decidedly scrofulous constitution, had suffered as a child from white-swell- ing of the knee, and when he applied to me, I found on examination that there was t\ large cavity in the upper part of the left lung, with considerable cough and expectoration of matter streaked with blood. I told him that I could do but little for him, but that he might lengthen his days considerably by following some out-door occupation. " I do that, Doctor," said he, " as much as possible, or I should have been in my grave years ago. I only work four days in the week, and go out shooting the rest of the time." I had an op- portunity of watching him for several years, and was astonished to see how much the disease was kept in Mectncity in Consumption. 43 check b}' his being for tliree days in the week almost entirely in the open air, the medicines I prescribed from time to time beings merely directed towards remov- ing the effects of any fresh cold. One day ho had the misfortune to upset his canoe and lose his favorite gun, which seemed to break his heart and he refused to go out shooting any in. ...3. In vain did I tell him he would not live six months if he stopped at home, out he would not go, and in less than four months he was in his grave. Another case which came to my knowledge, though not exactly under my own eye, will show how cures in consumption are attributed to anything but the right cause: — A gentleman in the prime of life had been troubled for some time with a distressinir CO -gh with profuse expectoration, the result of a wet- ting while out shooting, and for which he had been lying up, as he called it. His friends, becoming alarmed, compelled him to consult a physician who was considered very clever in diseases of the lungs, and after a careful examination he was told that his case was hopeless and that he could not survive six months. On learning thi« he immediately started for the country, determined to spend his last months in shooting, a sport he was particularly fond of, and Electricity in Consumption. under the impression that his days were short, was reckless as to the weather ; morning, noon and night, rain or shine was all the same to him. After two or three months of this life, he was astonished and de- lighted to find that his cough had entirely disappeared and his breathing become as free as ever. About a year from the time he first consulted the physician, he re-entered his office and requested to have his lungs ex- amined, and on the Doctor assuring him that they were quite sound, he asked him whether he did not remember him. The Doctor said he did not, and was not a little surprised to hear that he was a patient that he had given up as incurable year before. Naturally enough, the Doctor made all sorts of enquiries as to the treatment he had followed, and was staggered to learn that " he had tlirown physic to the dogs." '' But what was your diet ?" said he at last. " Well, Doc- tor," was the reply, "I ate everything that came along, and generally wound up with a couple of glasses of whiskey-punch at bedtime." " That was it," ex- claimed the Doctor, " it was the whiskey-punch that cured you ;" and he forthwith wrote a lengthy article on the benefits to be derived from stimulants in een- eral, and whiskey-punch in particular, in the treat- ment of Consumption — which article may have had Electricity in Consumption. 45 something to do with the still prevalent idea that liquor is good for consumption — than which, a greater mistake was never made ! To the educated physician, the discovery of the earty stages of Consumption, by the aid of the stethoscope, is generally easy, particularly if conversant with the phrenological signs that denote the consumptive dia- thesis ; but to the uninitiated there are three simple indications by which the disease may be recognized with comparative certainty in its early and curable stage. These are : Shortness of Breath, Qmchness of Pulse and Loss of Flesh A person may have any two of these signs without being consumptive, but where all three are united in the same person, there is little doubt of the nature of the case, and unless ai once attended to, the patient may be lost. In the first stage of Consumption, that is when the comprint, as yet, is rather one of general debility than a local disease, the cause has to be ascertained and re- moved, and it is at this period that Electricity is of great value in building up the system and restoring the various organs to their normal condition, thereby preventing any further encroachment. But when once haemorrhage has occurred or the lungs have become ulcerated. Electricity should not be employed : for m 46 Electricity in Weak Back far from doing good, it is almost certain to reproduce the haemorrhage and hurry the patient to the grave, WEAK BACK. This affection is frequently met with in young per- sons, particularly of the female sex, who have grown up very fast. There is, at first, no actual disease, but a constant sense of weariness and pain ; inability to sit up long ; inclination to lie down atevery opportu- nity, and a general listlessness inconsistent with per- fect health. After a time, unless relief be obtained, the «pine really gives way and spinal curvature en- sues. These ailments are most frequently the result of improper food and the want of adequate exercise. It is rarely met with in boys, because they are allowed to run about and take plenty of uut-door exercise; but in our young ladies, brought up like hot-house plants, with stays and tightly-fitting dresses that pre- vent the proper expansion of the lungs, and thereby hinder the thorough oxygenation of the blood. Weak Back is one of the commonest complaints. The Magnetic Belt, if combined with suitable exercises fur strengthening the back, sponging the back with cold water eveiy morning, followed by brisk rubbing, total abstinence from tea, and the use of hrotvn bread Electricity in Spinal Curvature. 47 instead of white, will cure many cases, but if the symptoms are of long standing, Electricity in the form of Faradism ought to be resorted to, or the result will be SPINAL CURVATURE, of which there are two principal varieties, viz.: the lateral and the angular. The former is usually the result of general debility, which has produced a re- laxed and flabby state of the tissues, resulting in a loss of power adequate to support the upper part of the body. It is first observed that one shoulder is higher than the other, or that the shoulder-blade "is growing out:' In proportion as one shoulder is high, the other becomes unduly depressed ; one hip projects while the opposite oue is drawn inwards; and on closer examination the spinal column will be found curved. If neglected or improperly treated, the health gradually fails ; and, owing to the compressing of the lungs, Consumption is a frequent result. Lateral Curvature of the Spine being based on debility, it need hardly ])e stated that Electricity has proved the most efficacious remedy in its treatment, the results being very soon apparent, owing to the facility with which the Faradic cuirent may be ap- plied to the spine, imparting tone to the pnfppKlod muscles and vigor to the system in general. 48 Electricity in {Spinal Curvature. 'i liL. In Angular Curvature of the Spine we have a to- tally difFerent disease to deal with, the bony structure being affected and not the muscles, as in the former complaint. This disease is easily recognized, and can hardly be mistaken, for while in the lateral curvature the spine partakes more or less of the shape of a capital S ; in the angular there is a projection of two or three of the vertebrae of the spine forming an angle, hence its name angular. It is invariably associated with some constitutional affection, such as scrofula,, etc., and unless immediately and most judiciously attended to, produces destruction of the bones, and^ in the most favorable cases, incurable deformity. The proper treatment of angular curvature of the spine is constitutional, with a properly-fitting support to the back. The application of Electricity has not resulted in any benefit, rather the contrary. Much patience and perseverance are required on the part of the physician as well as the patient, many months being required to obtain anything like favorable re- sults. However, there is no need to abandon hope, as the following letter will show : " Sir, — You will no doubt remember my calling on you some months ago, with my little boy, who has a. Electrkity in Diabetes. 49 curvature of the spine. You directed me to a Mr Authors (mechanical instrument maker, 16 King-st Ea.st, Toronto), for a spinal support.' I am happy to inform you that the spinal support ha^ nearly cured him of the curvature, etc., etc." In this case I prescribed a plain but nourishing diet ajid constitutional medicine; though, from the tone of the letter, it is evident that the father considers the support to have done the most in curing the child people being very apt to overlook the benefit resulting from judicious and suitable diet. It is only ' y a pro- per combination of internal treatment and external support that favorable results can be obtained. Elec- tricity, though very beneficial in lateral ■ -vature should never be resorted to in the cnigular form of the' disease. DIABETES. It is only recently that the true seat of this disease has been ascertained, the stomach, liver and kidneys having in turn been considered the origin of the trou- ble. True, after death, these organs have been found diseased, but these evidences were the results, not the disease itself It was an accidental blow upon the head thai Grst led to the idea that a disordered .^0 Electricity in Diabetes. state of the nervous system might be the cause. Dr. C. Bernard produced many of the symptoms by punc- turing a certain part of the brain, and other physicians have produced similar results by lacerating different parts of the nervous system. That Diabetes is inti- mately connected with, if not actually caused by, a dete- riorated state of the nervous system, may justly be inferred from the successful results that have followed its treatment by Electricity. The principal symp- toms are constant thirst, dry skin, pain and weakness in the loins, and excessive flow of urine laden with a peculiar kind of sugar. To Dr. Donkin we are deeply indebted for the know- ledge that valuable assistance is afforded by an exclu- sive milk diet in this disease, and now that the value of Electricity is being appreciated, it is gradually losing that character for fatality that has hitherto been con- nected with it, as the following case will illustrate : — Rev. Mr. N., a clergyman of considerable ability, but greatly overworked, sent lio word through his wife that he was suffering from lumbago. I prescribed what I considered the most suitable remedies under the cir- cumstances, but received word a few days later that he was no better, but rather worse, being evidently weaker. Thinking that there must be something ,. EUii^city in Diabetes. 