Rensselaer Union, Volume 2, Number 9, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 November 1869 — Malarious Fogs. [ARTICLE]
Malarious Fogs.
Cnuntlcen millions of Cubic feet of malarious vapor reck from the moist earth every twenty-four boons during the month of November. Thia evaporated moisture is tho active principle which begets fever and ague, billotu remittents, indigestion, dysentery, bilious cholic, rheumatism, and many other ailments which prevail more generally in the Fall tbjin at other seasons, and some of which, in low, swampy regions and new clearings, take the form of virulent epidemics. The best safeguard agaltwt these complaints, as evidenced by the experlcn ce of along series of years, is HOSTETTER’S ST'yMACH BITTERS, tho most pleasant and at" the. same time the most efficient of all vegetable tonics. ’"The invlgorationof the system is manifestly the beet means of defending it against the causes of sickness, whether constitutional ov casual. Nature, aa every pathologist knows, is the most determined enemy of disease, and the paroxysms of an acute malady are in most instances the consequences of the efforts she makes to conquer the foe. The great object, therefore, of preventive treatment is to reinforce the system, and it is accomplished thoroughly, rapidly and safely, by the use of HOSTETTER'S BITTERS. This powerful tonic contains also an aperient and corrective principle. It is no less valuable as a regulator and purifier than as an invigorant, and there is no danger of exciting the brain or over-stimulating the circulation by employing it as an antidote. Testimonial.—Walter Muir, Esq., traveling salesman for the large wholesale Drug House of French, Richards & Co., of Philadelphia, in a letter to Dr R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., says: “ Within the past few months Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy has found upon my list a most promising place. There is in one good snuff of it more virtue than is contained in a dozen packages of its worthless rivals that flood the market. Rest assured, Doctor, that my appreciation of its merits, as realized personally in my own case, will urge me to use my best endeavors in introducing its sale through our house. Yours faithfully, Walter Muir.” Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy is sold by most Druggists everywhere. Sent by mail on receipt of sixty cents. Address R. V. Pierce, M. D., Buffalo, N. Y.
