Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 270, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 November 1915 — SAYS WE BECOME CRANKS ON HOT WATER DRINKING [ARTICLE]

SAYS WE BECOME CRANKS ON HOT WATER DRINKING

Hopes Every Man and Woman Adopts This Splendid Morning Habit. Why is man and woman, half the time, feeling nervous, despondent, worried; some days headachy, dull and unstrung; some days really incapacitated by illness. If we all would practice the drinking of phosphated hot water before breakfast*, what a gratifying change would take place., Instead of thousands of half-sick, anaemic-looking souls with pasty, muddy complexions we should see crowds of happy, healthy, rosy-cheeked people everywhere. The reason is that the human system does not rid itself each day of all the waste which it accumulates under our present mode of living. For every ounce of food and drink taken into the system nearly an ounce of waste material must be carried out, else it ferments and forms ptomainelike poisons in the bowels which are absorbed into the blood. ( Just as necessary as it is to clean the ashes from the furnace each day, before the fire will burn bright and hot, so we must each morning clear the inside organs of the previous day’s accumulation of indigestible waste and body toxins. Men and women, whether sick or well, are advised to drink each morning, before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it, as a harmless means of washing out of the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels the indigestible material, waste, sour' bile and toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. Millions of people who had their turn at constipation, bilious attacks, acid stomach, nervous days and sleepless nights have become real cranks about the morning inside bkth. A quarter pound of limestone phosphate will not cost much at the drug store, but is sufficient to demonstrate to anyone its cleansing, sweetening and freshening effect upon the system.

Rev. O. G. Mozena, of Parkersburg, W. Va., who has been holding a revival meeting for the Christian church at Francesville, was here today and in company with G. H. McLain called at The Republican office. His meetings at Francesville have not been getting along very well, as he has a skating rink ,to oppose him and that is quite a job in a small town. .

Ray Day, who recently joined the United States army, is now stationed at Columbus Barracks, Ohio, and writes to his brother, Chase, that he likes it very well so far, except the administering of the anti-typhoid protholasis. All soldiers are required to take this In three installments as a precaution against typhoid fever, which has always been a great menace to soldiers at concentration camps and in the field.