The Mineola Monitor (Mineola, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 40, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 30, 1888 Page: 7 of 8
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CURRENT EVENTS.
In the German Relctiatafr there are 838
Smokers anil thirty-nine non-smokers.
Tliero are 50,000 Cblnoso In Australia
In a total population o 1 a little oves 2,500,-
<H)0.
Tno steel required for the United States
ship of war Maine aggregates about -,000
tons.
A recent steamer from Dundee brought
1,000 tons of potatoes to New York city as
her cargo.
It is estimated that 103 persons belonging
to the fishery licet lost their lives in the re-
cent gale oil Ireland.
It has been estimated that during growth
Indian corn draws thirty-sis times Us owu
weight of water from the soil.
Swine fever Is ragtyg In the south of Ire
land, and nine fresh outbreaks of the disease
Is reported from as many different sections.
As a preventive and cure of pleuropneu-
monia, inoculation has beon fouud ineffectu-
al in Holland, it being successfully stamped-
ed out by slaughter.
At the present time the United States and
Canada export about 150,000,003 pounds of
apples per annum, which are sold In London
markots and streets.
The farmers of Dakota are having line
weather for planting, and there will be an in-
crease of twenty-Qvo to tlfty per cent, in the
acreage this season.
Immense numbers of stoats and weasels are
being imported into New Zealand, in order
that tbey may destroy the rabbits which are a
pest In that country.
The government of New Zealand has pro-
claimed all Chinese ports infected In order to
put a stop to the entrance iuto the colony of
Chinese Immigrants.
The Hessian fly has appeared in the wheat
fields of New Zealand and instructions for
coping with the invader have been transmit-
ted from England by wire.
A sample of ryi> has recenly been exhibited
in Chicago grown iu Germany. It Is clean
and even, but thin, and weighs about flfty-
four pounds to the measured bushel.
A company has been organized with $100,
000,000 of capital to carry out the scheme of
the late Lieut. Maury, U. S. N„ for opening
the Amazon to the trade of the world.
Canal freights In corn from Chicago to New
York, via lake and canal, are quoted at
cents per bushol, or $1.05 per ton of 3,000
pounds, for transportation 1,500 miles.
Under the laws ot Iowa a passenger who
sticks his head out of a car window and has
it knocked off by a switch bar Is guilty of a
misdemeanor, and can be sent to jail for
three months.
Look out for the man who is advertising an
infallible cure for a corn, price $1, and money
refunded if the corn does not disappear. If
you send him s dollar you will reccivo by re-
turn mall the following rcclue: "Cut off
your toe."
Mi. Kennan gives one a good idea of
the enormous size of Siberia by stating that
Its territory would contain the United States,
including Alaska, with all of the States of
Europe except Russia, and there would still
be 300,000 square miles to spare.
Algeria Is undergoing great devastation
from a plague of crickets. This visitation
closely resembles the plague of locusts so
well known in tne East, to which, indeed,
Algeria Is sometimes liable. Cut in this case
It Is neither a locust nor a grasshopper, but a
cricket
Some Southern women are distinguishing
themselves as farmers and fruit growers. One
Georgia woman has sold this season 8,000
quarts from about one-half an acre of straw-
berries. She has set out 30,000 additional
plants, doing all the works with her own
hands.
That beautiful and valuable breed of fowls,
the Plymouth Rocks, originated about thirty
years ago in New England. Two different
strains started about ;the same time, one in
Massachusetts, the other iu Connecticut
They were produced by crossing the Ameri-
can Dominique and Black Java.
"I honestly think," says T. D. English,
"that a healthly and able-bodied toad, of in-
dustrious habits, will get away with and di-
gest his own weight of Insects during twenty-
four hours. If you be of an in9ectlcidal turn
of mind, turn out by daylight, and watch the
toads getting breakfast It Is interesting."
The metric system Is now the only lega
system of weights and measures for about
four hundred and ten millions of people, the
only prominent exceptions to Its general use
being in Russia, the United Statqs and Great
Britain, In the last two of which its use Is
authorized, although not generally adopted.
' Franco is expected to have an average
wheat crop; Russia haB good promise of a
(food crop, and other Continental countries'
[prospects are favorable, though about ten
days late. Private despatches from San
jFrancleco state that California is expected to
■have an output of wheat crop as large ai
[that 1887.
