Democratic Sentinel, Volume 7, Number 41, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 November 1883 — A Little Pain at First. [ARTICLE]

A Little Pain at First.

Years of torture afterward. Such is the wretched experience of too many rheumatic sufferers. Slight twinges in the bones or muscles, attributed possibly to a cold, finally declare themselves, by their increasing intensity, as evidences of the atrocious malady. But why give it headway. Why not eradicate it at the start with the S 3 tent blood depurent, Hostetter's Stomach itters. commenced by physicians with equal emphasis for rheumatism, as for dyspepsia, debility and constipation, complaints lor which it is an absolute specific. Where mineral and alkaloid poisons fail, the Bitters will be fouud to afford the rheumatic the relief they so often seek in vain. Attacked with this searching remedy at the outset, the malady rapidly gives ground, and the sufferer experiences a cessation of pain, of which he had before despaired. Malarial fevers also abate rapidly through its influence, and disorders of the liver, stomach, bowels and kidneys are overcome and prevented by it. An Ohio dentist has devoted himself to active politics, probably on the ground that his calling has fitted ‘him for “taking the stump.” —Pitsburgh Telegraph. “Yes,” said the farmer, “barbed wirefenco is expensive, but the hired man doesn’t stop to rest every time he has to climb it.”