The American. (Omaha, Nebraska) 1891-1899, August 17, 1894, Page 3, Image 3

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    H
AMERICAN.
LEO'S STRONG WORDS.
Ha Addresses a Large Audience in
an Eloquent Manner.
lie (Juute Some Eminent ( bun bm and
Churth rH-nt t Show the Altitude
r the (IiurvB Tvwanl Mate
Schools.
The following address was delivered
by Leo J. IX, Richardson before an en
thusiastic audience In Elgin:
Mr. Chairman axd Citizens of
Elgin; If I fail to meet your expecta
tions It will be from the fact that I,
like thousands of others, have bien de
frauded out of the rportunity of a
longer course in the common school of
the country.
The cause of ouch meetings as this
Is not of our own making. The rea
sons why the American Protective As
sociation was born, and should live and
receive the approbation of every loyal
and country-loving citizen, I shall en
deavor to explain in a humble and hon
est way. The first witness to the
charge of treason of the political I Io
nian Catholic church Is Cardinal Man
ning, one of the greatest leaders in the
Romish church, who said, "It is a duty
to obey the civil law so long as it does
not oppose faith." I refer you to Dona
hue's Magazine of 1888; he also endorsed
a book written by a Jesuit priest,Father
Shope. In the book are these words:
"The civil laws are binding on the con
science only so long as they are con
formable to the principles of the true
church." 1 always supposed that this
government was for the people, by the
people, and of the people; but accord
ing to Cardinal Manning we have a
government of the church, by the
priest, and for the pope.
Cardinal Manning said another per
tinent thing. He said that a contract
to which Rome was cot a party, made
by a Roman Catholic, is not binding
unless ratified by Rome.
We are electing men to office who
are a part of this system. We have
trusted them, because distrust is not
One of our American principles. But
when we discover that the promise
which a congressman makes to his con
stituents is not binding unless ratified
by Rome, when we learn, in the event
of a conflict of duties, he must obey
Rome, then it is time to consider if this
trust is to be continued. Then it is
time for the American people to say
whether they will have home rule or
Rome rule in America. This religio
political institution, called a church,
says: "Catholics would not be satisfied
with our system of public schools even
If the Bibl9 and every vestige of re
ligion were out of them." We say they
should be quarantined at Castle Garden.
The leading prelates of the Roman
church say that our schools are godless,
and that education therein fits the
children for the penitentiary. If that
is the case the Roman Catholic church
has a large number of teachers headed
for Joliet, because a very large portion
of the teachers in the public schools
are members of the Roman Catholic
church.
If it is not tiresome, I would like to
quote sotae Roman doctrine practiced
here they are mostly clippings from
Catholic papers and magazines:
Gladstone says: "No more cun
lng plot was ever devised against the
freedom, the happiness, and the yirtue
of mankind, than Roxanism."
"The Catholic religion, with all its
votes ought to be exclusively dominant
in Buch sort that every other worship
shall be banished "and interdicted.
Pope Pius IX.
"Protestantism has no principle or
consistancy, It was the creation of a
drunken, thieving and lustful mob, and
consequently must always act as the
mob dictates. Western Recorder,
Omaha Roman organ.
The Toledo Catholic Review thus
boldly advised the Roman Catholics of
this country: "Catholic votes should
be cast solidly for the democracy at the
next election. It is the only possible
hope of breaking down the school sys
tem." Do Illinoisians want this?
"The public schools have produced
nothing but a Godless generation of
thieves and blackguards." Priest
Schaur.
"I frankly confess that the Catholics
stand belore this country as the enemies
of the public schools." Priest Phelan.
"I would as soon administer the sac
rament to a dog as to christians who
send their children to the public
schools." Priest Walker.
We would much rather our children
should grow up in ignorance than be
taught in a school that is not Catholic.
Catholic Quarterly Review.
"The Roman Catholic citizen of the
United States owes no allegiance to
any principle of the government which
is condemned by church or pope."
Tablet.
"The public schools are the nurseries
of vice; they are Godless schools, and
those who send their children to them
cannot expect the mercy of God."
Priest Walker.
"Let the public school system go to
where It came from the devil. We
want christian schools, and the state
cannot tell us what Christianity is."
Freeman's Romish Journal.
"Catholic would not be satisfied with
the public st'boola even if the ProU--tant
Bible, and evry rrs-ig of relig
ious teaching were baoished from
thein." Button Advertiser.
