The Exeter Times, 1886-4-1, Page 3k1
YOUNG FOLKS.
A Spelling. LUND..
People, m a rule, are particular abort
having their narnpelled oorteotlY, and
they ore not to be blanied for eheir prefer•
mom, yQU may make the orbitooratio
Smythe ailife.long enemy by.,writhig his in
• the plebeian Wham— Suakin Here ie a
poet-enaster who wits extremely anxious 'to
hove the name of his city spelled properly :
The pest.master at Buffo, in making Fp
the men for Binghamton, persisted in an.
Sorting the "p» in addresaing the peohage,
though the Binghamton postnnaater had
written to him: on the isabjeot, explained
that the "p" Should bo omitted, and apked
thet the correction be nude. The ileffelo
pistol:miter peid o ,attention to the re,
quo% °antler:dog to addreea the packager: as
before, and fleetly the Binghamton man, a
somewhat poppy individual, got mad.
He had to addreee a mail package to Buf-
falo daily, and, of ter mailbag it up, he wrote
upon the otre in loig lettere the word
13uffalopadding beneath it the Ines -
"There 1 How do you Illie ta have the
name of your old town opened with a
too?'
It ie meld thee thin reformed the Buffelo
official.
Steering' by litotherhi Light.
Be put hie hands to hie month Re If lee
had placed a speaking -trumpet there, and
then ahouted tbrough them,
" Hul—lo ! Hul—lo—o—o 1"
There was no answer eave that (if the
heavy swaeh of the see, at his feet. Neither
waa there anything to be seen, only a vied
thiok curtain of gray miat falling every-
where over the sea.
He made another epeaking.trumpet with
his hands and shouted again, but there was
no response. Neither did the fog break be-
fore his piercing cry. Sullen and gray it
hung down over the OM
"1 don't see," mid Pierre, "where the
fishing boats are. And, of course, it don't
rlo any good to ea, but then, when one
don't know what to do, why—why he will
try anything. Guess I will go into the
house and eee mother."
He walked up the hard eandy beach,
glimbed the hatnmooks in the rear, and then
dropped down into a oosy valley that several
aged willows overshadowed. 'Under one of
them trees wae Pierre's home.
"Any word from the boats 2' :raked a
musical yoke.
"That is mother," thought Pierre
She wag stooping over the fire of drift-
wood that ahe had, begun to make on the
broad and blackened hearth.
" Any news from the boats ?" she asked
again. "It is time for the fishermen to be
at home.''
"Nothing," he said.
"Threeboats went out, Pierre—Iaaw them
go—your father's, your unole Louis' and
your uncle Pierre's."
Yee, three boats had gone to the fishing
grounds just off a rough, rooky point—three
boats rocking on the realms, surging ma.
"Four of the neighbors went with your
uncle LouteAte-
" I know Pan mother. All men in that
boat."
"And Cosette went in your fatherh,"
"Yes, and she is as good as a man in a
boat."
"Good as a man !" Cosette, Pierre's big
slater, could manage a beat better than some
refl.
Bs:sides Cosette, two others of the family
were in that boat—Clem and Victor, Pierre a
big brothers strong and muscular.
14I saw the boats off the point, mother,
two hours a o, and I could see Corsette stand.
ing in the f ru of father's boat. Uncle
Pierre's et eller out, ite aail set, and the
boat was einem g away."
"God keep I hem!" murmured the mothen
"1 don't like to have them late when the
sea is rough. God keep them!'
"1 will go out and see how things look
now."
He soon came back and reported that the
fog seemed to be mattering and the wind
eking.
"Could you hear the waves off the Big
Rook ?"
"Yea, I could hear them."
The mother sighed again and again. The
waves off "Big Rook" meant the suif
around a lofty ehoreoledge at high.tide ; and
when a storm was appro:ching, the agite,-
tion of the sea about this ledge was very
violent and poky. She went to the door,
listened, and then slowly climbed the worn
stairway leading to her little oheneber un-
der the roof.
"1 think I will go up shire," she mutt
mured.
"It won't do any good, mother," cried
Pierre, who knew what she proposed to do.
"1 wish you only thought it would,
Pierre."
