Democratic Sentinel, Volume 12, Number 13, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 April 1888 — SOMETHING WORTH READING. [ARTICLE]
SOMETHING WORTH READING.
Extract from the New York World—A Moat Wonderful Remedy, “New Yobe, March 23, 1888. “T hire been a sufferer from rerronsness and nervous prostration for years, snd have tried many ttungs, but without the least good. Hearing so tuucn about Dr. Greene s Nervura 2serve Tome from my tneuda and othrn whom it cured, I at last decided to taae it. Ito effects are really almost magical, fur it immediate y takes away that nervous, restless, and weak feeling or sense ot exhaustion, and restores one to a perfect condition of health. It is a great boon and a wonderful blessing to nervous people. "Lucie Wmxi." This wonderful remedy, whose praise is upon everybody’s lips, must be the most marvelous in its curative powers of any remedy ever discovered. We hear every day of remarkable cures of nervousness, nervous weakness, exhaustion, paralysis, or other nervous diseases effected by this great nerve tonic and restorative. Here a person rescued from the grave, as was Mrs. Annie Donovan, of Attawaugan, Conn.; there a case saved from that terrible disease, insanity, as was Mt. W. C. Miles, of 40 B.ne Hill avenue, Boston, Mass.; again, cures of paralysis of years’ standing, like that of Mr. Alexander Horn, of the Marine Asylum, Philadelphia, Pa, who had not been able to walk before for years; or restoration from the severest neuralgia and rheumatism, like the case of Mr. James Bown, of 27 Market street. New York City. Cures of sleeplessness, with nervous and physical exhaustion, are very frequent, the wonderful cure of Mrs. W. F. Abbe, of 19 Affleck street, Hartford, Conn., being only one among thousands. Altogether, the remarkable powers of Dr. Greene’s Nervura Nerve Tonic in curing all forms of nervous diseases like the above, and restoring to health sufferers from nervousness, nervous weakness, nervous debility, despondency, depression of mind, headache, trembling, numbness, dyspepsia, indigestion, constipation, the opium or chloral habit, eta, have demonstrated it to be a remedy of wonderful •powers, and at times of almost miraculous effects in curing disease. It is not to be wondered at, therefore, that drug stores everywhere are overwhelmed with orders for tliis remarkable remedy, and it is almost impossible to supply the demands from the hundreds of thousands of sufferers from nervous diseases. All druggists keep the remedy at 81 per bottle, and its low price places it’ within the reach of all. If your druggist does not have it, he will get it for you.
