Rensselaer Gazette, Volume 2, Number 25, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 October 1858 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 6 [ADVERTISEMENT]
IMPORTANT DISUOVEUY. CONSUMPTION cj- ALL DISEASES, OF THE LUNGS AND THROAT Cim t>c Cured t>y INHALATION. contact with the disease, neutralizes the tuberrii lar matter, allays the cough, causes a f rte anJ ' expectoration, heals the lungs, purifies the blo**d imparts renewed vitality to the nervous system eir ing that tone and energy so Hidispensable for there storation of health. To be able to state confidently that Consumption is curable by inhalation, is to mea source of unalloyed pleasure. It is as much under the control of medical treatment as any other form idable .disease; ninety out of every hundred cases can be cured in the first stages, and fifty per cent in the second; but in the third stage it is impossible to save more than five per cent., for the lungs are io cut up by the disease as to bld defiance to medical skill. Even, however, in the last stages, Inhalation affords extraordinary relief to the suffering attendin'this fearful scourge, which annually destroys ninety” five thousand persons in the United States alone - and a correct calculation shows that of the present p’opu latton of the earth, eighty millions are destined to fill the Consumptive's grave, 'I inly, the quiver ol death has no arrow so fatal as Consumption. In all ages it has been the great ene my of life, -for it spares neither age iror sex but sweeps off alike the brave, the beautiful, the graceful and the gifted. By thfe help of that Supreme Being from whom cometh every good and perfectTnft 1 am enabled to offer to the afflicted a permanent and speedy cure in Consumption. The first cause of tubercles is from impui’e blood, and the immediate effect produced by their deposition in the lunes is to prevent the free admission of air into the air-cells which causes a weakened vitality through the entire system. '1 hen, surely, it is more rational to expect grealer good from medicines entering the cavaties of the lungs than from those administered through the stomach: the patient will always find the lungs free amt the breathing easy.after inhaling remedies. Thus Inhalation is-a local remedy, nevertheless it acts const itulio nall > . ami with inoie power and certainty than remedies administered hr the stomach To prove toe powerful ami direct influence of this mode of administiation. chloroform inhaled will entirely destroy sensibility in a few minutes, paralyzing the ent ire nervous system, so that a limb may be amputated without the sliL-htest pain; inhaling the ordinary burning gas will destroy life j lt a few hours. Ihe inhalation of ammonia will arouse the system when fainting or apparently dead. The odor of many of the medicines is perceptible in the skin a fen minutes after being inhaled, and may be immediately detected iii the bldod. A convincing proof of the constitutional effects of inhalation, is the fact, that sickness is always produced by breathing foul a !* i’t this not positive ejvidr-nce that proper remedies careful ly prepared and judiciously administered through the lungs should produce the happiest results? During eighteen years’ practice many thousands, suffering from diseases of the lung's and throat, ‘have been under my Care, and 1 have effected many lemarkable cures, even after the sufferers bad been prtuumneed in the last stages, which fully satisfies me that consumption is no longer a fatal disease. My treatment of cojisuniption is original, and founded on long experience and a thorough investigation. My perfec t acquaintance with the nature, of tubercles. K-c., enables me to distinguish, readily, the various forms of disease that simulate coiisuniptiou and apply the proper remedies, rarely being mistaken even in a single case. This familiarity, in connection with certain pathological and microscopic discoveries, enables, me to relieve the lunes from the effects of contracted chests, to enlarge the chest, pu rify the blood, impart to it renewed vitality, giving energy and tone to the'entil e sy-tem. .Medicines with full diiections sent to anr part ot the I nited Stales aud Canadas by patients communicating their symptoms by letter. But the car* would be irtifce. certain if the patient should pay mo a visit, which would give an opportunity to examine the lungs, and enable me to prescribe with much greater certainty, and then tin- cure could be effected without my seeing the patient again. All letters asking advice must cotitain a postage stamp. AIWRESS G. W. GKAJIAM, A 3. D., o ’ BOX No. s‘.t. ' « ()fice, 1131 Filbert Street, old No. 109, lIKI.OW Twr.T.rTH. JPii 1 Inele'lpti in, I’eiin, J A I’KiZIl- JOlt EVERYBODY! - WHO SUBSCRIBES FOR THE NEW YORK WEEKLY PHESS A I'.E.trTIHI.LY ILLUSTRATED FAMILY NEWSPAPER. Tin- New York Weekly Press is one of the best literary papers of the day—a larae qnarto containinp- twenty payes. or sixty columns, of entertuinint- mutter.; ami eleyanlly illustrated evqry week. A GIFT WORTH FROM 50 CENTS TO WILL BE SENT TO EACH SUBSCRIBER ON R* CEII’T OF THE SUBSCRIPTION MONEY.- - TERMS—IN ADVANCE. 1 copy one year and 1 gift s2* fH> t 3 copies one year and 3 gifts.. ... 5 (rtk f 5 copies one year and 5 gifts X ffi) 1(I copies one year and 1 0 gifts.. . .15 fill I 21 copies one y-'ar atid 21 gifts.. . ..'lff 00 The articles to be distributed are comprisrit in the 10l low ing Ijst: xa-Ih l . 1 United States Treasury Note J.sl,(loo' 2 United States Tteusiiry Notes. . 5(>D 5 United States Treasury Notes 200 10 United States Treastary N’Mesft . . 100 10 patent lever hunting-ease watches.. . 100 20 gold watches. 7»> 50 gold watches . 60 100 gold watches. 50 300 ladies’ gold watches.. 3.5 200 silver hunt?ng-casc watches-. ... . ....... 30 500 silver watches. . . 15 to 2.5 1000 gold guard, vest and fob chai-ns. . . . 10 to 30 1000 gold pens tuYti pencils • 5 to 15 Gold Lockets, Bracelets, Broaches, Ear-drops. Breast Pins, Cuff Pins, Sleeve Buttons, Rings, Shirt Studs, Watch Keys, Gold and Silver Thimbles, and a variety of other articles-,. Worth from fifty cents to fifteen dollars’each. On receipt of the subscription money, the subscriber's name will' be entered upon our books, and the gift forwarded within one week to him,l by mail or express, post-paid £■ All communications must be addressed to “ DANIEL ADEE, Publisher, 8 9-ly 211 Center strecj, New York. SOMETHING NEW IN RENSSELAER’ f IMIE undersigned is desirous of informing his J- friends and Ihe public, generally, that he has now on hand A 1 EETLE THE BEST STOCK OF GROCERIES Fver Brought to this Mnrkrt. 1 0^7” Everything always nice and clean. I In addition to his Grocery department, he ■ keeps a general assortment of Provisions, such an. CORN MEAL, FLOUR, BACON, PICKLED PORK, a COD FISH, His stock of go«d Wooden-ware is complete, I such as Tuba, Buckets, Churn*, iialf.Buahela, Ac. I Cull around, gentlemen, with the cash, and von will always find tho latch-string hanging out. ’[so] J- M. AUSTIN. Wanted—Lumber. ANY’ person wishing to build and pay th* carpenter in lumber, can make such ar-. ranrreinonts with 41-fim JOSEPH A. f»T. JOHW
