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Show Ithey were brave men. I AND THEY SPOKE OUT HONESTLY WHAT THEY BELIEVED. I Some Iost Remarkable Words from the I.ips of Leading; iProfessional Gentlemen Gentle-men in Europe and A meriea. Dr. Radcliff was the most celebrated physician phy-sician of England in Queen Anne's time. He amassed a large fortune, and was for many years the physician to the queen, as well as to most of the English nobility. For some reason the queen took a disilke to him at one time and dismissed him as court physician. In her last illness, however, she sent for him. He refused to obey the summons, sum-mons, declaring: "Since her majesty's ease is so desperate aud her distemper incurable, I hardly think it proper to give her any disturbance dis-turbance in her last moments, so near at hand, but rather let her die as easily as possible." pos-sible." Dr. Radcliff observed a short time before his death: "When I was young and yet unskilled un-skilled in medicine I possessed at least twenty remedies for every disease, but since I have grown old in the art of healing I know more than twenty diseases for which I have not even a single remedy." The late Dr. Holland, who was au educated educat-ed whysieian, some years before he died wrote in Scribntr1 Monthly: "It is a fact that many of the best proprietary medicines of the day are more successful than many physicians, and most of them have been discovered or used in actual medical practice. prac-tice. When, however, any shrewd person, knowing their virtue and foreseeing their popularity, secures and advertises them, iu the opinion of the bigoted all virtue goes I out of them." ! Dr. William Edward Robeson of the royal navy of England wrote to a London newspaper news-paper called the Family Dijctor as follows: Having had more than seventeen years' experience ex-perience in my profession, I can conscientiously conscien-tiously and emphatically state that I have been abie to give more relief and effect more cures by the use of 'timer's Safe Cure than by all other medicines ascertainable to the profession. The late Dr. Dio L5vris, who seldom prescribed pre-scribed any medicine, wrote as follows: "If I found ruyse'.f the victim of a 9erious kidney kid-ney trouble I should ute Warner's Safe, Cure. The testimony of hundreds of Intel- ligeut and very reputable gentlemen hardly I leaves room to doubt that it is oue of those ! happy discoveries which occasionally bring aid to suffering humanity. Dr. R. A. Gunn, dean of the United States ' Medical College and editor of the Medical j Tribune, some time since wrote and published I a book in which he said: "The ingredients of Warner's Safe Cure arc among the most valuable medicines of our Materia mediea, and the combination is such as to insure the best possible action ou the kidneys and urinary organs." Dr. Andrew Wilson, F. R. 8., editor of ll ilth, in replying through his paper to a eone-sDondent who had written him regarding regard-ing Warner's Safe Cure, said: "Warner's Safe Cure is perfectly safe and perfectly reliable." re-liable." These are physicians so skilled, so independent, inde-pendent, so honest, so true to the conscientious consci-entious teachings of their noble profession, that they dare tell the truth to kings or queens or the whole world. All honor to them. i |