51 more than an ordinary cold in his case, I made fur- ther enquiries respecting his general health, and learned that he had been ailing for some considerable time, complaining principally of his back, passing large quantities of urine and troubled with great thirst. These symptoms led me to suspect that he was suffering from Diabetes, which was verified on examining his urine, which I found laden with glu- cose, or grape-sugar. He had been for some Time unable to attend to his ministerial duties. I at once put him on a strictly milk diet, while employing the most suitable internal remedies combined with Elec- tricity. At first it seemed as if the milk would not agree with him, his tongue turning as white as the milk itself, but after a little while it was evident to all his friends that he was improving, for notwith- standing that his food consisted wholly and solely of skim-milk, he steadily regained his strength, and one Sunday, being disappointed in a substitute, he was unexpectedly compelled to undertake the duties, and to his great astonishment and delight went through the whole service without the slightest difficulty. Gradually the sugar disappeared from his urine, and in a comparatively short time his health was thoroughly re-established. I 52 Electricity in Paralysis. In this case, complete cessation from all mental labor was the first step towards recovering the lost nervous tone ; the bland, unstimulating, but highly nourishing milk restored the wasted tissues, and the internal use of such remedies as are well known to remove the effects of nervous exhaustion, with the powerful assistance of Electricity, were the means, under God, of preserving a useful and valuable life from a most distressing premature death. I could refer to several other equally striking cases, but one is as good as a dozen for proving the cura- bility of the disease. Such favorable results can, however, only be expected if applied at the onset of the disease, before any of the internal parts have become organically affected. PARALYSIS. In no disease has Electricity been more frequently employed than in Paralysis, and while the results have been most brilliant in some cases, truth compels us to state that in others it has altogethor failed. The reason is, that Paralysis is not a disease, but the result of some affection of the brain or spinal marrow interfering with, or preventing, the proper action of the nervous system. It would require a large book. tSst. Electricity in Hemiplegia and Paraplegia, 53 instead of the few pages that I can devote to the sub- ject, to give anything like an adequate idea of the numerous diseases that tend to produce Paralysis ; I will therefore confine myself to the simple statement that Paralysis consists in a total or partial losa of sensibility or motion, or of both, in one or more parts of the body. It may be perfect or imperfect. It may be general, affecting the whole body, or partial, when confined to one portion alone. One of the most frequent causes of Paralysis is Apoplexy, and the benefit to be derived from Elec- tricity, or any other form of treatment, depends mainly upon the amount of actual injury which the brain has sustained. This, as may well be imagined, requires careful consideration at the hands of the physician. It most frequently appears in the form of HEMIPLEGIA or Paralysis of one side of the body, and if taken early enough is usually amenable to treatment, though com- plete recovery is rare, a certain amount of rigidity usually remaining. PARAPLEGIA or Paralysis of the lower half of the body, has its 54 Electricity hi Rhtwrnatic Paralysis. w origin in some morbid condition of the spinal cord. It is often the result of spinal exhaustion, without any actual degeneration of tissue. Such cases, if attended to before the spinal cord has been perma- nently injured by the injudicious use of powerful drugs like strychnine, etc., are frequently cured by Electricity, though the chances diminish the longer the treatment is delayed. RHEUMATIC PARALYSIS frequently remains after an attack of rheumatism, affecting the muscles and causing a wasting of the limbs, if not attended to. The sooner Electricity is applied to the parts the better, though even in cases of long standing, where the joints have become rigid from want of use, a cure may still be effected by com- bining Kinesipathy with Electricity. The following case will serve as an illustration of this kind of Paralysis : — Mrs. E., aged 56, had for two years been unable to do her own hair, owing to a paralyzed condition of the muscles of the upper part of the right arm. It was with the greatest difficulty that she could raise her arm sufficiently to touch her right ear. She attributed it to a severe attack of rheumatism with which she had been afflicted about two years previous to her applying to me. All kinds * ■■ Electricity in Locomotor-Ataxia, 55 of lotions and liniments had been used in vain. The Faradic current was applied freely to the neck and upper arm, followed by Kinesipathy, and in two months she was able to pass her hand over her head so as to touch the left ear. The cure was permanent. CONSTITUTIONAL PARALYSIS depends upon some blood-poison, or constitutional degeneration of tissue. Syphilis, Gout and Rheuma- tism are the most frequent causes met with, while lead, mercury and opium are the medicinal agents that most commonly produce the paralyzed state. It is in such cases that the Galvano-Electric Bath is found so efficacious in eliminating the poisons or morbid taints from the system, after which the Faradic current, by its tonic action, restores the limbs to their original standard of power and feeling. Another form of Paralysis, unfortunately too often met with, is LOCOMOTOR-ATAXIA, or progressive palsy, the true cause of which has only lately been ascertained. It is now known to depend upon a wasting and degeneration of a certain part of the spine, whence the morbid process travels towards 56 Ekctiiiilty in Locomotor-Ataxict. \i: §^-t "•C"V' the surface, and, when fully established, is beyond the power of any treatment. The priacipai symptom is a want of power to control the movements of the lower limbs. The gait is hurried and staggering, and in attempting to walk the patient drops his heel heavily on the ground at every step, swings from side to side, throwing out his hands to balance himself, like an unskiUed rope-dancer. At the same time there are severe erratic pains, chiefly in the feet and legs; these pains are boring, throbbing, shooting, sometimes sharj) and sudden like an electric shock. The intellect and memory are frequently unimpaired. As long as the disease is in the first stage, the symp- toms of which consist in a twitching of the muscles with stinging and crawling in different parts, a dispo- sition in the arm or leg to '^ go to sleep," sense of weakness in the limbs and a peculiar cushion-like feeling in the soles of the feet, with flying pains in different parts of the body, etc., very great benefit may be expected from the Electric treatment, because degeneration of the nerve substance has not yet taken place ; but as these symptoms become more marked, the chances of recovery decrease in proportion, though even then the disease may be arrested at a certain stage. I I Electiicity in Chorea. 57 Although this disease is occasionally met with in persons who have been exposed to severe cold, after unusual and protracted exertion, it is generally the result of long-continued abuse of the sexual system, and hence much more frequently met with .xi men than in women ; rarely, if ever, in childr I will merely add, for the satisfaction of those suf- fering from Paralysis, that Electricity imparts heat to the coldest limbs, even in cases where the heat of the strongest fire ha^ failed to afford it; nor Is this to be wondered at, when we consider that by means of the Galvanic battery even platinum, the hardest of metals, can be made red-hot in an instant CHOREA (St. Vitus' Dance) is a disease characterized by twitchings and jumpings, often ludicrous actions of voluntary muscles, especially of the face and limbs. It most frequently attacks girls between the ages of six and sixteen, though it Is not uncommon in boys. It may be brought on by any irritant cause, as fright, late hours, mental excitement beyond the power of the young and susceptible ner-^ vous system, but usually in young persons of inherited nervous constitution. Many of the milder cases of Chorea recover in a few months, if left -holly to i ^^ Electricity in Chorea. Nature, and placed on a plain, substantial and unsti- mulating diet, with plenty of out-door exercise. The spine might be sponged down every morning with salt water and thoroughly rubbed till quite red. Should the case, however, fail to be relieved by these simple means. Electricity, in the form of the Faradic current, may be relied on. The feet should be placed on a copper plate, or in a pail of warm water, connected with the negative pole, while the positive is passed down the spine, etc., etc. The following case is strikingly illustrative of the power of Electricity not only to impart tone to the nervous system, but also heat to the parts:— -Miss M., aged 18, had been suffering for some months from St. Vitus' Dance. Her left side alone being affected, I placed the corresponding foot in a warm bath and passed the sponge down the spine and afterwards down the left arm. Improvement soon became appa- rent in ohe greater control she obtained over her hand and arm, when one day her mother ennuired whether there would be any objection to her having both feet placed in the foot-bath, as her daughter complained that whereas she formerly had both feet cold at night, now the electrified one was warm, while the other remained as cold as ever. By immersing both feet , . Electricity in Epilepsy. 59 during the application she soon had the satisfaction of having the right foot as warm as the left. Even- tually she was cured of both ailments. A disease of far greater importance than the last is EPILEPSY, ■16 symptoms of which are too well known to require any description at my hands. That the disease is the result of some morbid action present in the great ner- vous centres, and that it is frequently hereditary, are facts fully established. It has unfortunately been so long considered incur- able that, until lately, medical men have preferred to turn their attention to diseases that promised more satisfactory results. Of late, however, particularly since the effects of the Direct Galvanic Current have become better understood, several physicians of emi- nence have acknowledged themselves astonished at the controlling influence that Electricity exerted over Epilepsy, and when combined with appropriate inter- nal remedies the results have often been as striking as they were gratifying. The Faradic current is, as a rule, useless in this disease, as it exerts little or no effect upon the nervous centres; inf^Aprl fh<^ f^ri^-^r ^«a«o ^f i?.-M-r-^.— ^_ i • i -J . _i !s^^ ^c«:!vo ui Hipi^cpciy iix vv'iiicn ^0 Electricity in Epilepsy, it has ever been of service have been those in which the menstrual function was dormant or irregular. But by applying the Direct Galvanic current to the sympathetic system of nerves, and occasionally to the head and spine, the attacks can in many instances be materially relieved, and their frequency lessened, even after a very short course of treatment. One of our most distinguished English electricians states, that out of sixty-four cases of Epilepsy treated by Electricity, a large majority received immediate benefit; and other physicians who have applied it carefully and scientifically testify to similar satisfactory results. In no disease is it more necessary to consider every case individually, as a course of Electric and medical treatment that would benefit one case, might be to- tally unsuitable and injurious in another. The first object to be attained is the suppression of the attacks, as every return strengthens the Epileptic habit, and renders it more difficult to control ; besides which it causes great prostration and exhaustion of the nervous power. The second object is to induce a total change in the nutrition of the brain and nervous matter generally, so as to restore their proper controlling force to the centres of consciousness and motive power. . Electricity in Epilepsy. 61 The last, and by no means the least, important aim should be to improve the general health, and remove all sources of irritation from mind and body. In Epilepsy, as in most other chronic, or lingering, diseases, the treatment has to be continued for a length of time, and unless both patient and physician perse- vere, the result is likely to be disappointing. It would, in fact, be unreasonable to expect a rapid cure in a dis- ease which has been progressing for a considerable length of time, as it must naturally require a propor- tionate time for its removal. Although in a majority of cases the convulsions may be controlled in a com- paratively short time, yet the Epileptic condition is not thereby eradicated ; this can only be effected in time, as the Epileptic constitution is one of such stub- born obstinacy as to require the alterative and strength- ening effect of Electricity in its fullest extent, to pro- duce permanently beneficial results. The disease is much more difficult to cure where it is hereditary ; recent cases being, as a matter of course, more amenable to treatment than those of long standing. Women are more susceptible of cure than men, and young men than those advanced in years. After the attacks have been brought under control for a longer or shorter period of time, there is often a 62 Electricity in Enuresis, trying period for both physician and patient. The latter, rejoicing in his newly-recovered health, is apt to think that his old enemy is gone, and that be is equal to any amount of exertion, and that he may now compensate himself for the privations previously en- dured, and may once more begin to thoroughly enjoy life and its pleasures. Unless restrained in such im- petuosity by the judgment of the physician, he will often have to expiate his indiscretion by more or less serious relapses, which might have been avoided if a better regimen had been followed. ENURESIS (Incontinence of Urine). Inability to retain the urine is a very common ailment in children, and usually relieved b}^ proper medicines. In adults and aged persons it is frequently associated with nervous debility, when Electricity, applied to the spine and lower part of the abdomen, is generally followed by quick and permanent relief, pro- vided the disease be not associated with organic dis- ease of the bladder or kidneys, under which circum- stances a suitable constitutional treatment would have to be instituted. Persons labouring under this or any other aflection of the urinary organs should carefully abstain from Eleciricity in Enuresis. 