SOTS «b*t hâve been reclaimed from the disease, and whose names 

 hâve been tendered me for référence. „ fwll :-i, 



llthough there is but <me Catarrh yet, like fever, of whwh 

 tbertisbûf eue, it assumes a variety of types, shades and forms. 

 T Z h of thèse, authors, wbo bave pretended to define be *, 

 el, bave given a favorite name ofdes.gnaf.cn : sud* as Hay 

 "Rose" "Dry," and "Periodic" Catarrh, te. Hay Oatarrn 

 dérive; its came from tbe fact, tbat it appears about the tome of 

 "hay ng," so called, continning for one or two months and tben 

 disaTearing. " Periodic» may arise at aoy Urne, but rs gener- 

 XS cluration. "Dry Catarrh" is shnply a solecsm, as 

 would be tbe term " dry déluge." 



The "Eose Catarrh" obtains ,ts cognomen from tbe mrcum 

 st ance tbat the odor of the rose exerts a spemfic agency m settmg 



!* "il! tbese varieties arc but changes or modifications cfCatarrir 



remédies to peculiar symptoms as they are developed. 



WHA.T IS CATAKRH? 



Itisnotwbat médical bocks and physicians bave described 



• M w Tbcir heory of it is a fallacy-delusion-a hypotbesis 



n v I»s cri'mTs no't in any cf the tocalities, organs or fissues 



\ a t„Ttli gênerai featurcs do not answer to thefiesenp- 

 asenbed toi . *|«^ ^ and effect _„ r rather, on- 



T g fi loca tfect" bave been mest strangely transpose* 



;re^^:-i^Hrthe^,toc,th p a/ 1 t wa sin- 



0Ur Tbc follcwing are seme cf tbc ^ Tf^tri^- 

 :SrpÏrrtt:rnn:—d y b r eathin gt brougbone 



