Democratic Sentinel, Volume 20, Number 22, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 June 1896 — AN INVITATION. [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]
AN INVITATION.
It Give* Vs Pleasure to Publish the fol- ' lowing Announcement. ea-.'itG - r. All women suffering from any form of illness peculiar to their sex are requested to communicate promptly with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. All
letters are re ceived, opened, read and an swered by women only. A*/ A woman can ,freely talk of her private // /I yTx illness to a \ 1 A > I woman; x. W/ \/) thus has been established the jMsy/l Ijfi eternal fe confideuce beW tween Mrs. J • W®' Pinkham f \ ! rwSB and the A i' i women of , I ■ America. //ioA I //JBL This con- ! ’7/ ) \ "“i K fidence has inVr \( -AXyJrA/ duced more than 100,000 women to XAJsJJv write Mrs. Pinkham for advice during the last few months. Think what a volume of experience she has to draw from! No physician living ever treated so many cases of female ills, and from this vast experience surely it is more than possible ahe has gained the very knowledge that will help your case. She is glad to have you write or call upon her. You will find her a woman full of sympathy, with a great desire to assist those who are sick. If her medicine is not what you need, she will frankly tell you so, and there are nine chances out of ten that she will tell you exactly what to do for relief. She asks nothing in return -except your good will, and her advice has relieved thousands. Surely, any ailing woman, rich or poor, is very foolish if she does -not take advantage of this generous offer of assistance. Never in the history of medicine has the demand for one particular remedy for female diseases equalled that attained by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and never in the history of Mrs. Pinkham’s wonderful Compound has the demand for it been so great as it is to-day.