If allegiance to the church demanded
of us oosltion to politiesl principles
adopted by our civil government, we
should not hesitate toob.y the church,
-Catholic World.
The-e so-called public schools are not
public schools, but infidel and sectarian.
Catholic parents who send their child
ren to such schools are guilty of mortal
sin. Priest Fral, Brooklyn!
While the state has right, s'le has
them only in virtue and by permission
of the supreme aulho i y, and that au
thority can only be expressed through
the church. Catholic World.
We are purely and simply Catholics,
and profess our unreserved allegiance
to the church, which takes precedence
of and gives the rule of our allegiance
to the state. Catholic World.
I would rather one-half of the people
of this nation should be brought to the
stake and burned than one man should
read the Bible, and form bis judgment
from Its contents. Bishop Sfiottswood.
If the American republic is to be sus
tained and preserved at all, it must be
by the rejection of the principles of
reformation, and the acceptance of the
Catholic principles of the American
people. Catholic World.
It will be a glorious day for the Cath
olics of this country when under the
blows of justice and morality our school
system will be shivered to pieces. Un
til then modern paganism will tri
umph. Cincinnati Catholic Telegraph.
So you see, friends, this is proof posi
tive, that there should be some con
certed action on the part of country
loving citizens to purge both old parties
of men who owe allegiance to the old
gentleman on the Tiber.
"The Catholic church numbers one
fifth of the American population, and
if its membership shall increase for the
next thirty years as it has in the thirty
years past, in 1900 Rome will take the
country and keep it." Priest Hecker.
Now, we have taken their own words
to prove their disloyalty to the institu
tion that has made this country the
envy of the civilized world. We have
no ill feeling against any man because
he worships God in his own way, but
we do object to a man or a set of men
using their religion as a cloak to
gain political power. Freedom of wor
ship as laid down in the constitution, is
freedom to to the individual, not to the
sect, and I believe the sect which teaches
that politics are a part of morals is dan
gerous. I also believe the sect which
teaches that a man, who comes into the
world by the same law of nature that
you and I do, has the power to forgive
sins and stand between a man and his
Maker, I believe that sect is dangerous
to the peace, harmony and stability of
this union. There is no church finding
fault with our public schools except the
Roman Catholic church, and I believe
you will agree with me when I say,
that any sect or set of men that under
takes to subvert our public school sys
tem, should be tried for treason. And
right here let me quote the "Holy laws
of Romanism." Archbishop Ireland, at
Baltimore, when he made his final ap
peal to that body of devoted subjects of
the holy father in Baltimore, said:
"Go to your homes with the enthuslas
Ism you have shown here; spread it in
every state in the union, and say there
is a new departure among Catholics in
the United States. Tell them there is
a new mission open for laymen. The
long expee'ed day has come when Cath
olic bishops, priests and laymen rise up
and say, henceforth we will act as one
man, in accordance with our religion."
The Jesuit doctrine is that a truly
good Catholic should be as a corpse in
the hands of his superiors.
That the faithful (corpses) may fully
understand their duty when they act in
accordance with this platform, we here
announce the laws which every lay
member of our holy communion is
bound to obey, or be deprived of the
holy sacrament of his faith.
1. The holy father is the supreme
ruler of the world, in spiritual as well
as temporal matters, especially where
we have the votes of power.
2. It is the duty of all Catholics to
plot and labor for the absolute suprem
acy of the pope.
3. It is the duty of all Catholics to
take part in elections, to know that
"politics are a part of morals. Politics
are morals on the widest scale. " They
must also give perfect submission and
obedience of will to the church and the
sovereign pontiff, as for God himself;
they must remember that they are to
acknowledge no civil superior before
the holy father: that in their political
work, "they must always and in the first
place serve the interests of Catholicism.
1. Wc are opposed to any system of
schools that teaches the youth more
than the Roman catechism, or that
teaches the young to think it is unnec
essary, a waste of time and money,
when the holy father has been ap
pointed by God, especially at the Vati
can council in 1 870, to do the thinking
for this world. Therefore, we call upon
our subjects to do all they can to break
down and destroy the free public schools
of this Protestant nation, which have
compelled us to set up and maintain at
great expense, parochial schools to de
iend our faith, thus lessening the in
come of the clergy,
u 1
f .. . ., f-'J
LKO J. RICHARDSON.