She lighted a lamp, set it in the narrow
window and then bowed her head in prayer,
It was her habit on stormy nights and Pierre
had °animals, joked about it, and yet it
was only talk on the surface. The terrible,
wrath of the sea awed bine; and if hie
pride had not prevented, he would have de-
clared his purpose to look to that God who
holds wind and wave alike bible grasp.
While a mother at home wag praying by
the lighted leanp mule at SOS were watching
It. The three teats he,d been bewildered
in the fog. Two of them had stumbled on N
little island, in one of whose coves they.
sought shelter for the night. Tho boat be.
longing to Pierre's father had not been so
fortunate. When the Wind rose and the
fog scattered, Cosette's keen eyes Were
turned in mien)/ direction, searching for
some r' .a guiding light.
"Oh, , a See !" ohe cried, pointing
toward
tt.
_ :flash of gold' off Ott the water's
edge.
"Make for that," replied her father.
The bow of the boat was pointed toward
that golden spark. Slowly but steadily
they advaimed through the rough waters,
and the boat was beached in a little shelter.
ed nook not far from, the home under the
willows,
"Here we are 1" shouted Victor) at the
door of the home. •
"Ohi thank God 1" cried the .nother,
coming dowa the stairway,her lomp in her
' head. "Oh, hotly:lid you get here ?"
"We steered by mother' light,' Bald
Coriette, "We saw it in the window,
though we did not know what it WLIB Out
there."
"Ah !" thought Nevem "it is time 1
were steering by motherht light," When he
lay down that night, he firse knelt and ask-
ed God to gaide him over life's rough ma,
The menthe went rapidly by. The cold,
hard blade of winter drove across the am,
and like plows they turoed up the &tit
weters, Then C31110 spring, with its eofter
eke, and the longer days kindled in the
sky that longer' light in which the sea rolled
end fleshed like it vent motel. Sluing,
though, did not noftea the cough that had
attacked Pierre and with which he vainly
vvre idled,
44 He can't Ilve eong," said the old doe -
ter ai the family "he gut4Y fto any day'
Opo stormy night the boy lay dying;
fathom, mother, Cottet Vlotort COMell•
the, gathered, in teare shoathis bed,
Pierre was wondering in hie thoughts; he
fancied ha was far eff on the sem The
waves, he eaid, wee runniug high,
"Dont you be afraid f " h id itt
o 0a
Id,
tome, looking rooted on tlemie who wept
at his side, "1 ahall—make—harbor
ateering by mother'.—light ;" and guided
by prayer, eteering by a motherh light, the
&her. boy quickly reaoleed Inimical end
home.
P4R$ONAlp,
----
Vice Chemellor Becton is the oldest
Judge on the hearth in England, He ie 88
yeAre old, and liremarkebly well preserved,
Mr, Thomas A, Edison vela spend oix
weeks in Florida with bis leride, and prob,
ably will not return to New Yorh city be.
fore the middle of Meg.
Jackson J. Hill of Ste Peul, Minn., is
mod to own the finest collection of diamonds
in the United Slates, and hie hien& speak
of him as the "'reek of Disimoncle,"
U. 8. Seoretery Lamar i le credited wale
haying lately rebuked Colonel Ingereoli for
his aggreseive infidelity, and expreeaed it
hope thatehe will some day bmome A Chris-
tian preaoher.
Qum Natalie Is said to be the most
beautiful wonaan in Servia ; but unless she
is gronly libeled by the lately extant pia.
tures of her, the atateraent is pretty rcugh
on the other Sandan woman.
Mr. John 'Dew, the father of the young
clergymsn to whom Mise Mary Gladstone
was married, is one of the most active and
ardent Conservatives in Devonehire, and it
Tory of the stern and unbending typo.
It is eaid that Thebaw, the ex•King of
Burmah, never touches liquor, and that „the
ufficere of the vessel whion took him to his
place of exile tried to tempt him with every
kind of drink, from gin to champagne, with.
out effect.
A celebrated Italian autress and singer,
Blanca Donadio, intends to take the veil.
She belongs to a devout Parisian family,
and during her stay in Florence, whore ehe
hag been lately acting, she Bent all the
flowers given to her on the stage to the
churches.