The largest umbrella in the world has been
|madc in Glascow for a king of East Africa.
-It can be opened and shut in the usual way,
,and when opened it is twenty-one feet in
|diame ter; the staff is also twenty-ono feet
ilong. It it lined with cardinal red and white,
,has a lot of straw tassels, and a border ol
,crImson satin. The cauopy itself is made of
(Italian straw, and the top terminates lu n
j glided cone.
; In the last eight years, the followiug figures
(indicate the increase of population in the
jscvcral States mentioned: Louisiana, about
|2< per cent; Florida, about 40 per cent; Ar-
jkansps, about 50 per cent.; Colorado, about
[68 per cent.; Texas, about 70 per cent.; Mln-
inesota, about 80 per cent.; Washington Ter-
ritory, about 03 per cent.; Nebraska, about
[133 per cent., Idaho, about 300 per cent.;
iMontana, about 333 per cent, Wyoming,
iabout 309 per cent., Dakota, about 344 per
jeent.
In California some damage has been
jdono to the hay by raiu, but the fruit, with
.[the possible exception of cherries, Is not
[hurt. Late-grown wheat is benefited, The
;army worm has nppeared In certain parts ol
lUpper Napa and Sonoma Valleys, and caused
[severQ damage. If not destroyed tho worms
•will leave nothing of the vines but the stem
;and branches. They come by thousands, and
[the best method of defence has been some
deep trenches dug about the fields and filled
with wat#
An ircpK"f<ni arrangement, which is likely
to prove o£ VnuQ'.-, le German farmers, has been
carried out by General Agricultural as-
sociation of Schlet^fgilolstein. An agency
18 to bo created for the Sirect sale of butter
;upon the English maiV*. A contract has
"bMn concluded with a merthant of London,
.who wll>take over the commercial representa-
tion of the dairies In the above-mesttfoned
.province. By this means the dairy sssocia-
tlons already in existence, or te bi funded
later on, will be able to gain, !t Is antici-
pated, far greater profit froia. the English
(markets than they do now.
Tito oltl Hindoo >m of uniting differ-
ent metals by casting lias boon success-
fully revived in a Boston foundry
where steel and bronze are the metals
dealt with. Those portions of tlio
finished article which are to be of
bronze are lirst cast, and after cooling
are removed from tho mold and tho
surface thoroughly cleaned from all
traces of oxide or other impurities.
These pieces are then placed in a mold
having a form corresponding to that
of tho finished article, and tho vacant
spaccs are then filled with molten steel,
which thoroughly unites with the
bronze wherever, it comes in contact
with its It is proposed to use this
process in tho production of firearms,
with an inner line of bronze and an
outer jacket of steel, but the prospects
of a useful arm being produced in this
way do not appear very flattering.
A writer in tho Economisto Francais
estimates the total los3 to France from
the ravages of tho phylloxera since
1805, when this scourge of the French
vineyards hrst made its appearance,
at the enormous sum of ten milliards
of francs or about £400,000,000. This
estimate is based upon French official
statistics giving aggregate area of vine-
yards destroyed in tho country at about
2,500,000 acres and on tho assumption
that, in addition to the acreage of vines
thus utterly destroyed, tho extent of
vineyards more or less infested with
tho phylloxera amounts to about 500,-
000 acres; making thus together 3,000,
000 acres.
Both in China and Japan soap stone
has long been largely used for protect-
ing structures built of soft stone and
other materials specially liable to at-
mospheric influences. It has beon
found that powdered soapstone in the
form of paint has preserved obelisks
formed of stone for hundreds of years
which would, unprotected, have long
ago crumbled away. For the insido
painting of steel and iron ships it is
found to bo excellent. It has no anti-
fouling quality, but is anti-c&rrosive.
Engineering remarks that alloys
formed by melting two or more metals
together present some very curious
characteristics, among which is the
fact that the melting point of the alio
is in general much lower than that of
either of itseonstituants. Wood's alloy
for instance, which consists of lead,tin
cadinium and bismuth, melts at about
150® F., while tho lowest fusing poin
of any of tho metals seperatcly is that
of tin—140 ®.'
