Image provided by: Yamhill County Historical Society; McMinnville, OR
About The Telephone=register. (McMinnville, Or.) 1889-1953 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 1, 1887)
| Bill Ny» Write» to Edwin Booth. Lrrrui. M armots E ating H ousk , ) V alikian . O , Nov. in, t F rtknd B ooth : 1 learn w.Ui wme surprise that through n niblMHivr'ta tiding between your manager r ■! r' own you are billed for Cleveland ua mj tuiuu eveuxng with Hr. Riley and myself. s,. In order to give the people of Cleveland an opportunity to witness two of America's greatest tragedians without inconvenience, I have deviled to change my own date, so as to avoid any annoyance by dividing the audience. Sentiment in Cleveland, 1 find, is about equally divided on the question of dramatic and tragic interpretation between you and I. Some like your stylo of melan choly best, while those who have used mine say they would have no other. So I think it would lx* better to give each and all an opportunity to judge fairly and impartially between us. I believe that while your stage sadness is the perfection of masterly interpretation, it is not entered into so thoroughly and partici pated in by the audience as mine is. 1 am in troducing this winter a style of sad that is becoming quite popular and brings tears to eyes unused to weep. Everywhere I go I hear you very highly spoken of, however. 1 think you are givivr general satisfaction wherever you go. I will try to go and hear you at Cleveland. I have read the play before so it will not be new to me, but 1 would enjoy going very much and my presence might induce others to go. It does not matter much where I sit. You can put me wherever you think 1 would attract the most attention. After the performance is over I will come back on the stage and congratulate you. Hoping that you are well, and that the awkward conflict of our dates may be sat; factorily adjusted so that your pecuniary loss will be merely nominal, I remain yours with kind reganU. B ill . N ye . TAUIICS OF THt GUN. A I-.eiur. at th. WarColl.g. <>■ Uod.ro Naval Weapon.. HALLOWMAS EVE. * Th. Cl.bratlon of Hailnwaan Inatltutad by lb. Ariel.nt Druid., Old superstitions die hard, and it will Lieutenant John F. Mei^s delivered a lecture at the Naval War College on certainly be long before the festival of "The Tacticsuf the Gun.” “The threa Halloween becomes as much a thing of naval weapon»,” »aid he, “a* usually the past as has practically become the recognized, are the gun, ram and tor Guy Fawkes celebration on the 5th of pedo. The attempt is often made to November. Long before the Christian arrange them in order of their import faith made way among the untutored ance, but it seems that this can hardly people of ancient Britain, the Druids | bo done with any degree of nati»fac- had performed special rites on what is tion to one's self, for their relative im now known as Hallowmas Eve; tires portance or usefulness must depend were lit deep in remote forests, upon upon numerous circumstances which outlying spurs of hills, even upon ihe we can not forsee or predict. The rel ative importance of her guns, torpe great plains that stretched between does and ram to a particular ship de dense forests and partially cleared pend upon the class of work she is woodlands; mystic rites were per called upon to perform. In the attack formed. the help of the true God was upon forts her guns are her m >sl use implored, the machinations of evil ful weapons, while many officers think powers were protested against. The that the rani skilfully handled will play earliest records bear witn ’ss to a uni the most important part in future fleet versal belief that on this night the acton. The question which naval powers of darkness muster in great officers have to decide when for force, that all supernatural beings hold an assgned displacement and cost revel within the sphere of humanity, they are called upon to lav down and that therefore it behooved all per the general features of ships—to sons to be careful on this night of all decide how much weight and space nights, for any sin conimitteil rendered they will allot to each weapon—¡seven the perpetrator liable to be brought a more difficult one. If the Atlanta, under the influence of some evil spir t being armed with guns, torpedo and a throughout the whole year thereafter. ram. meets the Indexible, her guns To th s day any child born in Scotland would be almost useless, and she must on the eve of the 31st of October is sup have recourse to either tier torpedo or posed to be in possession of certain rani if she undertakes the