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ARTICLE |

MAGNETIC HEALERS.

JAMA. 1899;XXXIII(15):921. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.02450670047010.
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ABSTRACT

We publish elsewhere in this issue in full a recent decision of the Appellate Court of the Third District of Illinois that seems to be important as defining the status of a certain class of irregular practitioners. It clears the air a little, though our courts are still befogged with "Christian Science" and Dowieism. It would not seem to be an unjustifiable extension of the principle, to call the anointing, etc., indulged in by some of these, also "manual treatment" and put them in the same category with the magnetic healers. In any case, the Illinois medical law should be amended and improved by striking out the exceptions made in favor of "purely mental or spiritual" means of cure. It is worthy of note in this connection that, according to newspaper reports, the health authorities in Chicago are inclined to attribute the present alarming increase of diphtheria, etc., at least

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