Take all in all.
— Take all the Kidney and Liver Medicines, —Take all the Blind purifiers, —Take all the Rheumatic remedies, ■ -Take all the Dyspepsia and indigestion Cures, —Take all the Ague, Fever, and bilious specifics, —Take all the Brain and Neive force revives, —Take all the Great health restorers. In short, take/fll th* best qualities of y/skriiiK!& andJine— best — Qualitiehoi ail^tHfl^-fag^Tmedicinesitf' the you ■wtilrfi/jS. tbab-jflop BittershAve the bffjfr and powers of a\\-^dhccntrawl inTMem, —And that tbyy will cure when any or all of these, singly or— combined. Fail! ! ! ! A thorough trial will give positive proof of this. Hardened Liver. Five years ago 1 broke down with kidney and liver complain*; and rheumatism. Since then I have been unable to be about at all. My liver became hard like wood ; my limbs were puffed up and filled with water. All the best physicians agreed that nothing could mre me. I resolved to try Hop Bitters ; 1 have u*ed seven bottles ; the hardness has all gone from my liver, the swelling from my limbs, and it has worked a miracle in my case ; otherwise I would have been now in my grav--, J. W. Morey, Buffalo, Oct. 1, 1881 Poverty and Suffering. "1 was drasged down with debt, poverty and suffering for years, caused by a sick family and large bills for doctoring. I was completely discouraged, until one year ago, by the advice of my pastor, 1 commenced using Hop Bitter, and in one month we were all well, and none of us have seen a sick day since, ami I want to say to all poor men, you can keep your families well a year with Hop Bitters for less than ouo doctor's visit will cost. I know it." A WOKKINGMAN. Prosecute the Swindlers!! If when you call for American Hop Bitters (see green twig of Hops on the white label and Dr Soulc'.i name blown in the bottle) tho vendor hands out anything but American Hop Bitters refuse it and shun that vendor as you would a viper ; and if ho has taken your money for anything else inn diet him for tho fraud and sue him for damages for the swindle, and we will pay you liberally for the conviction.
■was summoned, the door was torcea, and there lay the woman dying, with two bnllets in her head, and the man seriously wounded with no less than four bullet wounds In ha'fan-hour she was dead. The man refused to tell the cause of the shooting, or to admit that he had done it, except so far as to shoot himself. He was taken to a hospital, where he lingered until Saturday morning, and then died, The coroner repeatedly quea • tioned him as to his life and the last act of it ; he was willing to talk upon anything else, but as to the shooting of his wife he was persistently silent. On the very day the fatal shots w-'re fired, Thompson’s father, who had recently been .married to a second wife, started from his home for a bridal tour in Europe. He was due in New York on Friday evening. While on the way he received by telegraph news of the misdeeds of his son, and his first ■visit on arriving here was to the hospital where the dying youth lay. The latter was then too weak to talk more than a few sentences. What he did say to his father has not been given to the public, as no ore else was present, and the father declines to be interviewed; but the contents of the pockets and trunk of young Thompson tell the motive for the crime. The murderer’s pockets contained but 55 cents in money ; he had pawned his watch and everything else of value, had stolen his wife’s opera glasses and other thirgs from her trunk to pawn them an hour before the murder, and with the proceeds had bought the second-hand pistol with which he did the shooting. He had borrowed money from all his acquaintances until their patience and purses were exhausted ; he had nothing with which to pay his hotel bill and buy the tickets for their journey westward, and so determined to adjust the whole difficulty by an appeal to gunpowder. After shooting his wife he rang the bell, and then turned the pistol on himself before the boy could reach the door. JP
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Bibliographic details
Dunstan Times, Issue 1280, 10 September 1886, Page 3
Word Count
734Take all in all. Dunstan Times, Issue 1280, 10 September 1886, Page 3
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