Democratic Sentinel, Volume 8, Number 37, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 October 1884 — A Very Happy Man. [ARTICLE]
A Very Happy Man.
“In your opinion, my dear,” said a wife to her husband, “who was the happiest man that ever lived ?” “Adam, undoubtedly,” he replied. “You mean, of course, that he must have been very happy until he was turned out of the garden.” “No; I mean that he must have been very happy until Eve came.” The Studio makes the following suggestion to those who wish to buy pictures: “Never take the advice of anybody, no matter how ‘cultivated,* or ‘educated,’ or how great an ‘authority’ he or she may be.” This is somewhat startling, coming from a journal devoted to the advancement of art, but it has good reasons therefor. It holds, and rightly, that people should buy that which they really like, and then “try it by living with itif it be really good “it will help the purchaser to get something as good or, it it may be, better the next time.” The suggestion is wholly sound, for it is in accord with the theory that pictures themselves edtieatethe artistic sense.— The Current, Faithfulness is necessary In all kinds of work- Especially Is it necessary, in treating a cold, to procure the best remedy which is Alien’s Lung L alsam, and take it faithful! / according to direct ion.-’, and It will cure a cold every time and prevent fatal resu’ts. tola by all druggists.
