Rensselaer Republican, Volume 26, Number 34, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 April 1894 — Wonders of Corda. [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]
Wonders of Corda.
i w* 'in r//j I The subject pf the above portrait Is a prominent and much respected citizen, Mr. Robert Manson, of West Rye, N. H. Where Mr. Manson is known “ his word is as good jpg his bond." In a recent letter to Dr. R. V. IJPierce, Chief Consulting Physician to the 'lnvalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., Mr. Manson says: “Dr. Pierce’s' Pleasant Pellets are the .beet pills I over took for the liver. All my fftonas say they do them the most good.” 1 This opinion is shared by every one who •once tries these tiny, little, sugar-coated pills, .which are to be found in all medicine stores. (The U. S. Inspector of linmigration at Buffalo, N. Y., writes of them as follows: : “From early childhood I have suffered (from a sluggish liver, with all the disorders accompanying such a condition. Doctors’ (prescriptions and patent medicines I have jused in abundance ; they only afforded temporary relief. I was recommended to try a)r. Piferce’s Pleasant Pellets. I did so, taking two at night and one after dinner every day for two weeks. I have reduced the dose (to one ‘ Pellet' every day for two months. I have in six months increased in solid flesh twenty-two pounds. lam in better health ithan I have been since childhood. Drowsiness and unpleasant feelings after meals have completely disappeared." Assist nature a little now and then with a gentle laxative, or. if need be, with a more (searching and cleansing cathartic, thereby (removing offending matter from the stomach and bowels, and toning up and invigorating the liver and quickening its tardy action, and you thereby remove the cause of a multitude of distressing diseases, such fu headaches, indigestion, biliousness, skin diseases, bolls, carbuncles, piles, fevers and maladies too numerous to mention. If people would pay more attention to properly regulating the action of their bowels, they would have less frequent occasion to oall for their doctors’ services to subdue attacks of dangerous diseases.
That, of all known agents to accomplish this purpose, Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are unequaled, is proven by the fact that ones used, they are always »» favor. Their secondary effect is to keep the bowels open and regular, not to further constipate, as is the case with other pills. Hence, their great popularity with sufferers from habitual constipation, piles, and indigestion. The “ Pleasant Pellets ” are far more effective in arousing the liver to action than “blue pills,” calomel, or other mercurial preparations, and have the further merit of being purely vegetable and perfectly harmless in any condition of the system ; no particular care is required while using them. Composed of the choicest, concentrated vegetable extracts, their cost is much more than is that of other pills found in the market, yet from forty to forty-four “Pellets" are put up in each sealed glass vial, as sold through druggists, and can be bad atthe price of the more ordinary and cheaper made pills. Dr, Pierce prides himself on having been first to introduce a Little Liver Pill to the American people. Many have imitated them, but none have approached his “ Pleasant Pellets ” in excellence. For all laxative and cathartic purposes the “ Pleasant Pellets ’’ aro infinitely superior to all “mineral waters,” sedlitz powders, “ salts,” castor oil, fruit syrups (socalled), laxative “ teas,” and the many other purgative compounds sold in various forms. Put up in glass vials, sealed, therefore always fresh and reliable. Ono little “Pellot” is laxative, two gently cathartic. As a “dinner pill,” to promote digestion, take one each day after dinner. To relieve distress from over eating, nothing equals them. They are tiny, sugar-coated, antibilious granules, scarcely larger than mustard seeds. Every child wants them. Then, after they are taken, instead of disturbing and shocking the system, they act in a mild) and natural way. There is no reaction afterward. Their help lasts. Accept no substitute recommended to be “ just as good.” They may be better for the dealer, because of paying him a better but be is not the one who needs help.
The seven wonders of Corda are described at length by a Chinese paper, They consist of a hot mineral spring near Kin Shanto, locally credited with having the power of curing any disease, no matter how serious; two wells,one at each end ol the pen inula, which have the peculiar characteristic that when one is full the other is empty; a cold cave, from which issues constantly an ice cold wind of great force; a pine forest, which can not be eradicated; a “hovering stone," ol massive rectangular shape and free on all sides; a hot stone, which has been lying from time immemorial on the summit cf a hill, and evolving a Slowing heat, and a “sweating luddha,” on which not a blade ol grass or flower or tree has flourished lor thirty years. Empress Eugenie seems to be playing the role of the fairy godmother, ,but it is* to be feared that she cannot hold out very long at the present high rate of generosity. She has given a marriage portion of £40,QOO to the Princess Eugbnie, the second daughter of Prince Charles Bonaparte, the fiancee of Prince De Fabrice Massimo, and now she has given another £40,000 to Princess Eugenie’s sister, Princess Marie,the wife of M. Henri Gotta.
