Rensselaer Union, Volume 3, Number 17, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 January 1871 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
A Universal Remedy.— 4s Brown’s Bronchial Troches ” for Coughs, Colds, and Bronchial Affections, now stands the first in public favor and confidence; this result has been acquired by a test of many years. Its merits and extensive use have caused the Troches to be counterfeited, and we would cantion purchasers to be On their guard against worthless imitations. We call attention to the extract from the Chicago Tribune of January Ist, in another column of our paper. Let every reader interested in Life Insurance read it. Prussino’s White Wine Vinegar is a most superb article for table use. Warranted pure. a 1 New Patent Law for 1870, published by Munn & Co., 37 Park Row, N. Y., sent free. e »■ Tice Lakeside Monthly, published by the Lakeside Publishing Company, Chicago, 108 and 110 Dearborn street. Single numbers, 35 cents; $4.01 per year. This magazine, formerly The Western has taken front rank among the leading magazines of the day, and as a Western enterprise is peculiarly worthy the patronage of the reading public of the great Northwest. The contents of the January number are excellent, the different titles being: My Starry Days, by Benj. F. Taylor; Was it a Reality, by Egbert Phelps; Father Prout; How I Followed my Nose, by W. S. Walker; Art-Life, by B. Hathaway; Two Pinches of Snuff— Pinch One—by the author of “Noses;” The Future as it Was, by E. M. Smalley; Cardinal Bird, by G. E. Wright; My Christmas at Salt Lake, by Everett Chamberlin; The Man of Glass; Lost on the Cambria, by Angie H. Teal: Christmas Carols, by T. Haughton; Reviews of Books; Chit-Chat. ♦ Diseased Lungs are Greatly on an Increase in this Country.—The sudden changing of weather has done much to give rise to Consumption. But there are thousands of cases who bring it on by their own imprudence—such as wearing damp clothing, and going from the warm room into the cold air, and checking the perspiration, which causes irritation of the Lungs, and then matter or phlegm will collect, which nature will try to relieve by coughing it up, to prevent pustules from forming. If nature does not raise the matter with ease, and stop this inflammation, tubercles Will soon form, and Consumption will soon follow. Allen’s Lung Balsam will cure and prevent thousands of cases of Consumption if it is only taken in time. For sale by all Druggists. a »■ In numbers there is safety. It was upon this principle that the formula of Judson’s Mountain Herb Pills was prepared. Dr. Judson, intending to spend a fortune in advertising his pills, submitted his recipe to the revision of the most intelligent and learned physicians of the age, and the result is a simple but most efficacious medicine—the Judson’s Mountain Herb Pills. They purify the bloody reiribve all obstructipns, cleanse the skin of all pimples and blotches, perfectly sure and safe in their operation. The Hudson’s Mountain Herb Pills cure Biliousness, Female Irregularities, Headache? and many of the diseases arising from impure blood and a deranged digestion. Use the Judson’s Mountain Herb Pilus. and when you have proved their virtue recommend them to your friends. Thsy are both sugar-coated and plain. For sale everywhere.
The Body and its Needs. Considering? the 'extreme sensitiveness of the human beefyi and,' that ■’!»“« unprjtjpcted except by artifleW covedpg, from {he -action of cold, it is not stoanqi that at thia soafcn it is liable to many disorders: The slrtn exercises a powerful influence over the stomach and bowels, arid when Its functions are interruptedly sudden chills that seal the pores and -prevent evaporation from the surface, internal congestion is apli to ensue. The digestive organs never perform their office properly when thia is .the case, and' the waste matter of the systemvwhlch should be discharged in part through the perspiratory glands, having no ether outlet thafl the bowels and kidneys, .constipation and. a variety of ren “ l diseases are more or less prevalent. Dyspepsia, where it exists, is also aggravated by these causes. The most effective preventive of, and remedy for, disturbances of this nature, is Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters. Acting as a stlmnlaijt and tonic. It rouses the stomach and the Intestines, Imparting to those important organs both activity and regularity. It also operates as a sudorific, by toning the vessels of the skin aiid promoting the free passage of exhausted matteri-through that natnrai sieve of the system Being a mild diuretic, it gives a healthful impulse to the action of the kidneys, where there is a tendency to dropsy, and as a blood depurent and nervine, ha* a highly beneficial effect In rheumatic cases. It combines in happy proportions the tonic, alterative, aperient, antiseptic, diaphoretic and antibilions properties requisite for the restoration of a system generally disordered, and has no equal as a winter medicine,, ,
