Democratic Sentinel, Volume 9, Number 15, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 May 1885 — The Common Enemy. [ARTICLE]

The Common Enemy.

In order to make headway against the common enemy, Disease, it is necessary to oppose him with persistence. It very frequently happens that a remedy perfectly r dequate to the necessities of the case, if persisted in, I < condemned and thrown aside because a few doses of it do not cure a malady. How unreasonable and unjust would such a judgment be regarding Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, one of the most popular and highly sanctioned medicines of the day, a potent invigorant, and an invariably successful remedy for constipation, dyspepsia, liver com' laint, incipient rh* um ttsm, neura'gia and gout, inactivity and weakness of the kidneys and bladder, and tor the infirmities incident to the decline of life. No fact is I letter established than the above, yet in order to exT er enc.; tts t uth, those afflicted with obstinate forms of disease sho Id give this benignant curative a pati nt trial. If they do, they may rely upon decisive curative results. This mundane sphere is a mighty uncertain sort of place. The bitter and the sweet go hand in hand, and you always strike an up grade when you are in the biggest hurry.