A REMARKABLE LETTER.
(To the Editor of the New York Tribune.) Sir, —As my name and face have appeared in your paper and the public prints lately, and as m;u.y of my professional brethren are wondering at it, 1 feel it only just that I should make an explanation. The statement published over my name was made ten years ago, after long and mature investigation, and I have never changed my mind as to the facts then stated. At that time I said, as a physician, that I believed Warner's Safe Cure was the best of all known preparations for the troubles it was advocated to cure, and I say so still. I know it is considered the proper thing for the medical profession to decry proprietary and other advertised articles; but why should they do so '! As the late Dr J. G. Holland, writing over his own name in Scribner's Monthly, said : "It is a fact that many of the best proprietary medicines of the day are more successful than many physicians, and most of them were first discovered or used in actual medical practice; when, however, any person knowing their virtue and foreseeing their popularity secures and advertises them, in the opinion of the bigoted all virtue went out of them." Dr Holland was an educated physician, an unprejudiced observer, and he spoke from a broad and unusual experience. Proprietary medicines should not be decried. The evidences of their value are overwhelming. I have seen patient i recover from gravel, inflammation of the bladder, and Bright's disease, after use of "Warner's Safe Cure, even when all other treatment had failed. I make this frank and outspoken statement in the interests of humanity, and because I know it to be true. I trust for the same reason you will give it to the public. Respectfully, It. A. Gunn. 124 West 47th Street, New York. March 1. Dr Gunn is Dean of the United States College, New York, and editor of the Medical Tribune.
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Temuka Leader, Issue 2392, 6 August 1892, Page 4
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334A REMARKABLE LETTER. Temuka Leader, Issue 2392, 6 August 1892, Page 4
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