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Ro*tr lathis picture. buTTIIE LKtDnu KPflbV OF A 711.f1M A. Hat
M*iirnfrf f rtrt'2fr lk 'i l iS n fi. F *t h Akyon dealer for the T. T.
Hfe f.sfew r sr h .j ujwock "*• “ and r im *
pJSnaS-. *- tr. BAVSoec,*
, .. , ll‘.* i *^V •**■ • Car. Wo* aid Twelfth Sts., CTHCmUTI, 0. .
_*ggg, W -ISl> *HEIB WB BAYB gore I HO IJTEBHtBHT £0 VHOFITISm
r EXCELSIOR
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1 !>' J ■' ,■"■ ’,’ , ' ; !■:■[■ a Jinn Klaplr,
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nufiil Im. r i :m IIM! It.
, W t i?i£;S# |Kf , t*J£'-4 liSS : ;I Si-mi fur (in ulnr. No
MTVwB . t!< -n 1 ■ ■ <■in:Jl mniirnti- with
v? r . parties wanting tbsse fiia
.•.. L^’.-AT- jHH dilnee.
. OM Hills Repaired at short
and
Cotton Gin Work*-
MACON, Ga.
* **.
BEAST!
Mexican
Mustang
Liniment
OtTRBS
■oUdea, Seratchos, Contracted
Lumbago, flproini, Muscles,
Bheumatiriu, Strain*, Eruptions,
lorn*, Stitches, Hoof Ail,
•mM*. Stiff Joints, Screw
SUngi, Backache, Worms,
Jltci, Galls, Swinney,
Bruises, Sores, Saddle Galls,
Bunions, Bpavin Piles.
Corns, Crnolss.
! THIS GOOD OLD STAND-BY
*>otnpHMwi for ('rcrybody eincUy whit tEclalmwl
forik One of t!io reason* fur tiio grent popularity of
the Mustang Ltnlmcut In found In its uni reran I
appllcnlilliiy. Ever jhojy nonds such n medlelno.
The lsUmberinnn needs It in oaac of accident.
The Iloumowtfe m*fd it for goneradfamily use.
The (’Hiinlpr needs It fof his teams and his men.
The Mechanic needs It always on his work
heath.
Tho Miner uccdi It In case of emergency.
The l'icuoer needs It—can’-'tet along without It.
The Farmer needs It lu i house, hU stable,
and his stuck yard.
Thr Mien us hunt limit or (he lion Imuu needs
It iu liberal mu> Iv ritual and ashore.
The IforHialiuicirr noali It—lt Is bis best
friend and rafost reliauce.
The Muoli-srowsr noo.l It—tt will save him
thnuffor.it* cf dollars aud a world of trouble.
The Knllrond man needs it ait<l will need It so
long as ilia nfo is around of accidents and dangers.
Tho HaeUwoodnmun There Is noth
ing like tt as an iintktoto for tho danger* to life,
limb and comfort which surround the pioneer.
The Merchant netnls it about Ms store among
his employee**. Accldcuts will happen, and when
these oome the Vtnrtang I.lnimcnt la wanted at once.
Keep a liottlr lathe House. ’Tie the best of
economy.
Keep a Hotiln In the Factory. Itslinmediate
use lu case of accldcut m\vvs pain And loss of wages.
Keep a Bottle Atwaylu tho Stable fee
bee when wanted.
THE “ACME.”
/ • \ ! 2 ‘ ,a * *'
Ral Breaking & Speeding Girl,
\ / * \\y \/i / I \ 'y The Favorite of Farmers, Trainers nnd Hire ewe*.
\ / / | \ \ V / / I \ CunrpwHl by ur *rt •• k ■■hi—l
7 | ua. A pariMlf •uj' rUw, Mri m Mum< Ikai m
| ami rftjriiMlUy. Wrlfa hr Ctlinw ii M-. „
~’** jMßSSfcUwjiiimy * - !** ■ *<. • J V** v p
S I. GRENADES*
two SiMO—Pfat, Ul Qurti.
mIAM Over Sixty Millions Sold.
pkiobb.
\\i //y • Bar Ooz., SIO.OO.
w>y QuarU. ■ “ “ ig.OO,
"STAR” jg”
Tnbnltr Fire Extincoidur. V
Olui Tubs, 19i2i In. Ecldi 1 quirt.
f+ In this device wo combine
the BKST QUALITIES of our H
famous Grenades with tho MnH
NHW feature of Jiaving an ar- BiS
tlcla that can be uted by B,,rlnlt- SBg
ling. It is design*! especially t
for .se In P.tienger Coaches
end Dwellings. It is elegant RAH
In ornum.illation. It is cheap
awd reliable. No rust; nocorros- B 9
lon poaslbl* i WS)i
PUltt, sJ2.ooPerdoz. BB
Ornamt’d | B .OOPbrdoz.