unequal fight. mysterious faculties, to hold—if not With either of these weapons, she is consciously, at least unconsciously in the equal of her supposed adversary the midnight hours when the senses a id in that which she is more handy are obscured by sleep—communion she is her superior. Indeed, the con- with the supernatural world, and to bo nilerat on of the function of the ram at all times a person whose actions, must be re tn<! locomotive torpedo leads not tin- however eccentric, uuturally to the thought that they may garded charitably. Those who have Just Like a Man. lie destined to do away with the heavy read Sir Walter Scott’s Monastery and costly ironclads which are now the will remember that he has made use battle-ship» of all navies. These of this circumstance has space. “She’s weapons are great levelers and put it as tlytie as a Halloween wean” is a in the power of quickly built and inex phrase that may even yet be occasion pensive craft to sink and destroy the ally heard north of the Tweed, and in largest and nominally most powerful most of the popular accounts of wiz ards and uncanny folk the date of their ironclads in the world. If it be granted that we want some births is generally set down as on the sljipsi-arrying numerous guns we ought last day of October. When, later on. to settle on a standard gun for them; All-hallow Eve be ante a Christian ob and further, the gun m ust not be too servance. the old customs pertinent to heavy. The gift of prophecy is a rare its celebration did not pass into disuse' one, but the indications at present on the contrary, they became more and Mr. Simple Simon Jones takes the box seem to be in favor of a calibre of about deeply established, every here and there from the messenger, and opens it. ‘‘Pretty five inches, and there can be no doubt accumulating some new superstition, thing to send a $30 hat home in that shape, that the installation of such calibre can or annexing some old belief that had all punched in at the top, and the sides all be greatly improved by causing it to long lingered without direct assoeiat on bent! It’s well my wife didn't see it!” Then approach that of the Hotchkiss rapid with any special dav. season or local ho deliberately seats himself and proceeds to lire guns. Has not the reduction in the ity. Bonfires are still lit, on Hallow straighten it out aud make it “presentable.” number of guns and their massing gone mas Eve, though perhaps only one or This done, he gives it to the girl to take to too far? There are now ships of over two here and there among the mem Mrs. Jones. ten thousand tons displacement, cost bers of the innumerable village com ing millions of dollars, occupying years munities who thus celebrate the great to bu Id and carrying oniy four guns in event know that the practice is a rem a contracted space. These guns mat nant of paganism; indeed, it is sur lie .silenced, p rliaps permanently, by prising. in the use of this as of many other popular customs, to find how a couple of shots. The ships them selves are nearly as vulnerable to the few know any thing whatever of the wt tek of the rani or torpedo as are any significance of their celebrations. “We of our old wooden crafts, and we can do as our fathers did before us,” is not expect to get many hits unless in sufficient to account for every thing. In Protestant countries the vigil of All very exceptional favorable circum souls is no longer a religious observ stances with so few guns. These pon lerous vessels, with their great draught, ance, or, at any rate, is not so in Scot their small coal and ammunition en land, England or Germany. It may be durance. their few guns, and their vul- said that Halloween, as we understand nernbii ty to the ram and torpedo, are it. is only celebrated by the Teutonic a delus on. In the contest which has and Celtic races; with the Latins it is ’been go ng on for years between guns merely a religious v gil, round its ob m I armor, the guns have always been servance c inging few if any of those i ittle ahead. That th s is stdl the case wild legends or superstitions that are so is evident from the abandonment of plentiful in Scandinavia, Scotland and I ho endeavor to armor all of the vital Ireland. The nearest approach to the parts of ships. The rapid-fire guns Northe n solemnity, and even weird which have been introduced in the last ness, is the Venetian notle delle morti. few years and which now constitute a or night of all the dead; but the relig ■onsidera’le part of the otlensive power ions ceremonies attendant thereon of all men of-war, have put a new face take place not on the 31st of October, but 'pon the armor question.”