Rensselaer Union, Volume 9, Number 28, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 March 1877 — Encouragement for the Feeble. [ARTICLE]
Encouragement for the Feeble.
-Debility, Whether 44 bo inherent, or caused by overtaxed strength, or protracted illneoa, haa a most depressing influeaM OpoA thc mind, bleeding an abject melancholy nearly akin to despair, and enforcing the ribanrtenmeut of cherished projects and high hope*. Happily, the enfeebled system, even in extreme cases; is Rtuceptitfle of evidence that unfailing strengthener of the Vffak, and that in addition to vitalizing the physical' organization, it establishes regularity atoon* thsstofigpns upon whose efficient dkoharge or the duties imposed on them by nature, continued/ Wgorahd health depend. Thousands of, instances might be cited to show the regenerating inflUdnceorf She healthgiving agent in cases of,-debility, liver disease, dyspepsia, nervous ailments; constipation, intermittent fever, arinaty- ao.il uterine troubles, gout and rheumatism, and other maladies! * ' 1 *’ ' ! ' '■ ' * *■ z n ** V.' i J -j lT f (~ _ , /1 , Mr. Diogenes. This singular man fived in Gifeioei. He was distinguished for bis eqof otyieitice; bad manners, and bad disposition. It was his elder business to find fault. For example, lie took » hwtern one day when the 6un was shining'brightly and w«nt oot'to search for} .typxeat map, thereby insinuating that such persons’ wert Exceedingly scarce. When Alexander, a distinguish military gentleman, paid him a visit, ana inquired what he could do for him, he had titoinpudence to toll him to “ get out of his sunshine." To cap the climai of his odtßties, he drenod! like a beggar and lived in a tub! He was a sour, crabbed, crusty old bachelor.’ Vf ef Tnfer thdt 'W had no wife, first, because history does no£ mention Hlr; second, because no woman would tdke'kmdly to one of his habite, dress, or. manners, or aspire to become mistress of hip mansion. ‘ “There was an old woman whb liv*d> -In ;h in tone, bnt the woman who would live in a tub, and especially with such a eompdtwM, has nb* befn heard from. ,The misanthropic spirit whiph possessed this man was doubtlesss due 1 6 disordered digestion and ! a biliousness, one, of the. prominent symptoms of which is a morose, famt-finding disposition. The tongue id heavily 1 otytted, giving rise to a had taste, the appetite is not good, slid the patient feels doit stovpor, M dizzy, and .is apt to be fretful. Unfortunately, Mr. Diogenes'lived several centuries’! before* Bit Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets, .were invented, a few doses of which would have relisted Mil of his tragic influence, combined wtth.;ffoat of ti» Golden Medical Discovery, to cleanse his blood, he might have beeti Ira to take a muter cheerful view of lifq, to exchange hip tub fora decent ' habitatidn, to li, kpT+we rift" in personal appearance, and at last pave taken a wife to mend his clothes and his manners; Doth Of whfch were in evident need of rspaus, Aftd besom® • ty® haPpy sire of little Diogeneses who would hate handed down 1 to prosterity ihe nw< Wf of * cynio philosopher, but a cheerful, healthy, happy, virtue ‘ Out mom! I ■ ■ »!'i ■ ■
