Democratic Sentinel, Volume 6, Number 28, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 August 1882 — Faith. [ARTICLE]

Faith.

Often a dootor will say: “Well, now if yon will only have faith in my treatment I will core yon.” Stuff and nonsense! The idea is absurd, and yet it is a fixed notion with many, especially those of the quack fraternity who frighten the young into the use of their nostrums and then excuse their failure to cure from a want of faith on the part of their victim. The inventor of Dr. Guysott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla, an old and esteemed physician, used to take especial delight in persuading those who had no faith in his prescription to “only just try it” Faith or no faith, its effect as a blood purifier and true strengthener of the liver, kidneys and nervens system is most wonderful and is proven in every instance where used. The proprietors offer a thousand dollars reward for any case of impure blood, weakness, ill-health, dyspepsia, indigestion, nervous debility, urinary weakness, liver complaint or any chronic female ailment that this remedy does not benefit.— Gazette. Ask your druggist to get it for yon. Napoleon 111., whose health was not of the best, used to make use of a preparation of iron, which came to be called “Sjrupus Napoleonis,” and under that name crept into the German pharmacopoeia. In the new edition, however, of that work of interminable technicalities, the Syrupus Napoleonis has, for political reasons perhaps, been carefully excised. Mobs attention is now given to beekeeping in the South than ever before. The old-fashioned “bee-gum” has generally given place to improved hives, and a large increase of honey. J. F. D., of Cincinnati, 0., writes : “Dr. Guysott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla has eradicated from n>y system every trace of impure blood, resulting from a bad case of scrofula and syphilitic disorder of many years’ standing. ’ ’ I am of the opinion that there is nothing so beautiful but that there is something still more beautiful, of which this is the mere image and expression—a something which can neither be perceived by the eyes, the ears or any of the senses ; we comprehend it merely in the imagination.— Cicero. Know the true value of time; snatch, seize and enjoy every moment of it. No idleness, no laziness, no procrastination; never put off till to-morrow what you can do to-day. —Earl of Chesterfield.