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Col. Joseph L. Follett

Col. Joseph L. Follett image
Parent Issue
Day
9
Month
April
Year
1896
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

One of Sheridan's Commanders Saved by Paine's Celery Compound. Col Joseph L. Follett ,oí New York, has a national reputation. At the age of 21, Col. Follett enlisted in Battery G, First Missouri Light Artillery, and soon rose to its command. At Lookout Mountain, his was the only Battery that reached the summit. Since the war he has devoted himself to mechanical engineering, and has invented several important Improvetnente on the sewing machine, and a bieycle that promises to be.one of the surprises next season. The tensión on the nervous system of an inventor, kept up for months and months, seriously weakened the health of a busy brain worker like Col. Follett, and his constitution, which even the hardships of war did not weaken, threaten to succumb to nervous exbaustion. What Col. Pollutt has to say in P6gard to his restoration to health, cannot fail to carry great weight. In a letter to Wells & Richardson Co., of Burlington, Vt., he writes: "When suffering from mental exhaustion and a generally disorganized system, and overwork, I used Paine's colery compound. "The compound acted like a charm on my bowels and kept thom in fine condition, and I experienced great relief from my brain troubles. "I have not used Paine's celery pound for six months, but I shall in need of a tonic and general regular of thesystem. T have recommended it toa grcat rnany. and every ono who tried it got relief. "It is the best general remedy lever used or anythiug about." When the nervoussystcm hasbecome weakened from any cause, Paine'a oelerycom pound builds it up as nothing clse can. It make people well. People in every walk of life hare reason to be grratcful to Prof. Phelps, of Darthmouth. the eminent scientiet who discovered .Paine's celery componnd. He understood the peculiar needsof the ncrvous system; he knewthat thebackache, headache, sleeplessness, loss of appetite, and disordered blood all mean that tbc nerves are weakened and inadequate to the demands upön them. The experienced of thousandshas prOToti all over this broad country thatonly Paine's celüry eompound will give health to the nerves, and through them to the entire body. Colleges conferred upon Dr. Phelps highest honors f jr his invaluable investigations in medicine, but all this seems insigniticant in comparison with the chorus of gratitude that has gone up all over the world from meu, women and children, who have outgrown weakness and the lack of health by the use I of Paine's celery eompound, the most I wonderful nerve and blood restoration.

Article

Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Register