Democratic Sentinel, Volume 12, Number 24, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 July 1888 — One at a Time. [ARTICLE]

One at a Time.

“Mamma, what did you pray for ?” said the little five-year-old son of a friend of mine. “Why, for papa and mamma, and for God to make you a good boy,” she replied. “Well, that’s just what I’ve be:-n praying for, too,” said the young philosopher, “and if you are going to keep on I’ll quit."— Albany Journal. There are seventy-seven pupils, of whom thirty-two are boys, in the Indian school at Wabash, Ind. Nearly all of them are members of the Sioux tribe. They are diligent students, and except in the studies requiring close reasoning make as rapid progress as the average American school-.boy. Leave hope behind, All ye who enter here! So ran the due warning which Dante read on the portals of the Inferno. So runs the cruel verdict of your frieuds if you are overtaken by the first symptoms of that terrible disease, consumption. “Leave hope behind! Your days are numbered!” And the struggle against death is given up in despair. But while there is life, there is hope! Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery has cured hundreds of cases worse than yours-; and it wilAftsnre you, if taken in time. But delay is dangerous Mo power can restore a wasted lung; the “Golden Medical Discovery,” however, can and will arrest the disease. The people whom business men prefer to hare ’round are square men.— Shoe and Leather Reporter. Moxle has created the greatest excitement as a beverage, in two years, ever witnessed. from the fact that it brings nervous, exhausted, overworked women to good powers of endurance in a few days; cures the appetite for liquors and tobacco at once, and has recovered a large number of oases of old, helpless paralysis as a food only. Some of us starve o:i what others grow rich on .—Judge.