Democratic Sentinel, Volume 7, Number 20, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 15 June 1883 — A MALARIAL VICTIM. [ARTICLE]

A MALARIAL VICTIM.

To rax Enrrox: The following circumstances, drawn from my personal experience, sre to m per bant and really remarkable that 1 have set called upon to make them public* their truth can be amply verified: tended to make my future residence* 1 purchased a borne on the banks of tbs St Johns river and settled down, as I thought, for life. The summer following the first winter I was conscious of most peculiar sensations, which seemed to bo the accompaniment of a change of climate. I felt a sinking at the pit of the stomach* accompanied by occasional, fdlnrine?» tod nitusfca. . Ity hedd ached. Ity limbs pained tne and I had an dpi. resetVe sense of wearttteda _ I had a thiist fbr licids, and niy appetite V« Week tod unoertun My turn was ■ impfiired find .my .food, dig not assimi'fifc* At. first I imrglned ttwa* the effort of nature to become aoclimated end ae I ; thought little qf it B.nt my troubles increased until J beqame .restless npri feverish and the physicians .informed •me I was Battering from malarial fever. This continued.J» spite of all tbs best plmi Qians could do and 1 kept growmg.steadily worse. In the year lttoo my physicians informed me a change of climate was absolutely neces ary—chat I could not survive another summer in the South. I determined to return North, but not to the extreme portion, and so I took up my residence at Upper Sandusky in Central Ohio. The change did not work the desired cure and I again consulted physicians* I found they were unable to effect a permanent cure, and when the extreme warm weather of summer came on I grow so much worse that I gave up all here. At that time I was sufier* Sag tertibiy. HoW badly, only those can appieciatb who have Contracted inalaiial disease in tropical rfegionh It teemed as if death wbuld bb k reliW greatei- than arty bthet blessing. But notwithstanding all ' this. I am happy to state that I am to day a perfectly well and healthy man. How ,1 came to recover so remarkably can be waders.ood from the following ca d, voluntarily published by me in the Sandusky (OHio) Republican , entitled: HONOR TO WHOM HONOR IS DUX Editors Republican: Daring my recent visit to Upper Sandusky, so many inquiries were made relative to what medicine or course of treatment had brought such a marked change in my system, I reel it to be due to the proprietors and to the public to state that Warnei’s Safe Kidney and Lives Cure accomplished for me what other medicines and physicians had failed to do. The malarial poison which had worked its way po thoroughly through my system during five years’ residence in Florida had brought ine to the verge of the grave, and physicians had pronouncedmr case incurable; but that is not to be wondered at, as it was undoubtedly one of the, worst on record. Hough Brothers, of your pity, called my attention to the medicine referred to and induced me to try a few bottles 80 marked ras the change after four weeks’ trial that continued its use, and now, after three months, the cure is complete. This is not written for the benefit of Wavner & Co., but for the public, and especially for any person troubled with malarial or bilious attacks. ” Such is the statement I made, without solicitation, after my recovery, and such I stand by at the present moment lam convinced that Warner’s Safe Cure is all it is claimed to be, and as such deserves the great favor it has received. A remedy which can cure the severest case of tropioal malaria of five years’ standing certainly oannot fail to cure those minor malarial troubles which are so prevalent and yet so seriouA AtFHRD Dat, Pastor Universalist Church ■Woodstock* Ohio, May 10, 1883. In Breslau, a chimney shaft fifty feet high is composed entirely df papCr pulp, which has been chemically impregnated so as to resist combustion* Paper has been put to some extraordinary uses, but this is perhaps the most astonishing violation of preconceived ideas yet attempted. The next thing in order now will be gun-cotton crucibles.

The Lowell Daily Couri-cr speaks of Hood's SarsaparilJa as fast growing into use, and doing much good. The testimonials are bona fide, from par-tie 3 who have nse 1 the preparation, and cheerfully give their testimony as to its worth. Thore afbictcd with Scrofula, Biliousness or General Debility should try this remedy. Hood & Co are careful and experience! pharmacists, and their preparations can bo relied on. Sold by druggists.

To succeed, he reticent! Samson would never have overthrown the Philistines, had he not held his jaw.