Rensselaer Union, Volume 8, Number 46, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 August 1876 — The Rebellion of the Stomach. [ARTICLE]
The Rebellion of the Stomach.
The stomach obstinately rebels against all efforts to make it digest supcrabuuoaut or indigestible food. When s lit of dyspepsia has been brought on by over-indulgence ih the pleasures of the table l or any other cause, the invalid can obtain from Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters prompter and more complete relief than from any other source. This admirable specific not only renders digestion active, but regulates tne secretion and distribution of the bile, re-establishes a regular habit of bdHy when costiveness exists, restores the appetite, soothes and invigorates the nerves, and, if takeu before retiring, facilitates sleep. Under these happy conditions, the dyspeptic or bilious subject regains lost flesh, bis spirits recover their elasticity, and all-the various and harassing bodily and mental symptoms of chronic indigestion disappear.
