Democratic Sentinel, Volume 14, Number 40, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 October 1890 — Long Life to Him [ARTICLE]
Long Life to Him
Long life to the Jolly man! Wherever he goes there flits a breeae or sparkles a sunbeam, or, behold! the refreshment of a shower that turns the withered commonplace of life green as an April meadow, writes Amber. I have no patience with that etiquette that forbids hearty laughter. As well reprove a lark for singing when the sun is rising. I have no patience either with the crackle of thorny laughter under the bubbling pot of meaningless mirth; but downright contagious hilarity with its quick peal of laughter bells—give us plenty of that to keep our hearts in tuneful harmony. Did you ever hear of a villain who was full of the appreciation of humor, or quickly moved to laughter? Bad men may show their teeth, like Carker, or contort their faces into meaningless smiles, but their merriment is as different from the jocund laughter of good men as the call of the night bird differs from a bobolink’s sunlit spray of morning melody.
Dobbins' Electric Soap does not chap the hands, being perfectly pure. Many p-ople afflicted with Salt Rheum have been cured by its use. Preserves aud whitens clothes. Have your grocer order it and try it how. George Blust swore so frightfully at Mrs. Charles Graham, near New Albany, Ind., that she went into convulsions and died. An indignant professor of anatomy in New York denies that there is a skeleton in every closet—he has pawned his. —7'cxas Siftings. Wren medicine is given a child, parents like to leel it is a safe and proper one. Such a remedy is Dr. Bull's Worm Destroyers. The world’s a stage, and you will always have crowded houses when you make a fool of yourself.— Atchison Globe. For a disordered liver try Beecham's Pills. A man’s tongue cun spoil all his industry. If afflicted witli Here Eyes, use Dr. Isaac Thompson's Eye Water. Druggists sell it 25c.
