Rensselaer Democrat, Volume 1, Number 2, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 April 1898 — THE CAUSE OF DYSPEPSIA. [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]
THE CAUSE OF DYSPEPSIA.
From tfie Republican, Scranton, Penn. The cause of dyspepsia is'lack of vitality; the absence of nerve force: the loss ofthelife-sustainiiigeiementsof the blood. No organ can properly perform its function when the BOtirce of nutriment fails. When the stomach is robbed of the nourishment demanded by nature, assimilation ceases, unnatural gases are generated; the entire system respssde to the discord. A practical illustration Is furnished by the case of Joseph T. Vandyke, 440 Hickory street, Scranton, Pa. In telling his story, Mr. Vandyke says: “Five years ago I was afflicted with •
trouble of the stomach, which was very aggravating. I had no appetite, could not enjoy myself at any time, and especially was the trouble severe when I awoke in the morning. I did not know what the ailment was, but it beca m e steadily worse and I was in constant misery. “I called in my family physician, and he diagnosed the case ns catarrh of the stomach.
He prescribed for me and I had his prescription filled. I took nearly all of the medicine, but still the trouble became worse, and 1 felt that my condition was hopeless. I tried several remedies, but without benefit. After 1 had been suffering several months, Thomas Campbell, of this city, urged me to try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. “I finally decided to buy a box and began to use the pills according to directions. Before I had taken the second box I began to feel relieved, and after taking a few more boxes considered myself restored to health. The pills gave me new life, strength, ambition and happiness.” Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills cure dyspepsia by restoring to the blood, the requisite constituents of life, by renewing the nerve force and enabling the stomach to promptly and properly assimilate the food. These pills are a specific for all diseases having their origination in impoverished blood or disordered nerves. They contain every element requisite to general nutrition, to restore strength and good health to the ailing.
In Misery,
