Democratic Sentinel, Volume 12, Number 9, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 March 1888 — The Funereal Month of March. [ARTICLE]

The Funereal Month of March.

An observant metropolitan barber uri that be can tell one's physical condition bv the state of the hair! The Bible tells ns that with his hair gone Samson lost his strength. Hie Romans considered baldness a serious affliction, and Julios Cesar was never quite satisfied with himself because his poll wss bare. Tbs faoe, however, is the open book, snd one can readily trace in ita various expressions, lines, changes, and complexion the state of the system. The eye thst is unususlly bright, snd yet has s pal id brightness, the face upon whose cheeks nature paints s rose of singular beauty and flush, more marked in contrast with the alabaster appearance of the forehead and nose and lower part of the face, is one of tho-e whom the skilled physician will tell you will some day dread the funereal month of March, because it is then thst consumption reaps its richest harvest Consumption, they tell us, is caused by this, that, and the other thing, by microbes in the air, by micro-or-fanisms m the blood, by deficient nutrition, y a thousand and one things, but whatever tne cause, decay begins with s oough, and the remedy that will effectually stop the cause of that cough cures the disease of the lungs. Tnat is all there is of it The cough is an evidence of a wasting. To stop it effectually, a remedy must be used that will search out the cause, remove that, and then heal the lung and do away with the oough. This is the power, special to Itself, possessed alone by Warner’s Log Cabin Cougn and Consumption remedy. This is no new-fangled notion of narcotics and poisons, but an old-fashioned preparation of balsams, roots, and herbs, sucn as was used by our ancestors many years ago, the formula of which has been secured exclusively by the present manufacturers at great trouble and expense. It is not a mere cold dryer. It is a system-seacher and upbuilder and a consumption expellanfc. Where others fail, it wins, because it gets at the constitutional cause and removes it from the system. J. W. Hensaw, of Greensboro, Pa., on Jan. 15, 1888, reported that “he had derived more real benefit for the length of time, from Warner’s Log Cabin Cough and Consumption remedy than he had for years from the best State physician?.” If yon have a cough, night sweats, “positive assurance in your own mind that vou, oh—you, have no consumption,” and yet lose flesh, appetite, courage, as your lungs waste away, you may know that soon tho funereal month of March will claim you, unless promptly and faithfully you use the article named. If other remedies have failed try this one thoroughly. If others are offered, insist the more on trying this unequaled preparation. Some persons are prone to consumption, and they should never allow the disease to become seated.