ntlemen, from the depths of a grateful heart, I
remain.
Your obedient servant, G., Cayuta, Schuyler Co., N.Y.
* * * * *
Did the interest of our readers demand it, we could add to the preceding
list an almost endless number of extracts from letters written by
grateful patients, expressing their heart-felt thanks for having been
cured of spermatorrhea and impotency by our treatment. But we have we
trust given sufficient to illustrate our great success in dealing with
these maladies.
A CAUTION TO THE AFFLICTED. We are daily consulted by persons suffering
from spermatorrhea and impotency who have been victimized by ignorant
charlatans. Some seek to dupe and swindle the unwary by claiming to have
themselves been cured of spermatorrhea or impotency by some
prescription, which they offer to send free to any sufferer. When the
prescription is obtained it is found to consist of a few articles
well-known to every druggist, coupled with certain arbitrary and
fictitious terms, unknown to everybody and not to be found in any
medical work extant. Following the prescription is a modest suggestion
that if it cannot be filled by the home druggist, the
benevolently-disposed party furnishing the prescription will be pleased
to send the medicine, already prepared, for from three to five dollars.
Of course, the whole scheme from beginning to end being a swindle, when
the "medicine" is obtained and taken it proves entirely useless. Skill
and genuine merit do not go begging. Men who spend hundreds of dollars
for the publication of advertisements offering to give away valuable
information can always be safely set down as swindlers.
In the public prints will be found advertised various ready prepared,
"put-up," or proprietary, so-called "remedies," "Specifics," "Boluses,"
"Pastiles," "Rectal Pearls," "Urethral Crayons," "Voltaic Belts,"
"Galvanic Belts," "Batteries," and "Pads," all recommended as infallible
remedies for spermatorrhea and impotency.
A vast experience in the treatment of these affections has satisfied us
that each case must be studied and treated according to the symptoms
manifested, and that medicines that are adapted to one stage of the
disease are entirely unsuited to other stages of the same case. No "Pad"
or "Battery and Pad," "Galvanic" or "Voltaic Belts," "Battery," "Bolus,"
or "Soluble Crayon," ever did or can help a case of this disease, except
it be in the imagination. Al
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