5. We are in favor of filling all olllces
with men selected by the bishop of the
diocese, upon whose political judgment
all Catholics must rely, for, (as Monslg
nor Preston, of New York City, testified
to under oath in a civil court), the bish
op "must be obeyed whether right or
wrong," and this is the law. The faith
ful can confide in the bishop; though he
may in one county or city compel you
to support the candidates of one party,
and In the next county or city support
those of the other party, but you must
not hesitate, he "knows what he Is do
ing," for, in either case, we get our
price for your vote, and the holy church
is the winner.
In order to find employment for the
many thousands of the faithful who are
coming daily to swell the ranks of our
Catholic army, which will in time
posess this land, we must secure control
of all the cities, railways, manufactories
mines, steam and sailing vessels above
all, the press in fact, every enterprise
requiring labor, in order to furnish our
new comers with employment; this will
render it necessary to remove or crowd
out the American heretics who are now
employed' You need not hesitate; it Is
your duty to do so. You must not stop
at any thing to accomplish this end.
There are many ways to do this, but if
you cannot devise a way, consult your
father confessor, but "be careful to do
nothing that will create scandal."
7. We call upon all lay Catholics
having the means, education and ac
quaintances to become candidates for
legislative offices, to sit in city councils,
in state legislatures, congress or senate.
It is in these places that you will do
the most good for our holy cause, to re
claim this continent which was discov
ered by a Catholic for the true church.
In these places you can do good work
by securing offices for our faithful sub
jects, which is especially grateful to us,
their salaries being fixed and shown to
us we know just how much money to
demand of them for getting them the
places and caring for their souls, in
addition to this valuable aid, as mem
bers of law-abiding bodies, they can do
great good by frustrating such legisla
tion not approved by the holy church,
and in securing the larger appropria
tions for tchools under the supervision
of our worthy brothers and sisters, also
by having young priests appointed as
chaplains in the army and navy. The
opportunities for serving our church in
legislative bodies are numerous; hence,
this is urged upon you as worthy of
serious consideration.
8. We have learned with regret that
there are some Catholics who are pos
sessed with the insane idea that their
children can get a better education in
the godless public schools than in the
parochial schools. These insane apos
tates must be taught by their father
confessors that they cannot disobey the
Holy church with impunity. It is such
Catholics who fancy they must join one
of the dominant political parties and
vote with them, thus disobeying the
bishop, who may have made arrange
ments for his vote to be cast for some
friend of our church. In all such cases
the confessor of such Catholics must
deny to them the sacraments and im
pose a severe penance, order a liberal
alms which the confessor will give as
he may deem best.
Thus you see countrymen the laity of
the Romish church are coerced, and
their rights as American citizens are
abridged.
I wish to call your attention to a book
called "The Judges of Faith;" a book
that every man and every woman
should have and read. It contains a
most terrible tirade against our school
system, and has the approbation of
three hundred and eight of the high
and highest church dignitaries. I
might quote these proofs all night but
time will not permit. Do you know
that twenty-five of the largest cities
are run and misgoverned by the Irish
Catholics? I will give you a few
of the names of that nationality that
furnished 72 per cent, of the iesortions
In the last war of their enlistment, and
97 per cent, of the olico force iu that
Ilopkinized and Ftvhanized and Alt-
I.I ! : : .V.
