UNPARAIiliKIiED SUCCESS. 
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system have, in a degree, lost their restraining influence oy< 
She processes of disintegration, waste, and decay, which 
on so rapidly that nutrition cannot compensate for the loss to 
the system, then it is that my Discovery, by its antiseptic in¬ 
fluence, checks this melting up of the tissues by the chemical 
forces of the body, and thus arrests the disease. I shall 
never forget my delight on first witnessing its magic power 
over this heretofore uncontrollable condition of the system. 
To the lack of such an element in the treatment of Consump¬ 
tion the unparalleled fatality of the disease is largely duo. 
In their anxiety to improve digestion and nutrition, and thu® 
build up the tissues, physicians lose sight of the no less im¬ 
portant indication of restraining the destructive waste going 
on in the system which overbalances the supplies furnished 
by digestion. The gradually increasing emaciation and loss 
of strength renders perpetuity of the organism impossible. 
The Cough is a secondary symptom, arising from the irri¬ 
tation caused by the tubercles. The attempt to cure it bv 
means of medicated inhalations cannot but be attended with 
failure. They may palliate, and relieve irritability of the 
lungs, but, from the nature of the disease, they cannot cure 
it. They strike at the branches of the disease, while the 
root is left to flourish, to develop new branches, and replenish 
&he old. 
Expectorants have been employed to a great extent, and 
the theories that have been advanced advocating their use are 
sometimes very ingenious. That they modify the cough, we 
do not attempt to deny; but it is at a terrible expense, for 
they derange the stomach and interfere with digestion and 
assimilation—they modify a single symptom , and intensify 
the real disease. 
A new theory has been recently advanced to favor the sale 
of expectorant medicines, viz: that they “ripen the matter 
in the lungs,” “rot away,” and thus favor the expulsion of 
the tuberculous deposits. But while they are “ rotting away ” 
tubercles, they destroy the sound tissue also, and do not in 
the least arrest the formation of more tubercles. 
Improvement of the general health will always be attended 
with amelioration of the cough. If the patient did not cough 
at all, the lungs would soon fill up with broken-down tissue, 
and death from suffocation result. Irritation of the nerves 
supplying the lungs sometimes occurs, and causes the pa¬ 
tient to cough immoderately, when it is not necessary for the 
purpose of expectoration. This condition is readily con¬ 
trolled by the Golden Medical Discovery, which exerts a de¬ 
cidedly quieting and tonic influence upon the pneumogastrio 
nerve, which, with its ramifications, is the one involved. 
MONEY SAVED.— In cases of long standing where it 
will be necessary to use several bottles of my medicines, & 
great saving can be made by purchasing them by the dozen 
or half-dozen. The druggist will sell them less in the®® 
quantities than by the single bottle. 
UNPARALLELED SUCCESS.— In “The People’s 
Common Sense Medical Adviser” (which costs only $ 1 . 50 f 
postage prepaid), I have suggested a complete course of med¬ 
ical treatment for Consumption, which has, in a large experi¬ 
ence, been attended with a success heretofore unparalleled 
in the history of this distressingly fatal malady, 
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