Democratic Sentinel, Volume 8, Number 10, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 April 1884 — “After This the Deluge!” [ARTICLE]

“After This the Deluge!”

May well have been the exclamation of residents In the regions recently flooded, who beheld dwellings swept away, rich farms laid waste, bridges undermined and towns inundated. Worse than this is the prevalence of malarial diseases as the consequence of miasmabreeding mists. Guard against them with Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, a most desirable medicinal protection for residents or temporary sojourners in malarious localities. Chills and fever, dumb ague, ague cake, and bilious remittent yield to this effective remedy, and the nervous and enfeebled acquire a degree of tone and vigor by its use which fortifies them against the insidious attacks of malaria. Diseases of the stomach, liver, and bowels, rhsnmatism, nervous ailments, and kidney and bladder complaints are thoroughly relieved by it. If ever a temedy deserved the recognition of its merits, long accorded to it, it is this standard medicine. What room would one expeot to find in a castle in the air? A “ brown study,” to be sure.