Rensselaer Republican, Volume 24, Number 32, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 April 1892 — The Plea of Insanity [ARTICLE]
The Plea of Insanity
Cannot be urged in extenuation of the conduct of hosts of people who constantly inflict injury upon themeelves,-and lay the foundation tor serious and disastrous bodily trouble 'by the use. in season and out OF'season;'upon slight necessity and without discrimination, of dras-tic-vegetable cathartics and poisonous mineral cholagogues—notably the various forms of mercury—to relieve simply constipation, a complaint remediable at anv stage by the persistent use of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. This famous remedy never gripes, evacuates too copiously or weakens the bowels. If there is any other tonic aperient in or out of the pharmacopoea of which this can truthfully be said, we are unaware of it. Abandon the fatuous habit of dosing and use this benign regulator, which also sets right weakened stomachs and disordered livers. Rheumatism, neuralgia, sleeplessness. loss of appetite, malaria, debil-, ity and kidney complaints are troubles all conquerable by the Bitters. It’s funny that education should lift a man when it causes,him to get lore. The pleasant coating of Beecham’s Pills completely disguises the" taste without impairing their efficiency. 25 cents a box. A man of words is not apt to be a man of many deeds to real estate,
