Democratic Sentinel, Volume 7, Number 2, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 February 1883 — THE STUBBORN. [ARTICLE]
THE STUBBORN.
Obstinate affection known as Scrofula is a taint in the blood resulting from deficient nutrition. It is a powerful .disorder, outliving its victim by appearance in descendants. Few in any community are free from this corruption, which attacks different organs under different names, and at different times in different persons. To meet so desperate a foe requires a medicine of positive, urgent, forcible qualities. Such is HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA, whose most wonderful cures prove it the most reliable remedy. FOB TWENTY-ONE YEARS Thomas Bennett, 6 Coventry street, Boston, carried a scrofulous lump on his leg. It itehed intolerably the last four years; became a sore so troublesome that he wanted to cut out the lump with his knife. He-thought to carry this torment to his grave. Two bottles of Hood’s Sar apa< iiia cured the lump. TWELVE UGLY ULCERS Below the knee of the little son of Henry T. Ourtis, of Frankfort, Me., resulted from injudicious swimming in summer water. They discharged bone as well as matter. He took Hoo-i's Harsapa-Uia one season, threw away his crutches, which lie had used three years, and now walks a mile to school. BIRTH-BORN SCROFULA. H. J. Stearns- Willlmantie, Ct.. was afflicted from infancy. Lost mother, sister, brother by it. Took several bottles of Hood's Sarsaparil a, and is the sole survivor of his family. HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA. Sold bv druggists, $1: six for $5 Prepared only by C. I. HOODtCO.. Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