63 the use of stimulants and tea, or the benefit obtained from Electricity or medicine will be found merely temporary ; experience having proved that a free use of milk is as beneficial in such cases, as stimulants and tea are injurious in their effects. How quickly some cases of long standing can be remedied by appropriate medicines and judicious diet, the following case will prove:— Mr. S., aged 74, had for many years been sufifering from a most distressing irritation of the bladder, with incessant urging to urinate and the most scanty result. For eighteen years he had been in the habit of inserting a copper bougie every third day, ** to keep the passage open" as he said. After a careful examination, I assured him of speedy relief from most of his trying symptoms, provided he would abstain from sherry -v/ine, of which he drank three or four glasses a day, and tea. Finding him willing to acquiesce, I gave him a small vial of Homoeopathic medicine, and in three weeks had the satisfaction of receiving a letter of thanks from him, mentioning, among other symptoms of improvement, that he had never used the bougie since. Three years have since elapsed, and he remains as comfortable as could be expected of a man of his advanced age. Another old gentleman of 72 years consulted me 64 Electricity in Hydrocele. respecting an inability to retain the urine longer than fifteen to twenty minutes during the day, and having to rise every hour during the night, which seriously interfered with his rest. As there seemed to be no signs of anything but local debility, I applied the Farad ic current to the lumbar region and lower part of the abdomen, and with such prompt efiect, that after a few applications he declined to continue the treatment, as he could retain it for two hours durino- the day without inconvenience, and was not disturbed more than once or twice during the night. Although all cases do not so quickly recover, there are very few that are not more or less benefited by judiciously combined Electric and medical treatment. HYDROCELE is a disease by which the scrotum becomes gradually distended with a serous fluid, so that it acquires somewhat of a pear shape. It is met with in infants as well as old men, and is occasionally mistaken for rupture. Till quite recently, the treatment has con- sisted in drawing off the fluid and injecting port- wine, or diluted tincture of Iodine ; an operation connected often with severe pain, and frequently resulting in failure; the sac gradually filling up again. Of late it Electricity in Spermatorrhcea. 65 lias been discovered that the use of Galvanism is far less painful and more generally successful. STRICTURE. We are indebted to two French physicians for the method of applying Galvanism to this annoying and sometimes very distressing affection. One operation is usually sufficient to effect a cure in ordinary cases, and as the application is rarely attended with much pain, this method is gradually superseding all others. SPERMATORRHCEA is an abnormal escape of the seminal fluid, that consti- tutes a very troublesome complaint, attended by symp- toms pointing to a profound disturbance of the central nervous system. Abuse of the genital functions is the most fruitful cause of this affection, and persistence in such abuse invariably causes exhaustion of the nervous system, which in its turn is followed by general debility, nervous irritability, with a dreamy, absent kind of manner, indigestion, flatulence, constipation and other signs of dyspepsia. Sight and hearing become im- paired, the memory fails, palpitation of the heart, gid- diness, follow in course of timp rp«nlf,'r.«. o+ lo^j- v CO Electricity in Spermatorrhosa. extreme cases, in epilepsy, consumption, impotence and insanity. Seminal losses occur in the form of nocturnal emis- sions, or when straining at stool, or the fluid escapes imperceptibly with the urine. In the latter instance, the danger is all the greater, because it may occur for a long time without the person being aware of the loss ; attributing his languor and inability to work to any cause but the real one. Although this enervating complaint is a very pre- valent one, it has been greatly neglected; medical men preferring to pooh-pooh it or ignore it altogether ; whereas it ought to receive the attention of the first and best minds in the profession, as it is the disease that destroys many of the finest and noblest of our youths. The great diflaculty i^^. treating it successfully has no doubt had its share in influencing many medi- cal men to pretend to overlook it, or treat it in a slighting man-^.er, but the large number of young men we daily meet with, bearing the marks of general debility, too plainly testify to some widespread and generally prevalent cause, that should demand the most serious attention of the philanthropic physician. Most of these young men are rather to be pitied than blamed. The error was committed in ignorance, Electricity in Spermatorrhoea. 67 and having become acquainted with its evil conse- quences, they abandon it, but the results follow them tor years, sometimes to the grave ; nor does the evil stop there, as attested by a delicate and enfeebled offspring. Should these few lines have the effect of rousing the minds of parents to the actual and immediate cause that produces a disease which, like a wide- spread pestilential plague, undermines the present race, lowering its physical and mental standard, I shall be happy to think that I have done some little good in my day and generation. The cause of Spermatorrhoea is too well known to require any further reference, but there is a point towards which I would draw attention, as I consider it a matter of such vital importance that I cannot pass it over in silence. As I have already stated, the error that tends to produce Spermatorrhoea is usually committed in ignor- ance. How is it then, that the consequences cling so pertinaciously to its victims after the error has been abandoned ? If a man has been addicted to the use of tobacco or stimulants and becomes wise enough to abstain from them, the injurious effects gradually disappear more or less, and his health is compara- It i 1 1' 08 Electricity in Spermatorrhoea. tively restored ; but with regard to the above-named eiror, such improvement is rarely experienced, and why ? Nothing exists without a cause, and in this instance the cause must be a very common one, or its effects would not be so general. Richly-spiced food may have something to do with keeping up the irri- tation, but this alone would not satisfactorily account for it. There is one article of diet to which my atten- tion was drawn some seventeen or eighteen years ao-o, and time has only served to convince me that it is exerting a baneful influence upon people in general and sufferers from Spermatorrhoea in particular,— and that is Tea. It is unfortunately not known, that owing to its action upon the lower portion of the spine it produces at first a stimulating effect upon the sexual organs, which is followed by an opposite or relaxing condition, thei-eby hindering them from re- gaining their tone. The use of this beverage is, in my opinion, the principal cause of the difficulty in treating Spermatorrhoea. As I purpose to devote, further on, a few pages to an explanation of the influence of coffee, tea and stimulants upon the human frame, I shall merely add, that unless tea be entirely abstained from, a cure of Spermator- rhoea need not be looked for, and it is useless to expect Electricity in Impotence, 69 Electricity to tone up organs laboring under the com- bined influence of debility and excitability, while an article of diet having an exciting and subsequently debilitating influence on the organs is in daily use. Electricity has proved very valuable in the treat- ment of Spermatorrham, the Faradic current being applied generally, for the purpose of toning up the system in general, and improving the digestive organs, while the Galvanic current is directed locally in order to arrest the disastrous losses. This desirable result, however, can only be expected when the Electric treat- ment is assisted by a nourishing but non-stimulating diet and the maintenance of proper moral control. Should Spermatorrhoea exist for any considerable length of time and to any serious extent, it is apt to cause IMPOTENCE. By this term i mean inability to perform the gen- erative act. Greatly reduced sexual power is so distressing even to those who may be called reasonable men, that it should claim the most serious attention of the physi- cian in order to discover whether the impotence, com- plete or incomplete, be real, or due to ignorance or 70 Electricity in Im'potence. h some nervous disorder, — or whether to no impotence at all but only a hypochondriacal fear or false persua- sion of it. It is frequently mot with in persons suffering from excessive anxious mental work, with "jaded brains," and in connexion with some forms of dyspepsia : but in these cases it is only temporary ; rest, improvement of the general health and the judicious application of Electricity being sutficient to effects its ip^edy re- moval. Although there are numerous physical causes of impotence and decrease of sexual power, such as sexual excesses, particularly when they have been indulged in at a premature age, venereal diseases, affections of the testes and prostate gland, etc., etc., yet from all these causes together the cases are less frequent than those due to nervous disorder or to mental dt fects ; and the impotence which is complained of, or dreaded, without any reason, is more common still. The mental and nervous defects which n^ay render a man impotent are so various in different persons tv? to render it a most troublesome disease to treat ; and it is only where the physician obtains control over the mind and habits of the patient that a satisfactory result can be obtained. Owing to its acknowledged ! 1' Electricity in Sterility. 71 pjwer over the nervous system, Electricity is looked upon with great favor in the treatment of this dis- tressing complaint, but a cure is only to bo expected whore the mental, moral and physical habits of the sufferer are brought into harmony with the require- ments of Nature. STERILITY. or barrenness, is an incapacity for conception. It most frequently arises from Amenorrhoea, Dysmenor- rhcca, displacement of the womb, or some other func- tional derangement of the sexual organization, and is usually removed by the apfjropriate treatment of the disease upon which the sterility depends. Occasion- ally we meet with cases in which no derangement is apparent, and in these the Galvano-Electric Bath still holds out hopes of success after every other kind of treatment has failed. * FEMALE COMPLAINTS. I f /TIHERE is a class of diseases which, owing to its -A. being peculiar to the female sex, is known under the general appellation of Few.ale Complaints. These diseases, being mostly the result of a relaxed state of the system, are particularly amenable to Electric ac- tion, and when its merits are fully recognized and established, women will consider it in the light of " a God- send," saving them, as it does, from those exami- nations which are as distressing to the patient as they are disgraceful to the physician. Many true-hearted medical men of mature years look with feelings of horror, mingled with pity, at the treatment that has been instituted with regard to women's complaints during the past tv.