Democratic Sentinel, Volume 13, Number 45, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 November 1889 — The Seat of Pain and Pleasure, [ARTICLE]
The Seat of Pain and Pleasure,
The nervous system, often suffers a diminution of vigor, and causes mental annoyance, and even positive disturbance, without disease in the sensorium itself. It acts as a mere reflector, in many cases, of inaction in the stomach, and consequently of incomplete assimilation of the food by the blood. This, of course, weakens it, in common with the rest of the tissues, and renders it less able to bear without suffering an ordinary strain that would make no impression upon strong nerves. To supply a deficit of strength, and remedy a supersensitiveness in the nerves incident to a lack of vigor, Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters is far bettor adapted than any mere nervine or simple tonic, since the offspring of its use, complete digestion, is the vigorous and early parent of nerve force and quietude. Malarial attacks, rheumatism, bowel, liver aud kidney complaints succumb to the Bitters.
