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Parent Issue
Day
4
Month
March
Year
1891
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

Dyspepsia Makes the lives of many people miserable, and often leads to self-dectruction. Distress aiter eating, sour stomach, sick headacbe, heartburn, loss ot appetlte, a faint, " all gone" ieeling, bad taste, coated tongue, and irregularity of the bowels, are DlStreSS some of the more common After symptums. Dyspepsia does _ .. not get well of itself. It Eating requires careful, persistent attention, and a remedy like Hood's Sarsaparilla, which acts gently, yet surely and efficiently. It tones the stomach and other organs, regulates the digestiĆ³n, creates & good appetite, and by thus Sick overcoming the local m. A nUa. tom3 removes the Heaaacne thetic effects of the disease, banishes the headache, and reireshes the tired mind. " I have been troubled with dyspepia. I had but little appetite, and what I did eat u . distressed me, or did me neari" little g00)ji In an hOur burn af ter eating I would experlence a faintness, or tired, all-gone teeling, as though I had not eaten anything. My trouble, I think, was aggravated by my business, which is that of a painter, and irom being more or less shut up in a Soilf roomwithfreshpaint. Last " . spring I took Hood's STOmaCn rlUa- took three bottles. It did me an Immense amount of good. It gave me an appetite, and my food relished and satisfled the craving I had previonsly experlenced." Geobge A. Page, Watertown, Mass. Hood's Sarsaparilla Bold by all drugglsti. f 1 ; slx for fi. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD CO., Apottaecariei, Lowell, Mm. IOO Doses One Dollar

Article

Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Courier