The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser in Plain English - LightNovelsOnl.com
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TERMS FOR BOARD AND TREATMENT AT THE INVALIDS' HOTEL AND SURGICAL INSt.i.tUTE
are moderate, varying with the nature of the case and the apartments occupied. At times so great is the number applying to avail themselves of the skill of our Faculty, and the advantages which our inst.i.tution affords, that we are unable to receive all applicants. To be sure of securing good apartments, it is well to engage them sometime ahead, and make an advance payment of fifty dollars or more upon them, which will be refunded in case acute sickness or any similar cause should prevent the patient from occupying them at the time specified. Complete terms for treatment and board can be arranged only when personal application for entrance to the inst.i.tution is made, and the nature and extent of the disease and the necessary treatment fully determined by personal examination of the case. If satisfactory terms and arrangements cannot at that time be agreed upon, or if the case be deemed incurable, any advance payments that have been made to secure good apartments will be promptly refunded.
SPECIAL ADVICE.
Those coming here to consult us personally, should bring the money to pay for our services and for board and care while remaining here, in the form of drafts on New York City, Boston or Chicago, and _not_ in the form of checks on a local or home bank. Such drafts can be purchased in the home bank by paying a small amount for the exchange. If more convenient, post office orders payable at Buffalo post office will do.
VISITING PATIENTS WHO RESIDE AT A DISTANCE.
We are frequently asked to visit patients residing hundreds of miles away, that we may personally examine their cases, or perform difficult surgical operations. We can seldom comply with such requests as the time of our professional Staff is generally very fully occupied.
TO PHYSICIANS
wis.h.i.+ng to consult us in intricate cases of chronic diseases under their treatment, we desire to say that we shall, as in the past, take pleasure in responding to their solicitations. We have all the necessary instruments and appliances required in executing the most difficult surgical operations, and, as we have had much experience in this department, we are always ready and able to a.s.sist physicians who do not practice operative surgery. In this age of railways and telegraphs medical and surgical aid can be summoned from a distance and promptly obtained.
OUR MEDICINES
as put up for sale through druggists, are not recommended as "cure-alls," or panaceas, but only as superior remedies for certain common and easily-recognized diseases. They are our favorite prescriptions, improved and perfected by long study and a vast experience in the treatment of chronic diseases, and have gained world-wide celebrity and sale. We are well aware that there are many chronic diseases that can only be successfully treated and cured by careful adaptation of remedies to each individual case. This is especially true of the ever-varying and delicate diseases of the kidneys and bladder. It is not less so with reference to nervous debility, involuntary vital losses, with which so many young and middle-aged men are afflicted; and we may also include in this list epilepsy or fits, paralysis or palsy, obstinate gleety discharges, and many other chronic and delicate ailments of which our staff of physicians and surgeons cure annually many thousands of cases, but _for which we do not recommend_ any of our put-up, ready-made, or proprietary medicines.
NO RELATIONs.h.i.+P WITH HUMBUGS.
Had our put-up or proprietary medicines, as sold by druggists the world over, been adapted to all cla.s.ses and forms of chronic diseases, there would have been no necessity for our organizing a competent staff of physicians and surgeons to act as experts in the treatment of difficult, obscure, and complicated cases of chronic diseases. That we keep constantly employed, in our Buffalo and London inst.i.tutions, eighteen medical gentlemen, with such helpers as chemists, clerks, etc., is indisputable proof that the medicines we offer for sale through druggists should not be cla.s.sed with the humbug nostrums recommended to cure everything. They are the outgrowth of our vast and extended practice in the treatment of chronic diseases; are well-tried, world-famed, and _honest medicines_. They are not unduly puffed and lauded, but simply recommended for such diseases as are easily recognized and which they are _known to cure._
NOT CONFINED IN PRESCRIBING
Our physicians, in the treatment of cases consulting us, prescribe just such medicines as are adapted to each particular case. _They are not confined in the least_ to our list of a few put-up or proprietary medicines (valuable as they are when applicable to the case) but resort to the whole broad range of the _materia medica_, employed by the most advanced physicians of the age. They are not hampered by any school, _ism_ or "_pathy_."
OUR MEDICINES PREPARED WITH THE GREATEST CARE.
