Democratic Sentinel, Volume 14, Number 9, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 21 March 1890 — We'll Suppose a Case. [ARTICLE]

We'll Suppose a Case.

You are nervous and dyspeptic, your appetite flags, your slumber is broken cr disturbed by uneasy dreams, or you court the sleepy god In vain. What shall you do ? Try an alcoholic excitant to stimulate appetite, deaden the nerves at bed-time with a narcotic? Neither of these. Try Hostotter’s Stomach Bitters. It will, believe us, be more than a trial. You will continue to use this justly renowned nerve invigorant and stomachic. It is In the exigency supposed just what is wanted. It is a healthful stimulus t j appetite and digestion, does not excite, but quiets the brain and nerves,-is an excellent diuretic and a speedy reformer of a disordered condition of the liver and bowels. It counteracts a tendency to vheunpatisnl, nullifies the prostrating effects of overwork, mitigaftos the infirmities of age, and hastens convalescence. Persons exposed to rough weather should use It as a preventive, as should also tired studenes and business men.

A statue commemorat ng a touching little episode in the life of the late German Emperor Frederick is about to be erected at Kaiserslautern When Frederick was Crown Prince he visited one of the orphan Hsylums of that town. Among the children was a sickly and sad-faced little boy. Frederick noticed him, took him in his arm 3, and thereupon agreed to become his godfather. The child, to whom a caress was a stranger, appeared somewhat frightened at first, but soon got over his difficulty and began to play with thg Prince’s medals and decorations. The statue in question will represent the Prince with a baby in his arms and the youngster tugging at his cordons and crosses.