Democratic Sentinel, Volume 1, Number 25, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 August 1877 — What Can Be Cured [ARTICLE]

What Can Be Cured

Need not be endured, although what can’t must be. Among the bodily ills susceptible of complete removal by that benign tonic and alterative, Hostetter’s- Stomach Bitters, are general debility, malarial fevers, constipation, dyspepsia, liver disorder, and nervousness. Its remedial capabilities are, however, by no means limited to these maladies. Its properties as a blood depurent render it extremely serviceable in expelling the acrid impurities which produce those painful disorders, rheumatism and gout, and its invigorating and mildly stimulating effect upon the kidneys and bladder constitute it a useful medicine for impelling those organs to a complete performance of their functions when they are weak and inactive. In fact, there is scarcely any disease of which weakness is an accompaniment in which this admirable medicine cannot be used with advantage.