Count Herbert Blamer:ill is not to go as
German .A.nabaasador to England. He is
the right-hand man of his father in the
Berlin Foreign Office, and will stay there,
reaey to become the head of the depart-
ment on the Chaim:110es death or retire-
ment.
Mr. James E. Murdooh, the veteran
actor, at the age of 76 enjoys good health
and the posseeeion of unirat aired hankie&
He has a pleasant home at Cincinnati, where
he likes to reoeive visitors and discuss the
past and the present of theiAmerican stage.
The Pall Nall Gazette is being sued for
libel by Mrs. Broughton, at whose hone°
Jenrette made the arrangement whioh led to
the abduction of Elie). Armetrong and her
iubsequent impriaonment by ' Stead and hie
aseociates. His enemies assist the woman
with her snit.
Police Justice George A. Meech of Chica-
go, who hag brought a libel suit against the
Rev. Dr, Kittredge, in it eon of the officer
who in the War of 1812 commanded the
privateer " General Armstrong," and
through his mother a descendant of Wil-
liam Brewster, who was one of the company
of the Mayflower.
Dr. Henry Collier, a Georgia, dentiet, was
set upon the other night by three neglects,
who demanded his money. Putting his
hand in his pocket and saying, "Well, I
suppose Ill have to give it to you," Dr.
Collier pulled a pistol and did give it to
them. He killed one, wounded another,
captured the third and marohed him to the
lookup. The fourth footpad was leaky
enough to get away.
Miss Cleveland has adopted for use in her
correepondence a crest whioh is a copy of
the, new seal recently provided for the
President, and ahowe the bald-headed eagle,
not with wings outstretohed ts formerly,
but with his wearied pinions at rest; upon
the breast ot the eagle rests the familiar
shield, with les thirteen stripes and thirteen
stare. The °rest is printed in dead gold
and below it appear the words, "The Presi-
dent's House"
The Qum hat taken the recent lecture
of the Standard to heart and is emerging
from her long seclusion. Being, in town for
the drawing -room this week she drove
three separate days in the park. She has
further promised to attend public conven-
tions he the eity, and if she will consent to
ante -date her jubilee, that celebration may
take place this summer. It is hoped that
she will undertake royal progress through
the great towns.
Sir. Henry Jamee, London Iruth says, it
the vie:Min of a smut repartee. His oppo-
nent atBury Imid that he so greatly re-
spected. ord Salisbury, that if he we re to
li
pr.,o Rule, he should vote in favor
of it. Sir enry replied that he respected
Mr. Gladstone quite as much, but that if
it hundred Gladetonee were to propose Home
Rule, he should vote against it. Sir Henry
wrote to the chairman of his committee to
ask him whether, under the present circum-
stances, this utterance precluded him from
joining Mr. Glad:donate adminietration.
The chairman replied that it did.
Prince Krapotkine, the learned and
famous anatchist, recently released from it
French prison, has decided to make his
home in Hampstead, Eng., and expects to
spend there in peace and quietude the clos-
ing years of his edventurous and troubled
life. He intends, however, bofore resuming
hie duties, to make.a tour,of England and
America for the purpose of delivering a
series of leottires, 'in which he will define
his own via we upon moialisin and deseribe
the present aspect of the revolutiohary
r
vi
movement throughout the world owed
from the inside.
Prince Pascal de Bourbouri, brot er of the
extking of Naples, hat just figured in a po-
lice court, being charged with fraud in giv-
ing a mortgage for $160,000 upon his villa
which he had already mortgaged to its full
value of $39,000. The PrITIOt3 set up a de-
fenoe that he received no money ooneidera.
don for the mortgage, but wine which he
sold and only realized $10,000, The mort.
gagers tried to tell the villa and extort the
full amount of the mortgage, but the prime
was ocquitted on the ground that no intern
tion to commit fraud had been proven,
gel he it chola i on
In the Norehnvest hes boon euppreseed and
our citizens men nOW devote reasonable at.
tention to their mem. The only sure, safe,
and painless remedy is Putout's Painiess
Corn Extneeter. It never fails,; haver
makes gore epots wore° that the original
dlsooinfort. See that you get " Patualn'o,'
and take none °then
It is feared that the Swedish Minister
Kjoiti will never bi it protoanced emcees,
iiBASONABLE LAUGHS..
