Democratic Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 2, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 February 1886 — Undigested Food [ARTICLE]
Undigested Food
In the stomach develops on acid which stings the upper part of the throat and palate, causing “heartburn.” It also evolves a gas which produoes “wind on the stomach,” and a feeling and appearance of distention in that organ after eating. For both this acidity and swelling Hostetter’s "Stomach Bitters is a much better remedy than alkaline salts, like hartshorn and carbonate of soda. A wineglassful of the Bitters, after or before dinner, will be found to act’as a reliable carminative or preventive. This fine specific for dyspepsia, both in its acute and chronic form, also prevents and cures malarial fever, constipation, liver complaint, kidney troubles, nervousness, and debility. Persons who observe in themselves a dacline of vigor should use this fine tonic without delay. Professor T. G. Wormley, in liis now treatise on the Micro-Chemistry of Poisons, says: “The microscope may enable us to determine with great certainty that a blood is not that of a certain animal, and may be the blood of man; but in no instance does it, in itself, enable us to say that the blood is really human, or indicate from what particular species of animal it was derived.” His measurements show that there is but little difference in size between the blood corpuscles of man and those of a large variety of animals. — Hr. Foote's Health Monthly. * * * * All diseases of lower bowel, including- pile tumors* radically cured. Book of particulars, 10 cents in stamps. World's Dispensary Medical Association, 633 Main street, Buffalo, N. Y. "When tho heart is full the lips are silent; when the man is full it is different