— Newport on the eve of All-souls Day, that is, the dav following. It is in Scotland and Ire or. N. y. Tribune. land that Halloween is kept in its en tirety; in the former, curiously enough, HISTORIC GROUND. more in the east, mid-country, and Famoim Fort William Henry, at the South Lowlands than in the remoter High Terinlnom of Lake George. land districts; in other words more It is historic ground that has boon among the Scots proper than among traversed. Hero are the ruins of Fort the pure Celts. The best chronicle of “Oh, you cruel, heartless wretch! You William Henry. at the southern tcr- Hallowmas Eve that exists is the well- have ruined my hat. To think that I ever known poam of Burns, containing as it married such a monster! I shall go home to minous of Lake George, the strong does some record of the most generally hold bo ng described in its best days as practiced customs in connection wit!i my mother, so I shall!”—Harper’s Bazar. “a square building of pine logs, covered this really ancient vigil, but. consider Omaha has. with sand, flanked by four bastions ing the popularity of the subject, ther • Mr. Winks—Great Scott! There comes and surrounded by a ditch.” Mont is a wonderfully limited “Halloween” Jinks. He has a bill against me. Tell him I literature. The succeeding threefold am out. Mrs. Winks—Well, I’ll tell him you calm in 1756 with 6,000 French and chronicle may possibly, then, contain have just gone down town to pay a bill. Mr. 2,000 Indians (Iriquo's, or Five Na something novel as well as of interest Winks—No, no He’ll know you’re lying tions), destroyed the fort, the English to many readers. It may be that th • then. Tell him something ho can Iwlieve. and colonists losing 1,500 men in a timéis not fardistant when All-hallows Mrs. Winks—Well, I’ll tell him you're on an massacre by th’ treacherous Indians Eve will lose its hold upon rural ns other spree, dear. after the conditional surrender. Two completely as it has upon urban popu what ’ s in a name ! lations. when bonfires will be lit only Little Nellie—What does your papa do? years before the fort had been attacked bv a few youngsters, when apples will Little Dot—My papa is a horse doctor. L. by Vaudreuil w th 1,500 French and cease to be ducked for, anil when nuts N.—I guess I I tetter not play with you; I’m Indians, when the whole neighborhood wdl no longer be set ablaze amid the afraid you don’t belong in our set. L. D.— was laid waste and many sloops and red-hot coals; but the writer, for one, Why, what does your papa do? R N.—My batteaux burned. In the same year, believes that such a time is not yet at papa is a vet’rinary surgeon. 1755. in the immediate neighborhood hand, and disbelieves that Halloween THE NEEDS OF A MODERN ACTRESS. three sharp engagements took place on will disappear altogether as a festival. Great Actress—I see the heroine of your on ■ day, ¡September X, between forces It is not only that there would bo a play star:« as afistreet beggar. Author—Yes, aggregating 1,400 French and In- revolution in the child-world if such but— (I. A.—It is an ^excellent play d alls and 1.200 Americans and En sacrilegious disuse were to become the throughout, and I will appear in it; but you glish. the casualties being respectively fashion, but that there are too many must make a change in the first part. A.— loO and 300. The French retreated, older children interested in the famous Certainly, anything you wish. G. A.—Well, a backward movement that was on'y eve to allow its celebration to drop al put in a few lines to explain that the dia monds I wear while tagging are heir looms, to end four years later in the British together yet awhile. At sea. in Canada, the Stales. Australia, even in India, and that the dress is a present from Worth. conquest of Quebec and all Cana la. And h re. at th s narrow pass in Lake wherever a true Scottish or Irish family —Omaha World. Champlain, rise the well preserved is located, there is sure to be one voice walls of old Fort Ticonderoga, similarly raised in favor of the genial old cus Ills Appetite. Its superstitious observances “Papa has got his appetite back again, assoc ated with colonial as witli Revolu tom. hasn’t, be, mamma?” asked a Leavitt street tionary history. Ono midsummer day must undoubtedly pass swav—have, in 175X. Abercrombie, with 15,00«'col indeed, to a great extent already be Ikyvar-ohl the other day. “Pm afraid not, my child,” re pita I tta onists and British, sailed over Lake come obsolete--but the good-fellow good mother. “Ila didn't eat anything to