Democratic Sentinel, Volume 8, Number 40, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 October 1884 — The Most Obstinate of Endemics. [ARTICLE]
The Most Obstinate of Endemics.
Of all endemics—that is to say, of maladies which arise from causes incident to the localities where they occur—chills and fever is the most obstinate under ordinary treatment with the sulphate of quinine. That dangerous drug does not eradicate the disease—it simply bre. ks up the paroxysms<or the time being, and never vet teas known prevent their recurrence. He stetter’s Stomach Bitters, as a matter of contrast, uproots the germs of the malady, counteracts its terribly weakening and nerve shatt *nng effects upon the system, and prevents the long train of evils which not only the disease itself, but the drugs taken to counteract it, entads. Unlike them, it is not unpalatable and nauseating, but agreeable. Unlike them, too, it produces permanently beneficial effeets, nnd ir differs also from them in being safe. There is, moreover, no more r- liable < urative for constipation. rheumatism, liver complaint, dyspepsia, and debility. There are now 314 cotton mills in the Southern States, having 1,276,432 spindles and 24,873 looms, while at the time the census was taken in 1880, the South had only 180 mills, with 713,988 spindles and 15,222 looms. The largest increase in the number of mills was made in North Carolina, where a gain of 43 mills and 110,595 spindles are exhibited, while Georgia made an increase of 169,156 spindles and 22 mills. In 1880 the value of the manufactured cotton produced at the South was a little over $21,000,000, while in 1883 the value had risen to between $35,000,000 and $40,000,000. During three years and a half about $20,000,0011 has been invested by new and old Southern cotton mills in machinery.
In thirty years’ successful experience In the manufacture of 1 4',0t0 instruments, the 5 a-on & Hamlin Co upany have accumulated facilities for manufacture without wh ch they could neither produce as > ood o gaus as they now make, nor with 's g eat economy, f-aid an experience! manufacturer in witnessing the operation of a single machine in ther factory recently: “One boy with that machine does as much werk its ton s! 11 ed « orkn en could do wit ho at it, and does it better at that.” These accumulated facilities, including experienced and skilled workmen, n-n the secret of ter producing organs whi * are unquestionably the be t, yet can be sold at prices which are a little more than those of the poorest.—Boston Traveller.
