Democratic Sentinel, Volume 11, Number 36, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 October 1887 — A Useful Precaution. [ARTICLE]

A Useful Precaution.

It is a useful precaution for the tourist, the commercial traveler, or the emigrant to the West, to take along Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. Invalids who travel by steamboat or rail should provide themselves with it, in order to prevent or remedy the nausea which the jarring and vibration of vehicles in transitu often causes them. Vastly preferable is it for this simple, but needful purpose, to the heady unmedicated stimulants of commerce. On board Ship, it not only remedies sea-sickness, but neutralizes the pernicious effects of water Slightly brackish, which, if unqualified, is apt to give rise to irregularities of the bowels, cramps in the abdominal region, and dyspepsia. To the aerial poison of malaria it is an efficient antidote. Sick headache, heartburn, and wind upon the stomach, are promptly banished by it. It healthfully stimulates the kidneys and bjadder, and nullifies the early symptoms of rheumatism.