the use of
"Golden Medical Discovery." This is the only perfectly safe, scientific,
and successful mode of acting upon and healing it. Without, we trust,
being considered egotistical, we can say that this opinion is based upon
a large experience and a perfect familiarity with the nature and
curability of the disease. For many years our whole time and attention
has been given to the study and cure of catarrh and other chronic
diseases treated of in "The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser."
Cases of catarrh have been treated by thousands, and our medicines for
the cure of this loathsome disease, and of other chronic diseases, have
met with an extensive sale in all parts of the United States, and have
found their way into many foreign countries. The universal satisfaction
with which their use has been attended, and the grateful manifestations
received from the cured, have afforded one of the greatest pleasures of
our lives. Scarcely a mail arrives that does not bring new testimony of
cures effected by the treatment here recommended.
DIRECTIONS FOR USING DR. SAGE'S CATARRH REMEDY.
To prepare the medicine ready for use, put the whole quantity of powder
contained in the package, as put up for sale, into a bottle; pour into
it one pint of cool, soft water. Rain water or melted snow is good.
Ordinary lake, river, well or spring water will do if only _slightly_
hard. Cork the bottle tightly and shake it thoroughly, after which allow
it to stand six or eight hours to settle. Two of the ingredients of
which the remedy is composed do not entirely dissolve, but their
medicinal properties are completely and speedily extracted and taken up
by the water. These settlings have lost their medicinal properties and
should not be allowed to enter the nasal cavity. It should be kept
tightly corked, not allowing it to freeze in winter, or be kept where it
is very warm in summer. This we term the "Catarrh Remedy Fluid."
Use the fluid, prepared according to the above directions, not less than
three or four times a day, the last time just before retiring, in the
following manner: Without shaking the bottle to roll the fluid, pour out
a teaspoonful or more into the hollow of the hand, hold it there until
warmed; first gently, and afterwards forcibly, snuff the fluid up one
nostril and then the other, until the nose is well filled and it passes
back into the throat. No fears need be entertained that it will produce
strangling or any un
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