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HYDROZONE

(30 volumes preserved aqueous solution of H.O2)

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

GLYCOZONE

(C. P. Clycerine combined with Ozone)

THE MOST POWERFUL HEALING AGENT KNOWN.

These remedies cure all diseases caused by Germs. Successfully used in the treatment of diseases of the GenitoUrinary Organs (Acute or Chronic):

Whites, Leucorrhoea, Vaginitis, Metritis, Endometritis, Ulceration of the Uterus, Urethritis, Gonorhæa,

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Cystitis,

Ulcer of the Bladder, etc.

Injections of Hydrozone diluted with water, (according to the degree of sensitiveness of the patient) will cure the most obstinate cases.

Send for free 240-page book "Treatment of Diseases caused by Germs," containing reprints of 120 scientific articles by leading contributors to medical literature.

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

Hydrozone 18 put up only in extra small, sma, 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.

Charles Marchand,

Sold by leading Druggists.

PREPARED ONLY BY

Charles Marchand

Chemist and Graduate of the "Ecoie
Centrale des Arts et Manufactures de
Paris" (France).

28 Prince St., New York.

Avoid Imitations.

Mention this Publication.

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For Nervous and Mental Diseases.

Grounds comprise sixty acres of stately oaks and are picturesque and secluded. Buildings roomy, homelike, free from institutional features, and erected with special reference to the care of nervous and mental invalids.

Interiors Bright and
Cheerful, Luxurious
Furnishings, Superior

Appointments, Skilled
Attendance, First-
Class Cuisine.

Equipment for hydrotherapeutic and electrical treatment complete and modern-Static, Galvanic and Faradic Ap

paratus, Electric Bath,

Turkish and Russian Baths and Massage.

Noyes' Amusement Hall in connection with the Hospital, containing gymnasium, billiard room, bowling alley, hall for assemblies, sitting room, lounging room and library, furnishes ideal facilities for indoor sports and diversion. Carriages for the daily use of patients, free. For terms, address

DR. G. B. BURR, Medical Director, FLINT, MIGH.

ਸਰੀਰ ਰ ਰ ਰ ਰ ਸਰੀਰ

BLOOD

ਤੀਰ ਮੀਰ ਮੀਰ ਪੀਰ ਸਰ

Rich Blood, Red Blood,

Blood with plenty of hæmoglobin

INTEGRITY

and a full modicum

of Red Corpuscles.

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, Amenorrhoea, Bright's Disease, Chorea, Dysmenorrhea, 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. 56-58 WARREN ST., NEW YORK.

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DENVER MEDICAL TIMES

THOMAS H. HAWKINS, M.D., LL.D., Editor.

DENVER MEDICAL PUBLISHING COMPANY.
THOS. H. GIBBS, Business Manager.

Henry O. Marcy, M.D., Boston.

COLLABORATORS:

Thaddeus A. Reamy, M.D., Cincinnati.
Nicholas Senn, M.D., Chicago.
William T. Lusk, M.D., New York.
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.,

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.

Bradford Galloway, M.D., Leadville, Colo.
Greeley, Colo.

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

Address all Communications to 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.

Medical Colleges Must The American Medical Association Come to Time. at its recent meeting unanimously adopted the following:

WHEREAS, The American Medical Association did, at Detroit in 1892, unanimously resolve to demand of all the medical colleges of the United States the adoption and observance of a standard of requirements of all candidates for the degree of doctor of medicine which should in no manner fall below the minimum standard of the Association of American Medical Colleges, and

WHEREAS, This demand was sent officially by the permanent secretary to the deans of every medical college in the United States and to every medical journal in the United States; now therefore, the American Medical Association gives notice that hereafter no pro

fessor or teacher in, nor any graduate of, any medical college in the United States, which shall after January 1, 1899, confer the degree of doctor of medicine or receive such degree on any conditions below the published standard of the Association of American Medical Colleges, (shall) be allowed to register as either delegate or permanent member of this association.

Consolidation.

The Atlanta Medical College and the Southern Medical College have united under the name of "The Atlanta College of Physicians and Surgeons." This suggests the amalgamation business in Denver last year. Notices appeared in the various journals, and especially in the Denver daily papers, that the faculties of the University of Denver and the University of Colorado had united, forming a strong aggressive faculty, and that the State School had gone out of existence. Later a counteracting statement was published that the better part of the faculty of the State School, together with the faculty of the Gross School had united. Later a statement was published that the State School had gone out of existence, and later events have proven the last statement to be true. We wonder if the Atlanta doctors are engaged in like medical college squabbles.

Home-Made Koumiss. The Dietetic and Hygienic Gazette furnishes the following receipe: Fill a quart champagne bottle to the neck with pure cow's milk; add two tablespoonfuls of white sugar, first dissolving it in a little water by aid of heat; add also a quarter of a two-cent cake of compressed yeast. Then securely fasten the cork in the bottle and shake the mixture well; place it in a room having a temperature of from 70 to 80 degrees F. for six hours and finally in the ice-box for about twelve hours. It is then ready for use and may be taken in quantities varying with the requirements of the stomach and general condition of the patient.

Bolles et Bolles. There lies before us the announcement of the "Western Institute of Osteo

pathy," located on Colfax Avenue, and run by a certain Bolles and his wife, "in close touch with Dr. A. T. Still, the founder of the science." The "course" is arranged in four terms, two in each year, and embraces "lectures on histology, pathology, anatomy, chemistry, physiology, psychology, psychiatry, osteopathic diagnosis and practice, etc. So far as the "bulletin" shows there are only two persons in this faculty, namely, Mr. and Mrs. Bolles. It is to be presumed that what Pa Bolles don't know about the various subjects, Ma Bolles does, for between them they must know it all. The tuition fee for the course, which is payable strictly in advance, is $500! In other words, the doughhead applicant for a D.O. degree must put down all the "dough" before he can even enter "into touch" with Bolles and Bolles. Yet he should not complain, for does he not have at the very outset an intensely practical lesson in "pulling the leg?" Great is the "Western Institute of Osteopathy" and long may it waver!

The Average Patient. The average patient sends for a doctor in haste and repays him at leisure.

The average patient is apt to estimate a physician's ability by the amount of atmosphere he displaces.

The average patient likes to be humbugged. Any old fad will do so long as it has a new name.

The average patient is willing to pay ten times as much for cutting off his leg as for saving it whole to him.

The average patient, when nearly well of a sickness, will take a bottle of Rotgut's Relief or a box of Poopendike's Pills, and to these will he give all the glory, and "the doctor be d-d."

The average patient believes that the os humerus is the funny bone and that the seat of all the finer emo

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