Rensselaer Union, Volume 3, Number 38, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 15 June 1871 — A Pitiful Conditions [ARTICLE]
A Pitiful Conditions
Itts a sad thing to pass through life only half alive. Yet there are thousands whose habitifsd condition is one of languor and debility. They complain of no epccillc disease; they suffer no positive pain; hilt they have no relish for anythin" which affords mental or sensuous pleasure to their more robust and energetic fellow-beings. In hint- cases out oUen this state of lassitude and torpor arises froiw a morbid stomach. Indigestion destroys the energy of both mind and body. When the waste of nature is not supplied by a due and regular assimilation of the food, every organ is starved, every function interrupted. N my, what- does common sen.-e suggest under these circumstances of depression? The system needs rousing and strengthenin '; not merely for an hour or two, to sink afterward into a more pitiable condition than ever (as it assuredly would do If an ordinary alcoholic stimulant were resorted to), but radically and permanently. How is this desirable object to he accomplished f The answer to-thisi question, founded on the unvarying experience of a quarter of a century, is easily given. Infuse new vigor into the digestive organs by a course of Hosteiter’s Stomach Bitters. Bo not waste time in ' administering temporary remedies, but wake the system no by recuperating the fountain-head of physical strength and energy, the great organ upon which ail the other organs depend for their nurture and support. By the time that a dozen doses of the great veg ctable tonic and iuvigorant have been taken, the feeble frame of the dyspeptic will begin to feel Its benign influence. Appetite will be created, and with appetite the capacity to digest what it craves. Persevere until the cure is complete—until healthful blood, lit to lie the material of flesh and inns- . cle, bone and nerve, and brain, flows through the channels of circulation instead of the watery pabulum with which they have heretofore been Imperfectly nourished. Dr. S. O Richardson's Sherry Wine Bitters —A pharmaceutical preparation, by a regularly educated physician, is one of the most pleasant and valuable tonics of the day. Persons recovering from protracted illness, or those' who at this particular season of the year are subject to jaundice, habitual constipation, or any disease arising from a disordered stomach, liver or bowels, wiil lind in the sherry Wine Bttters a friend moro to be desired than gold. S.old by all Druggist*. ,
