Democratic Sentinel, Volume 22, Number 42, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 October 1898 — None to Send. [ARTICLE]
None to Send.
628 Summer Ave., Newark, N. J., May 24, 1896. The Piso Company, Warren, Pa.: Gentlemen: Piso’s Cure for Consumption was recommended to my mother by a friend, and I got it, although not having much faith in patent medibines. For over thirty years mother has had a most ranking cough whenever she takes the least cold, and no medicines have ever been able to touch it. She took your medicine two days, and her cough stopped entirely—has not even had a hacking since —and she sleeps better and feels better than she has in years. I want to tender you my most grateful thanks. We shall never be without Piso’s Cure for Consumption in the house. Respectfully yours, MRS. N. F. SPEEDLING.
The steamer rolled and pitched in the waves. “Deah boy,” groaned Cholly, at the end of his first hour on shipboard, “promise me you will send my remains home to my people!” A second hour passed. “Deah boy,” feebly moaned Cholly, “you needn’t send my remains home. There won’t be any.”—Hamilton Times.
