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IS THE MOST POWERFUL ANTISEPTIC AND PUS DESTROYER.
HARMLESS STIMULANT TO HEALTHY GRANULATIONS.

GLYCOZONE

(C. P. Glycerine combined with Ozone.)

THE MOST POWERFUL HEALING AGENT KNOWN.

Successfully used in

Diphtheria, Croup, Scarlet Fever, Sore Throat, Catarrh of the Nose. Ozena, Hay Fever, LaGrippe, Bronchitis, Asthma, Laryngitis, Pharyngitis, Whooping Cough, Etc. Inflammatory and Suppurative diseases of the Ear. Send for free 300-page book "Rational Treatment of Diseases caused by Germs," containing reprints of 140 scientific articles by leading contributors to medical literature.

Physicians remitting 50 cents will receive one complimentary sample of each, Hydrozone" and "Glycozone."

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Hydrozone is put up only in extra small, small, medium and large size bottles bearing a red label, white letters, gold and blue border, with my signature.

Glycozone is put up only in 4-oz., 8-oz. and 16-oz. bottles bearing a yellow label, white and black letters, red and blue border, with my signature.

MARCHAND'S EYE BALSAM

cures all inflammatory and contagious

diseases of the eyes.

DISTRIBUTING AGENTS:

Thomas Christy & Co., 25 Lime St., London, Eng.

Leeming, Miles & Co., 53 St. Sulpice St., Montreal, Can.

PREPARED ONLY BY

Charles Marchand

Beckett, Zeilin & Co., 220 Sutter St., San Francisco, Cal. Chemist and Graduate of the Ecole Centrale des

E. H. Buehler, 134 Lake St., Chicago, Ill.

John W. Lehman, 428 Camp St., New Orleans, La.

SOLD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS.

"

Arts et Manufactures de Paris (France).

57-59 Prince St., New York.

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WHEN THE

STOMACH REFUSES

food and nourishment, when intestinal or gastric inflammation render the stomach entirely unavailable, or inadequate, try

BOVININE

per rectum. It will nourish and support, and aid any form of medication.

When collapse calls for instantaneous blood supplytry it by sub-cutaneous injection of one part to two of neutral salt solution, and note the prompt response, a response so much more efficient and powerful than that from blood dilution. If you are interested a postal will bring our scientific treatise on topical and internal administration, and reports of hundreds of clinical cases.

THE BOVININE CO.,

75 West Houston St., New York. LEEMING MILES & CO., MONTREAL.

Sole Agents for the Dominion of Canada.

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This is what the pallid anæmic individual needs from whatever cause such blood poverty may arise. The best way to "build blood" is to administer

"Pepto-Mangan ("Gude")

This palatable combination of Organic Iron and Manganese contributes to the vital fluid the necessary oxygen-carrying and haemoglobin-producing elements and thus brings about a pronounced betterment in cases of Simple or Chlorotic Anæmia, Amenorrhea, Bright's Disease, Chorea, Dysmenorrhoea, etc.

In order to be sure of obtaining the genuine Pepto-Mangan "Gude" prescribe
an original bottle, holding xi. IT'S NEVER SOLD IN BULK.

M. J. BREITENBACH COMPANY, Sole Agents for U. S. and Canada,

LABORATORY, LEIPZIG, GERMANY.

NEW YORK.

† † † † † † j j j j

100 Warren St., Tarrant Bldg., NEW YORK.

DENVER MEDICAL TIMES

THOMAS H. HAWKINS, M.D., LL.D., EDITOR AND PUBLISHER.

COLLABORATORS:

Henry O. Marcy, M.D., Boston.
Thaddeus A. Reamy, M.D., Cincinnati.
Nicholas Senn, M.D., Chicago.
Horace Tracy Hanks, M.D., New York.
Joseph Price, M.D., Philadelphia.
Joseph Eastman, M.D., Indianapolis.
Franklin H. Martin, M.D., Chicago.
William Oliver Moore, M.D., New York.
L. S. McMurtry, M.D., Louisville.
G. Law, M.D., Greeley, Colo.

S. H. Pinkerton, M.D., Salt Lake City.
Flavel B. Tiffany, M.D., Kansas City.
M. B. Ward, M.D., Topeka, Kan.
Erskine S. Bates, M.D., New York.
E. C. Gehrung, M.D., St. Louis.
Graeme M. Hammond, M.D., New York.
James A. Lydston, M.D., Chicago.
J. T. Eskridge, M.D., Denver.
Leonard Freeman, M.D., Denver.
Carey K. Fleming, M.D., Denver, Colo.

