Democratic Sentinel, Volume 11, Number 34, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 September 1887 — The Sweetest Girl in School. [ARTICLE]
The Sweetest Girl in School.
“She’s the sweetest girl in school!” enthusiastically exclaimed one young miss to another, as they passed down the street togeiher. “Edith is so kind, and gentle, and unselfish, every one likes her. And she has lovely golden hair and pretty eyes. Isn’t it a I>ity her complexion is so bad; it spoils her ooks. And then she has such dreadful-head-aches!” The girls skipped along, but it happened Edith’s mother nad heard what ’they said. It set her thinking. What could be done for those headaches and the rough, muddy complexion, that was such a trial to her gehtle daughter. She recalled what she had read of Dr. Pieroe’s Golden Medical Discovery, and on the spur of the moment she slipped into a drug store and bought a supply. Edith took it faithfully, with the result that it cleared her disordered blood, relieved the headaches, made her skin soft fair and rosy, and now she is not only the “sweetest girl in school” but the most beautiful. Talk about women being flighty! Look nt bank cashiers.
In the Whole Hideoai Catalogue Of diseases, there were cone which, previous to the discovery of Hoetetter’* Stomach Bitten, offered more formidable resistance to the oldfashioned modes of treatment than the group of maladies which, under the collective name of malarial disease, afflicted entire communities that suffered hopelessly. Chill* and fever, dumb ague, ague cake, and bilious remittent were once regarded as well nigh incurable. Now it rejoices the hearts of thousands who reside in districts periodically subject to the visitation of malaria, to feel certain that in the Bitten they possess a certain defense against the scourge, a sure means of expelling its poison from the system. To the settler in the far West, the new emigrant thither, and to travelers and tourists by land and sea, the possession of this pleasant safeguard is a guaranty cf safety from diseases which they might vainly seek from any other source.
