The problems of medical practice and of the cost of medical care are today like a patient suffering with a superfluity of advisers, some scientific, some logical, some informed; others ignorant, biased or with the one sided perspective of the situation that a chiropractor has in studying the ailments of the human body. Finding a lack of competent and, perhaps, of entertaining writers among those who are informed on the subject, popular periodicals have accepted the contributions of the propagandists and loud-speakers. The yawping, sneering, exaggerated and, indeed, comical lucubrations of T. Swann Harding, who admits that he wrote a hundred and ten articles last year, have stirred a few physicians to anger, but have been met in general by the medical profession with yawns and with pity for the editors. Are these contributions really worthy of space in periodicals that are presumed to be devoted to thought and sound