Democratic Sentinel, Volume 6, Number 41, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 November 1882 — Tapering off. [ARTICLE]

Tapering off.

A Texas gentleman visited the Hot Springs of Arkansas for his health. He had not been there long when he happened to meet a friend fiem Texas, who was well acquainted with the convivial habits of the party of the first part —and who asked: “How are you coming on?” “Miglrty bad. I drank some of the infernal hot water, and I felt as if I had been sent for and couldn’t come,” “How much did you drink?” “Well, I reckon I have taken about fifteen glasses this morning.” “No wonder you feel bad. If you take to drinking water at the very start as if it was Texas whisky, it will ruin your health, certain. You will have to taper off a little until you become accustomed to it.”— Texas Siftings. Mr. B. R. Kenyon, of Chillicothe, Ohio, writes: “It is imposs.ble for me to praise Dr. Guysott’s Yellow Bock and Sarsaparilla as highly as it d< serves. I know ttobe an unfailing cure for syphilitic disorders, scrofula, impurity of the blood, dyspepsia and weak kidneys. It cured me entirely of all these disorders. ”