Rensselaer Republican, Volume 23, Number 4, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 September 1890 — A Reprieve for the Condemned. [ARTICLE]

A Reprieve for the Condemned.

Wretched men ana women long condemned to suffer the torturea of dyspepsia, are filled with new hope after a few doses of Hostetter's Stem* ach Bitters. This budding hope blossoms into the frultnion of certainty, if the Bitters is pertinted in. It brings a reprieve to all dyspeptics who seek its aid. Fiatu.enre, heartburn, sinking, at the pit of the stomach between meals, the nervous tremors and insomnia of which chronic stion is the parent, disappear with their hatetui progenitor. Most beneficent of stomachics! who can wonder that in so many instances >t awakens grateful eloquence in these who, beuefitted by it, speak voluntarily in its behalf. It requires a graphic pen to describe the torments of dyspepsia, but in many of the testimonials received by the proprietors of the Bitters, these are portrayed wjtha vivid truthfu ness constipation, biliousness, muscular debility, malarial fevers and rheumatl-m are re ieved by It. Why is it that people with good impulses are generally lazy. A soap that is soft is full of water, half or two-thirds its weight probably, thus you pay seven or eight cents per pound for water. Dobbins’ Electric Soap is all soap and no adulteration, therefore the cheapest and best. Try Dobbins’. A Binghampton car driver savs his work is like an organ. It is full of stops. Dr. John Bull, of Louisville, Ky.,showed his love for little children when he invented those dainty little candies he named Dr. Bull’s Worm Destroyers. It’s fun for the children, but it’s death to the worms.