Democratic Sentinel, Volume 13, Number 29, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 August 1889 — Shaken, Drolled and Drenched. [ARTICLE]

Shaken, Drolled and Drenched.

These are three participles of English grammar. They are also the three successive conditions undergone every day, every other day, or every third day, by the unhappy wretch heedless enough to allow fever and ague to fasten its clutch upon him. No need of it—none. Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters will and does preserve those who use it from every type of malarial disease, whether interniittent or bilious remittent. For nearly thirty-five years it has been a professionally recognized specific for and preventive of these tenacious maladies, not only on our own soil, but in tropical and equatorial lands where the scourge is prevalent at all seasons and in its worst forms. Biliousness, dyspepsia, rheumatism, kidney complaint, nervousness and debility are also ailments to the complete removal of which the Bitters long since demonstrated its adequacy.