-enty-five years; but beiLg in the minority they fear to raise their voices against a practice based on error and fraught with the most pernicious results. Some years ago, the super- intendent of one of our lunatic asylums was bold enough to express his objections to the local treat- ment of diseases peculiar to women, and in his annual report warned young physicians against such practice • 72 If Electricity in Dysmenorrhoea. 73 but his advice and admonitions fell flat before the power of those who upheld the system. From the experience of nearly thirty years' study and practice, I am fully convinced that in nineteen cases out of twenty the examinations to which \/omen and even young girls are subjected, in the present day, are not only unnecessary, but most detrimental to their men- tal, moral and physical welfare. DYSMENORRHCEA (Difficult or Painful Menstruation). Menstruation is sometimes attended with difficulty and pain of a distressing kind, which is referred to the lower part of the abdomen or the back, and often causes the person to remain in bed, where she rolls about in agony, and is troubled with nausea or sick- ness, loss of appetite, diarrhoea and chilliness. This state is, however, seldom attended with fever. Pain- ful menstruation occurs at all ages, from the firjt establishment of the function to its cessation. It happens to the married as well as the single, and is frequently the cause of sterility. The pain sometimes begins only an hour or two before the flow, at others it is troublesome for a day or two previouslj^ and is relieved by the discharge. Although there are many 74 Electricity in Leucorrhoea. remedies which have a decided tendency to relieve these distressing and periodically returning pains, nothing has yet been discovered to equal Electricity i n permanently curing them ; the combined influence of the Faradic current and the Galvanic Bath tending to remove the congestion that usually accompanies them, and tone up the system in general, so as to prevent their return ; that is, provided the symptoms are not connected with organic disease of the womb or ovaries. I 'fi i \i LEUCORRHCEA. This distressing and debilitating ailment is also known under the name offluor albus or " the whites," and consists in a discharge varying in appearance from clear, colorless (resembling the white of an eggjy to dark, purulent and even bloody. It is more gene- ral than any of the aflbctions peculiar to the female sex, and may exist in connexion with a robust and plethoric, or with a relaxed and debilitated state of the system. In the earlier periods of life it is frequently found to depend upon irritation of the spinal marrow; in later years often connected with ulceration (so-called) of the mouth and neck of the womb, and then affording" Electricity in Leucorrhoea. 76 a plausible pretext for the local application of nitrate of silver and astringent washes which, if they unfor- tunately have the desired effect of arresting the discharge, are so frequently followed by far more distressing internal ailments. Every physician of experience has met with ( ases of disease of the womb, ovaries, stomach or hoad that are clearly traceable to the suppression of Leucorrhoea by means of injections of lead, zinc, tannin or other astringents; and women cannot be too impressively warned against their use. The constitutional symptoms which attend upon Leucorrhoea are at first so slight as scarcely to attract any attention ; indeed so commom is the disorder, that women have got into the way of regarding it almost as a natural state of things, which erroneous idea frequently leads to the permanmt establishment of the disease. When Leucorrhoea becomes chronic* and aggravated by neglect or improper treati .i;, the comnlexion assumes that pale sallow unhealthy color so indicative of internal disorder, partial er-asiation, indigestion, constipation, languor and general debility ensue, the menstrual flow becomes abnormal, the constant and abundant discharge breaking up the general health 76 Electricity in Chlorosis, and inducing Chlorosis, and occasionally even Con- sumption in young girls and sterility in married women. In this, as in most of the ailments peculiar to the female sex, Electricity, in the form of the Galvano- Electric Bath, may be considered invaluable; not only on account of the permanent relief it affords, but because it saves them from those distressing examina- tions and local applications, as abhorrent to their nature as they are to decency and true scientific medication. CHLOROSIS. This disease is intimately connected with a state of an?emia, or deteriorated state of the blood, and is cha- racterized by a dull complexion, dirty-white, or green- ish color, hence the name of "green sickness." The menstrual function is either scanty and pale or alto- gether arrested ; the patient complaining of that lassi- tude and want of mental or physical energy so char- acteristic of general constitutional derangement. Under the influence of Electricity recovery soon takes place ; the face loses its pale unhealthy hue, the lips and tongue regain their natural color, the spirits recover the buoya...e of youth, and the menstrual flow returns to its normal condition. Electricity in Displacements of the Womb. 71 DISPLACEMENTS OF THE WOMB (Prolapsus, Anteversion, Retroversion). The womb, having some latitude of motion in its natural condition, is liable to descend and change its relative position from various causes. The most com- mon of these displacements is Prolapsus, or Fall- ing of the Womh, too well known to the actual sufferer to require much description. The weariness and aching in the back, with indisposition to stand, the feeling of debility of the parts, the sensation of bearing-down in front, all aggravated by walking, the leucorrhoeal dis- charge, increased menstruation and frequent micturi- tion leave little doubt as to the nature of the ailment. These symptoms are more or less marked, according to the lighter or more aggravated nature of the case. A slight relaxation may exist for a long time without attention being called to it ; but, of course, the longer the treatment is delayed the greater becomes the evil, and the more difficult the cure. The most prominent cause of the falling of the womb is a relaxed state of the peritoneum and liga- ments that support the womb ; which weakness cor- responds with the debilitated tone of the rest of the system, to which may be added the more immediate causes, such as straining, lifting heavy weights, etc., etc. I 78 Electricity in Hysteralgia. Impaired vital power being the principal cause of this common complaint, it may naturally be inferred, that Electricity, in i^-s varied forms, ought to act beneficially; and when carefully and judiciously ap- plied, the results are usually of a most satisfactory nature. The Faradic current is the one most fre- quently employed, though the Galvanic Bath is at times indispensable for relieving the irritable and engorged state of the Avomb. In Anteversion (bending forward) and Retroversion (bending backward) of the womb the general symp- toms resemble those of falling of the womb ; nervous irritation and local inflammatory-congestive condition of the organ being, more or less, present in all cases. The distinctive symptoms are, however, usually suffi- ciently marked to render those painfully distressing examinations unnecessary. The irritation and con- gestion are best relieved by the Galvanic Bath, and as soon as the parts have been restored to their nor- mal condition of strength, by means of the Faradic current, the organ regains its position without the aid of uterine sounds or pessaries. HYSTERALGIA is a term that has been applied to an irritable state of tlie womb, independent of inflammation. The symp- Electricity in Hysteralgia. 79 toms which distinguish the disease, are pain rouod the pelvis, dragging sensation in the back, or a tight feel- ing in the lower part of the abdomen from hip to hip as of a cord stretched across the pelvis' at the brim, extending to the groins, at times down the thighs, often to the foot on one side. It renders the patient nervous, thin and irritable, abounding in complaints, frequently confining her to the sofa and rendering her incapable of any exertion without aggravation o' suf- fering. The pains are generally worse during the men- strual flow, they are relieved by the recumbent posture, but never altogether absent, and occur in paroxysms of more or less severity. Sitting is sometimes painful, and the vibration caused by riding in a carriage over a rough road, or by any other jar, occasions great suffer- ings which last for hours. Under the ordinary course of medical treatment, this disease is very obstinate, and is too frequently aggravated by local examinations. One lady who was under my care some years ago, told me that for months her life had been one of protracted misery. The doc- tor came every Thursday to apply the caustic to the womb, the result of which was intense pain that lasted till the Sunday following ; the subsequent days being passed in less pain, but in mental dread of the dis- 80 Is! 11 Electricity in Hysteria. je.^. .deal to .e a,.„ ,one ..u,, the next J" '"?''r ' '""*'' "'■'''■ ""■"--cing the Electric tThoT '"'"' ''^^^'^'^ ^"^ *° -'k and ride wthout any pa.n or distress, and this happy result was obta.ned without any local application whate"; The disease be.ng dependent upon a deranged condi- ^o„ of the nerves conn cted with the womb, all that was requ,red was a treatment calculated to allay irri- tahon and tone up the system, the former being effected by he Galvanic Bath, the latter by the Farfdif :!.: ' Tr iirr' '':• *™*' "' ^''^™^*'^>''« ---. that Irutabihty was little more than Debility excited." HYSTERIA n>ay be considered a functional disturbance of the nervous system. It is principally met with in youn. liable to strong emotions, if made to suffer mental agony prolonged physical pain. It is not confined .td^^jttrLtt-'-T r-^" '--' n,-ai r^ .1, / ' ^'""^ *^ ^^e niore artifi- cial hfe they lead. It is almost always a chronic disease, the symptoms of wh.h are developed in a very regular mannef 11 Electricity in Hysteria. 81 first the complexion becomes pale and sallow, the patient loses flesh and complains of headache, the result of restless, unrefreshing sleep. The appetite is fanciful, with a craving for water, vinegar, salt or confectionery. Constipation is usually present, the bowels not moving more than once or twice a week, or sometimes even less often. There is much rum- bling from accumulation of gas in the intestines. The pit of the stomach is tender to pressure, but better after meals. Almost invariably there i.s pain in the left side of the chest, which they imagine to be a symptom of heart-disease. Pain and weakness of the back are constant symptoms. Menstruation is irre- gular. The blood is impoverished, the pulse being- quick, small or feeble. There is always great nervous excitability, alternated with lowness of spirits, and inability to fix the attention on any subject, a fond- ness for sensational novels, concerts, balls, etc., to the neglect of the graver duties of life. Convulsive attacks are frequent in hysterical women, and are sometimes confounded with Epilepsy ; a mis- take to be carefully guarded against. Hysterical attacks almost always occur after painful emotions, while Epileptic fits come on apparently with- out any exciting cause. In the hysterical attack, the G \ il 82 lOHS of Ekctricity in Hysteria. consciousness is preceded by a feeling as of a ball in the throat with a sensation of suffocation, while in the epileptic there is no such symptom. The hysterical patient has almost always time to find a suitable place upon which to fall, whereas the epileptic falls down as if struck by lightning, no matter where he may be. The end of the hysterical attack is usually a fit of crying and sobbing, while at the end of the epileptic lit, the patient falls into a deep sleep. When we consider that Hysteria is a purely func- tional disturbance of the nervous system, it will be easily understood why Electricity has proved so use- ful in permanently curing it. No other remedy acts as successfully in relieving the symptoms, and by raising the tone of the system, a relapse may be pre- vented and health restored,~provided always that the general mode of life is not such as to again lower the nervous condition. The following case is an excellent illustration of the disease, and of the manner in which it may be mis- taken for another :— Eliza M., a delicate, pale-faced girl, was one day carried into my office and gently })laced on a chair. From her mother's account, she had been suffering for seven or eight months from excruciating pains in the left foot and ankle. The Electricity in Hysteria. 