Rensselaer Republican, Volume 15, Number 41, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 21 June 1883 — Troops of Ailments Vanquished. [ARTICLE]

Troops of Ailments Vanquished.

On account of tbe promptness with which tt checks the fever* generated by unhealthy exhalations, Hostetter’s Bitten la considered an indispensable family medicine on the borders of the Southern and Western riven, and in new settlements where the plough and the axe are for the first time disturbing the solitudes of nature, its reputation, however, is not confined to such localities. Wherever the elements of disease are rife, it is the sunset safeguard of health; wherever sickness prevails, it is efficacious as a remedy. Among the serious diseases which it is guaranteed to control are indigestion, biliousness, and all the minor ailments connected with derangements of the stomach, the liver, and the bowels—such as heartburn, headache, flatulence, coetivenesa, nausea, distaste for food, langor and debility, palpitation of the heart, tremblihg of the hands, noises in the ears, disordered vision, disturbed sleep, and mental inquietude. As these physical and mental disturbances tend to a general failure of all the powers of the system, they should be at once corrected—as they always may be—by a course of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters.

A bad omen—to owe men more than you can pay.—Curl Pretzel * # «“Men often mistake notoriety for fame,” but they never mi-take Kidney-Wort for any quack medicine. Kidney-Woit is universally recognized as a standard remedy for all diseases of the liver, bowels and kidneys. The mist treacherous memory in the world belongs to a young man with a new watch. Ladies and sickly girls requiring a nonalcoholic geut’e stimulant, will find Brown's Iron Bitters bene'icial.