An approximate idea of the amount
of manganese contained in steel can
bo ascertained by means of the mag-
net. A magnet capable of lifting
thirty pounds of ordinary steel or iron
will only lift a few milligrammes if the
metal contains twenty per cent of
manganese. So small a quantity as
eight per cent will nearly neutralize
the magnetic attraction.
A double-pointed nail is the inven-
tion of an ingenious woman. The points
turn in opposite directions. They are
especially useful for invisible nailing
in wood-work. It is simply two nails
joined firmly, the sides of tho heads
being placed together.
A Nurcmburg inventor has produced
a shoo sole composed of wire net over-
laid with a substance resembling
india-rubber. These soles, which cost
but half the price of leather, have been
tested in the Gorman army, aud found
to bo twice as durable.
Dr. Worms of tho PaVis Academy of
Medicine, has ascertained that bees,
ants and wasps show a marked dislike
to tho now saccharine. To the human
palate there is no difference in the taste
between it and sugar. It has been
shown, however, that its use disturbs
digestion
TV e would be pleased to snow ot a man or
woman who has never had headache or been
subject to constipation. As these seem to be
universal troubles, a little advice may be In
order. Why should persons cram their
stomachs with nauseating purgative pills,
etc., which sicken and debilitate, when inch
a pleasadt and sterling remedy as Prickly Ash
Bitters will act mildly and effectually on the
liver, kidneys, stomach and bowels, and at
the same time tone up and strengthen the
whole system, causing headache, constipa-
tion and all such distressing evlli to quickly
disappear!
It is predicted that the borings
through the Straits of Dover will reveal
tho existence of extensive coal beds.
Cold Weather Benevolence.
Why is cold weather prodnctlve of benev
olcncc? it makes people put their hands In
their pockets. It also produces courhs,
colds and croup. Take Taylor's Cherokee
Remedy of Sweet Guin and Mullein.
Wet rope is only one-third as tensile
as dry, aud greased rope is even
weaker.
If afflicted with Pore Eyes, use Dr. Isaac
Thompson's Eye AVater. Druggist sell it. 35e
There arc in the United States over
eighty miles of railroad on which the
motive power is electricity.
5?JAC©BS ©H
B. MARK
SPRAINS, STRAINS, INJURIES.
1311 Seventh St., Loalatllle, Kj.
Willi# helping to remove a frame building of th«
Cltr Railway Co., it fell over on me, preeilng mo
to the ground and uprafnlng my back. 1 waa ear-
ned home on a stretcher, and the doctori attended
no two weeks, when my wife persuaded mo to us4
■t. Jacob* Oil, and the pain was soon gone entirely.
JASPER BROWER.
Sold by Druggist* and Dealer* Everywhere.
THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO., fcsltlmsrs, Md,
'1 lie ivuiurkuuiu suustaucu Known us
poteline is formed ft mixture of glycer-
ine, tannin and gelatine, to which may
bo added tho sulphato of baryta or
zinc-white, tho resulting mass may bo
colored by the addition of vegetable
colors. While poteline is hot it can bo
molded, and when cold is susceptible
ot every kind of manipulations such as
turning, fillitnr, boring, etc., aud takes
-very line polish.
Is This What Ails You?
Do vou huvo dull, heavy headache, obsl ruc-
tion of the nasal passuccs, discharges tallies
from the head iuto the throat, sometimes
profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick,
tenacious, mucus, purulent, bloody and pu-
trid; eyes weak, watory and Inflamed; rini;-
luc In the ears, deafness, hacking or cough-
liur to clear up the throat, expectoration of
offensive matter, together with scabs from
ulcers; voice chungcd and nasal twang;
breath offesnslve; smell and taste Unpaired;
is there a sensation of dizziness, wltn mental
depression, a hacking cough and general de-
bility? If you have all or any considerable
number of these symptoms, you aie suffering
from Nasal Cartarrh. 'the more complicated
jour disease has become, the greator the
number and diversity of symptoms. Thoj-
sands of cases annually, without manifesting
half of the above symptoms, result In con-
sumption, and ena in tne grave. Nodiseitfc
Is so common, more deceptive and dangerous,
or loss understood, er more unsuccessfully
treated by physicians. The manufacturers
of Dr. Sage's Catarrh remedy offer, in good
faltp, a reward of (500 tor a case of this dis-
ease which tljcy cannot cure. The remedy Is
sold by druggists, at only 50 cents.