We disapprove of bratundrille, The
aveeage woman °ail wield o broom too well
airZedlYetY. le Mit like a ple. There an
. .
upper oruat and it lower crust, but the real
aerength and aubetaime iks between them.
A recent writer gaps that inoineration of
the dead in common in Alaake. An ice.
oreamvition melee certainly be °eater there
than burial.
Flipkins was passing alovg the street
and eaw it trunk outeide the door of at
dealer, beariag the legend : "This aim for
$10," "So do I," eaid Flipleine.
A Milian woman is said to have peured
hot water alto her huuband's ar, S)1110
huebands would not object to euch a pro-
ceeding providing it deafened them.
" A sr amen washed overboard," eoolainin
ed Mrs, lean& as she read a newspaper
headlice ; "but he perhaps was co dirty
they hadn't enough water on the ship,"
"My dear," said a photographer to bin
wife, as he scoured his plate with hie nap-
kin, "1 do wish you could teach Bridget
to wipe diehes by the dry -plate primese.'
Women are liable to make many mistakes,
but not oae of them, at haat no white
woman, ever geta BO far wrong that ohe putts
pulverized charcoal OD her face instead of
pearl powder.
An old womeito fainted a few days ago
at her firat sightldf it locomotive and rail-
way trein. The eight of a fashionable
woman% train would undoubtedly haye
driven her oraze.
" Is there any dauger of the boa mut:trim
tor biting me ?" eeked a lady visitor at the
Z3'ologioal Garden. "Not the least marm,"
oried the showman. Ho never bites ; he
swallows his wham whole,"
Miss Hamilton "And so you enjoyed
your tour of Earcpe ?" lilies Toronto :
"Oh I indescribably.' "Did you see the
egueducks in Rome 2" "Yea, and they
ts wam beantif ally." "Swam ! What swam?"
"The aquaoluoks, of course."
Pablio Speaker (to reaoittr)--" You told
me that you tcok all the points I made in
my speech yesterday, and here you have
only got two lines, simply saying that I
addressed the meeting. And I spoke at
least an hour." Reporter—" I assure you
sir, that every point you made la in my re-
port. "
Court Officer (whiapering in magietratele
ear) : "A couple outaide wants you to
join them." Jlfagiatrage " Sh I Tell 'em
I'll be around the corner in five minutes:"
Court Officer: "It's it young couple, sir,
as wants to get married." Magietrate :
"Oh! tell 'ern they'll have to wait until
the court is adjourned."
The wind is always tempered to the
shorn lamb. In the bleak climate of St.
Paul, where an editor would naturally
freeze to death several times esch winter,
kind Providence induces his subscribers to
bring libel suits to warm him up. One
paper in that city has fourteen suits, and
the editor works in his shire eleeves on the
coldest days.
b.
How to get Strong.
Darr.b.bells and horizontal bars, Indian
club and the trapeze are valuable under
certain conditkne, but they are detrimental
'tether than benefioial if the blood is poor
and thin and pelsoned with bile. Uao ot the
muscles necessitates waste as well as induces
growth. If the blood does not carry enffl.
client nutritive material to repair the waste,
lose of strength necesearily follows, and
growth is out of the question. Purity and
enrioh your blood with Dr. Pierce's' "Gold-
en Medical Discovery" and then exercise
will develop° and not consume your phy-
sique.
"Mother, whet is an angel ?" "My
dear, it is alittlegirl with wings, who flies."
"But I heard Papa telling the governess
yesterday that she was an angel, Will
she fly?" "Yes, my dear; she will fly
away the first thing to -morrow."
The publishers of the Canadian Exhibitor,
which is to be issued ae it journal of the Ca-
nadian department of the Colonial and ra-
dian Exhibitien, have received from Sir
Charles Tupper permission to have the pa-
per printed in the Cenadian department of
the building, where the cffias will be it bu-
reau of information regardirg Canada.
The paper will be a Canadian product from
the ink, type, paper and press on which it
imprinted to the artiolesancl advertisements.
