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The Western Jewel and Home Journal from Topeka, Kansas • 4

The Western Jewel and Home Journal du lieu suivant : Topeka, Kansas • 4

Lieu:
Topeka, Kansas
Date de parution:
Page:
4
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

mESTBRij prnEii AND HOME JOURNAL THE FARMER FEEDS THEM ALL. But tlie prices for which he can soil his output Is fixed by members of the various Boards of Trade who Toil not, neither do they spin," The king may rule oer land and sea, The lord may live right royally, The soldlor ride In pomp and prldo, The sailor roam oer the ocean wide; But this or that, whateer befall, The farmer he must feed them all. The writer thinks, the poet sings, The craftsmen fashion wondrous things; The doctor heals, the lawyer pleads, The miner follows the precious leads; But this or that, whateer befall, The farmer he must feed them all. The merchant he may buy and sell, The teacher do his duty well; But men may toll through busy days, Or men may stroll through pleasant ways; From king to beggar, wbateer befall, The farmer he must feed them all. The farmers trade is one of worth.

Hes partner with the sky and earth; Hes partner with the sun and rain, And no man loses for his gain And men may rise, and men may fall, The farmer he must feed them all. God bless the man who sows the wheat. Who finds us milk and fruit and meat; May his purse be heavy, his heart be light, His cattle and corn and all go right; God bless the seeds his hands let fall, For the farmer he must feed them all. Good Roads. that my bank account had grown embarrassingly light, and the situations I was holding were not of the most lucrative nature, yet I managed through good engineering to come into the sole possession of from one pint to half a gallon of good, bad and indifferent whisky a day, which I must confess I consumed with a relish seldom seen in one who is not an habitual drunkard, and which up to that time 1 bad never claimed I was.

Although I have not used any Intoxicating liquor for a year, yet I hold that it Is the greatest nervine and gall regulator ever discovered, medical science notwithstanding. Give a man who is dead broke one drink and If he dont have a life-sized jag on in an hour there is something wrong with the liquor you gave him. When I arrived at Topeka I was informed that I could board where I pleased, go where I pleased and drink as much whiBky as I pleased on the condition that I would drink only the liquor I received at the Institute, which I was to have free of charge, and by simply asking for it. I got there in the morning and sealed the contract by relieving Keeley of about six ounces of his best Kentucky blue grass as an appetizer, before breakfast. After breakfast I was put in line for treatment.

All the patients form in a line, beginning with the oldest; this, of course put me in the extreme rear. As we marched by the doctor he injected a pinkish fluid into the left arm of each. This is called by the boys taking the shot. During the day I formed the acquaintance of a dozen or more of the bibulous artists who were in for the same offense as myself and, as several of them were recovering from the effects of an introduction to the barber pole, I took heed and sort of tapered off without compelling the doctor to inflict it upon me. The friendship that springs up between those in attendance is of the most friendly nature, and each class before leaving go to some photographer and have their pictures taken as mementos of the great turning point in their life, and as a general thing the portraits have the appearance of a gentlemanly nnd Intelligent lot of men.

The treatment cannot be called anything but a success. Thousands have tried it and are only too willing to certify to the good it has done them. All who go there are treated in the most courteous manner, and the good people of Topeka are always ready to show them all the courtesy they would to any one. And why men should persist in drinking intoxicating liquor and increasing the dread disease which will surely carry them off sooner or later, when science offers a permanent more than I can understand. Deafness Cannot be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the deseased portion of the ear.

There is only one way to cure Deafness, and that Is by constitutional remedies. Deafness Is caused by an Inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets inflamed you hare a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the Inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to Its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surface. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Halls Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free.

F. J. CHENEY Toledo, 0. tySold by Druggists, 75c. Morphine, whisky and tobacco habits cured by the Keeley treatment in Kansas only at the Keeley Institutes at North Topeka and Kansas City, Kansas.

Subscribe for the Western Jewel. Fifty cents per year, in advance. TREATMENT OF INDIANS. The newspapers throughout the United States have given much publicity and picturesque accounts of the four Delaware Indians, Steven Busy, George Washington, Simon Secondeye and William Easy, who took the treatment at the Kansas City Keeley Institute, some weeks ago. The sensational papers would have their readers believe that the Indians were uncivilized, wild and woolly, and hard to curry," and wore a dazzling variety of clothes, including red blankets, plug hats and speckled shirts.

Id the highly educated East, these sensational stories might be taken as true, but here in the West the people know that the majority of the Delaware, Shawnee and Osage Indians are not inferior to our boasted civilized races. Many of them are highly educated, refined, and of the best moral character, and are not so slow in their conception of right and wrong( cause and effect. The four Delaware Indians referred to, after thorough investigation of the Keeley cure, and the effect it had upon one of their friends who had taken the cure several months before, voluntarily entered the Institute at Kansas City Kansas, with the full determination of ridding themselves of the curse of alcoholism. The cure of those four Delaware Indians will have a wholesome effect upon the Indians in the Territory and will prove to all Christian people that their less favored brothers are learning the ways of their more enlightened neighbors, and are anxious to have the curse that is ruining their lives removed, that they may have a standing in their tribe and among the more civilized nations equal to any. The Delaware Indians, as a general rule, are well-to-do, Industrious, and have a goodly store of this world's goods, and the four who took the treatment had ample means of their own to pay their way through the Institute.

