Rensselaer Republican, Volume 22, Number 33, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 April 1890 — A Necessity of Health. [ARTICLE]

A Necessity of Health.

The thrown of D—<■: Turkey.—S%-T-cn). M.^arins

It I. a prime necessity oi health that the action of the bowel, should be kept r gular. But the way to overcome a temporary fit of constipation, or to remedy chronic costivenem, la net to deluge the stomach and drench the bowel, with purg-tivea of violent and painful action. The happy medium between an Inoperative and violent cathartic la Hostetler*. Stomach Bitten, which act. jmt sufficiently upon the bowel, to relax them, without pain, and which being a wholesomatonic a. well as aperient, has the effect of .lengthening both them and the stomach, and promoting the well being of the whole internal economy. The removal of bileirom the blood, increased activity of the liver, usually dormant in cases of costiveness, and sound.digestion follows the use of this beneficent medicine, as thorough and genial in it. effect, as it is safe ana pure in composition. Rheumatism, fever and ague, kidney troubles and debility are also remedied by it, The Deepest Mine in the World. St Louis Republican. It is at St. Andre au Poirier, France, and yearly produces 300,000 tones of coal. The mine is workedjjjwith two shafts, one 2,952 feet deep and the other 3,083. The latter shaft is now beingodeepened and will soon touch the] 4,000 foot level. A remarkable feature in this deep mine is the comparative low temperature, 75 degrees Fahrenheit. The gold and silver mines of the Pacific coast of our own country, at a depth of less than half of that oi the French coal mine, Often have much difficulty in keeping the temperature low enough to admit working. In some levels of the great Comstock lode the temperature prises as high as 120 degrees. ■ In a Dut shell: The worm.—St. Louis Magazine.