It will be illustrated by Canadian engrav-
ings, &gigging our cities' ocenery, °ton
tend the articles that appear in it will be re-
printed in the form of it memorial volume
to be sent out as a souvenir to public libra-
ries, boards of trade and mercantile bodies
throughout the Eraplre to convey a know-
ledge of Canada. This volume will ern.
brace the whole Dominion and will include
the information given in the handbook le-
aned by the Dominion Government. Ham-
ilton, Montreal and other cities have al-
ready made arrangements to have special 11-
luetrated descriptions in the journal and
the memoriel volume. Statiatios are aleo be-
ing compiled by the Toronto Board of Trade
ehowing the city's progrees during the last
fifteen yeare. The Eduoation Department
have also decided to have their deecription
of the educational eyetem of Ontario includ-
ed he the volume.
The first flowers of epring—Those which
your wife °elects far her Ender bonnet.
Do not take Pills or Powders a on tsining
Calomel fine at tem time of the yea r. the re-
sult may be serione. If ou require a do. it of
physic take Dr. Carsim's Stomach and Con-
stipation 13 It. s ; it acis gently on the Bovvels,
purifies the Blood, improves ths o reulati.n
etimulates the 'Aver aud leideeys, and speed-
ily mires Biliousnees, Headache, Dyspepsia,
Indizestion. Search the Drug billies fain ono
end of Canada to the other. mid you cermet
fled a remedy equal to it. Try it and use it in
your families. cold eYcnywhele in large
bottles at 50 cents.
Paper is being need tee a substitute for
wood. It is also being used as a :substitute
for rail:loads and mining companies.
A Peck of Peas (P's).
Hero are a Peak of Pea% tweet Peas, if
you will. Perseverance, Patience, Proropt
nese, Proficiency, Push and Politeness. Add
to these Dr, Pierce's "Pleasant Purgative
Pellets" and yen will get well through the
world without much trouble. The Pelleta
prevent constipation and surplus of tho bile
*Mole load to many different complainte.
Enclosed in glase, always fresh, entirely veg.
eeable, prompt and perfectly harmlees,
Any druggist.
Thomeevillo, Ga , in called "the garden
city of the South." it is the seediest place
In that mitten,
De. Sego's Catarrh Remedy surpasses all.
The pugiliet t who strikee out qtickly
believer, In the immediate delivery tie stem.
Imperial Cough Drops win give
Podia:ye and 'intent Relief to theme suffering
from Colds, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, etm,
and aro invaluable to oratord and vocalists,
For sale by druggieta and confeetieners.
R. T, W A '1C 80 N, Mearefaatarers,
Tomb:,
A.P,h73
5' 110TELESURGICAL INSTITUTE
No. 663 Blain Street, BILTFIEALO, N, V,
Not a Hospital, but a pleasant Remedial Home, organized with
A FULL STAFF OF EIGHTEEN PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS,
And exclusively devoted to the treatment of all Chronic Diseases.
This imposing Establishment was designed and erected to accommodate the large number of invalids who visit Buffalo from
every State and Territory, as well as from many foreign lands, that they may avail themselves of the professional services or
the Stair of skilled specialists in medicine and surgery that compose the Faculty of this widely -celebrated institution.
A F iR AND BUSINESS -LIKE OFFER TO INVALIDS.
We earnestly invite you to come, see and examine for yourself, our institutions, appliances, advantages and success in curing
chronic diseases. Have a mind of your own. Do not listen to or heed the counsel of skeptical friends or jealous physicians, who
know nothing of us, our systera of- treatment, or MeallS of cure, yet who never lose an opportunity to misrepresent and endeavor
to prejudice people against us. We are responsible to you for what, we represent, and if you come and visit us, and flnd that
we have misrepresented. in any particular, our enstitutions, advantages or success, we will promptly refund to you
alt expenses of your trip. we court bonest, sincere investigation, have no secrets, and are only too glad to show all
Interested and candid people what we are doing for suffering humanity.
NOT ALWAYS NECESSARY TO SEE PATIENTS.
By our original system of diagnosis, we can treat many chronic
diseases just as successfully without as with a personal con-
sultation. While we are always glad to see our patients, and
become acquainted with them, show them our institutions, and
familiarize them with our system of treatment, yet we have not
seen* one person in ilve hundred whom we have cured. The per-
fect accuracy with which scientists are enabled to deduce the
most minute particulars in their several departments, appears
almost unmet -nous, if we view it in the light of the early ages.
