Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 38, Number 33, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 January 1906 — Page 7 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
NO MAN IS STRONGER THAN HIS STOMACH. Lot the greatest athlete have dyspepsia and his muscles would soon fail. Physical strength is derived from food. If a plan has insufficient food he loses strength. If he has no food ho dies. Food ig, converted into nutrition through the ‘stomach and bowels. It depends on the strength of the stomach to what extent food oaten is digested and assimilated. People can die of starvation whe have abundant food to eat, when tho stomach and its associate organs of digestion and nutrition do not perform their duty. Thus the stomach is really the vital organ of the body. If the stomach is " weak” the body will be weak also, because it is upon the stomach the body relies for its strength. And as the body, considered as a whole, is made up of its several members and organs, so the weakness of the body as a consequence of "weak” stomach will bo distributed among the organs which compose the body. If the body is weak because it is ill-nourished that physical weakness will be found in all tho organs—heart, liver, kidneys, etc. The liver will be torpid and inactive, giving rise to biliousness, loss of appetite, weak nerves, feeble or irregular action of hearty palpitation, dizziness, headache, backache and kindred disturbances and Weaknesses. Mr. Louis Pare, of Quebec, writes: "For years after my health began to fail, my head grew diziy, eyes pained me. and my stomach was sore ail the time, while everything I would eat would seem to lie heavy like lead on my stomach. The doctors claimed that It was sympathetic trouble due to dyspepsia, and prescribed, for me. and although 1 took their powders regularly yet I felt no better. My wife advised me to try Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery—and stop taking the doctor's medicine. Bho bought me a bottle and we soon found that 1 began to improve, so I kept up the treatment I took on flesh, my ■tomach became normal, the digestive organs worked perfectly and 1 soon began to look like a different person. I can never cease to be grateful for what your medicine has done for me and 1 certainly give It highest praise.” Don’t bo wheedled by a penny-grabbing dealer into taking inferior substitutes for Dr. Pierce’s medicines, recommended to be "just as good.” To gain knowledge of your own body— In sickness and health—send for the People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser. A book of 1008 pages. Send 21 one-cent •tamps for paper-covered, or 31 stamps for cloth-bou na copy. Address TJt. R. V. Pierce, 663 Main Street. Buffalo. N. Y.
Kemp’s Balsam Will stop any cougb that can be stopped by any medicine and cure coughs that cannot be cured by any other medicine. It Is always the best cough care. Yon cannot aflord to take chances on any other kind. - HEMP'S BALSAM cores coughs, colds, bronchitis, grip, asthma and consumption In first stages. Nasal '/&fLYs*S. CATARRH In all Its *tage«. °<0(& JUo# Eli’s Cream Baling B |f/ cleanses, ooothea and heole f (ha diseased membrane, It cures catarrh and drirea •war a cold In the head |alokly. Cream Balm la ptaoad Into the noetrila.aprends aver the membrane and la aboorbed. MW la lm- ‘ mediate and a rare followa. It la not dryln*—doaa not produce anreatnj. Lar«a SUe, 60 cents at DrufgtaU or by maU ; Trial BWa, 16 eaow. JBJT BBOTHJCHS, M WarrasitreW, »*• Tork
