Democratic Sentinel, Volume 21, Number 44, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 October 1897 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
WOMEN DO NOT TELL THE WHOLE TRUTH. Modest Women Evade Certain Questions When Asked by a Male Physician, but Write Freely to Mrs. Pinkham. An eminent physioian says that "Women are not truthful, they will lie to their physicians." This statement should be qualified; women do tell the truth, but not the whole truth, to a male physioian, but this is only in regard >Sw to those painful and troublesome disorder* peon* HviSSSSh liar to their sex. “TgSffl'jwvJlll There can be no more terrible ordeal to a delicate, sensitive, refined woman than to be obliged to an* ' swer oertain questions when those questions are ) asked, even by her family physician. This is espe* I fSt'if) J ciftlJ y th* esse with unmarried women. ijmjllfiff f v This is the reason why thousands and thousands of P&KfrS'f \Z']f women are now corresponding with Mrs. Pinkham, —tii£r J To this good woman tliey can and do give every c\. I symptom, so that she really knows more about the true condition of her patients through her yQL correspondence than the physician who perv£)\ sonally questions them. Perfeot confidence and If H candor are at once established botween Mrs. Pinkham and her patients. UflkvU s~\j KW Years ago women hail no such recourse. V£*Nowadays a modest woman asks help of a rJ tTa womau wlu) understands women. If you suffer (MrafiHk w Jhi from any form of trouble peculiar to women, 11 wr lt® st once to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Maas., X rv\Wll and she will advise you free of charge. ]/Vti VI And the fact that this great boon whioh is —■* Ij extended freely to women by Mrs. Pinkham, is |IV appreciated, the thousands of letters whioh are received by her prove. Many such grateful letters as the following are constantly pouring Ini JHT “ I was a sufferer from female weakness for \ I about a year and a half. I have tried doctors HL \ I VH and patent medicines, but nothing helped me, \ V I underwent the horrors of local treatment, but II Y \ \ ■ reoeived no benefit. My ailment was pronounced IV. \ '\n ulceration of the womb. I suffered from in* I f\\ \ \ tense pains in the womb and ovaries, and the \\ ' \ \ backache was dreadful. I had leucorrhcea in •\ \ \ \ Its worst form. Finally I grew so weak I had \ \ \ 'to keep my bed. The pains were so hard as to \ \ almost cause spasms. When I oould endure the ' pain no longer I was given morphine, My memory grew short, and I gave up all hope of ever getting well. Thus I dragged along. At last I wrote to Mrs. Pinkham for advice. Her answer oame promptly. I read carefully her letter, and concluded to try Lydia E. Plnkham’s Vegetable Compound. After taking two bottles I felt much better; but after using six bottles I was cured. My friends think my cure almost miraculous. Her noble work is surely a blessing to broken-down women.’’—Gbaob B. Stabs* ■vbt, Pratt, Kansas.
It Was Before the Day of SAPOLIO They Used to Say “Woman’s Work Is Never Done.” This is the head v " T* y/ of a Pearline woman. ‘ ‘ There are others.” And if the others don’t look cheerful, it’s no wonder. You've \ £ ot wor k hard, if you do your fyl l washing and cleaning with soap, *[ I anc * youVe got to work a long time \ / over anc * you're wearing things out with your rubbing. Pearline m akes the work easy and quick > saves rubbing. The wonder is tnat any woman who has to do soap’s hard work can look pleasant Still, some of them do, in spite of it. mi Millions "fsc Pearline ♦ ,• • i ,\ t .. IMf* r*«n‘lr rsst of fwr eases whore Ripen. T.bule* relieved people from eevere suffering which thrjr experienced from the necouitv of Ifrln* In »irlmidre .tmoiph.ro. rirti, there nil ■■an who kept * 10-cent lodging-house in the Bowery, New York. He found that a Tabula taken bow and then kept him from getting tick in that polluted atmosphere. Then there waa a man who worked la a coal mine in Ohio, where the great distance under the hill, made It impossible to get pure air, the air being forced to the men by great fans which would sometimes cease tnelr motion oa account of breaks in the machinery and then the air would become vary bad indeed, causing palne Id the head, diizincsa and fainting. Thie man founda Rlpnns Tabula taken at such a time would preserve him from the pain he had previously experienced. Another miner, well known in Scranton, Pa., •offered from the foul atmosphere ho breathed for so many yean in the mines, resulting there from the Eses and damp. “My stomach suffered most,” said he. Finally he was induced to make trial of pans Tabules, and was so much benefited that he now makes a practice of carrying a few of the magic Tabules in his pocket, so as to bo able to swallow one at the first sign of approaching trouble. The fourth case it that of a Philadelphia tailor who had charge of the manufacturing department, ami was obliged to spend houn at a time in the pressing, sponging and ironing department in an overheated room where the atmosphere is very heavy and disagreeable. This resulted in giving him frequent headaches, from which he aometlmet suffered greet torture. The medicines prescribed by hit physician brought no rdllef, and he was, ho said, on the verge of detpalr when a friend one day advised him to try Rlpans Tabules. He did so and the result was that the first two Tabules wrought with him an almost magic change. “ I escape alt headaches now,” he writes, “ and no matter hotr hot the room Is, one Tabule doea away with ail suffering. I always carry some with me for aa emergency and can sincerely recommend them.” STtbe flve-eent carton. ritt tabules) oan be had by mall by sending forty-eight oents to the Rinss Cannon OoaraXT, So. 10 Bpruoo Street, Now York—or a single carton (tx.v tantrum) wUI be sent for Are cent.
C. N. tJ. No. 43—97 WHEN WRITINQ TO ADVERTISERS PLEASE SAY ” JM MW the adrertlseaent Is thli payer. ■ ■■ i Uwlhi
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