T The “Star” QB
rk. EXTINGUISHER [IM
■SHI Hold, sgall.ins.atul LM
Bnaa through e feet of
SIM, hoso 451 feet with our pump,
winch is tho b< st ever made.
. Needs no attention until used.
" ill not fieere, explode or get
■Bt out of order. -Norustoi eorroa-
BBSOW ion. Can be used by anyone.
needed in every . flSttr
village, lumber i<swihklPP7S
yard^trehouee,
Barj T
u'oho^^nnd^re
rour year, of pra: icai BM have Jcmcnu.ttd
tlcio to to tho only reliable sat thoroughly offl
oiout Hud fire npliuoo. Bolt. We um tho
übo ohODlcal litjuid is .11, ud guarantee fully.
Liberal dlaeonnte to ageult. Send
for rlreulnra anil tostimonlaU.
THtHAROEN MAID GRENADE CO.
SI fc s3 Dearborn St, Chloflo, 111.
HIC A G (
COTTAGE
ORGAN
ntiiUiind e Htanilnni of oxe-ellonoe e/hloh
’■bt f t of no Mijiorlor.
It.iontaijiH every itnprovvseeot tloMt Inventive
•I'JS, t'Klil ftutl money cun produce.
OUR MVS'--'
E-18 BAI-IT'-i
„ roi
fit”
•■-'OKL. jHpimlnH YKrrt:
Tlioso Organ, are celebratotl for vohnmt,
ipialtty of tone, quick response, artistic dcabru
beauty In finish, uerfts-t conatructlon. making
thorn tho most desirable organs for homes,
schools, ohurohes, lotlges, soeieties, etc.
UtTABUNREII BEPVTATION.
bVK4I *LKD rtnUTIES.
SKILLED WOBKMEK,
BKST MATERIAL,
OOMBINEK, mu THIS
THS POPULAR ORGAN
’nstruction Book* and Piano Stools.
dataloguM and Prioe Lists, on application, rsss,
CHICAGO COTTAGE OR6AN CC.
Cc Randolph and Ann Sts.. CHICAGO. ILL
MADAMS DEAN’S
SPINAL
DORSBTSI
LADIES* 6Sa„SS
Mr popular Conns la •vary i our* •■ No epm t
•nor require- - , Agent* art 1 ..Mn* 100
monthly. 100 different atjrlra to •fleet from.
Lartfoel bMhm. ben term*, and most aal
able (uadi. SaUafartkm rnorthteed Kirltisive
territory glean. 03 OPTriT FBKK. lllos
trated I’ntalottne aud p.irtletilare free tt rile
for tertna at mm. lak for our 0300 Oaeti
Premium Lbt. Our new (nek. entltlxl
OKU) KKPOKM fOK I.AIIIP*. with
l.l.iri>liy of Worth uiliulmiedl, amt on reoelpl
!of anulieattoa. IT Wil l PAY KM'KMI
IKNPKIt AUKKTM o WIUTK for lIKMK.
Han't delay If you a tali rti ••cure terrt
terr.
uva KHiu • *., m wunt. nw mt
AGRICULTURAL
winor iMTKRKirr HRLtrnri
to FARM AND UAKDKN.
Tldj Tillage.
Mr. Peter Varling, . well-to-do Gw
man Mr bbelbvvllle, lad.. 1 pleasantly
imaihitdi at a champion ana exponent
W i husbandry which may fairly be called
“Hood.” Hia land was extraordinarily
clear of foul growth—which is the more
remarkable when it is laid that the ag
riculture of hia neighbor* was of the
uwal “lick and promise" sort. “I trill
gil anr man a fife toiler bill Ihat’ll find
a handful of reeds in any of my field*.”
Hi* dwelling, big Item and outbuilding*
were likewise scnipuously neat; in brief,
an atmosphere ol tidiness and thrift
prevaded the entire premise*. The
natural consequence was, he made money
year by year, while others in the locality,
“who rather vegetated than lived,” re
mained poor. These fact* prompted an
Indiana Farmer correspondent to the
following emphatic reflection*:
“Show me a clean farmer, and I’ll tho*
you a man who ia making it pay. Show
me a slovenly, careless, weed-growing
farmer, and I’ll show you a man that’s
hard-run, and ignorant as an ass, beside;
because he ia too lazy or too blind to aee
that his own interest! behoove him to
have a clean soil to till, and to raise grain
only, instead of weeds; for evfcry Wfeed
that grows inside S fanner’s fields it a
soil robber, and steals that substance
away, day and night, which the farmer's
crop* require to promote perfect growth:
If clean farming generally prevailed our
moat noxious weeds would in a few years
disappear, and the farmer’s labor, in the
culture of his various crops, would be
very materially reduced.'- Ifett York
Tribune.
