Rensselaer Republican, Volume 20, Number 44, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 July 1888 — How to Select a Wife. [ARTICLE]
How to Select a Wife.
Good health, good morals, good sense and good temper, are the four essentials for a good wife. These are the indispensables. After them come the minor advantages of good looks, accomplishments, family position, etc. With the first four, married life will be comfortable and happy. Lacking either, it will be in more or less degree a failure. Upon good health depends largely good temper and good looks, and to some extent good sense also, and the best minds must be affected more or less by the weaknesses and whims attendant on frail health. Young man, if your wife is falling into a state of invalidism, first of all things try to restore her health. If she is troubled with debilitating female weaknesses, buy Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It will cure her.
It is natural enough that our brewers and their employes should get at lager Leads. . Au ugly complexion made Nellie a fright, Her face was all pimply and red, Though her features wera good and her blue eyes were bright, “What a plain gin is Nellie,” they said. But now, ss by magic, plain Nellie has grown As fair as an artist’s bright dream; Her face is as sweet as a flower new-blown, Her cneeks are like peaches and cream. As Nellie walks out in the fair mornitg light, Her beauty attracts every eye. And as for the people who called her a fright, “Why, Neilie is handsome”: they cry. And the reason of the change is that Nellie took Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, which regulated her liver, cleared her complexion, made her blood pure, her breath sweet, her face fair and rosy, and removed the defects that obscured her beauty. Sold by druggists. By a mere transposition of the two first letters of his name, Alger could have made himself the most popular candidate at Chicago, The best and most desirable Hotel in Boston is the United States, where there is no attempt at style, but a great deal of attention paid to the comfort and pleasure of patrons.—Boston Herald, April 12,
