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Parent Issue
Day
28
Month
July
Year
1886
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

A. WONDEKFÜL OCCUEKENCE. (Detroit Now) The interest awakened in an Important occurDce at Jackson causee! a representa. tlT of thU paper to visit that city. He raglstered at the Hard House and ngagfd Hon. Frank K Smlth lts Eropristor, and ex niember of the btate gislature In conrersation. 'ír. ü. D. Denlo, a man very wellknown in thls commnnltv. was probably tbe worst wrock physicially of any man Uils country iias ever seon. He was " Mr. Smlth stopped suddenly, and coing to the door callad in a man who was passIns. It was Mr. Denio, who sald : I un wbat people cali 'resurrected.' From a sllght attack of rheumattsm, growlnz out of a cold, I grew worse until my limbs were swollen fearfully, and my right side eutirely paralyzed. Any one Wno has had rheumatism knows what I suiTered. The doctors were very fait li ful, but they dld not help me. Thcy adminlstered morphine coustantly, but it could not klü tbe pain. Indeed, during my ravlngs I declared I would snoot the doctors lf I ever recovered, which, of cours, I was not responsible lor. I looked and longed for death. Butyetyou see me in perfect health. Do you want to know what is was that saved my llfe, vlrtnally raised me from the grave after the doctors and my frlends had abamlonerl me, and keeps me well all the whilef Hlbbard's Rhenmptic Syrip, the best medicine ever giran to lUfTering humanity." Newspaper ineu are naturally skeptical, and so the writer called on the wellknown house of Carroll & Boardman for whom Mr. Denlo worked when h iru flrst taken sick. Mr. Carroll said: "Mr. Denlo was ore of the nlckest men that ever recovered. He was paralyzed from rheumatlc poison, and no one ever dreamed he would get well. He is well though, and It Is slmply marvelous." "Dr. Charles H. Lewis, reafding at 209 Blackstone street. attendpd Mr. Denio durtnghlssicknpRs.HMil snid Mr. Denio liad ben a very mek mnn, liad irone bevond the reach of the medical profession, and had been cured, an he tlcc lnred, by the u of Hibbard's Kheumatlc Syrup. The above facts are true and they can be MlUd npon by all readers. We have lnvestlgated the utire case thoroughly and know It to be so. It is a lesson to all iufferars and shpnld be carefoily runioui nd acted npon.

Article

Subjects
Ann Arbor Courier
Old News