Cross-Breeding Hogs.
Many farmers get the idea that thej
can raise better hogs by combining the
good qualities of two or more breeds. In
accordance with this view, they one year
use a Poland boar, the next a Berkshire,
and tne next, perhaps, a Jersey Red.
Some even go so far as to have a rotation
of the hog crop by beginning with the
first and going through the series again.
Little, if anything, is gained and much
is lost by this practice. The hogs are not
uniform in size, form, color, appearance,
or in ability to fatten. When a man
comes to sell them he cannot offer an even
lot of hogs, similarly fine in all respects.
The buyer is not ao well pleased when he
sees them aa he ia by an even lot of any
one breed. Another imported point fa
developed when the farmer comet to pick
out young sows for the nextyear’s breed
ing. If he has bred evenly he can get
an even lot of sows the best suitml to nls
idea of a type of that breed, ana a boar
can lie chosen that will suit all. Where
mixing has been Indulged In the aows
chosen will represent several types and
the boar can do well adapted to only a
few of the sows. A man gets some in
spiration for better breeding, if he has
bred to a “type always carried in his
ra|nd,” and annually reproduced in the
pen with increasing accuracy.
There la, of course, something to be
said on the other side—breeding too fine,
or breeding in and In to establish or pre
serve a type. For the practical proauc
tion of pork there is no need of doing
fancy breeding. So many raisers of the
standard breeds can be found within a
short journey of almost, any farmer that
he need not lack for a boar quite similar
to hfcf “type,” without breeding to one
closely related. —Frairie Farmer.
Farm and Garden Notes.
Commercial fertilizers can be used in
no way to ao good an advantage as in
connection with barn-yard manure.
Raw onions chopped fine and mixed
with food twice a week, is better than a
dozen curea for chicken cholera.
Large peonies are preferable to small,
as there is more of a succession of bloom,
giving a longer picking from the same
seeding.
Corn, properly planted on well-pre
pared ground, should rarely neod the hoe
in the early stages if the plowing be skill
fully done.
Deep ploughing is sure death to the
peach orchard by cutting off the roots,
and particularly the fibrous ones that
nourish and sustain life.
If your garden plot is selectod, rake
over and burn up every vestige of grass
and weeds, so as to destroy not only seeds
but insects. A covering of straw, leaves
or stalks, burned over the ground will be
an advantage.
With vines, such as melons, squashes,
cucumbers, if the supply of manure is
small and it is desired to derive the
largest amount of benefit for one season,
manuring in the hill may be profitably
resorted to.
In a bulletin issued from the Ohio ex
periment station, Dr. Lazenby says that
the experimental test for the past two
years shows that the yiejd of corn is les
sened often by too frequent and improp
er use of the cultivator.
The small shoots around the trunk of
apple trees should be closely pruned as
also any from the center of the trees on
the larger limb*. This, with too rapidly
growing trees, is often a good method
to set them to fruit-bearing.
An Ohio fanner says orchard grass
will grow a thicker coating of muck than
any grass he knows, hence lie recommends
it as best for meadows that are liable to
overflow. Red-top will outlive all the
rest of the grasses under water.
It is only the poultry-keeper who
makes pets of the flock, and knows the
individual points of each one, who can
attain success. Selection and '‘the sur
vival of the fittest” tell in the business of
egg-production as in other things.
An experienced Canadian farmer says:
‘■The day is not far distant when great
changes in our methods of treatment of
lands will take place, bnt it will not be
until the principles, as well as the advan
tages of under-graining and deep and
thorough cultivation of the soil arc fair
ly well understood by the farming com
munity.”
A successful poultry raiser feeds whert
in the morning, barley at peon. id
wheat in the evening, lu auu : .'.; *lO
the barley he givea the slops and refuse
from the kitchen, after boiling it. The
wheat gives a rich yellow color to the
yolks, which is so much desired in the
city where eggs are sold in retail markets.
He says one great mistake many chicken
raisers make' is in feeding chickens too
much, and this accounts for their becom
ing diseased.