83 medical attendant had pronounced it chronic rheuma- tism, but had failed to afford more than temporary relief From the debilitated appearance of the girl, coupled with the absence of all swelling, 1 was led to think that the case might be one of hysteria, and the dread she evinced at the idea of my touching it, strengthened me in this opinion. Taking her foot carefully in my left hand as if I only intended to look at it, I drew off her attention to a number of casts of heads placed in different parts of the office, at the same time gradually increasing the pressure of my manipulations. The comparative freedom from pain on gradually augmented pressure proved to me that the case was one of Hysteria and not Rheumatism, and I did not hesitate to assure the parents that a few (lays' treatment would make a very great change in her, and that a three weeks' course of Electricity would completely cure hei*. In order to give them a })roof of its eliicacy, 1 at once placed her foot in a warm bath, connected with the negative })ole, and })assed a sponge, attached to the positive, gently down the spine, employing the Faradic current. The result was immediate relief, and the very next day she was able to walk from the waiting-room into the office without assistance, and a few days later she walked IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3) :?.r 1.0 I.I ~ 3.2 12.5 2.2 M 1.8 1.25 1.4 1.6 = 1 — — -« 6" ► V <^ /a ^a a Photographic Sciences Corporation 23 WEST MAIN STREET WEBSTER, N.Y. 14580 (716) 872-4503 5?- x9 ?i'54 iV * I j ^^ Electricity in Hysteria. to my office from a distance of more than a mile. This could not have been done had the case been one of Rheumatism. As her general health was greatly reduced, I con- tinued the treatment for three weeks, after which she returned home full of life and spirits, with a healthy glow on her face and all trace of pain or weakness of the ankle removed. Marvellous as the cure seemed to the parents, it was really nothing but what might be expected from the action of Electricity. The affection of the ankle was merely a local manifestation of a state of anaemia or bloodlessness of the brain and spinal cord, and by restoring the general health and improving the func- tions of sanguification and assimilation, the general cause being removed, the local affection quickly disap- peared. N.B.— This is one of the cases that Vital Mag- netisers make so much capital out of Anyone pos- sessing a fair share of animal magnetism might have relieved her as quickly as the Electricity did; the only question being whether the results would be as permanent as they were after the course of Electricity. ,* i*^ '> Electricity in " Turn of Life 85 "TURN OF LIFE."— " CHANGE OF LIFE." This period in the life of a woman is frequently ushered in by a number of distressing ailments, many of which may be relieved, if not entirely removed, by the judicious application of Electricity. At the cessation of the menstrual flow, which usually occurs between the ages of 40 and 50, women are often troubled, more or less, with nervous irrita- bility, Hushes of heat, ringing in the ears, palpitation of the heart, nervous apprehensions, and other symp- t()m8 denoting some change that is going on in the system, and hence the term " Change of life." While most of these complaints are amenable to the action of Homoeopathic remedies, there is one state, more particularly met with in worjien of good consti- tutions who have led active lives, which is Corpulency, or a tendency to fatty degeneration generally, over which medicine exerts no beneficial action. Corpulency at the " turn of life " has hitherto been considered incur- able. The increase in size is accompanied by short- ness of breath after any exertion, pain in the sides and back, constipation, congestion to the head and chest, vertigo, or swimming in the head, etc., etc., and while their friends congratulate them on their stout i 86 Electricity in " Turn of Life'' healthy appearance, they themselves know that they are anything but well, that they cannot walk any distance without fati^^e and pain in the back ; house- hold duties that formerly were a pleasure are now a burden, and they feel as if they were "going down hill." If they have ever suffered from falling or other displacement of the womb the trouble returns with greater severity ; ieucorrhcea follows in time, and if they happen to fall into the hands of a professed gy- naecologist,* their, troubles are attributed to the womb, and they are subjected to a treatment as trying to their feelings as it is wretched in the result ; feeHng, as they invariably do, worse instead of better after every one of these distressing local applications. In this condition of fatty degeneration, tumors hitherto benign are apt to take on a malignant cha- racter, hence the frequency of cancer at the " tu a of life." To persons suffering from this abnormal deposit ot fat with its accompanying ailments, Electricity is invaluable, a short course of Faradic treatment com- bined with a few baths being usually sufficient to One who devotes himself exclusively to the treatment of female complamts. Electricity in Palpitation of the Heart. 87 make them feel " five or six years younger," as they term it. Nor is the relief thus obtained by any means transient, for with moderate care and attention to the commonest rules of health the improvement will last for years, and should the general h; alth, froiu any unfor':^seen cause be again run down, a few applica- tions of Electricity will again restore it to its normal condition. I v/ould not dwell upon this peculiar affection, which is more distressing than dangerous, were it not that there are hundreds of women in Canada between the ages of 40 and 50 suffering as I have just de- scribed ; not actually sick, and y(3t anything but well. They feel that they have not the energy they should have, and yet their age is not such as to warrant their considering themselves constitutionally old or ■worn out. Many such cases come under my care every year, and the relief they experience from Electricity is as pleasing to themselves as it is striking to their friends. PALPITATION OF THE HEART. Owing to the prevalent idea that diseases of the heart are extremely dangerous and often fatal, many persons, particularly such as labor under a de}>ressed ! i I ^^ 88 Electricity in Palpitation of the Heart, state of the nervous system, are greatly frightened at the slightest appearance of pain or distress in the region of the heart, and it is sometimes very difficult to relieve their minds of groundless anxiety. Palpitation of the heart is at all times a tormenting and depressing ailment and should therefore claim the earnest attention of the physician, but though some- times connected with organic disease of that organ, it is far more frequently a mere symptom of some disor- dered state of the body or mind, such as dyspepsia, anaemia, nervous debility from sexual excesses, pro- tracted nursing, late hours, insufficient rest, or the excessive use of coffee, tea or alcoholic stimulants, and a judicious course of treatment holds wut, in such cases, every hope of a cure. Being so frequently a mere result of impaired vital ei rgy, it might naturally be expected that Electri- city should exert a powerful influence in relieving it. The Faradic current, if applied to the upper and mid- dle portion of the spine as well as to the epigastrium, rarely fails to act beneflcially, but a judicious diet,' careful mode of life, and a refraining from the original cause, be it mental, moral or physical, must be en- forced if the i-elief is expected to be permanent. Electricity in DeAtfnem. 89 DEAFNESS. The causes of Deafness are too numerous to be mentioned in a work of this size. For all practical purposes, they may be divided into two classes, viz. : the tnucous and the nervous. The cases depending upon some chronic affection of the mucous membrane of the ear are most commonly met with in children and young persons, and are rarely suitable for Electricity, owing to the strumous constitution with which they are connected. Homoe- opathy possesses so many valuable remedies for this class of diseases, that a large majority of cases of deaf- ness depending upon a deteriorated state of the mucous membrane of the ear are speedily and permanently cured by medicines alone. We are frequently consulted for cases of deafness caused by an accumulation of soft or hard wax, the result of cold, producing an abnormal condition of the cerumenous glands. Careful removal of the wax at once restores the hearing, to the astonishment and delight of the paticit, no further treatment being required. Should, however, the deafness be caused by, or connected with, a dryness of the internal ear, and I 90 Electvleity in Deafness. there be a deficiency of ear-wax, Electricity will im- prove the condition of the ear and hearing ; for if the current be passed through the ear a sensation of warmth will be felt, followed by an increased secre- tion of wax, the secretion even re-appearing after hav- ing ceased altogether for many years ; and e\ ^n thick- ening of the tympanum or drum of the ear may be removed by the same means. In the adult we occasionally meet with cases that seem to be connected with some obscure affection of the throat. These, though sometimes cured, too fre- quently baffle our best endeavors ; still, a persistent use of Electricity, general and local, combined with appropriate constitutional treatment, affords the best chance of ultimate recovery ; great patience and per- severance being, however, K^quired on the part of both physician and patient. Persons suffering from chronic diseases are too apt to forget, that ailments of long-standing require a proportionate length of treatment to obtain the de- sired cure. In deafness connected with disease of the mucous membrane, the use of injections of nitrate of silver, sulphate of zinc, tannin, and the like, is very objec- tionable, as they frequently do irreparable injury by ElectHcity hi Tinnitus Aurium. 