The action of the Delaware tribe in offering to assist those who are unable to take the treatment and wish so to do, is an example that should be followed iri every community, and is one that should not be forgotten by those who have among them erring friends who are individually too poor to take advantage of the vital benefits to be obtained by taking the Keeley treatment for inebriety. That the Indians can be cured of ine briety by the Keeley cure there is no doubt, and from the numerous inquiries now being made by the chiefs of the tribes we look for a great increase in the ranks at the Kansas Keeley Institutes from the Indian territory. At the present time two members of the Osage tribe are undergoing treatment and the physician in charge speaks of them in glowing terms. The editor of the Jewel hopes to be able to give to our readers a letter from our Indian graduates in the June issue. THE KEELEY CURE.

ED. G. MOORE SON, EDITOR ANO PROPRIETOR. 108 EAST SIXTH STREET. PUBLISHED MONTHLY.

By Mall In Advance, Portage Paid. One Year so cents. Entered at the Postoflloe In Topeka, Kan. sm, a second-class matter. ESTABLISHED IN 1889.

irir fAlnfrvfAf'VAlnlAVa It the party in power ia responsible for the preeent hard times, who was responsible for the panic of 1873? Look out for a booming old corn crop this fall. Fay no attention to Mrs. Lease and her advice bnt raise more corn and hogs and less wheat and 1. Wichita Star. The number of ex governors of Kansas living is bnt 7 Charles Bobinson, S.

J. Crawford, Thomas A. Osborne, Geo. T. Anthony, J.

P. St. John, Geo. W. Click, L.

U. Humphrey. The discrimination made by the members of Congress and the Washington polioe, between the capitalists and the unemployed who visit the Capital city will not be tolerated long. The Coxey army is made up of the class of men who went to the front in 61, and when onoe aroused are likely to create a commotion the "non-producers and "gentlemen of leisure will not want to see. All men are equal in the sight of God, and should be treated so by those in authority over them.

The editor of the Hutohinson Clipper was brutally assaulted by three toughst residents of that city, in front of his residence, a week ago last Sunday, and badly beaten. The cause of the attack was an article that appeared in the Clipper the day before the assault, Newspapers are somewhat like a good policeman; they will not attaok a citizen who is honest and "square after dark, and we will venture the assertion that the Clipper hit the right parties or they would net have kioked and brutally assaulted the editor. Yol. 1, No. 8, of the Kansas Breeze has reached our table.

It is another Topeka venture in the newspaper fieldf and seems to have a purpose in view. That purpose is to boost George W-Crane for state printer. It is printed at the Crane printing establishment, and of course is first-class in typographical ap-pearanoe. We are for any man for state printer who will promise not to fire old soldiers because thay are old soldiers, and employ a scamp who calls them paupers and thieves. Success to the Kansas Breeze.

McClures Magazine for May is far superior to any yet published. The May number commemorates the birthday of Gen. Grant, with reminiscences and an-eodotes by his son, Col. Fred Grant, and the generals old oomrades, and with a complete series of portraits from youth to old age. It also presents a study of the life and habits of oaptive wild beasts and their trainers, in the preparation of which anthor and artist all but lived for months with the largest collection of trained wild beasts in the world.

The number also contains other interesting articles, stories and pictures. AddresB 8. 8. McClure, 743 and 745 Broadway, New York City. The Western Jewel goes to every member of the Knights and Ladies of Security, nearly every Keeley graduate in Kansas, and has a large circulation among the friends of Keeley temperance work throughout the West.

As an advertising medium the Western Jewel is not in it. We will not publish an advertisement until we have satisfied ourselves that the advertisers are reliable and worthy of our readers patronage. It will be well for our foreign advertising friends to make a note of the above and save postage and circulars. Trade and due bills wont go. Cash advertisements only will be A WOMAN'S MISTAKE.

Eds. Western Jewel: One of the mistakes made by women is that of telling to their lady friends their domestic troubles, and especially the actual or seeming differences between them and their husbands, Among the several friends or intimates there will nearly always be one of those women who loves no one in particular, nor does shs bate any one in particular; rather good in the general aooeptance of the term good, not bad by any means. Yet owing to the faot that she loves no one over (much, she is likely to like a number of people, and, therefore always indulges in more or less sentimentality with whoever she is with. Now, chancing to be with the husband of the friend who has confided to her her troubles, real or apparent, Bhe Bt once begins to extend her sympathy tor the unfortunate, whioh is done in a very adroit manner in many cases. Knowing full well that a mans weak point is the desire to be sympathized with, for if there is one thing more than another which will turn the head of a man who is more than en ordinary good business man and well balanced on ordinary occasions, this is the one thing which will get the better of his usual good judgment.

