in order to make a few dollars. We find that one man cured
is the very best advertisement we can have, and that one such case makes
us one warm friend and advocate, and brings us many patients, where one
man deceived and defrauded would make us one bitter enemy and injure us
in the eyes of many. Thus, every other consideration of honor and
honesty aside, it pays us better to deal fairly with our patrons.
This treatment has been thoroughly tried in the most desperate and
adverse cases, and has stood the test of time and repeated trials, has
stood these tests as no other remedy or remedies ever have or ever will,
and in them men of all ages and all conditions may find strength, health
and vigor.
THE CIVIALE REMEDIAL AGENCY,
MAIN OFFICES AND LABORATORY,
174 FULTON STREET,
NEW YORK CITY.
--> Please address all Medical and Business Letters to Offices, 174
Fulton street. They may be addressed to CIVIALE AGENCY, or Mr. L. B.
Jones, our Business Manager.
(From the New Orleans _Weekly Picayune_, May 23, 1885.)
CIVIALE REMEDIAL AGENCY.--Every man, whether he be young, middle aged,
or old, suffering from weakness, debility, or impotency, will be made
healthy and happy by writing to this excellent concern, at 174 Fulton
street, New York. The advertisement should be read, which will show
skeptics that the agency is worthy of confidence. The press and medical
profession indorse the gentlemen connected with it in strong terms.
A SPECIAL AND IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT.
STRICT MORALITY vs. FALSE MODESTY.
In preparing both the first and later editions of this little work (that
has brought happiness to so many by opening the way to knowledge of a
proper means of cure and methods of regaining health and vigor), +the
utmost care and circumspection have been exercised in an endeavor to
exclude from its pages anything that could be construed by the most
fastidious as immodest, obscene, or in any way offensive to decency,
morality or good breeding+. Indeed, although purely and essentially
+a medical work, and intended solely for such persons whose duty it is
to be acquainted with the facts given+, in order to understand their
complaint, to place themselves under proper treatment, and to avoid
the dangers of quackery, we have in many instances wholly excluded
or materially modified the wording of passages in order to comply
with our original ideas of the strictest purity of thought and speech
commensurate with a
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