91 drying up the morbid secretion instead of removing it with its cause. Many persons date their deafness from the time that the discharge Uiis stopped by some astringent injection. The second class of cases, viz.: the nervous, which are dependent upon some disordered condition of the auditory nerve, are less frequently met with. Should the trouble be organic, by which we mean a permanent change in the structure of the parts, the chances ot recovery are very slight, but if it be merely functional, depending upon mere suspension or inadequate supply of nervous influence, after continued fever or any depressing or exhausting cause, the Faradic current may safely be applied witli great hopes of success ; provided always, that the general health be attended to; a matter very frequently overlooked by many otherwise careful physicians. A very common accompaniment of deafness, some- times even more distressing than the deafness itself is TINNITUS AURIUM (Ringing in the Ears, Noises in the Head). This very annoying complaint, though frequently connected with deafness, may exist without it. As a rule, it makes its appearance about middle age, and as 02 ElectHcity in Tinnitus Aurium. life advances, increases in intensity. While some compare the sounds to rushing of water, rustling of trees, etc., etc., others speak of them as ringing of bells, roaring, whistling, etc., being located either in the head or the ear, sometimes in both. Very often two distinct noises are perceived at the same time, one noise being continuous, the other appearing at in- tervals. The pat it complains of a constant heavi- ness in the head, and would be willing to bear forever the hardness of hearing if he could be relieved of the distressing noises. At times the trouble is so slight as to be considered of trifling importance, but aggra- vated cases, by their depressing mental and moral influence, impair the functions of the brain, and several cases are on record where they have even led to suicide. So great is the discomfort whi,3h it gives, that per- sons incurably deaf, and who are quite conscious of the impossibility of recovering their hearing, will still apply V) be relieved from this haunting and most an- noying symptom. An eminent English aurist states :— " As chronic catarrh is the commonest form of deafness, so is tinnitus aurium the most frequent result or sign of it." The origin of these noises was for a long time a Electricity in VcrtUjo. m mystery and source of much speculation, but they have been clearly traced to the membrana tympani. or drum of the ear, and though hitherto deemed in- curable, they are now, except when caused by large doses of quinine and iron, almost invariably relieved, if not entirely removed, by the careful application of the Faradic current directly to the drum of the ear, by means of the ear-speculum. The current should be very weak at first and gradually increased in strength. VERTIGO (Giddiness, Swimming in the Head) is an affection that requires the most careful conside- ration, for though often a mere result of gastric de- rangement, or so-called " biliousness," particularly in tne spring of the year, from eating too much animal food and neglecting exercise, yet it is occasionally a symptom of more deeply-seated disease of the brain, the heart, the liver, or the kidneys, and a course of treatment that might be most judicious to the former would possibly prove fatal to the latter. Sometimes it is caused by the suppression of haemor- rhages, such as hfemorrhoidal or menstrual, when it is apt to lead to Apoplexy. In such cases, the Galvanic Bath, by restoring the arrested secretion, quickly re- moves all danger. ^* Electricity in Blindness. Frequently Vertigo is found to be symptomatic of an exhausted .state of the nervous system, resulting from anxiety, severe mental strain, the excessive use of tobacco or alcoliolic stimulants, nursing too long, haemorrhage, seminal loss, etc., when the Faradic cur- rent, combined with proper internal treatment and nutritious diet, would be the treatment calculated to prove most beneficial. In persons advanced in years, vertigo is usually the forerunner of Apoplexy and Paralysis. Here Electricity, by imparting tone to the nervous condition, not only relieves the distressing symptom, but wards off the impending danger and thereby adds materially to the length of their days. Where Vertigo is connected with organic disease of the brain, heart or kidneys. Electricity should rarely be resorted to, a carefully instituted medical treatment being more calculated to ensure success. BLINDNESS. Where the loss of sightly complete, Electricity, like every other treatment, holds out little or no hope, but where the sight is gradually failing from over-exer- tion of the eyes in reading or working on dark clothes, etc., or from the gradual decay of nerve power conse- Electmcity in Blindiiens. 95 10 le quent upon aclvancing years, Electricity may frequently be used to great advantage That the affliction of the sight is sometimes the result of a derangement of the system owing to a taint in the blood or of debility, the following two cases will plainly demonstrate. Eli:ia C, aged 22, tailoress by occupation, had been working very steadily on black cloth for two or three y.'ars, when she noticed the sight of her right ej'e to fail. She continued, howeve'* to work on with the left eye till that one gavu v>ub also, when, afto»- trying two or three home and patent remedies she applied to me for advice. Concluding her case to be one of simple exhaustion of the optic nerve, caused by over- straining her eyes, I prescribed one of our usual inter- nal remedies, urging at the same time complete rest for the eyes, out-door exercise, and such general hj^gienic rules as would be calculated to improve the general healtn. Finding no improvement after three u' four weeks, I made a closet examination of her case and found that she suftered from profuse menstrual flow every two weeks. Thinking that the debility which naturally ensued from such a drain upon the system might possibly be retarding th act'on of the medicine she had been taking, I prescribed '^^ome •*S:. am 90 Electviciiy in Blindness. powders for this excessive flow. They had not only the desired effect but to my great satisfaction and her delight so completely removed the mist that had hung over her sight that, to use her own expression : " she could thread a needle again as well as ever." Electri- city in this case would have been as useless as the medicine prescrib(3d for the sight; the dimness of vision and mist not being, as I imagined, the result of straining the eyes, but the consequence of the unnatural drain upon the system. The following case is an exceedingly interesting one, showing how the loss of sight may be caused by the retrocession of an eruptive skin disease. George D., a young farmer, about 26 years of age, consulted me respecting the gradual loss of sight of the left eye, which had grown so weak that he could hardly read No. 12 of Dr. Angell's test type. This was a matter of the most serious importance to him, as he had lost the sight of the right eye by an accident some years before. One of our best oculists had declared his case to be hopeless. On enquiring into his constitution, I found that he had suffered severely in infancy from scald-head and so-ofulous sore eyes. My opinion was ahiiost as unfavorable as the oculist's, but seeing his distress, I agreed to try what I could do for him, pro- Electricity in Blindness. 07 vided he would attend strictly to my advice and directions for some months, and come in regularly every four weeks to report any change that might oc- cur. For the first five or six months the improve- ment was very slow, but still as there was some improvement, being able to read No. 9, we resolved to persevere. One day he came in greatly distressed at an eruption that had appeared on his leg, and was astonished at my assuring him, that so far from that being an unfavorable symptom, I felt sure that his sight would now rapidly improve, and so it was, for at his next visit he could read No. 6, and in three or four months more he was able to read the smallest type with ease. Had the Galvanic Bath been applied in this case, the cure would doubtless have been effected in half the time. There are certain effects produced by the applica- tion of the Galvanic Current to the eyes which enable the Electric Physician to form some opinion as to the probability of a cure. If the positive pole of a pretty powerful galvanic current be placed upon the eyelid or brow and the negative to the back of tiie neck, a blue light will be perceived, but if the poles be re- versed an orange ; and the more profuse the flow of tears after a galvanic applic; H on, the more favor 98 Electricity in Drooping of the Eyelids. able the result to be anticipated. The same hopeful prognosis may be deduced from the perception of sparks by the patients. Should, however, the above-mentioned signs fail to be produced under the action of the direct current after several attempts, there is little hope of benefit to be expected from further treatment. DROOPING OF THE UPPER EYELIDS (Ptosis) though not dangerous, is often sufficiently annoy- ing to make relief desirable. Should it be caused by over-taxing the eyes, the Faradic current will soon effect a cure, by restorin^^ the tone of the third nerve, but occasionally the affection is sympto- matic of cerebral disease, and then becomes a matter of far more importance. Where such is the case. Electricity, except as a tonic to the system in general, is rarely suitable ; constitutional treatment, combined with rest from mental work, being more calculated to arrest the disease. LOSS OF VOICE (Aphonia) is either functional or organic. The first form is prin- cipally met with in hysterical women after repeated polnft fl.nrl ntrAr-PYavfino* fVi __ ..,.Ck -XTrstrkr^ Electricity in Tumors. 99 arises, in such cases, from loss of power in the muscles connected with the vocal cords, frequently coupled with other derangements of the system, the general and local application of the Faradic current is quickly followed by permanent benefit. Should the loss of voice, however, be the result of chronic inflammation or ulceration of the larynx, Elec- tricity will not be found suitable ; constitutional treat- ment being the only means capable of restoring the parts to a healthy condition. Though we are greatly indebted to the laryngoscope for enabling us to recognize the various forms of throat diseases, still, its introduction has not been without drawback, as its use has led to an increased employ- ment of local applications of nitrate of silver (caustic), etc., which are rarely productive of benefit, and too frequently ruin the voice for life. TUMORS. Tumors may be simply divided into two classes, viz.: Non-Malignant and Malignant; and though, in the majority of cases it is easj^ for the '.veil-in- formed and experienced physician to distinguish the one from the other, still some are occasionally met with in which the most scientific medical men aie in doubt as to their true character. rr I I I i !; : I! 100 Electricity in Tumors. It is in tumors that quacks make their harvest, for with them every tumour, however simple, is a cancer. Some years ago a friend of mine, a physician in good standing, settled down in a small town where there was a notorious cancer-doctor. Having heard so much about him, he concluded to pay him a visit, to satisfy himself whether he really had any superior method of treating that dreadful disease. After introducino- him- self and explaining the object of his visit, to mv friend's astonishment the quack made him an offer to sell out to him, being afraid that the Medical Council might prosecute him for practising without a licence. My friend appeared to listen to his proposal, and the quack took him to see some twelve or fifteen cases that were then under treatment. Of these, my friend found that onl}^ two were real cancers, the remainder being different forms of non-malignant tumors. On remarking this to the quack, he coolly replied: '* That's so, that's where I have the advantage over the regular doctors ; every tumor that comas to me I declare to be malignant and therefore a cancer, and as not more than one in ten is really of that nature, if I succeed in curing the nine that are not cancers, I get credit enough to make up for the real cancer that I can do notliing for." This is the manner in wliich Electricity in Tumors. 101 the public are preyed on by such unprincipled men. I need hardly add that my friend declined to buy him out. Kon-malignant, innocent or benign tumors, as they are also termed, though at times painful and dis- tressing, are not dangerous to life. Malignant tumors, on the other hand, are such as have a tendency to destroy life, and ought to be attended to at once, as they are invariably associated with a diseased state of the blood. They should be considered as local manifestations of a general consti- tutional disturbance, and hence the folly of removing them with the knife or caustic. Such irrational treat- ment is like lopping off a branch under the idea of changing the character of the tree. The only method that has ever proved successful, is to act upon the constitution generally, thereby modifying the local disease. As this is a matter very little understood and of vast importance to thuse suffering from ailments of the kind, I will append two or three cases as illustra- tive of non-malignant and malignant tumors. Some ten or twelve years ago a fine, healthy-looking young lady, about 22 years of age, consulted me respecting a small tumor near the nipple of her left breast, which It i id 102 Electricity in TuTiiors. had been pronounced a cancer by some young doctor, whose eagerness to perform an operation was evidently greater than his experience of the disease. After careful examination, I assured her that there was not the slightest danger, that it was merely what is called "adenoid" and not malignant, and would easily be removed by proper treatment. Her mind was, how- ever, so imbued with the idea of its being a cancer, and of the necessity of having it cut out, that I had the greatest difficulty in quieting her, and it was only on my promising that if it had not entirely disap- peared within four weeks, I would remove it with the knife, that she consented to take the medicine. Before the month had elapsed, the tumor had entirely vanished under the action of a little Homoeopathic medicine. But although this case was so easily cured by the use of appropriate internal remedies, there is little doubt, that a contrary treatment would have resulted in subjecting her to considerable distress, if not danger, and an operation would have been of verj^ serious injury to her if she had later got married and had had children to nurse. The following case will show how a malignant tumor may be arrested in its growth, become latent and yet return to its original malignant character owing to improper diet. Electricity in Tumors. 