Democratic Sentinel, Volume 22, Number 19, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 21 May 1898 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
TRIALS OF SALESWOMEN. Mrs. Plnkham Says Standing Still is One of Woman’s Most Trying Tasks. vltt r Have you ever thought why it is that so many women or girls rather walk for an hour than stand still for ten minutes ? It is because most women suffer from some derangement of their delicate organism, the liscomfort from which is less trying when they are in motion than when standing. So serious are these troubles and so dangerous to health that the laws in some states com- aiP&jIWRMSMjpk pel employers to provide resting places for But no amount of law can regulate the hard tasks of these women. Customers are exacting, and expect the Baleslady to be always cheerful and pleasant. How can a girl - ~' ~ be cheerful when her back is Vfcy"""" aching, whenshe Is assailed by lassitude and bearing- ~| | LSJ j—• down pains? No matter how sweet tempered she ie | naturally, her nerves give way under the pain after a while, Vp Employers, however, don’t want cross and snappy saleswo men. Cheerfulness is very Important capital, and no one can be j » amiable when racked with pain. If you are ill or suffering, write 1 without delay to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., and tell her all about yourself. Your story will not be new to her; she has heard it many thousand times and will know just what you need. Without doubt, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound will help you, it has done such wonderful things for suffering women. Do not hesitate to write her all the little things that make you feel miserable. Your letter will not be seen by any man, and Mrs. Pinkham’s advice will cost you nothing. Read this letter from Mrs. Margaret Anderson, 403 Lisbon St., Lewiston, Me. “ Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— For years I had suffered with painful menstruation every month. At the beginning of menstruation it was impossible for me to stand up for more than five minutes, I felt so miserable. One day a little book of Mrs. Pinkham’s was thrown into my house, and I sat right down and read it. I then got some of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and Liver Pills. 44 1 can heartily say that to-day I feel like a new woman; my monthly suffering is a thing of the past. I shall always praise the Vegetable Compound for what it has done for me.” - Ask Mrs. Pinkham’s Advice—A Woman Best Understands a Woman's Ills
AA~M Your market iY\ Y and butcher shop ought to use Pearline, \ l 1 * < surely. There’s no place that needs to be ! ZZZ Z kept cleaner. M y . '£\ There’s no place that’s half as w Lp hard to keep clean. Soap and Vvyfuj£V water is of no use at all It ~C *JJJ) takes Pearline, and nothing L but Pearline, to keep down \\A 1 § f the general greasiness. ✓ > How many places you see, where f f —if \ the whole shop and fixtures in it j, ’-gjjyr | seems to be fairly crying out for Pearline! ki Millions Pearline
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