Rensselaer Union, Volume 3, Number 40, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 June 1871 — SYMPTOMS OF CATARRH. [ARTICLE]

SYMPTOMS OF CATARRH.

Indisposition to exercise, difficulty of thinking or reasoning or concentrating the mind upon any subject, lassitude, lack of ambition or energy, discharge falling into throat, sometimes profuse, watery, thick and tenacious mucous, purulent, offensive, etc. In others, in a dryness; dry, watery, weak or inflamed eyes, ringing in ears, deafness, hawking and eouL'liing to clear throat, ulcerations, death and decay of bones, scabs from ulcers, constant desire to clear nose and throat, voice altered, nasal twang, offensive breath, impaired or total deprivation of Sense of sjnell and taste, dizziness, mental depression, loss of appetite, indigestion, dyspepsia, enlarged tonsils, tickling cough, difficulty in speaking plainly, general debility, idiocy and insanity. All the above symptoms are common to the disease in some of'4ts st ages or complications, yet thousands of eases annually terminate in consumption or insanity and end ill the grave without ever having manifested one-third of the symptoms above enumerated. No disease is more common or less understood by The proprietor of Ur. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy will pay SSOO reward for a case of catarrh which it cannot cure. Sold by druggists, or send sixty cents to R. V. Pierce, M. D., 133 Seneca street, Buffalo, N. ¥., for it. A pamphlet free. Beware of counterfeits and worthless imitations. Remember that tlie genuin has the words “R. V. Pierce, M. D., Sole Proprietor, Buffalo, "-printed upon the wrap[>er ; also has Dr. Pierce’s portrait, name and address on itis private government stamp ~upoh each j>ack age. 572 Toothache proceeds from ague in the face, operating upon the exposed nerve of a decayed tooth. Rub tlie gum thoroughly witli tlie finger, wet with<Zo/*nson’s Anodyne Liniment, heat the face well, and lay a flannel wet .with the liniment on the face; also put a little of tlie liniment into the cavity of the tooth on cotton. - The system frequently gets out of order, and should be at once regulated, else other troubliswill ensue; when physic is needed take Parson'*Purgative PUls; they are a safe, wholesome and natural medicine. 1 ~ » “The Excelsior Choir,” edited and published by Cabl Bund. Tills musical monthly is niled w ith new music of a high order, and is just what is needed in every choir. Endorsed by leading professors and teachers; replete with gems; beautifully printed; gives an anthem, or set plece,in each number. Commenced in April, 1871. If you want it for a year, send twenty-live cents to “ Cabl Bund, care of Root & Cady, Chicago,” and get all who sing In your choir to do the same. _ • The Phrenological Journal for July is unusually good. Conspicuous among ita contents*are: Audubouiana, or Reminiscences pf the Great Naturalist, with portrait; Man’s Place in Nature; A Rule for Editors—What they should be; Tbe last of the Tasmanians, Illustrated; “Woman vs. Woman's Rights,” reviewed; Loaders in the Mormon Reform Movement, with portraits; Tlie Beard—Should it be Worn? Tree Wonders of California, illustrated; The Treaty; Ron. Ward Hunt, Chief Justice of the New York Court of Appeals; Western School-houses; The Traveler, an illustrated poem. This number begins a new volume. Subscribe for it now. Price, $3.00 a year; single numbers, 81 cents. S. R. Weils, Publisher, 389 Broadway, N. Y. » The Little Corporal for July is a medel number. Mrs. Miller’s new story begins well, and will be read with delight by all the boys and girls. The p6em “ Pictures on the Slate,” has a full pagq^flustration by Lauderlucli, which is exceedingly fifle and suggestive. Under its new management, this already popular juvenile la gaining in beauty and excellence with each number. Terms, $1.50 a year. Published by JOHN E. Millbb, Chicago, 111. •