Subscriptions, $2.00 per Year in Advance; Single Copies, 20 Cents.

Address all Communications to Denver Medical Times, 1740 Welton Street, Denver Colo. We will at all times be glad to give space to well written articles or items of interest to the profession.

[Entered at the Postoffice of Denver, Colorado, as mail matter of the Second Class.]

EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT.

The Opening
College Year.

The annual grind begins in September, and about a quarter of the grist is finished the next April from the scholastic standpoint. With both teachers and students there is a mingled dread and desire to take hold of the old work again. The novelty of it all wears off in a week or two, when lecture-room and laboratory settle down to the steady routine of precept and example, whereby a full fruition and complement of medical science and art is to be expected. May each year's work in all the schools be better than the last, and let lecturers and professors everwhere remember that their highest function is to teach, not to orate.

The Doctor's No man needs his regular vacation Vacation. more than does the physician. What

with care and great responsibilities and the rough edges of daily experience, the flesh grows weak though the spirit is willing. Up in the cool mountain heights, or down by the balmy seashore, or hidden away at some obscure countryside, the love of life and action is renewed, and the doctor comes back to his patients with healing in his looks and in his

hands. Unfortunately he cannot always get away on a holiday jaunt. Sometimes only the wife and children are able to go and enjoy a rest. Often it is the patients who take the vacation and leave the doctor in the lurch, waiting to be paid for valuable services rendered. Will the day ever come when the average patient will recognize the rights of the person to whom health and life are owed, as equal to the demands of the butcher, the milliner, the circus and the theater?

The Association of American Medical Colleges.

This society convened at Atlantic City on June 4 and 5, at which several educational papers were read and discussed. Fifty-six colleges Such amendments as would exclude "sun-down" medical colleges were adopted, to take effect in July, 1901.

were represented.

Dr. Albert R. Baker, of Cleveland, was elected President, and Dr. Thomas H. Hawkins, of Denver, and Dr. W. H. Earles, of Milwaukee, Vice-Presidents. Dr. Parks Ritchie, Dr. W. W. Keen, and Dr. J. M. Dodson were added to the Judicial Council.

The Cooper Medical College, of San Francisco, the Medical Department of the University of Kansas, and the American Medical Missionary College, of Chicago, were elected to membership. A committee was appointed at the request of the federation of state examining boards to co-operate with a similar committee. appointed by them to consider common interests. This committee consisted of Dr. W. J. Holland, Dr. Dudley S. Reynolds, Dr. W. E. Quine, Dr. W. J. Means, and Dr. Parks Ritchie.

The Rocky Mountain Inter- This association held its State Medical Association. second annual meeting at Butte, Montana, Aug. 2829. Those interested in this distinctly local society watched with no little concern the success of this last meeting. The success of such a society is dependent on

the interest taken in its proceedings by the state in which it is held. That Colorado intends supporting it has been evidenced by its representatives when held in Utah, and by the interest taken in this year's meeting in Montana. The first meeting, held in Salt Lake City in 1899, was eminently a success. That Montana has taken hold most earnestly is shown by the fact that she added forty-three new names to the membership roll. This simply means that the Rocky Mountain Inter-State Medical Association is a success.

To Utah is due the credit of making the first meeting a success. Montana, however, has proven herself the keystone to the situation. All future meetings will have her to look to, and if they are as proportionately successful as the meeting held there, they may well feel proud.

The manner in which President Cole, with his able executive committee with Dr. Murray as chairman, conducted the meeting at Butte would have done credit to any of the old standard societies. There was no hitch in its proceedings, and the visiting members felt that they were well paid for the time spent in their attendance upon the meeting.

Too much cannot be said of the royal hospitality shown by the Butte physicians. Had they had their own way, in heaping pleasures upon the visiting members, it would have taken Cy Warman to express it. It would be day all day while it was day, and there would be no night in Butte. As it was the hospitality shown was equivalent to the endurance of the guests.

The scientific program excited interest and kept the attendance large throughout the meeting. We believe that Montana was benefitted by this meeting, as was Utah last year, and as we expect Denver to be next year.

We believe Dr. Fleming, who was elected president, has the interest of the meeting at heart. Its success will depend upon his choice of an executive committee. We feel as though that committee will be selected from

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