Democratic Sentinel, Volume 12, Number 11, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 April 1888 — The Lessons of “ Unser Fritz'” Case. [ARTICLE]
The Lessons of “ Unser Fritz'” Case.
The greatest doctor* in Europe don’t *eem to know what ails “Unser Fritz. 4 Thu* are the Garfield and Grant episodes repeated, and public confidence in “expert” medical Knowledge is again shaken. The effect is a revulsion. Since the fatal days of 1883, many of the doctrines of the schoolmen concerning extensive medication have been abandoned, and all schools of practice are more and more relying upon old-fashioned simple root and herb preparations and careful nursing—the only reliances known to our ancestor*. These methods and reliances are illustrated to-day in a series of old-fashioned roots and herbs preparations recently given to the world by the well-known proprietors of Warner’s safe cure—preparations made from formula possessed by many of our oldest families, and rescued for popular use, and issued under the happy designation of Warner’s Log Cabin Remedies. “My son,” exclaimed a venerable woman to the writer when he was a boy, “my son, you’r yeller and pale and weak’like lookin’, you’r needin’ a good shaking up with some sas’paril.” A jug of spring sarsaparilla was just as necesssary in the “winter supplies” of fifty years ago as was a barrel of pork, and a famous medical authority says that the very general prevalence of the use of such a preparation as Log Cabin Sarsaparilla explains the rugged health of our ancestors. While Warner’s Log Cabin Sarsaparilla k an exaellent remedy for all seasons of the year, it is particularly valuable iu the spring, when the system is full of sluggish blood and r. quires a natural constitutional tonic and invigorator to resist colds and pneumonia and the effects of a long winter. Pnilo M. Parsons, clerk of the City Hotel of Hartford, Conn., was prostrated with a cold which, he says, “seemed to settle through my body. I neglected it, and the result was my blood became impoverished and poisoned, indicated by inflamed eyes. I was treated, but my eyes grew worse. I was obliged to wear a shade over them. I feared that 1 would be obliged to give up work. ” “Under the operation of Warner’s Log Cabin Sarsaparilla and Liver Pills,” he says, “the sore and inflamed eyes disappeared. My blood, I know, is in a healthier condition than it has been for years. 1 have a mnch better appetite. I shall take several more bottles for safety’s sake. Warner’s Log CabiiffSarsaparilla is a great blood purifier and I most heartily recommend it” A few bottles of Warner’s Log Cabin Sarsaparilla used in the family now will save many a week of sickness and many a dollar of bills. Use no other. This is the oldest, most thoroughly tested, and the best, is put up in the largest sarsaparilla bottle on the market, containing 120 doses. There is no other preparation of similar name that can bquai it. The name of its manufacturers is a guarantee of its superior worth. While the great doctors wrangle over the technicalities of an advanced medical science that cannot cure disease, such simple preparations yearly snatch millions from untimely graves. '