Medical authority can bo found for
the theory that it is the early riser who
catches miasma if there bo any in tho
air.
Thief Arrested.
Tho news was received with the utmost
satisfaction by the community that be had
terrorized; but the arrest of a disease that is
stealing away a loved and valued life, Is an
achievement that should inspire heart-felt
gratitude. Chilliness, cold extremities, de-
pressed spirits, and extremely miserable sen-
sations, with pale, wan features, are the
results of disordered kidneys and liver. Ar-
rest tho causo at once by taking Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery. It is a purely
vegetable detective that will ferret out ana
capture the most subtle lung or blood disor-
der. Druggists.
Basic slag, the refuse of steel works,
when freed from iron and reduced to
—
powder, proves to be
fertilizer.
a valuablo
When fragile woman sighs, del loring
The charms that quickly fade away,
What power, the bloom of health restoring,
Can check the progress of decay 1
The only aid that's worth attention.
For pains and ills of such description,
Thousands of women gladly mention—
'lis "Pierce's Favorate Proscription."
The price of this royal remedy, Dr. I'leree's
Favorite Prescription, is but one dollar.
Specific for ull those chronic ailments and
weaknesses peculiar to women. The only
medleiuefor such maladies, sold by druggists,
under a positive guarantee from the manu-
facture rs, that it will give satisfaction or
money refunded. See guarantee on bottle
wrapper. Large bottles $1. Six for 15.
It has been ascertained by carefu
experiments conducted by M. Roger
that poisons lose one-fifth of their
toxic power when taken into the sys-
tem by fasting.
Blood Poison
*'I was polaoncd by poison lry. and let It go till the
poison got Into my blood, when I was obliged to give
up work, and was confined to my house for two
months. I had sores and soales on me from head to
feet, my finger nails camo off, and my hair and
whiskers came out. I had two physicians, but did
not seem to get much hotter. Hood's Snrsnparllla
helped me so much that I continued taking It till I
US* "HP* hottloi. when I was curtf . Ictnrcfr
ommenj HSM's Sarssparlfia to all as the beat blood
purifier I know of." George W. Vunk, 70 Park
ATenae, UrocVjiort, N. T.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. II; six for *5. Prepare'! only
bj C. I. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
LIVER
DNEYS
WELS
m
ana n$iuuramoi „
Tsst of Tsars,
f Ik*
has stood tha Tsst of Ts
i Curing all Diaaaiai ol
^BLOOD.Llfwt, IXl
, tn>KlT lBf
*«. ItPurlflei
Uisr.7i-
DYSPKPB
PATI01T, JA
UCKHXADAI
I0XT800HPLJ
disappear atoncaufei
lta beneficial Inflow.
It Is purely a Hodltis*
Mlta cathartlo proper-
ties forbida it* iiimi
beverage. It is pleas-
ant to tne taite, fend as
easily taken by ehlld.
ren ai adults.
PBIOKiy ASH UTTERS Cfl
wbfnMMan,
SnXovi* Kama* OR*
FOR AIX DISORDERS OF THE
Stomach, Liver
and Bowels
TAKE
PISIFICmls
STRICTLY VEGETABLE.
Cure Constipation. Indigestion, Dyspepsia,Piles,
Sick Headache, Liver Complaints. Loss of Ap-
petite, Biliousness, Nervousness. Jaundice, eta
lor tale by all Druggists. Price, 2.1 Cento.
•ICIFIC MANUFACTURING CO.. ST. LOUIS. M
WANTED
Dallas, Texaa. K
AGENTS to soli The
Plctorlnl Hlolor)-
of the Illble. Address
A.P. POSTER*Co.,
Name this paper.
FREE La-rK° ™^h,-*!AOB PAI'KB.
I Address Box 86, Toledo, Ohio.
FREE
By return mall. Foil Descrlptlaa
Hoedy's >>w Tnlltir Hiatal, f Urtmt
Cuttle*. HOODY £ CO.. Ciaoiao'.ti. 0.
