Rensselaer Union, Volume 3, Number 41, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 July 1871 — The Universal Safeguard. [ARTICLE]

The Universal Safeguard.

It is useless for State Legislatures to pass laws for the preservation of the public health, if the great law of self-preservation, which depends for its enforcement upon the will of the individual, is suffered to remain a dead letter. There is scarcely an adult member of, the community, of either sex, in the country, who has not seen the testimony in favor of Uestetter’a Stomach Bitters, furnished over their own signatures by persons of acknowledged eminence in science, literature, art, commerce, and every department of business and professional life. These witnesses have declared in the most explicit terms that the preparation is a safeguard against epidemics, a sovereign remedy for dyspepsia, a valuable antibilious medicine, a promoter of appetite, a genial and harmless stimulant, a good acclimating medicine, a strengthener of the nerves, a general in-' vigorant, a protection against the deleterious effects of malaria and impute water, and that it imparts'a degree of vigor and activity to the vital forces which is not communicated by any other of the tonics and stomachics in use. Under these circumstances the self-preservative law of nature should teach every rational person who, either by reason of inherent debility or in consequence of exposure to nnwholsome influences, is in peril of losing the greatest of all temporal blessings, health, the importance of using the Bitters as a defensive medicine. Dyspeptics who neglect to give it a trial are eimply their own enemies. It is guaranteed to cure indigestion in all its formß, and the bilious and nervous will find nothing in the whole range or officinal and proprietary medicines which will afford them the same relief.