Rensselaer Republican, Volume 24, Number 31, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 March 1892 — A Lucky Escape. [ARTICLE]
A Lucky Escape.
Fortunate is the man or woman residing in a malaria-ridden locality who. escapes the dreaded scourge. Not one in a thousand does. When the endemic is a periodical and widespread visitation, it is just as common to see whole communities suffering frpm it as individuals. The most vigorous const!tuiion ts pot proof against it—how much less a system feeble or disordered. As a means of protection against malaria, Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters is the supreme medicinal agent. It will uproot any form of malarial disease implanted in’ the system, and even in regions where miasmatic complaints are most malignant and deadly, such as -the Isthmus of Panama, Guatemala and the tropics generally, it is justly regarded as an efficient safeguard. No less .efficacious is it as a curative and preventive of chronic indigestion; liver trouble, constipation, rheumatism, kidney complaints and la grippe. The woman who wished -to git the shades of her ancestors to hang at her parlor windows was not a descendant of any Mayflower family. For sometime I had besn troubled with Live Complaint; exhibited all the common symp, toms, biliousness, headache, poor digestionfurred and coated tongue, bad taste in mouth, etc. Swamp-Root cured me. Am having greatsale on your remedies, J. McCullough, the Druggist, Lawrenceburgh, Ind. Abstemious and sober Americans will experience much mental anguish at reading that Secretary Foster is coming home on the Spree. . A man who has practiced medicine for forty years ought to know salt from sugar; read what he says: Tolepo.O., Jan. 10, 1887. Messrs. F. J. Cheney & Co.—Gentlemen: I have been in the general practice of medicine for most forty years, ana would say that in all my practice and experience have never seen a preparation.that I could prescribe with a s much confidence of success as I can Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by you. Have prescribed it'a great many times and its effect is wonderful, and would say in conclusion that I have yet to find a case of Catarrh that it would not cure, if they would take it according to directions. Yours truly, L. L. GORSUCH, M. D. Office 315 Summit St. We will give 8100 for any case of catarrh that cannot be cured with Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Taken internally. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O. by druggists. The Connecticut State Federation of Labor is very active in organizing of all kinds of labor throughout the State, having sixty-five unions connected with the State body. “I have iu my employ a man who has been a victim of periodic headaches for yearly has tried all kinds of treatment, and I have tried various remedies on him. Your Bradycrotine helps him more than anything ever did." O. D. Kingsley, M. *D., White Plains, N. Y. Of all Druggists. 50c. “I now understand,” said Scrimpin when the grocer “charged it’Mor the third time, “why men feel so much affection for a noble charger.” For Throat Diseases, Coughs, Colds, Etc., effectual relief is found in the use of -‘Brown’s Bronchial Troches.” Price 35 cents, Sold only in boxes. Three scruples m ake a drachm, butmos of the boys take the dram first and let th scruples come in at the second table.
