Rensselaer Republican, Volume 13, Number 7, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 November 1880 — Tarry Not [ARTICLE]

Tarry Not

Ontll yon ara driven to tha verpe of distraction by a disordered llrar, bnt a* aeon aa the organ lures motinon *. discipline It with a caura* of nos teller's Stom•oh Bitten, an anti-billons medicine which enanroa •etiva secretion by tha liver and a regular habit o» body. Paina throngh tha right ehealder blade and riba, vertigo, nausea, coating of the tongo', conrli(ation and sick headaches, which ara all iociden al to blUonineas, ara promptly remedied by this active and thorough specific. As a remedy for debility it eanaot be surpassed, strengthening the stomach and promoting digestion, enriching the blood and invtg. orating tbs nerves. It protests the system againet malaria,and tuns the disease in iterations forms radiantly. It overcomes a tendtney to rhsnmtism, remedies disorders of glie kidneys and bladdsr, and azpela imparities from tbs circulation. A newspaper and newspaper editor tliat people don't talk about, and sometimes abuse, are rather poor consents. Tho men and business lhat an editor sometimes feoh bis duty to defend, at o risk of making cueinies of another class, the first to show their ingratitude.. The editor who expects to receive much charity or gratitude will soon find out his mistake; but be should ge on and do and say what he conscienciensly thinks right without regard to frowns or smiles. Customer—“ What do you think of Malt Bitters T” Druggist—“ They are the best medicine I know of called ‘bitters,’ because prepared from Malt, Hops, Calisaya and Iron, which are great and wholesome medicines.' 1