Malaria.—Tenacity varies according to climatic conditions. Malarial cachexia always yields slowly, sometimes defies adjustment altogether. No reports are to be had on pernicious malaria. Other forms recover though paroxysms tend to recur several times before checked, but of shorter duration than if no adjustment is given.

Mastoiditis.—Good results in the few cases observed.

Measles.—Excellent. Recovers quickly. Eruption hastened by early adjustment, runs very mild course with little or no fever, catarrhal symptoms disappear early. No sequelae.

Meniere’s Disease.—Labyrinthine disease of this character has been cured, without reported failures, but data is meagre, not more than three or four cases having come under the author’s notice.

Menorrhagia—Metrorrhagia.—Results excellent, and usually quick. One fifty-two-hour intermenstrual hemorrhage from uterus was stopped in one hour by adjustment, with no recurrence.

Migraine.—Migraine, or hemicrania, gives a fair prognosis only. Most cases require a long course of adjustments.

Movable Kidney.—Prognosis good, but change of position and complete fixation slow. No treatment required—merely adjustment.

Myelitis.—Transverse myelitis, if adjusted in the acute stage, may be checked as any other inflammation, and the damage and resulting paralysis will be greatly lessened or altogether prevented. The paralyses which follow myelitis require time for the rebuilding of the degenerated axons whose course is interrupted at the diseased area, but tend to recover.

Myocarditis.—Reports conflict. It is well to consider this a grave condition and one open to investigation.