Rensselaer Republican, Volume 19, Number 39, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 June 1887 — A Sad Case of Poisoning [ARTICLE]

A Sad Case of Poisoning

Is that of any man or woman afflicted with disease or derangement of the liver, resulting in poisonous acciirnulationa in the blood, scrofulous affections, sick headaches, and diseases of the kidneys, lungs or heart These troubles can bo cured only by going to the primary cause, and putting the liver in a healthy condition. To accomplish this result speedily and effectually nothing has proved it elf so efficacious as Dr. I’iercc’s. “Golden Medical Discovery,” which has never failed to do the work claimed for it, and never will. A lawn party is pleasant enough until it begins to lain. Then it becomes a forlorn party. What can be more disagreeable, more disgusting. than to sit in a room with a person who is troubled with catarrh, and has 10 keep coughing and clearing his on.her throat of the mucus which drops, jut .> persons are always to be pitied if they try to cure themselves and fai>. ‘But if they get Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy there need be no failure. It is odd that the wages of sin remain just the same as they were when the hours were shorter. The bowels may be regulated, and the stomach strengthened, with Ayer’s Tills. They are trying to suppress the whip factories on the ground that they deal in lickers. , Every one is perfectly satisfied who uses Buckingham’s Dye for the Whiskers. The-author of the saying that “you must always take-a man as you find him,” was a policeman.