Old apple trees, |>ccUlly if unthrifty,
often hare much loose bark on their
trunks. This is, however, only a tympton
of unthrift, and scraping it off will not
make the tree fruitful unless it is mt
nuretband well cared for otherwise. One
incidental advantage from scraping this
rough bark is that many codling moths
make this their hiding place and will
thus be destroyed. To accotnplUh thU
result the work should be dons esrly, at
least as soon as the trees blossom and as
muck earlier as possible.
SUPPORTING
forlfcaltwlaail of Bally*dolm|Siii^ab*M
a Mila froca Bodyfcr aa the road towards
1 itosrith, ia Irtisnd, for the purpose of
evicting a man named Boltoo. The
troops pad police were vary much fa
tifoads owing to the loag marches al
ivsd v aide with a fierce, tropical hast
beating down on them nil the way, and
they warn mated for a start whan they
turned eff the main road into the one
lending aver the field* and hillskU to the
tenant's house. The column, instmri of
advancing to the farm in n body and
than forming itself into cordons, ap
proached the plach ih Section* of compa
nies, Cot Turner, mounted on horseback,
directing the operations, assisted by CoL
Miller sad Capt. Welsh. To the surprise
of the sheriff and those conducting the
campaign, it was found that not the
slightest preparation had been made to
rive any resistance. Aa the forces were
defiling down the fields towards Tenant
Bolton* house some policemen left the
ranks for the purpose of filling their
watet-bbttlcs from the well close by.
Borne yodng women who observed the
men approaching at once stirred up the
water- in the well so as to dirty it. A
policeman threatened to duck one of the
girls in the well, and Col. Miller coming
up said he felt inclined (ogive the women
a good kicking for their conduct Two
odiihlfyrtlen Commenced to gtoiln St the
poiiefi add cSll thfehi ndrriev Col. Tur
ner, who observed the latter incident,
ordered the policemen with slaves to be
'down oa them and arrest them. The
countrymen, however, had taken time by
the wing, and were far a-.vay before some
fifty constables were chasing after them
to no purpose over the fields. There
being no teßistance offered, the eviction
was carried out without anything what
ever of the excitement at simil ir previous
occurrences. The few sticks of furniture
in the house were put out, but previous
to the sheriff giving up possession to the
agent, a son of the tenant was found
concealed in the premises, and dragged
Cut by the police. Bolton resented their
rough treatment, whereupon he was taken
into custody.
Electric Street Cars.
A successful exhibition of a street car
Kllad by electricity from storage bat
placed under the seats, was made
in Philadelphia. The batteries, consist
of eighty-four small cells, each being of
the size of about one-quarter of a cubic
foot. The track upon which the car was
ran is 1,000 feet in length with four curv
es, one of which has a radius of thirty
three feet. Immediately upon leaving
this curve a gradient commences with a
rise of 5 per cent, which is equal to 284
feet pe. mile. There was no brake use
ed, the car being controlled entirely by
electricity through the medium of a small
handle which was turned as the occasion
required so as to regulate the speed, stop,
or start the car as might be wished. The
stored electric energy is sufficient, it is
claimed, to run the car over on ordinary
street car track thirty miles without ex
changing the battery. It can run upon
ordinary street car tracks where horse
cars will run.
Marvelous Orowth.
IK 1880 the South had 180 cotton mills,
while it now has 853. In 1880 there were
34,502 manufactories in the South, pro
ducing 8315,924,704, against 51,419 now,
producifljr $505,892,000. In 1880 the
South mined 6,000,000 tons of coal and
in 1886 Over 18,000,000, while during the
same period $600,000,000 havo been spent
in .building new railroads and improving
old ones, the present mileage in the
Southern states being 83,767 miles,
against 20,642 in 1880.
Prat. liObeite’i Memory Discovery.
No doubt can be entertained about the value
and genuineness of Prof. Lolsette’s Memory
System, as It Is so strongly recommended by
Mark Twain, Mr. Proctor, Hons. W. W. Astor,
Judah P. Benjamin, Dr. Buckley, and others.
For full details send for Prof. L.’s prospectus,
at 287 Fifth Ave., New York. From it the Sys
tem is taught by correspondence quite as well
as by personal instruction. Colleges near New
York hare secured his lectures. He has had
100 Columbia Law students, two classes of 300
each at Yale, 2UO at Meriden, iiO at Norwich,
100 at Wellesley College, and 400 at University
of Penn. We cannot conceive how a system
could receive any higher endorsement.
Are Married People Hnppyf
Do you think married people are happy, Un
cle Jake? "Dat ar 'pends altogedder how dey
enjoy dcmselves; If dey hab chilluns an' keep
Dr. Diggers’ Huckleberry Cordial, dey are cer
tain to be, for hit will cure de bowel troubles
and de chillun teething.”