Take, for example, the eleutro-magnetie telegraph, the greatest
invention of the age. Is It not a marvelous degree of accuracy
which enables an operator to exactly locate a fracture in a sub-
marine cable nearly three thousand mile.s long? Our venerable
"clerk of the weather ' has become so thoroughly familiar with
the most wayward elements of nature that he can accurately
predict their movements. He can sit in Washington and foretell
what the weather will be la Florida or New York as well as if
several hundred miles did not intervene between him and the
places named. And so in all departments of modern science,
what is required is the knowledge of certain
signs. From these scientists deduce accurate con-
clusions regardless of distance. So, also, in medi-
cal science, diseases have certain unmistakable
signs, or symptoms, and by reason of this fact, We
have been enabled to originate and perfect a sys-
tem of determiningwith the greatest accuracy,
the nature of chronic diseases, without seeing and personally
examining our patients. In recognizing diseases without a
personal examination of the patient, we claim to posses,s no
miraculous powers. We obtain our knowledge of the patient's
disease by the practical application, to the practice of medi-
cine. of well-established principles of modern science. And it
is to the accuracy with which this system has endowed us that
we owe our almost world-wide reputation of skillfully treating
lingering or chronic affections. This system of practice, and
the marvelous success which has been attained
through it, demonstrate the fact that diseases
display certain phenomena, which, being sub-
jected to selentlile analysis, furnish abundant
and unmistakable data, to guide the judgment
of the skillful practitioner aright in determining
the nature of diseased conditions. The most ample resources
for treating lingering or chronic diseases, and the greatest skill,
are thus placed within the easy reach of every invalid, however
distant he or she may reside from the physicians making the treat-
ment of such affections a specialty. Full particulars of our origi-
nal, scientific system of examining and treating patients at a dis-
tance are contained in "The laeoplees Common Sense
Medical Adviser.s, By B. V. Pierce, 31!. D. 1000 pages and
over 300 colored and other illustrations. Sent, post-paid, for $1.50.
Or write and describe your symptoms, inclosing ten cents in
stamps, and a complete treatise, on your particular disease, will
be sent you, with our terms for treatment and all particulars.
MARVELOUS
SUCCESS.
OUR Ent Lan S
NASAL, THROAT
AND
LOC DISEASES.
Recognizing the fat that no great institu-
tion dedicated exclusively to the treatment
of chronic' diseases, would meet the needs of
the afflicted of our land, without the most
perfect, Complete and extensive provision for
the most improved treatment of diseases
of tne air -passages and lungs, such as
Chronic Nasal <Catarrh, Laryng..
itis, Bronchitis, Asthma, and Consumption, wei,have
mado this branch of our institution ono of the leading Depart-
ments. We have every kind of useful instrument for examining
the organs involved, such as rhinoscopes, laryngoscopes, stetho-
scopes, spirometers, etc., etc., as well as all of the most approved
kinds of apparatus for the application of sprays, fumigations,
atomizations, pulverizations, inhalations, and all other forms of
approved medicinal applications.
iffe publish three separate books on Nasal, Throat and Lung
diseases, viz.: A Treatise on Consuraption, Laryngitis and Bron-
chitis; price, postpaid, ten cents; A treatise on Asthma, or
Phthisie, giving new and successful treatment ; price, postpaid,
ten cents; A treatise on Chronic Nasal Catarrh, price, postpaid,
tive cents.
Dyspepsia, 56 /Aver Conn plainnes Ob.
-DISEASES OF rhea, Tape -worms. and kindred affections
@Ululate copstipati on, chronic Dior.
are among those chronic diseases in the sue-
DISESTIO cessful treatment of which our specialists have
N. attained unparalleled success. Manyof the dis-
eases affecting the liver and other organs con-
tributing in their functions to tho process of digestion, are very
obscure, and are not infreqently mistaken by both laymen and
physicians for other maladies, and treatment is employed directed
to the removal of a disease which does not exist. Our Complete
Treatise on diseases of the Digestive Organs will be sent to any
address on receipt of ten cents en postage stamps.
ISREGIIT9S DISEASE, DIABETES, and
kindred maladies, have been very largely treated,
and cures effected in thousands of cases which had
been pronounced beyond hope. The study and
practice of chemical analysis and microscopical
examination of the urine in our consideration
of eases, with reference to correct diagnosis, in
which our institution long ago became iamous, has naturally led
to a very extensive practice in diseases of the urinary organs.