geldized city of Chicago. I will read
them: They wero the McLauchlins,
McCloskeys, Mahoneys, Reilleys, Kel
lys, Rorkes, Shaughnessys, FinnogiMis,
Noonans, Corcorans, O'Rourkes, Fitz
patricks, Far rolls, Murphys, Moo
neys, Dunns, McGarrys, Quinns, Bren
nans, McDermotts, Murthas, Hagger
tys, O'Flynns, O'Donohues, Kerrigans,
McCauns, Meaneys, Gradys, McNa
maras, Phelans, O'Connors, Lynches,
O'Tooles, Keenans and the like, that it
is strange not to read first in the re
quirements for office, proof of the birth
of the candidate, or of his father, in
the land of Erin. A simple perusal of
civil lists of the cities of New York,
Brooklyn and Jersey City tells the story
of the personnel of our municipal gov
ernments. The almond-eyed representative of,
the pope, Mgr. Satolli, Is here. He
comes from a country where the Roman
church has done the educating for 1000
years, and today 82 per cent, of the
Italian people are illiterate. Yet this
little Dugo, who cannot 8eak our lan
guage, is dictating to the people in this
country how and where their children
shall bt taught. The church of Rome
has driven 850,000 children out of the
public schools into the parochial
schools, and are being taught treason
pure and simple, being taught to be
good Catholics before they are good
citizens. Citizens of Illinois, see to it
that none but honest, conscientious men
are selected on our school boards, men
fearless in the defense of our nubile in
stitutions. The whole danger in this
country is not altogether from Rome,
but from the allies of the pope; the
cowardly Protestaet politicians, whose
only thought is gain and self; men who
cringe and crawl to some priestly In
fluences; men who would sacrifice the
memory of their mother to attain their
selfish end, adopting the Jesuit idea,
that "the end justifies the means." I
believe that the time has come for de
cided and heroic action. These wrongs
can never be prayed out of our land,
neither can we expect to have the
wrongs .-ighted by either of the old
parties that divide the country and
surely not by this sugar-cured congress
now in session. We want men to rep
resent us who receive their politics
from the Potomac instead of the Tiber.
We place country above party and
principle above men, We believe that
this herd of cattle from Roman Catho
lic Europe that is being dumped on our
shores should remain at home until our
own workmen are provided for, I mean
the class that a yard of calico would
clothe a whole family a year. We de
mand that no man shall cast a ballot
until he can read and write the English
language, and I would have him parse
this sentence: Any man who breathes
a word or harbors a thought of disloy
alty to our institutions, shoot him on
the spot.
Romanism was born under planets
that were in opposition. It lives in the
objective case. Like a mule it has no
pride of ancestry, no hope of posterity.
It never originated anything, except
an unrelenting war on our schools in
America, and the inquisition in Europe.
It shines by borrowed light. It has
been united in honest wedlock to Amer
ican principles, but has lived a thous
and years in open adultery with crime,
ignorance and superstition. The atmos
whlch surrounds Romanism is full of
noxious vapors, that breed moral pesti
lonce ana aeatn. me sun never
shines through it; vice seeks its station;
corruption grows lusty under its influ
ence. Its waters are torpid, lifeless,
covered with scum, such as stagnant
pools and moveless waters and always
offend the eye of man.
The soil which Romanism has culti
vated has failed to yield harvests of
value to the nation, but has given
crops of worthless weeds and briars.
Romanism has no love of country. It
loves popes, cardinals, bishops and the
inquisition, instead of nations and pres
idents; drives loyalty from its door and
welcomes rank treason to its habitation.
Romanism blessed Jeff Davis and the
Confederacy; bound up the wounds of
treason and sKke words of hope and
comfort to its devotees.
Riinanism Is curao to ton land, the
source of our blttoremt (tut; tho haven
where vice and crime find NilogisU
and defender.
Romanism is original slo, let loose to
rend and destroy. It is tho spirit of
evil.
It is the incarnation of unhollnontt;
the child of the devil. I U home should
be in outer darkness, where there is
weeping and wailing and gnashing of
teeth.
We lay at the door of Romanism the
murder of that matchless man, Abraham
Lincoln. Every jxtsou connected with
that diabolical Jesuit scheme wan a pa
pist. I call them papist because the
Kpe Is their papa.
Mr. Lincoln when defending Rev.
Chinlquy in a court of Justice in this
state in 18oti, discovered the Roman
clergy there in force to influence tho
witnesses and the jury and ho said:
"May it please your honor, gentle
men of the jury and American citizens,
this conspiracy, I am aware, has failed
In its efforts, but I have a few words
which I wish to say." Ho went on and
depleted the career of Father Chinlquy
and how ho had been unjustly prose
cuted, and then in conclusion, said:
"As long as God gives me a heart to
feel, a brain to think, or a hand to exe
cute my will, I devote It against that
power which has attempted to use tho
machinery of tho courts to destroy the
rights and character of an American
citizen," and for this utterance and de
fense of that great and good man Lin
coln came to his death with a bullet
cast in a Jesuit mould.
And now, my friends, let mo say as
did another man who has made a study
of this question: "Thus, before the
American public as the highest court
of jurisdiction, we arraign the pope of
Rome as the representative of the
papal policy, the representative whom
they put forward to stand for the whole
church in its antagonism to civil and
religious freedom, against which he
has committed high crimes and misde
meanors. We impsach him in the
name of liberty of conscience, whoso
rights he has denied. We impeach
him in the name of freedom of worship,
whose temples he would close. We im
peach him in the name of free speech
and free press, whose voice he would
smother in the smoke of fire and fagot.
