Rensselaer Union, Volume 3, Number 25, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 March 1871 — Burning Shaking. [ARTICLE]
Burning Shaking.
By • ridiculous misapplication of language, la* vallds are aometlmea said to “enjoy very poor health," bit It la not on record that any human being waa ever spoken of aa enjoying chills and favor. And jpt there are thousand*. at this moment, In one or the other of the two stages of the dleoarier, who might Just aa wen have avoided It as not. If there- la anything demonstrable In therapeutics. It la that Iloetetter's Stomach Bitters Is an antidote to Intermittent fevers. No Instance can be cited In which It has been taken, either as a safeguard against this class of dlaeaaca, or aa a remedy for them, and failed to produce the desired effect. The season when malarious fevers are rife, baa commenced, and no inhabitant of any district subject to their visitations should be without this, great preventive and remedy. Indeed, It la a moat potent protection against all the allideuta which prevail In the spring months. From marsh and pool, and from all moist soils, are now rising the mephitic elements which give birth to fever, tndl geetlon, biliousness, colics, and a whole host of epidemic and other maladlefo Aid the system to resist them. Energise endMfgnlate all the animal functions, with this reinforcing agent. This precaution la aa necessary In cities an In new settlements, for malarious fevers are now almost as common In the great centers of population as on the borders of the Southern bayous and marshes, and the rich agricultural regions of the West. The preventive end remedy ts accessible to all. Who will be unwise enough to brave, recklessly, the danger It would avert?