The medicines employed are all prepared in our own Laboratory by skilled chemists and pharmacists, and the greatest care is exercised to have them manufactured from the freshest and purest ingredients. Our Faculty probably employ a greater number and variety of native roots, barks, and herbs, in their practice then are used in any other invalids' resort in the land. Using vast quant.i.ties of these indigenous medicines, we can afford and do not neglect to have them gathered with great care, at the proper seasons of the year, so that their medicinal properties may be most reliable. Too little attention is generally paid to this matter, and many failures result from the prescribing of worthless medicines by physicians who have to depend for their supplies upon manufacturers who are careless or indifferent in obtaining the crude plants and roots from which to manufacture their medicines for the market. While depending largely upon solid and fluid extracts of native plants, roots, barks, and herbs, in prescribing for disease, yet we do not use them to the exclusion of other valuable curative drugs and chemicals. We aim to be unprejudiced and independent in our selection of remedies, adopting at all times a rational system of therapeutics. This liberal course of action has, in a vast experience, proved most successful.
WORLD'S DISPENSARY MEDICAL a.s.sOCIATION, 663 MAIN STREET, BUFFALO, N.Y.
PRESIDENT GARFIELD'S
ENDORs.e.m.e.nT OF THE
INVALIDS' HOTEL AND SURGICAL INSt.i.tUTE
_AND ITS FOUNDER._
The following letter from an eminent lawyer of Tennessee, is noteworthy, inasmuch as it shows the estimation in which Dr. Pierce and the inst.i.tutions which he has founded were held by the lamented Garfield, who was one of the Doctor's intimate friends and colleagues while he was serving as a member of Congress:
OFFICE OF H.F. COLEMAN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, SNEEDVILLE, TENN., Aug. 11, 1884
_World's Dispensary Medical a.s.sociation, 663 Main St., Buffalo, N.Y._
GENTLEMEN:--Your letter of the 31st ult. just received and contents noted. I am perfectly satisfied with the explanation, and ask pardon for the sharp letter written you some days since. The mails are very irregular, as you know, and we are too apt to be impatient and attribute our mishaps to the wrong cause. Your honesty, integrity and ability are not doubted in the least by me.
I have, perhaps, a higher endors.e.m.e.nt of you than any other patient under your care, and for your gratification I will give it to you.
Some time since I was in conversation with Congressman Pettibone, of this State, when the following conversation took place: "You say," said the Major, "that you have visited Dr. Pierce's medical establishment in Buffalo, New York?" "Yes, sir, I did." "You found everything as represented?" "Yes, sir, as was represented, and which I a.s.sure you was quite encouraging to a man who had traveled as far as I had to visit an inst.i.tution of that kind." "That man, Dr. Pierce," said the Major, "is one of the best men of the times. While at Was.h.i.+ngton, during my first term," he continued, "one day I was in President Garfield's room and a fine-looking, broad-foreheaded gentleman came in, and President Garfield arose and took him by the hand and said, 'Good morning, Doctor, I am so glad to see you,' and then turned and introduced him to me as Dr.
Pierce, of Buffalo, New York. Knowing the Doctor by reputation, and having seen his pictures, I at once recognized him. He, in a short time, left the room, and Garfield said to me, 'Major, that is one of the best men in the world, and he is at the head of one of the best medical inst.i.tutions in the world.'"
With this high endors.e.m.e.nt, I have unbounded confidence in your integrity and ability.
Very truly yours, H.F. COLEMAN.
NOTICES OF THE PRESS.
OUR PROFESSIONAL STAFF.
The Buffalo _Evening News_ says: "Each and every member of the medical and surgical staff of the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Inst.i.tute is a graduate in medicine and surgery from one or more legally chartered medical colleges, and several of the members have had many years of experience as army surgeons, and in hospital and general as well as in special practice. One is a licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians, Edinburgh; licentiate of the Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons, Glasgow; licentiate of midwifery, Glasgow; member of the Royal College of Surgeons, London, England; extraordinary member of the Royal Medical Society, Edinburgh, etc. Another is a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, at Philadelphia; another of the New York Medical College; another of the Buffalo Medical College, and of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York; another of Cincinnati Medical College, and of the University of New York; another from Buffalo Medical College, and diplomas from all these inst.i.tutions, as well as from many others equally noted, can be seen at the offices of this inst.i.tution, if any one feels any interest in them."
_FROM THE "ROMAN CITIZEN," (ROME, N.Y.)._
THE INVALIDS' HOTEL AND SURGICAL INSt.i.tUTE.