Rensselaer Republican, Volume 14, Number 2, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 September 1881 — RED LIPS AND ROSY CHEEKS. [ARTICLE]

RED LIPS AND ROSY CHEEKS.

Wheeling, W. Ya., May 30,1881. t I am an old physician, and have lost many of my youthful prejudices. Happening to learn of the great good done by a certain remedy ija. restoring to robust health a former patient of mine who suffered severely from several chronic ailments resulting from weak pulmonary, digestive and urinary organs, and whom I was unable to benefit with my most careful treatment, I determined to prescribe it as occasion required. I have done so and the results following have bly been most satisfactory. Under its use the blood becomes richer, the digestive, urinary and pulmonary organs are made strong and perform their natural functions readily and without pain, all decay Ceems to be immediately checked nd the progress of the disease arrested, the pulse becomes fuller and stronger, the lips red and the , cheeks rosy, the temperature of the body increased and more uniform, the action of the heart regular, and the muscular strength greatly invigorated. In justice to the inventors I will say this remedy is called Brown’s Iron Bitters, it is a preparation of Iron and vegetable tonics, contains no alcohol, and is the only preparation of Iron in a perfectly assimilable form and that I does not blacken the teeth. I have never known it to fail to give permanent strength to every part of the body, or to injure the most delicate constitution. I have known it to assist nature in curing many chronic diseases when all other remedies had failed. Its soothing effect on mind and body is most remarkable, and it is the only positive cure I know of, for sexual weaknesses, etc., those most stubborn of all debilitating diseases. The Rochester Republican issued a very creditable daily during the fair at that place, this week. Kalamazoo, Mich., Feb. 2,1880. I know Hop Bitters will bear recommendation honestly. All who use them confer upon them the highest encomiums, and give them credit for making cures—all the proprietors claim for them. I have kept them since they were first offered to the public. They took high rank from the first, and maintained it, and are more called for than all others combined. So long as they kept up their high reputation for purity and usefulness, E shall continue to i ecommend tnem —something I have never before Sdone with any other patent modi- s cine. J. J. Babcock,