TEXAS LAND8
•tourexpense. Uodle
solicited for sale. When con-
tracted, liberally advertised
er & 1'orter,Dallas,Tex.
fC'« •• a Oar. Psmplsa worth ftM SRIS. Lines
l
J
%||
I
I
I1'
SLiME'ifi
w*-w\iiw*n
INVALIDS' HOTELsSURfilCAL INSTITI
No. 663 Main Street, BUFFALO, N. V.
/Not a Hospital, but a pleasant Remedial Home, organised with
A FULL STAFF OF EIGHTEEN PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS;
And exclusively devoted to tlio treatment of all Chronle Diseases.
I.-
\
: i
A FAIR AND BUSINESS-LIKE OFFER TO INVALIDS,
Wo earnestly :
Invito you to como. sco and examltio for yimrstlf, our institution!, appliances, advantages and auocepa In in
chronic diseases, lluvo a mind of your own. l)u not listen to or hoed tho counsel of skeptical friends or jealous physicians,
know nothing of us, our system of treatment, or means of euro, yet who never loso an opportunity to misrepresent and onar
to uiwjudlco people atfoinst us. Wo arc responsible to vou for what wo represent, and If you como ana visit ui, and And . _
wo liavo misrepresented, iit any particular, our institutions, advantages or success we will promptly refund 10 TOI
nil expenses of .your trip. Wo court honest, sincere investigation, have no seoroU, and are only too glad to anOW M
interested and candid people what we are doing for suffering humanity.
COMMON SENSE AS APPLIED
It is a well-known fact, nnd ono that npiienls to tho judgment of
his whole tlmo to tho study and Investigate
diseases than I10 wli
Mfen, In all ages of
investigation of a certain class ,,
, treat every ill t6 which tlf,«h is heir,
tho world, who have become famous, have devoted tholr
MEDICINE.
■thnM
ualifled
who
braqoh ot WMoe,
literature organization, nnd subdividing tho practlco of mcdloine and sur^ry in ttita institution, every Invalid l«
"" ■ ■■ • attention to the particular class of diseases to which tho case belong
by a specialist-ono who devotes his undivided attention to the particular class of disease^ to which the case belonrt.
advantage of this arrangement must be obvious. Medical science offers a vast llold ■ for investigation, and no pbysVolan
within tlio brief limits of a lifo-time, achieve tho highest degree ot success in tho treutmottt of every malady incident to buntl
NOT ALWAYS NECESSARY TO S£E P^^EJJT^.
examining our patients, I|t recognising dli
humanity.
By our original system of diagnosis, we can treat many chronto
diseases just as successfully without as with n personal con-
sultation. While we are always glad to see our patients, ahd
bct'omo acquainted with thein, show them our institutions, anc
familiarize them with our svstem of treatment, yet wo huve i)ol
sech ono person in live hundred whom wo have cured. The per-
fect accuracy with which scientists aro enabled to dcduco tljo
most mlnuto particulars in their several departments, appears
almost miraculous, if wo view it in the light of the early ages.
Take, Wr example, tho eleotro-magnctlo telegraph, the greatest
invention of tho ago. Is it not a marvelous degree of accuracy
which enables an operator to exactly locate a fracture in a sub-
marine cablo nearly threo thousand miles long? Our venerkblo
itncr" has become so thoroughly familiar w Itli
the most wayward elements of nature that ho can accurately
predict their movements. He can sit in Washington and foretell
what the weather will bo in Florida or New York as well as if
several hundred miles did not Intervene between him and tho
places named. And so In all departments of modern science,
whut is required is tho knowledge of certain
BtynK. From these scientists deduce accurate con-
clusions regardless of distance. Ho, also, In medi-
cal science, diseases have certain unmistakable
signs, or symptoms, and by reason of this fact, we
have been enabled to originate nnd perfect a sys-
— tern of determining, with the greatest accuracy,
of chronio diseases, without seeing and personally
tho nature
ari thus praccifwlthln thj 1
J. qky reside 11
Options a st>Sclall
_ iSrM
lstakaUe data, to guide the
llful jirJotltlonor aright In dei
jMftlopi. The most amp"
~ and the 1
distant!,
mfnt ot BU
nal, sclenting sysM
tance are contain
medical Adviser.'
