Rensselaer Republican, Volume 22, Number 45, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 July 1890 — No Land on Which the Sun Shines [ARTICLE]

No Land on Which the Sun Shines

Possesses greater natural advantages than our own, but there are portions of ihe great grainbearing West and fertile South where atmospheric influences prejudicial to health militate against them, in some degree, as placet of residence. Heavy rainfalls and the overflow of great rivers, which upon their subsidence leave rank vegetation exposed to the rays of the sun, there beget malarial fivers, and there also the inhabitants are periodically obliged to use some medicinal safeguard against the scourge. Toe most popular is Hos tetter’s Stomach Bitters, a preventive that has for over a third of a century afforded reliable protection to those whom experience in the futility of ordinary remedies for fever and ague, has taught to Bunstitute for them. Whether intermittent or remittent, miasmatic fevers are conquered and averted by the superb anti-periodlc and fortifying medicine as thev are bv no other preparation in use. Use it, aad abandon impure local bitten. A pawnbroker, after all, is but a poor, loan man.—Siftings. We moved here recently, and the druggist said he didn’t have any Dr. Bull’s Worm Destroyers, but when I said I wouldn’t have any other, he said he would get some in a few days, and so he did. I know what Dr. Bull’s Worm Destroyers will do, and will not give my children any other.—Mrs. J. D. Blair, Burton, Cal.