Rensselaer Republican, Volume 26, Number 46, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 July 1894 — The Real Demon ot the Marsh [ARTICLE]
The Real Demon ot the Marsh
Is not a spook, but a reality It is neither a •bogie" nor a “kelpie,’’ nor any other of those spirits which the credulous have supposed to haunt the banks of rivers and streams after dusk. Its name’is malaria, and though invisible. it is very terrible and tenacious when it seizes you. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters drives it away, nor will It attack those whose systems are fortified with the great medical defensive agent. The miasmatic mists of early morning, the vapors exhaled at eventide may be safely breathed by those protected by the Bitters. In the t ropics where every form of malarial dis ease threatens the svjourncr, the Bitters is the best reliance of the inhabitant. For dyspepsia, liver complaint, lack ot vigor, appetite andsleep; for rheumatism and nervousness the Bitters are a sure and safe remedy. The worst about the average crank is that while he inevitably turnsup he objects to being turned down. . Lovely warmth of colpr, with traces of pink and white, is the exquisite complexion that follows the use Glenn’s Sulphur Soap. The greatest circulating medium is the drummer.