Our specialists have acquired, through a vast and varied experi-
ence, great expertness in determining the exact nature of each
ease, and, hence, have been successful in nicely adapting their
remedies for the mire of each individual case.
The treatment of diseases of the urinary organs having consti-
tuted a prominent branch, or specialty, of our practice at the
Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, and, being in constant re-
ceipt of numerous inquiries for a complete but concise work on
the nature and curability of these maladies, we hava.published,,a
large illustrated treatise on these diseases, which will be sent ne
any address, on receipt of ten cents in postage stamps.
ENTELANIMEATION OP THE
13LAD9ER, Gravel, Enlarged Pros-
tate Gland, Retention of Urine, and
kindred facetious may bo included among these
In the cure of which our specialists have achieved
marvelous success. These are inily treated of
hi our illustrated pamphlet on Urinary Diseases.
Itineludes numerous testimonials from well-known people. Sent
by nafill for ten cents in stamps. Send for it at once.
STRICTURES AND URINARY EIS-
TUIL/E.—Hundretits of cases of the worst form
of strictures, many of them greatly aggravated
by the careless use of instrument in the hands
• of inexperienced physicians and Surgeons, caus-
ing false passages, urinary listailee, and other complications, annu-
ally consult us for relief and cure. That no case of this dam is
too difficult for the skill of our specialists is preyed by cures re-
ported in our illustrated treatise on.these maladies, to which we
refer with pride. To intrust this class of cases to physicians of
sinall experience, is a dangerous proceeding,
ra
been ruined for life by so doing, while thousandsnaYam
nu
nalati lvlboasse
their lives through unskillful treatment. Send particulars o f your
case and ten cents in postage stamps, for a large, illtstrated trea-
tise tiontaining many testnnonials.
Epileptic convulsions, or Fite, Pa.
valysis, or Palsy, itkoicoiletitor Altaxia,
at. Vitutes Dance, Inlioninia, or friability
to sleep, and • threatened ifisanity, Netvotts
Debility, arising from oVerstudy, excesses, and
other eauses, and every variety of nerVolls (Mee-
bon'are treated by our specialists for these dis-
easea with a ruesaitreof success heretofore regarded as impossible.
See numerous OfISC`d reported in our different 'Unstinted pam-
phlets on nervous diseases, any one of which will be sent for ten
cents in postage stamps, when request for them is accompanied
with a statement of at case for consultation, to that we may know
which ono of our Treatises to send.
So alarmingly provident aro those ehronie dis-
eases peenliar to females, rind so famous have
our institutiotis become for their cure that we
were long ago obliged to create a special depart,
anent, thoroughly orgailized, tutd devoted ex --
dusted?: to the treateneet of these efiSes. The
physicians and surgeozia in this Department
, have made theao delicate diseases their solo study.
Hunclreda are brought, to our institutions from far distant Stated
on beds, and they go home well and strong. Every case consult-
ing etit. speeialiats, whether by letter Ot in person, 15 given the
most careful- and considerate attention. ,EVery iinpertant,ease
(end we get few Which have not already baffled ten the
IDISEASES.
KIDNEY
BLADDER
DISEASES.
STRICTURE.
NERVOUS
DISEASES.
MESS.
home physicians) has the benefit of a full Council, composed of
skilled specialists. Our Department and rooms for ladies in the
Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute are so arranged as to be
very private, and free from the annoyances so common M other
institutions. Send ten cents in postage stamps for our large
Complete Treatise on Diseases of Women, illustrated with innine-
TOUS Wood -Cuts and colored plates.
PILES, IFISTITILA IN ANO, and other dis-
eases affecting the region of the Tower bowel, are
largely treated, and with marvelous success, by
specialists, who give their whole time to the study -
and treatment of this class of affectiozuf. We never
fail to cure pile tumors, however large. When the
patient can come here for treatment, we will
guarantee a cure.
Fortunately for suffering humanity, a method of treatment has.
been perfected and thoroughly tested in our institutions,b3r which.
in from six to fifteen days radical and perfect cures of the worst
forme of piles are effected without causing any severe suffering.