We impeach him in tho namo of civil
liberty, over whose just laws he has
proclaimed the sovereignty of Romish
councils. We impeach him in the
name of the marriage bond of the ma
jority of the happy households of the
christiaa world, which he has stigma
tized a "filthy concubinage," because
not contracted in the Romish church.
We impeach him In the name of Prot
estantism, which he calls, 'heresy,' and
against which he invokes the persecu
tion of the civil government and the
tortures of the inquisition; in the name
of progress, which he has tried In vain
to stay; of modern civilization, with
which he cannot be reconciled; in the
name of the free and enlightened gov
ernments of the world, against whose
most beneficent laws he has hurled his
anathemas; in the name of the Holy
Bible, whose free circulation he has
pronounced a pest; in the name of free
America, whose overthrow he has
plotted; in the name of Almighty God,
whose prerogatives ho has blasphem
ously usurped; in the name of all these,
we impeach the pope and tho hierarchy
which dominates the Roman Catholic
church, and summon them to the bar of
oppressed humanity, and of divine
justice."
I might close my address now, but I
will not, for I desire to call your atten
tion to one thing that may have escaped
your notice. It is the complete sub
serviency of the public press to the
church of Rome. Nearly every dally
paper In the United States of any conse
quence has upon its editorial staff a
Jesuit, who is there to see that nothing
goes Into the paper which reflects In
any manner upon the Roman Catholic
church. It is through these Jesuits
that the Roman Catholic Truth Society
does its work, and it is due to their in
fluence that so many complimentary
notices of Roman prelates, and so little
of the truth regarding the priesthood,
creeps into the papers. But, while the
the daily papers, as a rule, fawn upon
the members of the hierarchy, it is not
because they believe those members to
be the good, true christian men they
outwardly profess to be, but because
they fear their power In both politics
and business. No, my friends, it is not
love but fear combined with greed for
the almighty dollar that keeps your
metropolitan daily papers ironi pub
lishing the truth about Romanism, and
about the aims and objects of the A. P,
A. But thank God, we have passed
that point where it is necessary for us
to approach the editorial sanctum with
our hats off, and beg, or even ask for
fair treatment from the daily press
with the formation of this great Prot
estant association this great American
order brave men, who loved their
country and her free institutions far
more than ease and comfort, invested
their capital in printing presses and
printing material and began publishing
papers that bivathod pure patriotism
in every line. One was located in Bos
ton, another in Detroit, but very few
men in Illinois or the west knew they
were published. Time rolled on and a
young man in Omaha, Nebraska, be
came imbued with the idea that Rome
wait trying to gain jxcwtwitlon of this
country. I In studied a khort time over
the situation and concluded to leave
his position and Invest his money la
printing material and begin the publi
cation of an anti-Roman paper. He did
so, oM-ulng his office in a little bed -oona
8x9 feet in hi homo, where, for five
or six month he and his wife did all
work editorial, tyo-scttlng, etc. Ia
the fall they took in a partner by the
namo of Kelley a Canadian, but a ."rot
estant and together they lab ;ied as
men never labored before. Then an
election was held, and the men they
supiHtrted were elected, business came to
them and tho paper was made twice Its
original size, after the office had been
moved into a tine suite of rooms In one
of the best office buildings in the clty
The co-partnership was inurgodlntoa
stock company, and renewed efforts put
forth to make the paer a credit to tho
cause it had oxused.
About that time a Roman Catholic
mob in Kansas City, Mo., attempted to
take tho life of Rev. J. G. White that
grand old patriot of Stanford, 111. It
was then that the company at Omaha
conceived the Idea of opening an office
In Kansas City. Tho idea was con
verted into a fact, and the next election
went American. About the same time
Chicago bad elected a mayor, a mem
berof the Roman Catholic church and
a Clan-na-gaol. This fact became
known to the American Publishing
Company of Omaha, and Mr. Kelley
went to Chicago and opened an office
there, and today that city lays claim to
tho best patriotic paper in the country
The Chicago American a paper
which Is fearless and outspoken in ita
advocacy of American principles, and
In Its denunciation of priestly interfur
ence in the affairs of state. And it ia
because of such papers as The Ameri
can that we are not forced to beg space
of the dally papers in order to have our
side of the case, fairly presented to the
people, and It is the duty of all true pa
triots to help these men, who risk not
only their capital but their lives la
fighting for the principles you say are
right, and the way to do that Is to sub
scribe for the paper and pay for it one
year in advance. How many of you
will do that?
