Democratic Sentinel, Volume 14, Number 14, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 April 1890 — Every Meal Is a Trial [ARTICLE]

Every Meal Is a Trial

To the dyspeptic. Flatulence, heartburn, oppressive fullness of the stomach are the inevitable sequences of his use of the knife and fork. To say of him that he gratifies the cravings of appetite would be genuine satire. He only appeases them. Is relief attainable? Certainly, and by the use of a pleasant as well as thorough remedy, Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters. Will it cure immediately? Certainly not'—it does not effect miracles. Bui it does give prompt and unspeakable relief, and will, if persisted in, produce an ultimate cure. Not only does it impart relish to the food but promotes its conversion by the ftamach into rich, health and strength sustaining blood. Superseusitiveness of the nerves, mental depression, and unquiet slumber, produced by interruption of the digestive functions, are also remedied by it. It iB the finest preventive and curative of malarial disorders, and relieves constipation, rheumatism, kidne| and bladder ailments, and liver complaint. The swan is the longest-lived bird, and it is asserted that it has reached the age of one hundred years. Knaner, in his work entitled “Naturhistoriker,” states that he has seen a falcon that was one hundred and sixty-two years old. The following samples are cited as to the longevity of the eagle land vulture: A sea. eaglo captured in 1725, and already several years of age, died 104 years afterward, in 1819; a white-headed"vulture, captured in 1706, died in 1826 in one of the aviaries of Schoenbrunn Castle, near Vienna, where it hud passed 148 years in captivity.