Georgs? in 1,1100 boats to capture the ship, the laughter, the nut-roasting, s'ronghold. but failed ingloriously. the tho apple-ducking, the candle-singeing day. But why do you ask?” “'Cause I beard him tell Mr. Brown that death of Lord Howe, the idol of the ought long to be specially associated he came home home fullrr'n a goat last night. army, in the first skirmish, throwing a with the 31st of October. — Wm. Sharp, I didn’t know but”----- cloud over the ardor of the troops that in Harper's Magazine. “Run along into the next room like a good Ala-reromhie's dilatory tactics could little girl. 1 think I hear your pa|*a coining not remove. Th ■ following year the The Severn Tunnel. now and mamma w ishes to speak to him.”— brilliant Amherst, with a largo force Detroit Free Press. The tunnel under the estuary of the and the generalship in miniature of a Grunt, moved swiftly upon the fort and River Severn, in England, on the lino Took Him at Ills Word. captured not only it lint Crown Point of the Great Western railway, which “Seems ruiher small, though I rec k on you it-elf. far to the north, thus finally t-r- has occupied thirteeen years in con ort ter know more bout it *u me. ” ntinnting the French power on thia "Too schmall? By grazioux, man, de coat’s chain of lakes, where it had born es- struction, has at last been successfully peeg enough for two like you.” • labl shed for a third of n century In completed. It is one of the greatest “Two like me! Y< p’laverin’ rascal, what engineering achievements of modern Revolutionary days Ticonderoga agsin yer try in’ ter pa’m off on me—a coat that’s too big fur mo? Nor* yer haul me out a coat looms to the front, and the story of its t mes. The length of the tunnel proper For upward that tits me, ur I'll »»at yer up! D'y’ hear?"— capture by that greatest popular hero is about four miles. of the t m s, Ethan Al on, and hi. of two miles it p isses under the e -tu try Harper's Weekly. Green Mountain boys, in the grav of of tho Severn, and at high t de thé Kindred Sonia. th” morning of May 10, 1775, steal ng water over it is about one hundred feet “Can you give me n penny to buy a night’s tip fr m the waterside through the in depth. The tunnel line, with the lodging and breakfast withf ha mid. “1’vs wicket gate, has been fittingly celel ra cuts, is upward of seven miles in lengtn. ted in all histories. —Cor. Chieu jo Infer lor more than four mile» tiie tunnel is not”---- “Can’t do it. I haven’t a cent ir my Oitan. driven through hard pennant stone, pocket." it s twenty six feet wide by twenty “Weli.” mid the tramp, “I know liow to —The Boston Globe heads its divorce feet high, and is lined with vitrifie«! sympathize with you. 1 used to bo an artiit depar.inent “Cutting Hymen's Haw brick. The co»t is £2,010,00).—-V. y. mya—lf ouoa. ’—Mow York biuu. »er." Slur, INVALIDS’ HOTEL«“SURGICAL INSTITUTE No. 663 Main Street, BIFFALO, N. Y. 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 A FAIR ANO BUSINESS-LIKE OFFER TO INVALIDS. We earnestly invito you to come, see and examine for yourwlf, our institutions, appliances, advantages and success In curint chronic diseases. Have a mind of your own. Do not listen to or heed the counsel of skeptical triends or Jealous physicians, w« know nothing of us, our system or treatment, or means of cure, yet who never lose an opportunity to misrepresent and endeavoi t© prejudice people against us. We are responsible to you for what we represent, and it you come and visit us, and find ths we have misrepresented, in any particular, our institutions, advantages or success, we will promptly refuud to yoi all expense« of your trip. We court honest, sincere investigation, ha\e no secrets, and are only too glad to show q Interested and candid people what we arc 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 wo are always glad to see our patients, and become acquainted with them, show them our institutions, and familiarize them with our system of treat ment, yet we have not seen one person in five 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 miraculous, if we view it in the light of the early ages. Take, for example, the electro-magnetic 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 miles 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 V-'ashington and foretell what the weather will be in 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 siynx. From these scientists deduce accurate con clusions regardless of distance. So, also, in medi igns of cal science, diseases have certain unmistakable signs, or symptoms, and by reason of this fact, we isease