103 One of those kind-hearted ladies who consider it their duty to do all the good they can, in the course of one of her errands of mercy, met with a poor colored woman suffering from cancer and brought her to my office with the request that I should take her under my care. On examination I found that it was indeed a scirrhus or hard cancer of the left breast. Of the malignant character of the tumor there could be no doubt, the breast having dwindled away just in pro- portion as the tumor increased. I explained to the lady who brought her, that the woman's only chance lay in the use of such constitutional remedies as would modify the malignant character of the tumor and arrest its growth, when, if successful, it would become a hard, inert mass. After the first three or four weeks the tumor became stationary, and then in the next three months gradually decreased to about two-thirds of its size when first seen by me, the breast resuming its natural proportions, all pain having disappeared. I then told the old woman that I had done all that I could for her, and so long as she took care of her diet she need not fear a return, but that if she ever used alcoholic beverages of any kind, or green tea, the trou- ble would be sure to re-appear. Some months later she returned, the tumor having begun to pain her 104 Electricity in Tumors. again. On enquiry I found that she had had a pound of green tea made her a present by some kind but injudicious friend, and forgetting my injunctions had been dnalcing it pretty freely for several v.eeks I prescribed the former medicines, but this time without benefit ; the system being so saturated with the villainous compounds used to color the green tea that medicine had little or no effect, and a few months' later she died at the General Hospital. I have often been asked why cancer is such an in- curable disease. The answer is a very simple one Physicians will treat it as a local disease, while it is a constitutional one. They will cut it out, ignoring its constitutional origin, instead of turning their atten- tion to finding the proper remedies that modify the constitution and thereby remove the malignant nature of the di.sea.se, reducing it from a malignant to a non- mahgnant one. Many a case have I treated in this manner with perfect success, but in order to obtain these favorable result,,, the case mu.st be taken in hand before the system has been injured by large doses of inappropriate drug-s, or the tumor irritated by salves applied under the vain delusion of scattering it. The following case may be a warning to some of those who have faith in salves. Some twelve or fifteen vears ago Electricity in Tumor 8. 106 I was attending a poor German girl in the house of a kindhearted middle-aged woman who had acted the part of the good Samaritan, in offering her a home, when one day the woman asked me to look at her breast and give her my opinion respecting a small tumor not larger than a hazel-nut near the left nipple. I explained to her tl i ' it was not malignant, but that owing to her being just at the " turn of life " it would require very careful treatment, -^.s such t'lmors were very liable, at that period, to take on a malignant character, and in fact turn into a cancer. For neveral months she followed my advice, the tumor remaining stationpry and causing her no annoyance, but un- fortunately, one day a young doctor was attending one of her boarders, and as it would cost her nothing she thought it might be as well to have hio opinion on her tumor. Acting upon the erroneous knowledge acquired at college, the young doctor urged her to scatter it, and prescribed the necessary salve, but so far from its producing the desired effect it soon increased to four times the size, owing to the irritation of the rubbing and the exciting action of the salve. Feeling uneasj^, and not liking to come to me after having acted con- trary to my advice, she consulted another phj^sician, nlTr. nn'rnT'f.n'nQ'f.olir r\f -fhck cqwiq n-r-inr^-n r\r\fns r\in.\in\ ^ .^^ -..^l^-^ 1 ! f! i i i lOG Electrudty in Twmore. prescribed precisely the same treatment, merely sub- stituting a still more irritating salve, the result of which wa* an increase in the size of the tumor Sh<. now returned to me and acknowledged her eiror in giving up my method of treatment and requested me to take her in hand again. On examination I found that the tumor which waa formerly not lai^er than a small marble had, under the improper treatment, be- come as large as an egg, and mu^h to my regret I felt compelled to inform her that treatment was useless, as the injury was irreparable. She then put heraelf under the care of a quack who promised to eat it out with a salve composed of hog's lard and white-lily root, but before the tumor was out, the woman died of exhaus- tion. Electricity has repeatedly been used with benefit in the treatment of tumors, but our experience has been too limited to warrant its being u.sed alone, carefully selected constitutional remedies being always required • the Galvano-Electric Bath, and the pure Galvanic current, by means of simple plates of silver and zinc frequently affording material assistance. Ample experience has proved, that the removal of a cancer by means of the knife or caustic is invariably followed sooner or later by a relap.se, thereby causing an in.- Elecb'icity in Goitre. 107 mense amount of unnecessary suffering, besides short- ening the life of the patient. An old physician of Lower Canada who has had a very extensive expe- rience in this disease, states that he has removed over 200 breasts for cancer, and solemnly avers that if he had his time over again he would not remove one. On the other hand, Homoeopathy has cured many cases, and aided by Electricity and Galvanism, holds out the best hopes we have in the present day for arresting or alleviating this terrible disease. m GOITRE (Bronchocele) is a tumor too well known to require description. It may be cured by Electricity, but unfortunately pa- tience and perseverance are indispensable, and hence it is that the majority of persons suffering from this ailment prefer the temporary relief afforded by the application of Iodine ointment, to the detriment of their general health, rather than strive for the more permanent results obtained by the persevering use of Electricity and Homoeopathy. NiEVUS (" Mother's Mark ") is a small tumor, or growth, formed by enlarged and ii.^ uiiaueu. uiOOvivesseis, tot wic lkhuuvhii oi wiiiuu tue ._i _ir .i.:_i- it- 108 Electricity in Ulcers. Direct Galvanic Current is strongly recommended on Wicount of its simplicity, rapidity and effectiveness. Gilt needles connected with the negative pole ar« in- serted into different parts of the nsevus, while the positive pole with the sponge-holding electrode is applied to an indifferent part in the neighbourhood In a few seconds bubbles of hydrogen gas are seen issuing around the point of each needle, while the portion of the tumor immediately adjoining the needles becomes livid, changing to a dirty whiv i. No hemorrhage ensues and no dressing is required; the crust formed dries and faUs off after a few days, leav- ing, in the case of small nasvi, no mark, and in the case of larger ones only minute white scars. XTLCERS. An ulcer, like a tumor, is but a local manifestation of a generally diseased organism, and to cure it radi- cally and scientifically the remedies should be directed Uiore toward, the general than the local condition. VVheie impoverished vitality is the cause, the general application of Electricity in the form of Faradism will be found beneficial in restoring the sys- tem to a healthy condition and then the ulcer will heal up spontaneou.sly, but if it be the result of a Electricity in Hheamaiisr n. 109 specific poison in the blood, proper internal medication will be found absolutely necessary to obtain a cure, though the Galvanic Bath may still be employed as an adjunct. BED-SORES. There is one kind of ulcer frequently met with in patients long confined to their beds, and therefore very properly termed " V)ed-sores," which has hitherto been found very difficult, to manage, but by the aid of Galvanism it is a^stonishing how quickly it may be cured. A thin plate of silver, rather larger than the sore, should be placed immediately' over tne ulcer and connected with a plate of zinc by means of an insu- lated wire ; the zinc to be placed upon any adjacent part, and if the action be found insufticient, it may be increased by covering the zinc plate with a piece of cotton cloth moistened with salt and water. A few days usually suffice to heal a sore that would other- wise have been a source of distress to the patient for as many weeks. RHEUMATISM. In the acute form, which is characterized by high fever and painful inflammation of the joints, I do not 110 Electricity in Lumbago and Sciatica. opathic remedies are infinitely more reliable ; but in the sub-acute and chronic forms, Electricity, owing to its vitalizing and purifying effects upon the human system, has long since established its claims as a very valuable remedy. Though sub-acute and chronic Rheumatism are sometimes considered sequelae of acute Rheumatism, they are more frequently distinct constitutional affec- tions; based, like all chronic diseases, upon an im- paired condition of the vital powers, or upon some taint in the blood— often upon a combination of both. They are rarely met with in infancy or youth, owing to the recuperative powers of Nature being on the ascendant during the earlier periods of life, but as middle age advances they occur more frequently, sometimes locating themselves in the muscular tissues' of the loins in the form of LUMBAGO, or on the envelope of the nerves as in SCIATICA, or affecting the fibrous textures about the joints, causing pain, stiff-ness and swelling, culminating in what is ternrifid P Elech^ity in Rheuniatic Paralysis. Ill RHEUMATIC GOUT, when, owing to the action of the muscles being im- peded, atrophy of the limb takes place, ending at times in RHEUMATIC PARALYSIS. In Lumbago, the application of the Faradic current is quickly followed by relief and cure. In Sciatica, both forms of Electricity have been used with benefit, but where the limb is atrophied, the Faradic current is always required to restore the attenuated muscles to their normal condition. These two last-mentioned diseases are very commonly con- nected with a loss of phosphates, and until this drain upon the nervous system is arrested, a permanent cure cannot be effected. In Rheumatic Gout, the results of Electricity have not proved as satisfactory as might have been ex- pected. Some cases recover quickly and permanently, while others, though as carefully treated, derive very little beriefit. Others again seem to be doing very well for a time, but the slightest indiscretion causes a relapse, when the patient, instead of patiently follow- ing up the treatment, applies to some other physician 3 112 Electricity in Prurigo and Pruritus. for relief, a proceeding not to be wondered at, when we consider the constant gnawing pain they suffer. Satisfactory results are rarely obtained unless a care- ful and judicious course of internal treatment be adopted in conjunction with the Electricity. But if Rheumatic Gout sometimes baffles our best endeavors, Rheumatic Paralysis is a form that is nearly always treated with success ; and where Elec- tricity is combined with Kinesipathy, or the movement cure, the most brilliant results are obtained ; the stiff, contracted joints soon regaining their natural action, and the attenuated muscles recoverinor their orio-inal size and strenorth. PRURIGO AND PRURITUS. These two terms are employed to denote intense itching of the whole surface or of certain parts of the body. The former is usually applied to the disease when affecting the whole frame, while the latter refers more particularly to an intensely distressing itching of the anus or adjacent ])arts. The Galvanic Bath, combined with judicious diet and appro})riate constituti(mal remedies, enables us to give permanent comfort where formerly only tempo- rary relief could be obtained from the use of lotions, salves and othei- external applications. Electricity, Nature's Own Tonic. 