Democratic Sentinel, Volume 7, Number 41, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 November 1883 — Tons of Silver. [ARTICLE]
Tons of Silver.
Five thousand tons is a good deal of silver for the Government to keep in its vaults, especially so when every single dollar could be invested in Carboline pro bono publico. When the little short man begged the big tall woman for a kiss, she stooped to concur. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is an extract of the best remedies of the vegetable kingdom known as Alteratives and Blood-Purifiers. The silence which reigns in a cornfield well provided with scare-crows—is it not a case of an effect without caws? Rock Hill, 8. C.—Rev. J. 8. White, says: “ I used Brown’s Iron Bitters for general debility. It restored me to strength and vigor.” Of course all imported eggs are stowed beneath the hatch-ways. Rfmarkablk for overcoming diseases caused by impure water, decaying vegetation, etc., is Brown’s Iron Bitters. When a man is half-seas over you may harbor a suspicion that his Judgment is afloat. J. W. Thornton, of Claiborn, Miss., says: “Samaritan Nervine cured my sou of fits.” It does not matter how well the gardener tries to do—he is always slipping. Wakefulness at night is a terror, Samaritan Nervine cures it, and hence is a blessing. Would you call a nurseryman who grafts trees a Buddhist? As one having used Ely’s Cream Balm 1 would say it is worth its weight in gold as a cure for Catarrh. One bottle cured me.—3. A. Lovell, Fsanklin, Pa. (See ad’vt.)
New Bisk, H. C. —Rev. G. W. Offiey, says: “ I have taken Brown’s Iron Bitters, and consider it one of the best medicines known. ” Th* sleepy brakeman knows what a carbuncle do in a tight place.