have been enabled to originate and perfect a sys tem of determining, with the greatest accuracy, the nature of chronic diseases, without seeing and personally S D . examining our patients. In recognizing diseases without i personal examination of the patient, we claim to posse« no miraculous powers. We obtain our knowledge of the patient's disease by the practical application, to the practice of ini< cine, of well-established principles of modern science. And it is to the accuracy with which this system has eudowed 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 disease« arvelous display certain phenomena, which, being sub- Jected to scientific analysis, furnish abundant uccess and unmistakable data, to guide the judgment of the skillful practitioner aright in determining the nature of diseased conditions. The most ample resource« 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 or ourorigi- nal, scientific system of examining and treating patients at a dis- tiincc are contained in “The People’s Common Scute Medical Adviser.” • By R. V. Pierce, M. D. 1000 pages «nd over .'WO colored and other illustrations. Sent, post-paid, for $1.50. Or write and describe your symptoms, inclosing ten rents in stamps, and a complete treatise, on your particular disease, will be sen*, you, with our terms for treatment and all particular! M S . COMMON SENSÜ AS APPLIED TO MEDICINE. It is a well-known fact, and one thnt appeals to the JndR-mcut of every thinking person, that tho physician who devote, his whole time to the study and investigation of a certain class of diseases, must become tatter qualified to tn-at aud diseases than he who attempts to treat every ill to which tlesh is heir, without giving special attention to any class of dirauo. Men. In ail ages of the world, who have become famous, have devoted their lives to some special branch of science, art, or literature. Bv thorough organization, and subdividing the practice of medicine and surgerv in this institution, every Invnlld is trrated hv a specialist -one who devotes his undivided attention to the particular class of diseases to wliieh the case belongs Ttu advantage of this arrangement must Is obvious. Medical science offers a vast field for investigation, and no physician ran, within the brief limits of a life-time, achieve the highest degree of success in the treatment of every malady iucideut to bumaalt,. ■■■ AüF 'W' The treatment of Diseases off the | pamphlets on nervous diseases, any one of which will be 6ent for Air Passages and Lungs, such as ■ ten cents in postage stamps, when request for them is accompanied asal hroat Chronic Nasal Catarrh, Laryn statement of a case for consultation, so that we may know gitis, Itronchltis, Asthma, and which one of our Treatises to send. and CoiiNii nipt ion, both through conv- We have a special Department, thoroughly and at our institutions, consti organized, and devoted atc/wriudi/ to the treat ung iseases spondcnce tutes an important specialty. ment of Diseases of Women. Every case con iseases of We publish three separate books on Nasal, sulting oar specialists, whether by letter or in Throat and Lung Diseases, which give much valuable information, person, is given the most careful and consider omen viz: (1) A Treatise on Consumption, Laryngitis and Bronchitis; ate attention. Important Cases (and we get few price, post-paid, ten cents. (2) A Treatise on Asthma, or Phthisic, which have-not already baffled the skill of all _._z — new a successful treatment ; price, post-paid, ten cents. the home physicians) has the benefit of a full Council, of skilled giving (3) A Treatise ----- on Chronic Nasal Catarrh ; price, post-paid, two cents. specialists. Rooms for ladies in the Invalids’ Hotel are veryjprU vate. Send ten cents in stamps for our large Complete Treatise DyspepMia, “ Elver Complaint,” Ob- on Diseases ot Women, illustrated with numerous wood-cuts and U SEASES OF "tinatc Constipation, Chronic Diar colored plates (160 pages). rhea, Tape-wo rm»--, and kindred affections are among those chronic diseases in the suc HERNIA (Breach), or RVPTrRE, no cessful treatment of which our specialists .have of how long standing, or of what size, acioal ure matter at ained great success. Many of the diseases is promptly ar^d permanently cured by affecting the liver and other organs contributing in their func our specialists, without the knife and of upture without dependence tions to the process of digestion, are very obscure, and are not upon trussea. infrequently mistaken by both laymen and physicians for other Abundant references. Send ten cents for