113 "NATURE'S OWN TONIC." In the foregoing pages I have endeavored to furnish my readers with a short but reliable description of the action of Electricity upon the human frame, and the diseases in which it has been found, by actual expe- rience, to act beneficially. The extraordinary power that it exerts upon the nervous system, particularly when in an impaired condition, has gained for it the title of " Nature's Own Tonic," and certainly nothing has yet been discovered that can be at all compared with it in restoring vital energy ; and the rapid strides that it has made in public estimation during the last few years most clearly demonstrate that it is just what is required in this age of excessive nervous tax- ation. •if CONCLUSION. TN conclusion, I will offer a few words of advice to -i- those who are desirous of improving their health and willing to make some sacrifice to regain it, if it has become impaired. The immediate causes of many of our sufferings lie much nearer than people imagine. Few are willing to believe that a large proportion of our ailments are the result of a constant use of Coffee, Tea, Tobacco and Alcoholic stimulants ; but such is really the case • and although I have too frequently found it a hope- less task to persuade persons to abandon what they know and feel to be injuring them, still the occa- sional satisfaction that I have had of seeing some few derive benefit from my advice, prompts me to enter into a few details respecting the above-mentioned injurious articles; and I will merely state, that my convictions respecting them are the result of thirty years' actual practical experience ; that anyone in- clineri to test the truth of my assertions, may easily do so, and the more carefully and the longer the investigations f>re carried on. the m/^v^i fylly ^^'^\\ :a 114 ' ^j "^ «t Coffee. II.j it be evident, that what 1 have written regarding them is " Truth, all Truth and nothing but the Truth." COFFEE, .•IS we all know, is a most agreeable and exhilarating beverage for breakfast, and were it not for the injuri*^ ous consequences that follow its continued use, many, who have been compelled to banish it from their tables, would gladly continue to drink it. The stomach is the region that it would seem principally to affect, producing, sooner or later, Indigestion, Jfeartburn. Flatulence, Palxntation of the Heart, Swimming in the Head, Constipation and the host of \ he had been drawn, that he could not summon courage to free himself from it. The reasons given by some persons for using tobacco are as extraordinary as they are amusing. One clergyman stated that he used it " to prevent his get- ting fat," while another smoked cigars to make him fat. One has a tickling in the nose calling for snuff, another a rising in his stomach if he doesn't smoke ; another a dryness of his throat if he don't chew. One individual urged as a reason for chev/ing, that a man naturally required a liUle to sweeten his mouth after dinner. A respectable lady who suffered from a pecu- liar weakness of the eyes took snuff for eleven years without deriving any benefit, but satisfied herself with the idea that no doubt she would have been much worse if she had not taken it at all. Many are ready to admit that it is filthy, disgusting and pernicious generally, but their own cases are peculiar, and to be regarded as exceptions ; but if any young man asks an old smoker whether he would ad- vise him to acquire the habit, he will invariably dissuade him from it. The only person in whom the use of tobacco might be tolerated is the old man whose active years of life are over, and whose time hangs heavily on his hands, Beer, Wine, Whwkey, ii\ VM ^ but it should never be used by the young and middle- aged who have any ambition to rise and take a place among men, on aceounc of its enervating influence upon the nervous system, its tendency to deteriorate mind and body and its proneness to lead men into the habit of using intoxicating liquors. BEER, WINE, WHISKEY AND OTHER ALCOHOLIC STIMULANTS. Until the prevalent but erroneous idea that alco- holic beverages such as Beer, Porter, Wine, Brandy, Whiskey, etc., are strengthening and beneficial to the human race is rooted out of the minds of people, temperance organizations, " Dunkin Acts" and the labors of philanthropic men will avail but little in stemming the tide of intemperance, disease and pre- mature death that prevails around us. Novels and other light literature tend to maintain the idea by ex- citing narratives of exhaustion and narrow escapes from destruction by the timely aid of a " horn oi' brandy," and physicians themselves, who should know better, too frequently assist in propagating the notion that stimulants are strengthening by the reckless manner in which they prescribe them, notwithstand- ing the urgent remonstrances of so many of the lead- ing physicians of the day to the contrary. m m Il i ■ 132 Beer, Wine, Whiskey, d-c. Sir Benjamin Brodie, Dr. Chambers, Sir James Clark, Dr. Marshall Hall and many of the most emi- nent medical men in England testified openly that : " An opinion, handed down from rude and ignorant times, and imbibed by Englishmen from their youth, had become very general, that the habitual use of some portion of alcoholic drink, as of wine, beer, or spirit was beneficial to health, and even necessary for those subjected to habitual labor ; whereas, anatomy, phy- siology and the experiences of all ages and countries, when properly examined, had satisfied every mind well informed in medical science, that the above opi- nion was altogether erroneous : that man, in ordinary health, like other animals, did not require any such stimulants, and could not be benefited by the habitual employment of any quantity of them, large or small ; nor would their use during his life-time increase the aggregate amount of his labour, but that in whatever quantity they were employed, they would rather tend to diminish it'' Sir Astley Cooper, the celebrated surgeon, also asserted : " We have all been in error in prescribing Wine as a Tonic. Ardent spirits and poison are convertible + ^«v«c. " Thp Qfinmnihia a-ixran a.Q 0)/)f at.Vfi.niinflt n.nd IS Bea; Wine, Whwhey, d-c. 133 invariably followed by a corresponding depressionf which leaves the patient ivorse than at first. And yet, in direct opposition to the opinion of these men of undoubted learning and lengthened experience, we continually hear medical men talking of Beer as nourishing and Wine as strengthening. Moreover, as if to prove the truth of the old proverb that " the devil could quote scripture for his own pur- poses," that sacred volume is used not only to excuse, but as an authority for drinking ; but while the advice "to take a little wine for the stomach's sake" is repeatedly urged, very rarely do we hear the warning passage cited : " Wine is a mocker, strong drink is raging, he that is deceived thereby is not wise ;' and oven allowing that St. Paul's advice to Timothy may have been judicious in his day, the latter is undoubt- edly more applicable to the state of society at the l)resent time. Whether a man drink ale, porter, wine or spirits, it is the alcohol that acts upon him, and the persistent effects of alcohol are mental and physical disease and premature death. Many persons imagine that alcohol gives strength, and we hear feeble persons saying that they are " kept up uy stiinuiants," whereas quite the contrary is the i:h Beer, Wine, Whiskey, dc II » truth, for they are in reality ke2)t doivn by thrm. The sensation they derive from tlie immediate action of the stimulant deceives them and leads them to attribute temporary yood to what, in the majority of cases, is pei-manent evil. During the first stages of its action it may enable a wearied oi* feeble organiza- tion to do brisk work for a short time ; it may make the mind briefly brilliant ; it may excite muscle to quick action ; but as it affords no sustenance, and does not replace the worn-out substance it must inevitably tend to ultimate destruction. Like a fire, it makes a brilliant sight, but leaves a desola! -i behind. The first symptom that attracts attention, after alcohol has been taken, is increased action of the heart, it beats more quickly and the pulse rises, in propor- tion to the amount taken. From careful computations by eminent men, it has been ascertained, that after taking one fluid ounce of alcohol the heart beats 430 times more during the first day. On increasing the dose to two fluid ounces the second day, it beats 1,872 times more, and the follow- ing day, after taking four fluid ounces, the heart beats 12,960 times more ; and yet in the face of such facts there are some physicians who will still assert that alcohol retards the waste of the human frame. Beer; Wine, WImkey, dx. 135 If a man were to walk up to an engineer and say : " My friend, the more quickly you drive your engine along the road, the less will be the wear and tear,'' the probability is that the engineer's answer would be : " My friend, if that is all you know about it, the quicker you shut up the better, for you are only mak- ing a display of your ignorance, experience having j)roved the very reverse." Unfortunately for the human race it is more easy to prove the fact with regard to an engine, where the question of dollars and cents is involved, than in the comparatively less valua- ble life of a human being. Those who have travelled in cold climates testify that Alcohol destroys the natural heat of the body, and therefore; "to take a drop to keep out the cold" is a grievous fallacy ; and one to which many a death has justly been attributed. Alcohol is a dangerous instrument even in the hands of the strong and wise, and a murderous instr!i- ment in the hands of the foolish and weak. " It des- troys the vital organs, renders the course of the cir- culation slow, imperfect and irregular, suggesting the call for more stimulation, and by tempting the renewal of the evil ruins the mechanism of the frame long before the time for iis natural decay. lie wno uses 136 Heer, Wine, Whiskey, tS:c. it in so-called muderation frequently fails to recognize the deterioration that is slowty going on in him. He may perhaps complain of feeling more sensitive to the changes of the seasons, and looks anxiously for the return of the life-giving summer ; the autumn is dreary tj him and the first months of spring produce a feeling of depression and relaxation, hut still he cannot imagine these feelings to be the result of the moderate amount of stimulants that he takes. Later, neuralgic, rheumatic or gouty pains, according to the individi^al constitution, torment him, and long before the natural period for cessation from active work has arrived the man is an old man. Where alcohol has been used to greater excess, and organic disease has been produced, the result is the failure of some one important organ, such as the Ijart, the lung, the kidney or the brain Disease of the heart is commonly met with in those who use alcoholic stimulants, either in the form of fatty degeneration or dropsy ; when life is rarely pro- longed beyond a few months. It is a constant com- plaint of those afflicted in this manner that " nothing does them any good now," by which they mean that the stimulant once so enicacious in affording them temporjiry relief is at last a failure; when a menial I Blier, Wine, Whislnj, PAGE. 69 s 3a 33 74 24 55 III 107 107 "5 27 91 81 52 53 5 77 112 112 98 109 54 91 III 26 139 65 47 57 71 65 93 116 91 126 99 lOI lOI 85 108 93 46 131 131 35