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Smouldering fires
of old disease

lurk in the blood of many a man
who fancies himself in good health.
Let a slight sickness seize him, and
the old enemy breaks out anew.
The fault is the taking of medicines
that suppress, instead of curing,
disease. You can eradicate disease
and purify your blood, if you use
the standard remedy of the world,

Ayer's Sarsaparilla.

Scoff and Cough.

The man who scoffs at friendly
advice to "take something for that
cough," will keep on coughing, until
he changes his mind or changes his
earthly residence. Singular isn't it,
how many stubborn people persist in
gambling, with health as the stake,
when they might be effectually cured
of cough, cold, or lung trouble, by a
few doses of

Ayer's Cherry Pectoral.

THE ONLY
Sarsaparilla
to receive a medal at
the World's Fair,
Chicago, 1893,
was

Ayer's Sarsaparilla.
The Oldest and the Best.

Ayer's Curebook.
* * *
"A story of cures
told by the cured," a
book of 100 pages, containing
16 half-tone
portraits. Sent free on
request. J. C. Ayer
Co., Lowell, Mass.

The Woman,
The Man,
And The Pill.

She was a good woman. He loved
her. She was his wife. The pie was
good; his wife made it; he ate it.
But the pie disagreed with him, and
he disagreed with his wife. Now he
takes a pill after pie and is happy.
So is his wife. The pill he takes is
Ayer's.

Moral: Avoid dyspepsia by using

Ayer's Cathartic Pills.

The Blue and the Gray.

Both men and women are apt to
feel a little blue when the gray
hairs begin to show. It's natural
they should. In the normal condition
of things, gray hairs belong to
advanced age. As a matter of fact,
the hair turns gray regardless of
age; sometimes from sickness but
more often from the lack of care.
There's no need to have recourse
to hair dyes. The normal color of
the hair is restored and retained
by the use of

Ayer's Hair Vigor.

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