And now, my friends, let me say In
concluding this address, there never
was a time in the history of this republic
when men loyal men were needed aa
much as they are needed today. Willing
hands are wanted to bear aloft this em
blem of our greatness; men with hearts
as true as steel, are needed to repel
the onslaughts of the Roman church
upon our public schools. We need men
who will be true to their country and to
Its Institutions, and when we fiud them
and they come in and stand with us in
defense of all that Is dear to us our
liberties, our schools and our flag
priestly dictation in our affairs of state
will be at an end. (Loud applause.)
A LIST OF (JOOD HOOKS.
Foxe's Book of Martyrs.
A large quarto vulunid of 1,100 double
column pK, and is a ttandard work
In every particular. Cloth, 12.50, sent
by express.
LeCaron the Spy
Gives a history of the Fenian raids on
Canada, and a complete expose of their
plots attain the lirltlsh government.
Paper, 50 cents.
The Assassination of Lincoln
is an Intensely Interesting volume,
written by T. M. Harris, one of the mil
itary commission which tried the as
sassins. Cloth, 12.50,
Plain Talk
About Romanism
of Today
By Bev. Hugh Montgomery. Thl little
work Is by no means uninteresting. It
draws a comparison between popery
and Protestantism, and contains much
historical information. Price in paper
cover, 50 cents.
Romanism Not Christianity
By Rev. Robt. Love. This Is an excel
lent work, and is well worth reading by
every Patriotic student. Price, paper,
50 cents.
The American Citizen Library
contains many interesting stories, such,
as, "Convent Horror," "Auricular Con
fession and Popish Nunneries," "Six
Months In a Convent," "William of
Orange," and others yet to follow, one
each month. Price, 12.00 per year.
All the above books will be furnished by
the American I'cbi. ishi.no Company at prices
named, but cash must accompany the order,
else no notice will be taken of It.
; Errors of Youth.!
SUFFF.RKRS FROM I
Henoss Debility, Yostato! 1
ff Indiscretions, Lost Mood, ,
BE YOUR OWN PHYSICIAN.!
Many men, from the etTecti of youthful impru
dence," have brought a r tout a state of weakric
that ttM reduced lite general vateui to much at to
induce almost every other Jiwac; and the rea.
rauae of the troun.e varv'!r ever Iw-nm uKftii,
they are ilortfire! fir everything but the rijttit one. W
Dun UK oiif itenive cwlirge anil h'Mpitai pnwtire &
we have dtwovtred new and concentrated rvme- W
din. i he atrunipanrinc prrrnption m orterea a
aa PKKTM AMI tl'FKI'V 1 KK. hundred of"
cae having been reMred t perfect health hy its A
ue after a!l other rented iea ftned. Perfectly pure
inKred;pnt n.ut be uactt in the yreparmiiun of thn
prescription.
R Krythroxylon cne. drachm. 9
Jerubebiti, ) drachm. &
Heioiiiaa I-.oit-a. f drachm.
(relsemm, pran-. ml
V.U. urnaf.ie an.ara (alcoholic), Sgraini.
l.xt. tep!atulra, i .TupU-.
Gljcertrte, ij. . Mix.
Make f pilit- Tk I piil it S p.m., and another 9
on KOinp t bed. Thm remedy i adapted to every
weakness in either e, and ej'nliy in thoae
cane resulting front imprudence. The recti perat've &
power of tfi.i rrtrame are astonish ititt. and it
us continued fr a sliort t mte rhanireit (iie lanuid.
debilitated, mrv
,e condition to uue of renewed
!: a-n! t:?-t. t A
To those who wou'd prefer to obtain it of u. by w
reimmnj( f!, a tea-ed package contain r1 J;1.!. Q
careful". y compound d. ni he sent by mail from
our private iaN-'raforr. or we wiii furnish ti park- 0
airea. which will cure moat eac. for .". Alt fcrera
I NEW ENGLAND MEDICAL INSTITUTE,
. 12 Trenton Row, Boston, Matt.
Sfk