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Address.

JAMA. 1899;XXXII(25):1403-1406. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.02450520001001.
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PRESIDENT'S ADDRESS.  BY A. R. MITCHELL, M.D.LINCOLN, NEB.Through all time men have suffered for opinion's sake. Those who failed to accept prevailing opinions were "has beens." Those who did not accept new dogmas for established facts were and are not progressive. Those who see in the works of the fathers demonstrated truths, are not up to date. Men with opinions not in harmony with the prevailing tendency are agitators and disturbers of that harmony which, fostered by a desire to be "in the swim," must be unruffled. In our profession—always lauded for its harmoniousness—there has arisen, within the last decade, a sentiment of oneness, of sweet charity, and a disinterested (let us hope) desire to embrace each other in the name of Esculapius. My distinguished predecessor, in his excellent address last spring, reading the signs of the times, painted in roseate colors the rising sun of the coming

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