Jasper County Democrat, Volume 22, Number 104, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 March 1920 — MARINE SERGEANT FOUGHT FOR BREATH [ARTICLE]

MARINE SERGEANT FOUGHT FOR BREATH

Was So Run Down He Could Hardly Dress Himself —in Perfect Health » Now, He says. "It has taken only one bottle Oa Tanlac to put me back on my feet feeling like a new man,” jaid Alfred A. Wells, of 628 North Eight St., Richmond, Va., a sergeant in the Marine Corps, stationed at the recruiting office in Richmond. “I was in a bad fix when I began taking Tanlac,” continued Mr. Wells, "and I was so weak I could hardly dress myself of mornings. 1 had such a poor appetite,that I did not care whether I went to the table or not, and the little I did eat disagreed with me. The pains in my stomach were something awful and gas would press up around my heart until- I thought I would smother and I would just have to fight to get my breath. At times the gas would cause shooting pains In the region of my heart, and I would get so dizzy I would have to hold on to something to keep from falling over. I was badly constipated and could get but little relief from laxatives. I was so nervous that the least unexpected noise would excite me, and it was next to impossible for me to get any sleep. I would roll and tumble and would be uncomfortable in every position I tried, and when morning came you can imagine how completely tired-out I was. “This was the condition I was in when I started taking Tanlac, but, it is- a fact, I began to feel better after the first few doses, and I kept on improving so fast that by the time I finished my first bottle I was absolutely in perfect health. I eat anything I please and as much as I please and am never troubled with indigestion in any form. I am entirely free of nervousness and I am no longer constipated. When I go to bed now, <1 sleep all night long as sound as a child and of mornings I just simply feel fine. I certainly have cause to praise Tanlac and I give it my hearty endorsement, without hesitating one minute.” Tanlac is sold in Rensselaer by Lr.rsh & .Hopkins, and in Remington by Frank L. Peck; in Wheatifield by Simon Fendig.—Advt.