Rensselaer Republican, Volume 20, Number 37, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 May 1888 — $500 Reward. [ARTICLE]
$500 Reward.
If you suffer from dull, heavy head aehe, obstruction of the nasal passages, dischargee falling from the head into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid: if tbe eyes are weak, watery, and inflamed; and there ia ringing in the ears, deafness, hacking or coughing to clear the throat, expectoration of offensive matter, together with scabs from ulcen; the voice being changed and having a nasal twang; the breath offensive; smell and taste impaired; experience a sensation of diasiness, with mental depression, a backing cough, and general debility, then you are suffering from chronic nasal catarrh. Only a few of the above named symptoms are likely to be present iu any one case at one time, or in one stage of tbe disease. Thousands of cases annually, without manifesting half of the above sysiptoms, result 4n-consumption,-and end in the grave. No dis-ase is so common, more deceptive and dangerous, less understood or more unsuccessfully treated by physicians. The manufacturers of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy off er, in goodfaith, SSOO reward for a .case dt catarrh which they cannot cure. The Remedy is sold by druggists at only 50 •ente. ’' ;
The Potter’s field—the bishopric of New York. BOUGH ON rrClP’Olntnierii cures Bkla Kumon, Pimplea, Ftah Wonna, Rlnx Worm*. Tetter, Belt Rheum, Frosted Feet. Chilblains: Itch, Ivy Berber's jtch Scald Head, Bcaema. Me. Druggirts or ma£ E. 8 Wells. Jeraey City. <>• •.
DB, B. G. FLOimrS GBKAT WORK. The many thousands of our readers who have been benefited by the remarkable skill of Dr. Flower will be pleased to know that the Spectator Publishing Company, of Boston, Mass., have jest issued a beautiful new pamphlet, containing, among other interesting matter, a recoid of many recent cures wrought by Dr, Flow<r on prominent personages. T heee cures are, in many instances, startling in their nature, having been pei formed after the highest authorities and meat learned representatives of the old school of practice had pronounced the flat of doom* and declared them to be beyond the limit of the curable. So marvellous are these strange storks of lives rescued from the jaws cf the giave, that, were they not related by the individuals themselves, with their names and addresses given, and in many instancesthe parties being distinguished personages, who are noted and known far and near, one would almoat imagine that he was in the midst of some oriental tale, with the sweat fascination of the miraculous and the mystery of the mystio hanging o’er him. In addition to the above, this pamplet contains an interesting article from a recent iisue of the New Haven Register on Dr. Flower’s strange power of diagnosing, where, bv sympathetic intuition, he is enabled to describe the exact con* dition pf the internal organism of any person, and describe his disease, its rise, progress and the attending symptoms far more accurately than the patient himself could give them, and this without asking the patient a question. This power accounts, to a very great extent, i for the doctor’s phenomenal success in treating his thousand) of patients, a large percent, of whom are treated in their homes, hundreds and thousands of miles from Boston. There is also in this little book a strikingly fine picture of Dr. Flower, and an excellently engraved view of Dr. Flower’s new Health Palace, now rapidly approaching completion, in Boston. It will be one of the features of the “Hub,” a palace of beauty and comfort. All invalids should not s fail to read this remarkable little work, which will be sent free, post-paid, to every reader of this paper who eends name and address to the Spectator Publishing Company, Boston, Mass. Recent police court developments seem to show that one of the Fox sisters’ “spirit drawings” consisted mainly in getting out the cork, followed generally by taking in the spirits.
Among the people of to-day, there Are tow indeed, who have not heard of the merits of Prickly Ash Bank and Berries, as a household remedy Teas and drinks have been made of them for centuries, and in hundreds of families have formed the sole reliance in rheumatic and kidney diseases. Prickly Ash Bitters now take the place of the old system and ia more beneficial in all troubles of this nature.
