Rensselaer Republican, Volume 21, Number 23, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 February 1889 — The Chamber of Torture [ARTICLE]
The Chamber of Torture
I* the apartment to which the unhappy sufferer from Inflammatory rtaumatlsm is confilied. If, ere the crisis of pain if reached, that fine preventive, Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, is used by persons ota rheumatic tendency, much unnecessary suffering is avoided. Nervines, anodynes and sedatives, while havingnone but a specific effect, are yet very desirable at times. Yet they can produce no lasting efleet upon rheumatism, because they have no power to eliminate from the blood the rheumatic virus. Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters does this, and checks at the outset a disease which, if allowed to gain headway, it is next to impossible tQ dislodge or to do more than relieve. Rheumatism, it should be remembered, is a disease with a fatal tendency from its proneness to attack the heart, A resort to the Bitters should, therefore, be prompt. Dyspepsia, kidney complaint, malaria and nervousness are relieved by it. You can not reason with an angry man. Passion silences the voice of his judgment. With groans and sighs, and dizzied eyes, He seeks the couch and down lie lies; Nausea,nnd faintness in him rise, Brow-racking pains assail him. Sick headache! But ere long comes ease. His stomach settles into peace, Within his head the throbbings eeasePierce’s Pellets never fuil him! Nor will they fail anyone in such a dire predicament. To the dyspeptic, the bilious, and the constipated, th y are alike “a friend in need and a friend indeed. Er nigger will go to heap moah trouble to steal er turkey dan he will to kill er wild one. Don’t hawk, hawk, blow, spit end disgust everybody wi h your offensive breath, but use Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy and end it. Perhaps the most potential letter of the alphabet is “n," because it can make a man ot ma.