maladies, and treatment is employed directed to the removal of a Illustrated Treatise. disease which does not exist. Our Complete Treatise on Diseases PILES, F1STULÆ, and other diseases affecting the lower of the Digestive Organs will be sent to any address on receipt of bowels, are treated with wonderful success. The worst cases of ten cents in postage stamps. pile tumors are permanently cured in fifteen to twenty days. Send ten cents for Illustrated Treatise. g. . * ‘7 DISEASE, r., DIABETES, »1 JI nr. I KN, and „ , kindri tfinuru ’ il Iimlndioq hum . KIDNEY kindred maladies, have be« n very largely treated, Organic weakness, nervous debility, premature niuiu.1 an(j cureg effected in thousands of cases which ha«i „ecline of the manly powers, involuntary vital nicriOrC been pronounced beyond bc.vc~J u I. >|>e. These diseases are elicate les» . losses, s. impaired memory, I mental anxiety, absence readily diagnosticated, diagnosticated, or determined, by chemical will-power, melancholy, weak back, and kin UlSrASFS ot analysis of tim urine, with.mt a personal examina- UlOLflûLù. dre(i affections, uffeetioiiH. milanchol; nw- .... if tion of patients, ivho can, th dred are an speedily, thoroughly and per ■ herefore, generally be manently cured. __ siicceAHfiilly treated at their home«. ’‘The" study and To those acquainted with our institutions, it is hardly necessary practice of chemical analysis and microscopical examination of to say that the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, with the the urine in our consideration of cast«, with reference to correct * 1 in xirlxi. ’lx ««lie not i 11 i f i 1., long n. ago — l. became famous, . has branch establishment located at No. 3 New Oxford Street, London, diagnosis, which our i institution naturally led to a very extensive practice in diseases of the urmarv England, have, for many years, enjoyed the distinction of being organs. Probably no other institution in the world lias been so the most largely patronized and widely celebrated institutions in largely patronized by suffera from this class of maladies as the old tne world for the treatment and cure of those affections which arid world-famed World s Dispensary and Invalids' Hotel Our arise from youthful indiscretionsand pernicious, solitary practices. specialists have acquired, through a vast and varied experience ! We, many years ago, established a special Department for the great e.xpertmws In determining the era. t nature of each case' ' treatment of these diseases, under the management of some or and, tlin hence, been successful in nicely adapting their remedies ®aillful physicians and surgeons on our Staff, in order onrn have tif each onoh inrliviilno I naazx u-vnuo ( that «11 who for tho euro of individual case. ' ” ’ apply to us might receive all the advantages of a full | Council of the most experienced specialists. These delicate diseases should carefully treated Hi.i-r.AM I . va AiR^uriK ate inw-a^ssnouid be carefullv anonioliat thoroughly f )>. r„^iu _ — with th« 4 Wo offer no apology for devoting so much I bX " g*ci»ltet lamlllar I who w, is )g competent to ascertain abovrtain tiie the eVaet exa. t cimdition condition I attention to this neglected class of diseases, e ffer believing .. . anil no condition of humanity is too and stage of advancement which the disease has made (which can only be ascertained by a careful chemical and and best pology I ■ services of ‘ to - - the - - merit - - - - - * - - * - the - - profession - irofession - - - sympathy - - - - - - - - to - which i - A urumai. microscopical examination ot the urine), for medicines which are “ noble w® ouratlvo in one stage or condition are known to do positire inhiru ' belong. lielong. Many who suffer from these ternbM ternbie In others. We have never, therefore, attempted to piit upanvthinir diseases contract them innocently. Why any medical man, intent for general sale through druggists, recommending to cure tbr'sh on doing good and alleviating suffering, should shun such cases, disease«, although possessing very superior remedies, knowimr fid I we cannot imagine. Why any one should consider it otherwise well from an extensive experience that the only safe and sik - co ««. than most honorable to cure the worst cases of these diseases, ful course is to carefully determine the disease «nd It» progress in unfierrtand: and yet of all the other maladies which each case by a chemical and microscopical examination of the am let mankind there is probably none about which physicians urine, and then adapt our medicines to the exact stage of th* h .