Rensselaer Republican, Volume 24, Number 9, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 October 1891 — Vapor Poison and Its Antidote. [ARTICLE]
Vapor Poison and Its Antidote.
The morning and evening mists that pervade the atmosphere of malarious localities cannot be breathed with impunity, A safeguard is needed to render harmless the dangerous miasmata with which they are Impregnated, The surest, safest defense is Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters. It is an antidote to the poison which has already been inhaled and borne fruit, an adequate preventive of its harmful effects. No preparative for breathers of miasma-tainted air or drinkers of malaria-poisoned waters like the Bitters. It completely neutralizes the otherwise irresistible onset of the aerial foe. Settlers on newly-cleared land, excavators of canal routes (notably that on the Isthmus of Panama) Western pioneers and emigrants—in short, all subjected to malarial influences in air or water find in it a benign remedy, an effectual safeguard, Disorders of the stomach, liver and bowels, “la grippe,” rheumatism and kidney complaints are remedied by the Bitters. When an author isn’t read, he’s blue naturally.
