Open Air Training for the Run Down Business or Professional Man T is not uncommon for men who have worked themselves to the breaking point to go to their physician with the expectation that a prescription for a brisk tonic and a little advice as to diet are going to relieve their nerve tension, restore their exhausted vitality, and enable them to continue their "killing pace." Every intelligent physician knows how futile palliative treatment is for such cases. To save such men from a fatal breakdown, with its inevitable sojourn at a sanatarium, or insane asylum-perhaps a suicide's grave-it is urgent to call a halt, enforce the dropping of all business for a time, and place the patient under a pleasant regimen in the open-air. Mr. William J. Brown, the proprietor and director of the famous Brown's Gymnasium on Twenty-third Street has established just the place medical men have so long been seeking for this class of patients. It is only a short distance from New York City, at Garrison-on-the-Hudson, and consists of a magnificent estate of over 300 acres. Nature has done her part admirably, but even more important than the beauty and salubrity of this delightful Pine Hill Farm, every patient immediately comes under the personal care of Mr. Brown. A definite scheme of intelligent exercise is outlined-after consultation with the attending physician-and Mr. Brown who has devoted many years to the study of physical exercise in its relation to health, thereafter takes full charge of the patient. An incredibly short time not infrequently accomplishes wonders. From being a wreck, nervous, apprehensive, unable to eat or sleep, grouchy and out of tune with the world, the lucky protege of Mr. Brown is soon converted into a new person, hungry, hopeful and happy, able to eat and digest all kinds of nourishing food, sleep like a child, and equal to taking up again his every day duties with all the strength and poise of the well man. The whole scheme is based on bringing the sufferer close to Nature and restoring his mental and nervous balance through natural exercise of neglected muscles and sluggish organs. Medical men are urged to investigate Pine Hill Farm and the clean, heath-giving work of William J. Brown. Through his aid many a health problem can be solved for the man on the verge of a breakdown or -something worse. For reference and booklet address: WILLIAM J. BROWN PINE HILL FARM, GARRISON-ON-THE-HUDSON, N. Y. The personal claims of a manufacturer may be regarded as partisan, but when a manufacturer makes no claims for his product, contenting himself with presenting the consensus of opinion of thousands of physicians, his statements merit consideration and his product deserves investigation from those members of the profession who have not used it. Clinical Results Prove Therapeutics and clinical results, reported by thousands of successful practitioners demonstrate that The First Real Cost-Test Ever Made Automobile vs. Horse A public test of the Maxwell car and a horse and buggy on the streets of New York and its suburbs, under actual conditions of traffic, has just been completed. It Proves That: The automobile is an economy. Its pleasures are within the It is an indispensable factor in It is an implement to increase The automobile industry, now The Maxwell is the standard, THE ATTESTED RESULTS The automobile cost 68/100 of a cent per passenger mile; the horse and buggy 1 44/100 of a cent. The car covered 2 times the distance traveled by the horse. The car averaged 76 3/10 miles-cost $1.03; the horse averaged 32 9/10 miles-cost 95 cents. Up-keep, depreciation, and other charges made the total car-cost 18/10 cents per passenger mile; and the total horse and buggy cost 2 cents per passenger mile. SEND FOR THESE BOOKS Latest Catalogue and other interesting literature containing convincing proof sent on request. Just write on a postal "Mail Books." MAXWELL-BRISCOE MOTOR CO. Hill St., Tarrytown, N.Y. Licensed under Selden Patent Members A.L.A.M. Short Talks on Bacterial Therapy бу GH Sherman M.D. No. 1.-INTRODUCTORY In this series of "talks" I am going to try to open before you the vast possibilities of bacterial therapy in general practice. I have made and used bacterial emulsions for over four years-my personal experience is at your service for the asking, and my laboratory products, too, for a nominal consideration. Let me start you on the road to success in the treatment of many of the intractable conditions you meet every day. One dollar will pay for my 140-page cloth-bound book "Vaccine Therapy in General Practice," and enough vaccines for the treatment of any one case just convince you. Write at once for particulars Literature and further Imformation on request G. H. SHERMAN, M. D. GOVERNMENT LICENCE NO 30 419 St. Aubin Ave. THE Functional Diseases of Women —amenorrhea, dysmenorrhea and menorrhagia especially- by the use of HYPEROL that this remedy cannot fail to appeal to every physician who takes pride in the "AN For liberal samples and clinical data address THE PURDUE FREDERICK CO. 298 BROADWAY. NEW YORK MENSTRUAL |