Daughters, Wlvri, and Viollier..
Send for Pamphlet on Female Diseases, free;
securely sealed. Dr. J. B. Marchisi, Utica, N.Y.
If afflicted with sore eyes, use Dr. Thompson’s
Eye-water. All druggists sell it at 25c. a Dottle.
The best cough medicine is Plso’s Cure for
Consumption. Sold every where. 25c.
Boils and Pimples
And other affections arising from Impure bl 'Od may
appear at th'a seas n. when the i>lood Is heated.
Hood's rom v.-a the cause of these
troubles by purifying, vitalising an \ enriching the
bio© I, and at the sara tine It gives tone and
strength to the whole system, and mak?a one feel
“like anew man.”
“I know H od** £arsapa Ula to be good by the
trial I gave it for eruptions on my face. I had a
bard time to p rifv my bl od. but auccee tod at last
w th Hood's Saiaapar 1 Hvrkt a. Pa r, Cham
P lgn, 11.
Be sure to get the peculiar me Heine,
Hood's Sarsaparilla
•old by all druggtsta $1; six for fl& Prepare l only
ty C. L HOOD * OCX. Apothecaries. Lowell. Haas.
S^MARUN REPEATING
' RIFLE
BIST IN THI
WORLD!
Made la ail aiaaafbr^^^^^^.
Urge or small game.
BALLARD
Cnllw.ltatha end Target Rifles.
for IVlnst rated Catalsgve.
llsriia Fire Arm* Cos., liew Quycb, Conn, w
K Without Increasing
the coat we have made
the FIFTH WHIRL
the strongest nnd meet
satisfactory port of a
Baggy or Carriage.
11l astro ted pamphlet
free.
THEdERBRANDCQ.
jfklMOhT, O.
J.P. STEVENS ft BRO.
JEWELERS.
Atlanta, Ga.
Iw4 far Catalase*.
BUSINESS
Hja<.Trwt.?ygr , hi | gia
i b Owuqtt, Sud for Otreatarq
7 4*. re. avsTwi St AvUiita, t;„ s u ,
* /flt'tt- f.ethiv -i set k Hpwoußtn •< Pa,t >*<■•■■< i
BHpSaßßif
pgfiSOl
ililllllfihMßvN.TrwanainiMlM.
UriUM
1
T- " J 7 ; , 0
fjH |B | 1 jfSi ’"'J; *35 Jr*' 4 *’* ~V ' MOWN >r* * • I MKg IS|C J
INVALIDS’ HOTEL"!SURGICAL INSTITUTE
No. 663 Main Street, BUFFALO, N. ¥. -
Not a Hospital, bat 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 B'lbfWpfrom
every State and Territory, aa well as from many foreign lands, that they may avail thcmselved of the professional aCmces or
1 .m> Staff of akilled specialists in medicine and surgery mat compose the Faculty of this widely-oeiebrated Institution,
A FAIR AND BUSINESS-LIKE OFFER TO INVAUOS.
*0 earnestly Invite you to come, see and examine tor yourself, our Institutions, appliances, advantages and success l in
chronic diseases, Have a mind of rour own. Do not listen to or heed the counsel of skeptiou friends or Jealous physicians, who
know nothing of us, our system of treatment, or means of cure, yet who never lose an opportunity to misrepresent and endeax or
to prejudice people against us. We are responsible to you tor what we represent, and if you come and vtalt us, and and tnat
we have misrepresented, in any particular, our Institutions, advantages or success, we will promptly refund *?V”“
all expenses •* your trip. We court honest, 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 chronio
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
familiarise them with our system of treatment, yet wo have not
seen one person in live hundred whom we have cured. The per
fect accuracy with which scientists are enableo to deduce the
most minute particulars In their several departments, appears
almost miraculous, If we view it in the light of toFearly 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 pf nature that he can accurately
predict their movements. He can sit In Washington 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
placet named. And so in all departments of modern science,
what is required la the knowledge of certain
• ... „ signs. From these scientists deduce accurate con-
SlfiNS OF elusions regardless of distance. So, also, in medl
" cal science, diseases have certain unmistakable
nice ICC signs, or symptoms, and by reason of this fact, we
UiOLfloL, have been enabled to originate and perfect a sys
fen, G f determining, with the greatest accuracy,
the nature of chronio diseases, without seeing and personally
COMMON SENSE AS APPLIED TO MEDICINE.
