Rensselaer Republican, Volume 24, Number 33, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 April 1892 — The Collapse of a Rotten Tenement. [ARTICLE]

The Collapse of a Rotten Tenement.

With crumbling faundation and shaky, bulging walls, is not more certainly to be looked for than the suddepgiviag way of a constitution sapped by overwork, unremitting anxiety or exposure to hardship and malign climatic influences. Against the disastrous effects of each and all of these. Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters is an effectual safeguard. It fortifies the system against them by infusing into it fresh vigor begotten of renewed and complete digestion and assimulation of the food, and its consequent reparative action upon the exhausted tissues and impoverished circulation. No preparative for the undergoing, without injury, of an unusual amount of bodily or mental work, no means of averting malarial infection, or disorders born of bad diet and impure water equals this superlatively fine defensive invigorant. Take it for dyspepsia, constipation, billiousness, rheumatism, kidney trouble, la grippe. A hen-peeked husband is often chickenhearted. Coughs, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, etc. quickly relieved by Brown’s Bronchial Troches. They surpass all other preparations in removing hoarseness and as a cough remedy are pre-eminently the best. Food for reflection—the good dinner that you missed.—Texas Siftings. To Subscribers of this Paper. After ‘£> years constant use of various Pile Remedies I never found anything to do me any good until I tried Dr. Kilmer's U & O Anointment. I used it in connection with the SwampRoot, and I tell you it made a new man out of Tneto ~ ~~~~ 3. P. Brown, Osgood. Ind. The best muzzle for a dog is a revolver's muzzle.—Texas Siftings. ’ •3.65 to Chicago, •3.65 Via the Pennsylvania Line from Indianapolis