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A Good "combine."

A Good "combine." image
Parent Issue
Day
19
Month
January
Year
1888
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

ff huckster, si x f e e t two, with a voice like a cracked foghorn, stood at the corner. His wagon was very small.about three times the size of a boy's " Express," and held a half dozen melons. The donkey was tall, lean, lank, and seemed afraid of the little k'yart to which he was harnessed. The huckster singly was not a novelty, nor the donkey, nor the wagon, but the "combine," the trinity, from which all sorts of comparisons could be drawn, was a sensation which drew a crowd of little folks and servants. The little folks talked about it at home, and so he was advertised, and bis example points a moral. It is this : to say a remedy will relieve, for instance, is not saying much. The heat from the friction of the hand will sometimes do that. Nor is it all to say that it will cure ; for the cure may be temporary and the pain may return ; nor will it do to boast of a permanent cure, unless there is no relapse, no return of pain for a good length of time against changes of weather. But a remedy which relieves all pains promptly and surely, which relief is a cure beyond all question, which cure is proved in a thousand cases permanent beyond any fear of relapse, is a "combine" of virtues beyond all competition.upon which the public eye is fixed. And this is the superior merits of St. Jacobs Oil. As a proof, Mr. R. G. Trol], Western Union Telegraph Co., St. Louis, Mo., states: "In March, 1881, Isuffered terribly with neuralgia. I applied St. Jacobs Oil at 8:40; at 9 A. M. went to work. In five minutes after the pain was gone. I have never had ït since; that one application cured me." These points repeated in so many instances are given to clinch its superiority. As in the case of the huckster, it is not a single thing that tests. It is not one but many virtues that are required to subdue pain, and this combination, by long years of experiment, has proved itself unfailing in efficacy and unsurpassed in merit. It requires no loud voice to proclaim it ; it Bpeaks and acts for itself, always true and sure.

Article

Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Register