Had you not made the very serious mistake of oonfiding to her your difference she would not have known when to have begun the attaok. Tt is knowing the weak place in the fortifications of the enemy whioh leads the general to direct the forces against that point. My sisters, do not longer make this mistake; if you are now, or have been doing so, go to your husband, Bnd with your arms about his neok, tell him how you love him and how you long for all differences to be put aside. Try this and see how ong he will be in coming your way. A Wife.

Mrs. Lease is said to have a voioe like a gong, cheeks of brass, lungs of iron, and nerves of steel; and if the charges that she says are out against her are true, she should have underolothes of barbed wire. Troy Chief. An ordinance was passed by the city council of Topeka this week forbidding boys or girls under the age of sixteen years to be alone on the streets or alleys of that city earlier than 6 a. or later than 9 p.

m. Now if they would enforoe their cigarette ordinance it would be a pretty deoent city. However we venture a prediction that girls under "sweet sixteen will be source aritoles in the OBpitol city. Hutchison Clipper. May day prooeBsions have been forbidden in Austria, and workingmen have been notified that anyone absent from work upon that day without the consent of his employer will be considered guilty of breaoh of oontraot, and will be liable to dismissal.

Ex. How long will it be before the American workingmen will be obliged to ask their employers for the privilege of celebrating the anniversary of American independence There are Borne peculiar features of the saloon business. The recently elected "reform officials of Canton had a conference with the saloonkeepers the other day and begged to assure them that they (the new officials) would not harass the whisky sellers with prosecutions. Did you ever know a oase where city officials deemed it neoeesary to make such assurances to men engaged in an honest, honorable, legitimate business? Suoh things show that among aU classes the whisky dealer is considered an outlaw. Peoples Press, Ouba, HI.

1 KEEIEI OP imnii tlKMI mtam i i mm unit i pmiramM luia fi i 1 ns ibu aiui TOPEKA, KANSAS. Corner of Sixth Avenue and Clay Street. i imam i mm an iiMf. min nun in in i ni iii.ii la unnH nuuitui a. iirim.Miimii nun a u)u i iitimn i ran ilium iiun Nearly 2000 persons cured of w- INSTITUTES mm im iMitiiML ur-p.

inii-a mts cm a-i wi mv. ii ampiur a a xm kk am a iul a a rati a is1 KANSAS CITY, KAN. I Portsmouth Building. Sixth Street and Minnesota p-4 P- 9 mi Rirai i i rn nan i ju ni a i hi JW nniiunniiiiiuanBiuuRiwR mni Miiams A1 have been absolutely BY ONE "WHO nAS TRIED IT. Some Keeleyite who pushes the quill after a very clever fashion, treats the readers of the Newton daily Eanaan to a spicy description of life at the Keeley Institute, under the non de plume of One who tried it.

Many of the boys who know the Newton graduates will recognize a style peculiar to some one they have seen and we imagine they will have but little trouble in assigning the letter to the proper author from the following extracts: After a person has taken the Keeley cure, nearly every one he meets wants to know something about it. Some ask if the patients are kept in cells and corridors, like in other ails. Others entertain the Idea that it is a kind of an asylum filled with a lot of howling, drunken men, where barrels of whisky with tin cups attached, grace every corner, and where terror and turmoil reign supreme. Let me state that such is not the case. The greatest drawback the Keeley cure has ever had is the erroneous idea that some have about the patients being treated like criminals or lunatics.

Dr. Keeley is the man who discovered that drunkenness is a disease and that over one million people in the United States are affected with this disease which is more dangerous, more conta-geous and more loathsome than any epidemic mentioned in any of the revised medical works of the day. Institutes have been established under his supervision for the treatment of unfortunates thus affected, and Dr. Keeley, all praise to him, is too intelligent a man to allow these afflicted persons to receive anything but the most courteous and humane treatment. After making up my mind that 1 was taking a drap too much of the disease that Dr.

Keeley discovered, I was induced to take a course of treatment at the Topeka Keeley Institute. Of course I was not drinking much, from the fact Alcohol and Morphine Inebriety, In the past two and one-half years by the iiTSTrruTBs. Board and Lodging at very reasonable rates, ($4.00 and upwards.) LADIES TREATED PRIVATELY. Beware of Imitators. Dr.

Leslie E. Keeleys remedies and treatment for inebriety are administered at no other place in Kansas than the regular Keeley Institutes. WRITE FOR PARTICULARS. CORRESPONDENCE CONFIDENTIAL. Address THE KEELEY INSTITUTE, At either of above named places..

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À propos de la collection The Western Jewel and Home Journal

Pages disponibles:
180
Années disponibles:
1893-1895