It la a well-known fact, and one that appeals to the judgment of every thinking person, that the
his whole time to the study and Investigation of a certain class of diseases, must become better qualified to treat suen
diseases than he who attempts to treat every 411 to which flesh is heir, without giving special attention to any d .
Men, in all ages of the world, who have become famous, have devoted their lives to some special branch of science, art, or
"tOTfiy 1 thorough orffanlzallorli B „ a subdividing the practice of medicine and surgery in this institution, every Seated
by a specialist—onewho devotes his undivided attention to the particular class of diseases towhich the case belongs. The
advantage of this arrangement must be obvious. Medical science offers a vast field for investigation, and no
within toe brief limit, of a Ufa-time, achieve the highest degree of success in the treatment of every malady incident to Aqmanlty.
' OUR FIELD OF SUCCESS.
u _ Tho treatment of Diseases of the
NASH THRfIAT Air Passages and Lungs, such as
IMML, innUAI Chronic Nasal Catarrh, Laryu
iun gilis, Bronchitis, Asthma, and
anu Consumption, both through, corre
rllHC fllQCspondeuco and at our institutions, consti-
UIOCAoEu. tutes an important specialty.
We publish three separate books on Nasal,
Throat and Lung Diseases,which give much valuable Information,
viz: (DA Treatise on Consumption, Laryngitis and Bronchitis;
price, post-paid, ten cents. (2) A Treatise on Asthma, or Phthisic,
giving new and successful treatment; price, post-paid, ten cents.
(3) A Treatise on Chronio Nasal Catarrh; price, post-paid, two cents.
Dyspepsia, “ Liver Complaint;’’ Ob-
UISFARFS lIF situate Constipation, Chronic Diar
ulvuvl.ll ui r iiea, Tape-worms, and kindred affections
DIPCCTinU are among those chronio diseases in the suo-
UlaCoMUn. cessful treatment of which our specialists have
a™*J attained great success. Many of the diseases
affecting the liver and other organs contributing in their func
tions to the process of digestion, are very obscuro, and are not
Infrequently mistaken by both laymen and physicians for other
maladies, and treatment is employed directed to tho removal of a
disease which does not exist. Our Complete Treatise on Diseases
of the Digestive Organs will bo sent to any address on receipt of
ton cents in postage stamps.
„ BRIGHT’S DISEASE, DIABETES, and
Itnury kindred maladies, have been very largely treated,
MIMCI and cures effected in thousands of eases which had
flionoro been pronounced beyond hope.. These diseases are
UlStfloto. readily diagnosticated, or determined, by chemical
iHumJ analysis of the urine, without a personal examina
ion of patients, who can, therefore, generally be
successfully treated at their homes. The study and
practioe of chemical analysis and microscopical examination of
the urine in our consideration of cases, with reference to correct
diagnosis, in which our institution long ago became famous, has
naturally led to a very extensive practice in diseases of tho urinary
organs. Probably no other institution in the world has been so
largely patronized by suffers from this class of maladies as the old
ana world-famed World's Dispensary and Invalids’ Hotel. Our
specialists have acquired, through a vast and varied experience,
great expertuoss in determining the exact nature of each case,
and, hence, have been successful in nicely adapting their remedies
for the cure of each individual case.
IT? - *These delicate diseases should be carefully treated
nillTinN Iby a specialist thoroughly familiar with them, and
uau 1 tun, | w ; 10 jg competent to ascertain the exact condition
an q stage of advancement which the disease has
made (which can only be ascertained by a careful chemical and
microscopical examination of the urine-), for medicines which are
curative In one stage or condition are known to do positive injury
in others. We have never, therefore, attempted to put up anything
for general sale through druggists, recommending to cure these
diseases, although possessing very superior remedies, knowing full
well from an extensive experience that the only safe and success
ful course is to carefully determine the disease and its progress in
each case by a chemical and microscopical examination of the
urine, and then adapt our medioines to the exact stage of the dis
ease and condition of our patient.
u, To this wise course of action we attribute the
WONDERFUL marvelous success attained by our specialists in
n wnwi.ni ww that important and extensive Department of our
ClllMireO institutions devoted exclusively to the treatment
UUUutuO. of diseases of the kidneys and bladder. Thetreat
ment of diseases of the urinary organs having
constituted a leading branch of our practioe at the Invalids’ Hotel
and Surgical Institute, and, being in constant receipt of numerous
inquiries for a complete work on tho nature and curability of these
maladies, written in a style to be easily understood, we have pub
lished alarge Illustrated Treatise on these diseases, which wul be
sent to any address on receipt of ten cents in postage stamps.
n . INFLAMMATION OF THE BLAB.
