Democratic Sentinel, Volume 14, Number 41, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 November 1890 — PECULIAR INFATUATION. [ARTICLE]

PECULIAR INFATUATION.

Different Methods of Following the Injunction “Love Ono Another.” Do men ever fall in love with each other? Women da Not long ago a young woman tn New Jersey was married to a youthful laborer on her father’s farm. Sometime afterward it was discovered that the husband was a female; the young wife refused, however, though earnestly entreated by her friends, to give up her chosen consort. The strangest part of the discovery was the fact that the bride knew her husband was a woman before she was led to the altar. If men do not exhibit this strange infatuation for one of their own sex,'they at least oftentimes give evidence of the fact that they love one another. There are many Instances on record where one man has given his life for another. There are many more instances where men have given life to another. It is a proud possession—the knowledge that one has saved a precious human life. Meriden, Conn., is the home of such a happy man. John H. Preston, of that city. July 11, 1890, writes: “Five years ago I was taken very sick. I had several of the best doctors, and one and all called it a complication of diseases. I was sick four years, taking prescriptions prescribed by these same doctors, and I truthfully stale I never expected to get any better. At this time, I commenced to have the most terrible pains in my back. One day an old friend of mine, Mr. R. T. Cook, of the firm of Curl is & Cook, advised me to try Warner’s Safe Cure, as he had been troubled the same way and it had effected a cure for him. I bought six bottles. took the medicine as directed, and am to-day a well man. lam sure no one ever had a worse case of kidney and liver trouble than I had. Before this I was always against proprietary medicines, but not now, Oh, no.” Friendship expresses itself in very peculiar ways sometimes; but the true friend i* the friend in need.