^ ftrlt-V. Plei
J nnd other illustrations. . ..
^ describe your symptoms, luclft
Hps, an a a oomplete treatise, on your 1
be scut you, irlUt our term* for treatnien
ND
iseases.
OUR FIELD SUCCESS.
The treatment of Dlaeaaea of tho
Air Passage* and f/iuig*. suoh as
Chronic Niaaal Catarrh, Laryn-
gitis, Bronchitis, • Asthma, aud
Conauntptlon, both through cotre-
iti-
conatl
uiui. • juiaai
_onsuntpttou, both through
spondence and at our Institutions,
tutes an important specialty.
Wo publish throe separate books on Nasal,
Throat and tung Diseases, which givo much valuable information,
viz: (1) A Treatise on Consumptlc" * '
rloe, post-paid, ten cents. (S) A
giving new and successful treatinenl
3) ATI
'roatlse on Chronic Nasal Catarrh; price,
Diseases of
on, Laryngitis nnd UronchltiS 1
" on Asthma, or l'hthlslv.
A TreatlSO Ull yicmuia. UI
itinent; price, post-paid, ten com
,'atarrh; price, post-paid, *
,two
Dyspepsia, " Liver Complaint," Ob-
stinate Constipation, Chronic Diar-
rhea, Vape-worms, and kindred affectlops
aro among those chronic diseases In the suc-
cessful treatment of which our specialists have
attulncd great success. Many of the diseases
affecting the liver and other organs contributing In their func-
tions to the process of digestion, aro very obscure, and are not
Infrequently mistaken by both laymen ami physicians for other
maladies, and treatment Is employed dlreoted to tho removal of a
disease which does not exist. Our Complete Treatise on Diseases
Of tho Digestlvo Organs will be sent to any address on reoolpt of
ten cents In postage stamps.
DRIOHT'S DISEASE, DIABETES, and
kindred maladies, have been very largoly treated.
tion of patients, who can. therefore, generally be
KSuccessfully treated at tlielr homes. Ths study and
ictlco of chemical analysis and mloroscopl "
e urine in our consideration " "
ur institu
e
ly no <
"gely patronIzoilliy si ...
and world-famed World's Dispensary and Invalids' Hoi
. leal examlnatu
of oases, with reference t<
tutlon long agO became famou
diagnosis. In which our institution, long agO became
naturally led to a very extensive practice in diseases of the urinary
organs. Probably no other institution in the world ' " "
organs,
largely
r suffers from this olsss of mulaSleit as ufe old
jrld's Dispensary and Invalids' Hotel. Our
specialists have acquired, through a vast and varied experience,
great expertness In determining the exact nature of each Case,
and, hence, have been successful In nicely adapting their remedies
for the euro of each individual case.
0
These delicate diseases should bo carefully treated
stage of advuncoment whloh tfie dls&e hi
nly bo ascertained by a careful chemical an
ilnatlon of the urine /, for medicines which are
ItlTtMl I by a specialist thoroughly familiar with them.
1 ,un" I who Is competent to ascertain th
n, am
dltiul
1 and
made (which can on _
microscopical examination
curative In one stage or condition are known to do punitive injury
in others. We have nevqr, therefore, attempted to put up any thlr
for general sat
diseases, although
ell fi
urse is to carefully deterinii
_ _ .Jcrosconlci
urine, and then adapt our medicines to tho exact stage of the dls-
from an extensive experience that tho only Fitfe and success-
ful course is to carefully determine the dlsi-ase nnd Its progress lu
each case by a chemical and microscopical examination of the
ease and condition of our patient.
Success.
To this wise course of action we attribute the
marvelous success attailAl by out
that important and extensive Depa
Institutions devoted exclusively to tho treatment
•l by our specialists In
5 Department of our
ot diseases of the kidneys nnd bladder. The treat-
ment of diseases of tne urinary orgnns
constituted a leading branch or our practice at the Invalids Hotel
and Hurglcal Institute, aud, being in constant receipt of numerous
inquiries for a complete work on the nature nnd curability of these
saaladles. written In a style to be easily understood, wo have pub-
lished a large Illustrated Treatise on these diseases, which will be
sent to any address on receipt of ten cents in postage stamps.
INFLAMMATION OF THE BI.AD.
