Rensselaer Union, Volume 1, Number 45, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 August 1869 — Summer Perils—How to Escape them. [ARTICLE]

Summer Perils—How to Escape them.

•.It will net do to trifle with the health In hot weather. Vigor oozes through the akin st every pore, end it la by physical vigor only that. unhealthy Influences esn be baffled and repelled. The vital elements sre evaporated In perspiration. Intense heat converts a man Into t self-acting ptunp, and the moisture that Is pnmped ont or him is derived from the well-springs or life within him. There la great need, therefore, that these sources of physical strength should be In a condition to bear, without danger or Inconvenience, the extraordinary drain. It they are not In such a condition, the Individual become* languid and low-spirited. The mein thing Is to keep the digestive apparatus In good working trim; for If the stomach, the purveyor of the system, does Its duty thoroughly, the liver, the bowels, the brain, and tbs nervous system, being duly nurtured, will be likely to do theirs. In view or these facts. It la manifest that a powerful and wholesome vegetable tonic Ilk* HOSTETTER’S BTOMACU BITTERS is especially required at this enfeebling season.' It is the most admirable of all correctives and lnvlgorsats, and for this reason: It does not over-stlmnlate the system. The proportions of aperient, tonic and stimulating components are so judiciously graduated, that the processes of lnvlgoratlon and purification go oa simultaneously, and no undue-ex-citement Is created In the circulation or the brain. All nnmadlcated stimulants, however pare, excite the pnlse andthe nervous system. Their exhlla rating effect Is temporary, and when It passes oil the physical and mental depression they were emB toyed to remove relnrns fn an aggravated rorm. at this Is not the case when HOSTETTBR’S BITTERS are taken aa a stomachic and nervine. The medical herbs, roots and gams with which they are Impregnated, neutralize the exciting principle of the rye spirit which forms their basis, and which is in Itself tho most wholesome of all the varieties of alcohol. wlf you have a discharge from the nose, offensive or otherwise, partial loss of the sense of smell, taste or hearing, eyes watering or weak, feel dull and stupid or debilitated, pain or pressure in the head, take cold easily, you may rest assured that you have the Catarrh. Thousands annually, without manifesting half of the above symptoms, terminate in consumption and end In the grave. No disease is so common, more deceptive or less understood by physicians. R. V. Pierce, M D., of Buffalo, N. Y., is the proprietor of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy—a perfect tpccific for Catarrh, “ cold in the head,” or Catarrhal headache, which he sendsjto any address, post paid, for sixty cents, or four pimkages for $2.00. Bold by most druggists everywhere.