Rudder dub, stone in the bladder,
IIUUItILn Gravel, Enlarged Prostate Gland, Re’
DIKHCt tentfon of Urine, and kindred affections,
UloUobO, may be included among those in the cure of which
our specialists have achieved extraordinary suc
cess. These are fully treated of in our illustrated pamphlet on
Urinary Diseases. Sent by mail for ten cents in stamps.
XTRIRTIIRF I TULA;.— Hundreds of cases of the worst form
WI mu l wllw a of strictures, many of them greatly aggravated
by the careless use of instruments in tne hands
of inexperienced physicians and surgeons, causing false passages,
urinary flstuhe, and other complications, annually consult us for
relief and cure. That no case of this class is too difficult for the
skill of our specialists is proved by cures reported in our illus
trated treaties on these maladies, to which we refer with pride. To
Intrust this class of cases to physicians of small experience is a
dangerous proceeding. Many a man has been ruined for life by so
doing, while thousands annually lose their lives through unskillful
treatment. Send particulars or your case and ten cents in stamps
for a huge, illustrated treaties containing many testimonials.
-T— —"I Epileptic Convulsions, or Fits, Pa.
NERVOUS ? r £•"* Locomotor Ataxia,
St. Vitas’s Dance, Insomnia, or inability
riieriece to sleep, and threatened insanity, Nervous
UloUoCo. Debility, arising from overstudy, excesses, and
■sssam other causes, and every variety of nervous affec
tion. are treated by our specialists for these diseases with unusual
suooces. See numerous oases reported in our different illustrated
COLTJIi£BLA.
ATHENAEUM,
Mp rveiorc deciding wnwt to send your
daughter to school, write for an illustra
ted catalogue giving foil particulars, to
ROBT. 0. SMITH, Prest, Columbia, Ten.
Asia era*.
i>tr.uus w -tktiiic MscMaea If r**u want
naewa i wv>urnaaM.P q.aaSsspre“lß .■
ik Th. NnriannlCaTtJ •/st H.T
examining: our patients. In recognizing l diseases without •
personal examination of the patient we claim posse ss no
miraculous powers. We obtain our knowledge of the patient •
disease by the practical application, to the practice of modi--
nine, of well-established principles of modern science. And it
1%4t0 the accuracy with which this system has ®Jjdowed us that
we owe our almost world-wide reputation of skillfully treating
lingering or chronic affoctiqns. This system of practice, and
HoroHn. the marvelous success which has been attained
UftCurTnu* through it, demonstrate the fact that diseases
ITsAHVELUUS display certain phenomena, which, being sub-
Cnnnreo Jectcd to scientific analysis, furnish abundant
OUGGESS. and unmistakable data, to guide the judgment
■■■■■■■■ of the skillful practitioner aright in determining
the nature of diseased condition*. The most ample resources
for treating lingering or chronio diseases, and the Softest .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 off examining: and treating patients at a dis
tance are contained in “The jPeople’s Common Senee
Medical Advisor.” By R. V. Pierce, M. D. : loco ./V* B *?s?
over 300 colored and other illustrations. Sent, post-paid, for *l.eo.
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 particular.
pamphlets 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 a case for consultation, so that we may know
which one of our Treatises to send.
Wo have a special Department, thoroughly
n,organized, aud devoted exclusively to the treat-
U SEISES UF ment of Diseases of Women. Every case con
suiting our specialists, whether by letter or in
WMICII person, is given the most careful and consider
llUlnCß. ate attention. Important cases (and we get few
which have not already baffled the skill of all
the home physicians) has the benefit of a full Council, of skilled
specialists. Booms for ladies in the Invalids' Hotel are very pri
vate. Send ten cents In stamps for our large Complete Treatise
on Diseases of Women, illustrated with numerous wood-cuts and
colored plates (160 pages).
A,,.- HERNIA ( Breach ), or RUPTURE, no
HID fill LURF matter of how long standing, or of what.size,
■aiwiuMk vuiih J 8 promptly an( j permanently cured bv
lIC HIIDTiIDC our specialists, without the knife and
Ur nuriunc. without dependence upon trapses.
Abundant references. Send ten centtf for
Illustrated Treatise.
PILES, FIbTULjE, and other diseases affecting the lower
bowels, are treated with wonderful success. The worst cases o£
pile tumors are permanently cured In fifteen to twenty days.
Send ten cents for Illustrated Treatise.
ITirTTmn Organic weakness, nervous debility, premature
uELIOATE decline of the manly powers, involuntary vital
“ losses, impaired memory, mental anxiety, absence
fIIQCIfiCC Of will-power, meluneholy, weak back, and kin-
UloLQota, dred affections, are speedily, thoroughly and per
manently cured.
