Rensselaer Republican, Volume 21, Number 41, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 June 1889 — Happy Homes. [ARTICLE]
Happy Homes.
Here’s a health to the wives and the mothers -Who nit in our,households to-dayt, - ■ • Who are glad when they brighten for others The hours that go drifting away. Mjty their eyes keep the light of the gladness, Their hearts hold the fullness of bliss That banishes shadows and sadness, And what need we ask more than this? Bat how can this happiness be kept? What shall protect those we love, those who make a Heaven of the home, fr om the ravages of disease that is often worse than death, thatis, in fact, a lingering death? The questioff ia easily answered: Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, the standard remedy for all of those peculiar diseases to which women are subject, ihwhat must be relied on to preserve the health of wives and mothers. It prevents those diseases, and it cures them. It is a blessing to women and therefore a national blessing, because it gives health to those about whom thehappiness of home centers, and the strength of a nation is in its happy homes.
There is no better excess in the world than the exoess es gratitude.—La Bruvere. Dr. Pierce’s Pel.’ets, or Anti-bilious Granules; in vials, 25 cents; one a dose. Druggists. “A hired girl,” once said a backcountry New England farmer, “costs wages, but all a wife needs is two calico dresses a year, and she does all the work.” When an article has been sold for 24 years, in spite of competion and cheap imitations, it must have superior quality. Dobbin’s Electric Soap has been constantly made and sold since 1865. Ask your grocer for it. Best of al I. Southern bank officials are complaining of a lack of copper cents in the South.
