Rensselaer Republican, Volume 26, Number 11, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 November 1893 — A Widely Prevalent Maladay. [ARTICLE]

A Widely Prevalent Maladay.

While It is perfectly true that swamp vapors, morning and evening mists along the banks of slow winding, turbid streams, and the effluvium exhaled by the sun from moist and decaying vegetable beget malaria, it frequently breaks out where no such conditions exist. It is, in fact, a malady widely prevalent, of which it is in many oases impossible to discover the origin. But though its causes are often obscure, the testimony, professional and public of the inhabitants of America and other lands, leave no reasonable doubt not only that Hostetter's Stomach Bitters uproots this tenacious disease when fully developed, but fortifies the system against its first attacks Chills and fever, bilious intermittent, dumb ague and ague all yield to it alike. Liver trouble, always present in malarial disorder, dyspepsia, constipation and kidney complaint succumb to the Bitters. Naturally it Is the strongest candidate who carries the day.