Democratic Sentinel, Volume 9, Number 33, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 September 1885 — The Present Generation [ARTICLE]

The Present Generation

Lives at telegraphic speed—eats too fast, retires too late, does not rise betimes, smokes, and (alas, that we should have to say it!) chews too much tobacco. The consequences are dyspepsia, a general absence of that robust and manly vigor which characterized our ancestors, and a manifest proneness to early decay. Regular hours, a due allowance of time for meals, the disuse of excessive smoking, and altogether of chewing tobacco, in connection with a course of Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, will in nine cases out of ten efface consequences of the abuses of the laws of health Indicated above. A want of stamina, dyspepsia, nervousness, and biliousness are among these consequences, and they are bodily ills to the removal of which the Bitters is specially adapted. Nor is the Bitters lesi fitted to overcome and prevent fever and ague, kidney and bladder troubles, and rheumatic ailments. It is also a fine appetizer and promoter of convalescence.