Send ten cents in stamps for our large illustrated Treatise on Piles.
Hernia (Breach), or Rupture, no inatter of
how long standing, of what size, or what the ago
of the patient may be (if not tinder four years), is
speedily and radically cured in every
ease undertaken by our specialists,
without the knife, without dependence upon
trusses, without pain, and without danger.
There is no longer any need of wearing dummy,
THROW AWAY awkward, chafing, old 'trusses, which, at best, givo
TRUSSES.great ft
relief, which never cure, but often inflict
injury and induce inflainmation and strangula-
tion, from which thousands annually die.
HAT There is no safety in depending upon any kind of truss,
HUt though, no doubt, every man who has suffered the agonies
SAFEof a strangulated hernial and died, thought himself, safe.
. Both the rupture and the ruse keep up a mental strain and
induce nervous debility and various orgamc weaknesses of the
kidneys, bladder, and associate organs.
CURES GUARANTEED in every ease undertaken.
Can any sufferer ask for greater inducements than these?
Notwithstanding the great number of ruptures treated in tho
three years past, many of them of immense size and of such a
character that no other plan of treatment could possibly have
succeeded, every case to which this perfected system of treatment
has been thoroughly ',emptied, has been perfectly cured. Only a
few days residence at the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical institute is
PILE
TUMORS.
nelebsusna
rYcla
elifen • meet
cured, will be furnished ±0 any one wishing. to call upon or write
nt references, by Permission of those whom we have
•ated treatise ou Rupture sent to any address upon
receipt af ten centt
oanio weakness
, nervous debility. premature
decline of the manly powers, involuntary vital
losses, and kindred affections, are speedily, thor-
oughly and permanently cured.
To thee° acquainted with our institutions it ig
hardly necessary to say that the Invalids' Hotel and
Surgical Institute, with the branch establishment
located at No. 8New Oxford Street, London, England have,
for inany years, enjoyed the distinction of being the most largely
patronized and widely celebrated institutions in the world for the
treatment and cure of those affections which arise from youthful
indiscretions and pernicious, solitary practices.
We, many years age, established a special Departenent for the.
treatment of thefie disessee, under the management of some of
the most skillful physicians and surgeons on our Staff, in order
Council of the most experienced medical men.
that au who ittplopnley to us might receive ail tho advantages of a fun
WE OFFER tooaa'41°.gottl fgraggevor ac)erielLiaetgril-
no condition of humanity' is too wretched to merit
lie sympathy and best services of the noble pro -
Ho APOLOGY. t
fession to which NVO belong. Many who euffer from these terrible
diseases contract them innocently. Why any niedical roma intent,
on doing good, and alleviating suffering., should shun such OBSOAv
WO cannot imagine. Why any one should consider it otherwise
than meat honorable to cure the worst coxes of these diseases', we
eatmot understand; and yet of all the other maladies which afflict
mankind there aro probably none about which physicians ill gen-
eral practiee know so little.
We fully agree with the eelebrated Dr 13artholow, who says, "1
think it a reproach to our profession that dile eubject has been
permitted, in a measure by otir own indifference, to pass into the
hands of unscruptilons pretenders. Decause the subiect is disa-
greeable, competent physicians are loath to be concerned with IL
The same onnecessary eastidiousness causes the treatmerit of thee
malady to be avoided in private practice,"
We shall, therefore, continue, as heretofore, to treat with our
best consideration, sympathy, tmd skill, all applicants who are suf-
fering from any of these delicate diseases.
Our Complete and Illustrated Treatise on theSe subjects 18 sent
to any address on receipt oe ten coots in stamps.
Attab diatetenenuo nirstAsno A SPINOIALTIC.—Althongh
tve haVei in t1ie. preceding learagraphs, made mention of some of
the epecon ailmentto which particular attention is given by the
specinlists at tbe enwilitls' Inotel end. Surgicel Institute, yet the
institution abounda in skill, faellities, and apparatus for the
sticcetisful treatment of every -form of chronic ailment, whether
requiring foe lie num reediest or seseletil means.
All letters of inquiry or of comet:hence should be addressed to
WORLD'S DISPENSARY MEDICAL AS 0010104,,
003 Maitt atreet, BUFFALO, IL
DELICATE
DISEASES.