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Parent Issue
Day
1
Month
October
Year
1891
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

Bis Conlributlon. " Wliat will you contribute to the oyster supper for tho parson?" asked the deacon. "I'll give the oyster," replied themisor. OLD MALARIA SUFFERERS. Broken Down in Body and Spirit, Eagerly Seeking a Cure. Medicines That ünly Damage - Medicines That Only Palliate - Medicines That Permanently Cure. Selected from a Lectnre Deliveredby Dr. Hartman, of Columbua, Ohio. I need only to refer every one to their own observation in mahírial diseases to prove that the usual remedies have not, as a matter of fact, been successful in curing them. Go to any inalarious section of the country and you find its inhabitants taking regularly enormous doses of the medicines that are lauded as cures of these affections, with little or no effect. The varions preparations of cinchona or calisaya bark, known as quinine, sulphate of cinchona, sweet quinine and tasteless quine, are taken with wonderful persiatency, with seemingly no other effect than to depress the heart'saction,lower the nervous vitality, and produce a most pernicious form of biliousnes?. When traveling through the malarial districts it ia often pitiful to see the sallovv-eyed, listless, woe-begone victims industriously swallowing large doses of these harinfnl chemical preparations, vainly hoping, through them, to regain their health, but rarely realizing their hopes. I have much to say in favor of cinchona bark in tho treatment of malarious affections, but these peculiar chemical aalts - quinine, etc. - which are obtained from cinchona barks, by adding to them poisonous acida, I can not too strongly denounce aa dangerous drug, which will inevitably produce a a much worae condition of the pystein than the disease for which they are taken. It is almost an every-day occurance in my practico that a patiënt comes to my office to consult me who has been treated for some form of malaria from one to ten years. The unfortunate victima have gone helplessly from dotor to doctor, taking of each one about the same Hst of vegetable and mineral poisons, until, broken in body and spirit, they languidly begin to use my preRcriptions with hardly faith enough left to take any more medicine. Pe-ru-na is a specific for this condition, but I gonerally find it necessary in such cases to use, in addition to Pe-ru-na, a few bottles of Man-a-lin to restore the action of the liver and bowels, which have been deranged, as the result of former treatment. In these cases the Pe-ru-na and Man-a-lin should be taken as directed on the bottles. Having continued the Man-a-lin lng enough to thoroughly regúlate these organs, the Pe-ru-na is continued alone until a cure is complete, which is sure to occur unless some serious complication has set in before the treatment was begun. For a complete treatise on Malaria, Chills, and Fever and Ague, send for The Family Physician No. 1. Sent free by The Peruna Medicine Company, Columbus, Ohio.

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Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Register