Democratic Sentinel, Volume 8, Number 36, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 October 1884 — A Foe in the Air. [ARTICLE]
A Foe in the Air.
A foe, all the more dangerous because unseen, Inrtrs In the air of every locality where malaria la developed by marsh mists, noxious gases, or the vaporization of water contaminated with decayed vegetation. Fever and ague, bilious remittent, dumb ague, and the forms of fever which assume a typhoid character are its products. There is no safety, even for the most vigorous o nstitution, unfortified against this insidious foe, and th: danger to persons of a bilions habit or feeble constitution, is doubly great. Protection may, however, be sought witii certainty in Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, the leading American preventive and specific for the dis.-ase. It regulates the bowels, purifies and enriches the blood, healthfully stimulates the liver, and by increasing the activity of its various functions, puts the system on guard against disease. Besides its usefulness as a febrile preventive, no finer remedy exists for rheumatism, dyspepsia, inactivity of the kidneys and bla 1der, and other jporgaulc maladies. The ship of state is dressed in sails made from political canvas, and guided by tho tiller of public putrntnirc
