Rensselaer Republican, Volume 15, Number 37, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 May 1883 — A Disabling Disease. [ARTICLE]
A Disabling Disease.
No disease which does not confine* nun to his bed so completely unfits him for business as dysiiepeia. When the stomach is foul the brain is always muddy and oonfused, and as the cares and anxieties of life ate a sufficient burden for the organ of thought to bear, without being tormented by the miseries bom of indigestion, it is highly desirable for the brain’s sake, as well as for the sake of every other portion of the system, that the disordered stomach should be restored with the utmost dispatch to a healthy, vigorous condition. This object can always be accomplished by a course of Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, the purest and best of vegetable specifics, which evacuates the morbid humors through the bowels, rouses and tones the torpid stomach and regulates* the liver, imparts firmness to the nerves and clears the sensorium of its mental cobwebs. Persons subject to attacks of indigestion, bilious headache, irregularity of the boweh, sickness at the stomach, or “the blues," should take the Bitters once or twice a day throughout the present season. A suBscBXBEK suggests that if a sewing circle is a “muliebrie resort” a political caucus is a homogeneous Fort Stevenson, Dakota Ter.—Rev. James McCarty says: “Brown’s Iron Bitters cured me of severe dyspepsia.”
