OCR Text |
Show A Tonic of Rre Merit. There arc many tonics, but few indeed which produce any other effect than artificial ar-tificial stimulation of the appetite. Tim, so far from being a benefit, is a positive detriment, if the digestive organs aro weak, because it ind uces tho patient to eat more than tho sciui paralyzed stomach can act upon, and thus aggravates indigestion. indi-gestion. There is, however, a tonic which possesses the rare merit of imparting impart-ing both vigor and regularity to tho operations of nutrition. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters provoke a wholesome appetite, because they enable the stomach to dispose of what it itrecoives with suuh healthful rapidity that at the proper time for meats it is not torpid from indigested matter, but craves its timely pustenance. It is the very fact that it lacilitates digestion that renders the national stomachic Buch a powerful coadjutor of nature in instituting those rfcuperalive processes which result in the recovery of tho general health. Uninterrupted, Un-interrupted, vigorous action of the physical physi-cal machinery icevitably results from the u-e of this supremeinvigorant and alterative, al-terative, af |