Rensselaer Republican, Volume 28, Number 17, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 December 1896 — A TALK ON DYSPEPSIA. [ARTICLE]

A TALK ON DYSPEPSIA.

A Diaeaae of Civilization.—l tf* gym** toms—How to Core It. Dyspepsia is said to be a disease of civilization.. Savages knot 7 nothing about it. The disease has become domesticated in America and we hs a people have threatened to monopolize It. Few disorders inflict upon their victims greater suffering, yet dyspepsia is not particularly dangerous and seldom causes death. It permits the sufferer to linger in misery for the allotted term of life. The complaint usually begins with a aense of fullness, tightness and. weight in the stomach after meals, and a diminished or lost appetite. Flatulency and sour stomach are also common, and there is often nervousness, vomiting end general distress. Dizziness is also a prominent symptom, and an ‘‘all gond’’ feelin&gm the stomach. Some* times the has a bad taste in the mouth, headache, heartburn and palpitation. k Dyspepsia is the result of disturbed or interrupted functions of the stom- . ach and digestive organs. The cure consists in restoring these functions. If the stomach is too weals to digest food it must be strengthened. This must be dPne through the blood, which is the medium that carries strength and nourishment to all the organs. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is* the One. True Blood Purifier and it cures dyspepsia by purifying and enriching the blood, combined with its direct action upon the 6toiU'ach and its secretions. Perhaps in no way has Hood’s Sarsaparilla relieved greater suffering than in its cures of dyspepsia, which are indeed legion. If you are suffering from this disease, give Hood’s Sarsaparilla_a fair trial at once. It will tone and strengthen your stomach, give you an appetite and strength and relieve the pains and miseries eff dyspepsia.