The Water-cure journal, and herald of reforms, devoted to physiology, hydropathy and the laws of life . a life subscriber, as I shall have the Journals aslong as I can raise a dollar to pay for them. Iam satisfied that reading the Water-Cure Jour-nal has been a saving to me of what would payfor twenty copies, and it will be to any one whoreads it and follows its teachings. WATER. BY ISAAC COBB. Cold water for me— Instead of blue pills—Meandering freeThrough rivers and rills,When fevers attack me, and troublesome chills,And pain which the spirit with agony fills. Cold water by far Is bett


The Water-cure journal, and herald of reforms, devoted to physiology, hydropathy and the laws of life . a life subscriber, as I shall have the Journals aslong as I can raise a dollar to pay for them. Iam satisfied that reading the Water-Cure Jour-nal has been a saving to me of what would payfor twenty copies, and it will be to any one whoreads it and follows its teachings. WATER. BY ISAAC COBB. Cold water for me— Instead of blue pills—Meandering freeThrough rivers and rills,When fevers attack me, and troublesome chills,And pain which the spirit with agony fills. Cold water by far Is better than tea,Is better than areNing-yong and Bohea,Though they come from a clime that is over the sea,Eenowned for its wealth and imperial degree. Drink coffee who will. And cocoa as quaff to your fill,Te in cities who dwell,The myriad drinks by the epicure madeTo tickle the palate and punish the head. Who cares for them all,When Croton suppliesThe thirsty ones call, From a fount that neer dries,With the purest of liquids that over was knownTo peasant, or prince, or king on his throne ?. We feel that onr renders, however distant, are not Steangebs, batFuiRNDs, with whom we may sit down and have a quiet familiar talk,and to whcm we may suggeet tmpics for Convebsation, Discussion andInvkbtioation. The Liquor Business : Its Effects upon the Minds, Morals, and Pockets of our People. By P. T. No. 4 of ir/iuZe Worlah Temperance Tracty. Containing—Enm a Common Enemy—the Best Portionof our Citizens liable to Fall—the Innocent suffer more thanthe Guilty—an Appeal to the Pocket—all Evil and no Good—Acohol a Poison; God never made it—the License Laws—their Impotency and Absurdlty^the , what hisTrade makes him—his Argument—his Eights—Adulterationof Liquors—the Maine Law—Objections answered—ClosingAppeal. Twelve pages: Per one hundred copies, fifty cents, or fourdollars a thousand. Published by Fowleks and Wells,New York, Bo


Size: 3093px × 808px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1850, booksubjecthydrotherapy, bookyea