Rensselaer Union, Volume 2, Number 44, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 July 1870 — The Blood in Summer. [ARTICLE]

The Blood in Summer.

The blood deteriorates in hot weather. Prof use perspiration deprives ituf a portion or its nourishing and reproductive properties. Consequently, in summer, the fleck loses in some degree its firmness, the muscle* lack their uual elasticity and vigor, and the weight of the body diminishes. These are clear indications that tbe. ordinary supply of she life-sustaining principle afforded by the food ws eat, is not sufficient to meet the requirements of the system under a Ugh temperature. There Is another reason for this, betides the diced influence of the heat, ns.: tte loas of appetite and the weakening of the dlgefltve powers which it occasions. Under these elrcsmstanees a wholesome lnrlgorant Is evidently needed, and the beat and safest i» Hoetbttei’s Stoaach Bitters. This

admirable vegetable tonic and alterative sets Oror ably upon the syetem la several way#, lttncreaaes the appetite end fisetuutes digestion, thereby inclining the ttomach to receive and enabling it to aoetmilataa doe amount of non riehmant. It also tones the relaxed secretive organa and the bowels. -Under lie operation the proceae of emaciation, occaaloned by the drain through tho pores, la arrested, the Whole frame refreshed add Invigorated, and the spirit* exhilarated. Tha dyspeptic, the bilious, the nervous, the debilitated, scarcely need to be teld that It ie precisely the etlmulant and corrective they ought to take art this season. Thousands of them know the Tact by experience. Nothing in the pharmacopeia (or out of it) will supply Its place—least of all the trashy local nostrums which some nntcrupilons dealers wonld be glad, for the benoflt of tholr own pockets, to peddle out In Its steed.