Rensselaer Republican, Volume 18, Number 41, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 June 1886 — Thomas Carlyle, [ARTICLE]
Thomas Carlyle,
the greet Scotch author, suffered all his life with dyspepsia, which made his life miserable and caused his best and truest friends not a little pain bd'eause of his fretfulnesa. Dyspepsia generally arises from dlse&ses of the liver, and a* Dr. Pierce's- “Golden Medical Discovery” cures all diseases of this great gland, it follows that while all cannot be Carlyle*, even with dyspepsia, ail ean be free from the malady, while emulating his virtues. The man of indigenous bunions may be said to be a person of great resources, since he generally has something on foot. “ Oh, wad some power ths gtftle gle us, To see ourselveffas tthers see us." Few women want to appear sick, and yet how many we see with pain written on every feature, who have been suffering for months from female weakness, and who could easily cure themselves by the use of Dr. Pierce’s “Favorite Prescription,” to be found at any drug story. This remedy is a specific for weak backs, nervous or neuralgic pains, and all that class of diseases known as “female complaints.” Illustrated, large treatise on diseases of women, with most successful courses of self-treatment, sent for 10 cents In stamps. Address, World's Dispensary Medical Association, 663 Main street, Buffalo, N. Y. You may crowd, you mav jauq the streetcar if you will, but there’s room for one more on the vehicle Still. For imparting tone and strength to the stomach, liver, and bowels, take Ayer’s Pills. When a Chatham street merchant charges sl7 for a coat that costs $2.50, he offers it regardless of cost. ■Soft, pliant, and glossy hair results from the use of Hall's Hair Kenewer. A coal dealer lays up treasures in heaven when he goes out of his weigh to oblige a poor widow.