To those acquainted with our institutions, it is hardly necessary
to say that the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, with the
branch establishment located at No. 3 New Oxford Street, London,
England, have, for many years, enjoyed the distinction of being
the most largely patronized and widely celebrated institutions in
tbe world for the treatment and cure of those affections which
arise from youthful indiscretions and pernicious, soliiary practices.
We, many years ago, established a special Department for the
treatment of these diseases, under the management of some of
the most skillful physicians and surgeons on our Staff, in order
that all who apply to us might receive all the advantages of a full
Council of tbe most experienced specialists.
*TjrTT*™"l We offer no apology for devoting so much
HE UFFER attention to this neglected class of diseases,
behoving no condition of humanity is too
Nfl Ipmncv wretched to merit the sympathy and best
lIU HrULUDI, services of the noble profession to which we
■■■— belong. Many who suffer from these terrible
diseases contract them innocently. Why any medical man. Intent
on doing good and alleviating suffering, should shun such cases,,
we cannot imagine. Why any one should consider it otherwise
than most honorable to cure the worst cases of these diseases,
we cannot understand; and yet of all the other maladies which
afflict mankind there is probably none about which physicians In
general practice know so little. We shall, therefore, continue, as
heretofore, to treat with our best consideration, sympathy, and skill,
all applicants who are suffering from any of these delicate diseases,
ftiinrn it IJnur Most of these cases can be treated when at a
UUfftD AT nUMt. distance just as well as if here in person.
A Complete Treatise (138 pages) on these diseases sent sealed,
in plain envelope, secure from observation, on receipt of only ten
cents, in stamps, for postage.
I Hundreds of the most difficult operations known
uURBICIL to modern surgery are annually performed in the
” most skillful manner, by our Burgeon-special-
PnipTipr ists. Large Stones are safely removed from the
r lUHI 1 iUL. Bladder, by crushing, washing and pumping them
out, thus avoiding the great danger of cutting.
Our specialists, remove cataract from the eye, thereby curing blind
ness. They also straighten cross-eyes and insert artificial ones
when needed. Many Ovarian and also Fibroid Tumors of the
Uterus are arrested in growth and cured by electrolysis, coupled
with other means of our invention, whereby the great danger of
cutting operations in these cases is avoided.
Especially has the success of our improved operations for Vari
cocele. Hydrocele, Fistulas, Ruptured Cervix Uteri, and for Rup
tured Perineum, been alike gratifying both to ourselves and our
patients. Not less so have been the results of numerous operations
for Stricture of the Cervical Canal, a condition in the female gen
erally resulting in Barrenness, or Sterility, and the enre of which,
by a safe and painless operation, removes this commonest of im
pediments to tee bearing of offspring. -*■
A Complete Treatise on any one of the above maladies will be
sent on receipt of ten cents in stamps.
Although we have in the preceding para
fll i URRfIMiR graphs, made mention of some of the special
• unnun,u ailments to which particular attention is
fliqciqirc given by tbe specialists at the Invalids’
InuEAubO Hotel and Surgical Institute, vet the insti
i Onroill TV tution abounds in skill, facilities, and ap-
A urtuIALIT. paratus for the successful treatment of
every form of chronic ailment, whether re
quiring for its cure medical or surgical means.
All letters of Inquiry, or of consultation, should be addressed to
WORLD’S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION,
663 Main Street, BUFFALO. N. 7.
WEAK MEN, WEAK WOMEN, r £g|?i>?
Or. HAlKO'n BLOOD UftANtl.fH in
•usreoioua. tha idutwi of the hour, thousand!
ham uaed theta and nor one bat la enthualutle orer
h.elr woaderful prooertlea. 28 cents; 9 bo tea. |L
mall, pomace prepaid AU?n
sx u^^i;^ n *o^ ( ssrTSfi£i
Ur. WBf. M. BAIHDa Washtactaa. I, J.
Central University.
RICHMOND. KY. Nn| Seme-, opera Sep 14,'87
rail family. Ur touch .nayuerty. healthy Umlm..
moderate et|o h.w loWmattea and I.'aul (ua
aai> I- M. lilnurtm. D. It., Ohaaeell.e
Pdniiomi^S^
■ m gaaa WA.W Ol OTIh hOILDINU.
Washington. D. C.
Kry a lihltih nil manzmimt
H mkj Wher{ All Wmi KT
1 p " 1
qgMftraaiitWMiHaaqp
A# N. V.Me Twenty.elan, <'