DIOK, STONE IN THE BI.ADDER,
«ravel, Enlarged Prostate Uland, Re-
tention of Urine, and kindred affections,
may lie Included among those In the cure of which
Diseases.
I Stricture. I;
1 11
our specialists have achieved extraordinary sue/.
" lly treated of In our Illustrated pamphlet
Kent by mall for ten cents In stamps.
cess. These are full
Urinary Diseases,
I STRICTURES AND URINART FISu
TUIjAJ.—Hundreds of cases of tho worst form
of strictures, many of thern greatly aggravated
' by the careless use of Instruments In the hands
of Inexperienced physicians anil surgeons, causing false passages,
urinary flstulse, and other complications, annually consult us for
relief and cure. That no ease 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 wo refer with pride. To
intrust this — "* *—'— —'
dangerous 1
doing, while thousands annually
treatment. Send particulars of your ease and ten eenta In stamps
for a largo, Illustrated treaties containing many testimonials.
Flta, Pa-
ocomotor Ataxia,
pamphlets on nervous diseases, any ona of which will be aent /at
ten Cunts in postage stamps, irhen request for them is aocomp
with a stati '
on 9 of 0
Diseases of
QUr BJHJC
Qtton
tattoo, bo that we umy ]
wuicu uuvti
the homo physicians) has tho
specialists. Rooms for ladies r.
vate, Beud (en cents in stampi
on Diseases of Women, iUustraf
colored plates (160 pages).
partment, th
vc no
... Cure
mas
St
Knoutd^penoel
Ibundaut references.
df Rupture.
Illustrated
PILES,
bowels, are
and othor diseases affecting the lower
ul success. Ths worst oaaea of
fifteen to twenty daf^
CdWn
nervous debili
*fety, a
melano
To th
trefrtm
er no a
to thii
no con
vs
disease* con
011 doing gooq an
wo cannot imaain
ginj
than most honora
we cannot understand)
T,
Just m wcj) ajuf beryl
i (138 pages) on these <
afflict mankind thei,
S35&
Cup r Hose. ££
A Complete Treatise (MB pages) on these diseases sent Haled.
in plain envelope, secure from observation, on receipt of only tad
cents, in stamps, for postage.
Hundreds of the most dlffloult.
to modern surgery are annually
nost skill*"1 manner, by. p"
ts. Large - :ones are safel]
iiaddir, by crushing, washf
out, thus avoiding i
itaract from the aye,,
' i cross-eyes and inset
'lsn ond also Fibroid
sur6ical
growth and cured by
_ir invention, whereby
cutting operations id these esses is avoided.
Especially has the success of our improved
•ele. Hydrocele, Fistulas, Ruptured
s, Ftotu
lured Perineum, been al
patients. Not less So ha'
for fltricture of tb<
erally resultlii
alike
Cervical Caal
nneas, or
rstli
mora'
electro
Is class of cases to physicians of small experience Is a
i proceeding. Many a man has b«on ruined for life by to
lie thousands annually loso their lives through unskillful
Epileptic Convulalona, or
ralysla, or Palsy, tscomott
St. VUna's Dance, Ineonanla,
to sleep, and
Debility, arlsii
other < '
. Jnaonanla, or inability
threatened insanity. Nervous
' from (
lllty, arising from overstud/, excesses, and
■ causes, and every variety or nervous alleo-
tlon. are treated by our specialists for these disease, with unusual
fWOSM. 8sw numsrous oases reported In our atiffeivnt llluftrated
„ iPL , . , __ .
by a safe and painless operation, remo'
pediments to tha bearing of offsprlnr.
A Complete Treatise oh any one of t
sent on receipt of ten cents in stamps.
Mtboug
apHkmi
ments
K.
'en i>y
u, a condition In ibe ..
Sterility, and the cure
vea thl, commonest <
tha above in a) ad las will |*
Although we have la the preceding '
graphs, made i ' — —
ailn-- ■
qufring for it# cUr$ medic
All letters of Inquiry, eg
Illlll III
tutlon abo
<
. —k :
li^sl
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The Mineola Monitor (Mineola, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 40, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 30, 1888, newspaper, June 30, 1888; Mineola, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth254240/m1/7/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mineola Memorial Library.