n;i.\ I:MIM\ OF SCAKLE'l 



*> robbed over the face ai well 



;LS over the Uxly ' 



Rev ary although this treatment may 



appear, I have received a large body of 



lence from experts to the effect that the pro- 

 fession recognises its greu Correspondents 

 describe it as " the most tremendous revolution 

 ever proposed in medicin< 'an epoch-making 

 experience/' "revolutionary, but a great blessing 

 both t< rofession and to the (ml Two 

 doctors remarked, \ is our hospital system 

 U doomed.' 1 Two speak of *' your most instnu - 

 o," and suggest that it should be re- 

 nted specially for the use of medical missionaries 

 in China. Ac. The point that seems to 

 have struck most of my correspondents is that my 

 treatment does away with the necessity for isola- 

 :i. The practice of medicine text-books state 

 that rigid isolation for at least six or eight weeks 

 must be carried out even in the mildest cases 

 of scarlet fever. That, of course, is the doctrine 

 in which all of us have been brought up, and 

 probably requires some courage and ii to 

 fly in the face of i: Yet I am convinced and 

 I hope that the experience, as already report 

 will go far to prove to my medical brethren that 

 such isolation is wholly unnecessary in dealing 

 with sr 