« m general practice know so little. ease and condition of our patient. OI XV e shall, therefore, continue, as heretofore, to treat with our best consideration, sympathy, and skill, all applicants who are suf To this wise course of action we attribute the fering from any of these delicate disease«. marvelous success attained by our specialists In Wi*tof these eases can be treated by us when that mnortant «nd extensive DepartmZt. f oim (ilIRFn IT HnilKT UUnC.U Al nuffit. at a distance just as well as if they were here institutions devoted exclusively to the treatment ••1 of dlsea^-sof the kidneys and bladder ThW in tw*rson. "IA haying t Our i ( ompiete and Illustrated Treatise (168 068 pages) on these sub- oonstttutpd a leadIng branch of oar pnu-tlee at the InfJhd«-IK "4 J^t^ssenttoany address on receipt of ten cents in stamps. «nd Surgical Institute, and, being in constant receipt of tiumeroiw QlioniRAi a hundreds of the moat difficult operations knoTjJ inquiries for a complete work on th«- nature and curability of th««e UunbluAL to modern surgery are annually performed m to® maladl.«, written in a Mvle to be easily understood, we have put2 I niost skillful manner, by our Surgeon-speciM- hshe«l a large Illustrated Treatise on these diseases, which will £ rRACTICE Stones are safely removed from tnj sent to any address on receipt of ten cents in postage atamna IIHUI uu" Bladder, by crushing, washing and pumpiDg pumping them ______ OUL thus avoiding the great danger of cuttinj. n. ...rn nfeabwation of the BI in. I Our specialists, remove cataract from the eye, thereby curing bhna- ladder Gratcl, eh si o k y» thf hlaoihr Enlarged Prostate Gland Ril nijss. They also straighten cross-eyes and insert artificial ones rtaFA^F^ *<’""on of Vrlnc, and kindred affection. when needed. Many Ovarian and also Fibroid Tumors of tt* UUtBSti. may he included among’ those in the euro or.to i terus are arrested in growth and cured by electrolysis, coup*« " our s|ieeialists have achieved extraordinary .i,,." with other moans of our invention, whereby the great danger« „ . cw>. Theee are fully treated of In our HlustrattM pamphlet on cutting orw'rations in these cases is avoided. Lsr>»daily ‘-eially has the success of our improved operations for van îu Urinary Diseases, dent by mail for ten cento In stamps. °n ■ | ^P I Hydrocele, Fistuhr. Ruptured Cervix Ctcri. and for Ru£ ; |,rinpum, been alike gratifying both to ourselves and<JJJ i I08? 80 have been the results of numerous operations the Cervical Canal, a condition in the female grj* by the eareless use of instruments In »1,,, •■rally resulting in Barrenm-ss, nr Sterility, and the cure nt -J11™’ of Inexperienced physicians and surgeons, «iiusing faliw 2JÎ so, 1 ani V" 1* “a operation, remove« this commonest of im urinary tistiilfv, and other complications. annuaUy consult iw r,^ pediments to the ’” tearing of offering. w relief and euro. That no case of this elas« is too dimi-u it t ,5 °mplete Treatise on any one of th© above maladies will ht skill of our specialist« is nrovci by runs re|H>rt«i |n our Til’ll t«»«*! sont on receipt of ten cents in stamps. tnileil treata-s on these maladies, to which we refer wtth nri<L> t intrust this elassof ctusw to physicians of small £rXK£ J? All fiunnum Although we have In the preceding P»**: dangerous proox’dlng. Many a man lias tieen rutnei for Ilf.”i.v CLL uiinuNIG graphs, made mention of some of the si’«'“ doing, while thousands annually l<iro their Ilves through unskiSfni nier.ee. ailment« to which particular attention J tnatmer.t, Send particulars of your case an<l ten A nt. In .. 1 Riven by the s|>oeialist» at the In'jd™* foro^argejnustrat.M treaties containing many testimoniite., ',’S Hotel and Surgk-al Surgical Institute, yet ^ . Betel the insti nsh- tution abounds in skill, facilities, andl sg Epileptic Convnl.lons. or Fits P= pecialty panitus for the successful treatment n ervous St. tlin«« .or Dance, Insomnia, «*r»w»t«r- or ” inibili?? 01,15* , f iz----- evQvv form of chronic ailment, whether re riltcitct ,o ’i'X'P- »nd tnnaten.-l insanity '■ quiring for its cure medical or surgical means. All letters of inquiry, or of consultation, should be addressed to DISEASES. Debility, arising from •—* other causes, and every variety of nervous neiv^TitK? affets tlon. are treateo by our specl.hM« for the» dlsea», „^h unum^i iuccsss. Itos numerous caw. reportsd tn our dlff.in. «porti i» N , T L D . D W DiGESTiOH. . C R R . D UAUT 3N, B W O No « ® -, ?, . ' ' > I STIM8TOIIE. I N DISEASES A S . WORLD'S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 063 Main Btiart, BUFFALO, S. Y.