Democratic Sentinel, Volume 7, Number 39, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 October 1883 — What Is Money [ARTICLE]

What Is Money

Weighed against that health it so often fails to buy? Dross indeed. While we can none of us claim a total exemption from the greatest of all ills to which flesh is heir—ill health—we may do much to lessen the chances of incurring it, and this not alone by the adoption of such sanitary measures as are to be found in daily exercise, regular hours, prudence in eating and drinking, and a wholesome diet, but also by resorting to the judicious preventive medication when the Tsvstem is threatened by unhealthful influences. For instance, residents or sojourners in malarious localities should use Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters as a defense against chills and fever, and persons who incur much out-of-door exposure should employ it as a safeguard against rheumatism. Travelers in the tropics find it invaluable also as a means of arresting liver complaint and constipation, and counteracting the debilitating influence of a torrid climate. An English magazine is speculating as to “the kind of clothes ghosts wear.” We always supposed they wore spirit wrappers.— Norristown Herald. An effective medicine for kidney diseases, low fevers and nervous prostration, and well worthy of a trial, is Brown’s Iron Bitters. The coinß paid for beer are bar nickels of society.