Democratic Sentinel, Volume 6, Number 6, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 March 1882 — Spring Fever. [ARTICLE]
Spring Fever.
Persons should not think lightly of that feeling of extreme debility so common in the spring of the year. It is often the forerunner of a year of ill health. It renders the system very susceptible to disease, and is caused by the blood being filled with poisonous homos. The blood, byall mesas, should be kept healthy ; otherwise its power to assimilate nutritions food becomes impaired, and dyspepsia, liver complaint, headache, nervous debility, extreme languor, weak kidneys, want of physical and mental endurance and general prostration is the result. Since prevention is better than cure, don’t wait for the final result of spring-time indisposition, when the first symptoms or languor are manifested, but begin using Dr. Guysott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla. A a spring medicine it excels all other remedies, gently but surely expelling the poisonous blood humors with which the system becomes impregnated by the incidental effect of changeable winter weather. It makes the blood red, rich and pure, causes it to circulate with more vim, enables it to renew the wasted tissues, and carries strength and vitality to every weakened part of the hnman system, restoring impaired bodily functions, and checking all decay of the urinary, digestive and pulmonary organs, which, if neglected, too often ends in a premature grave. To avoid danger from rear collisions, a newspaper ' correspondent suggests that the rear car be emptied instantly whenever a train comes to a stop elsewhere than at a station. We would suggest that some of the worst rear collisions have been at stations—notably that at Revere, so that it might be well to empty the rear car there too. It is an Irish* philanthropist, we believe, who proposed to take radical measures and leave off the rear car entirely. Mr. Robt. B. Barton, of Dayton, Ohio, writes : “ I wish every one to know that Dr. Guysott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla haa cured me of severe dyspepsia and urinary troubles. It has made me very strong.” A dealer in rubber goods was invited by a friend into a Now York restaurant, where liver aucl bacon were served to them. After chewing on it for a while the rubber merchant said, ‘ ‘ How curiojs it is that, although I live out of town, these restaurant people know me, and know that I deal iu these goods, too.”
Potash for grape vines is being tested in Franoe. A variety of the black muscat has been found defective in color where potash is deficient iu the soil, and the writer recommends that one vine of this grape he placed iu every grapehouse, to show by its full or by its deficient color whether the border for the roots has a sufficient supply of potash. Druggists say that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is the best remedy for female oomplaints they ever heard of. Homeliness is almost as great a merit in a book as in a house, il the reader would abide there. It is next to beauty and a very high art. It flea on the wings of the morning, good news as well as bad, always. We mean the fame of “Dr. Sykes’ Sure Cure for Catarrh.” Mrs. Emma P. Ewing-, an authority on culinary science, says that bad cooking has made America a nation of dyspeptics, inebriates and criminals. An unadvertised and positive cure for Catarrh—“ Dr. Sykes’ Sure Cure.” Edinburgh University has 3,237 students, the school of medicine taking the larger proportion—l,62B. Kidney-Wort haa cured thousands. Try it and you will add one more to their number. With God go over the sea ; without Him. not over the threshold.
