Democratic Sentinel, Volume 22, Number 23, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 June 1898 — WOMEN IN BUSINESS. [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

WOMEN IN BUSINESS.

From the Free Press. Detroit. MichA prominent business man recently expressed the opinion that there is one thing will prevent women from completely filling man’s place in the business world—they can’t be depended upon because they are sick too often. This is refuted by Mrs. C. W. Mansfield, a business woman of 58 Farrar street, Detroit, Mich., w’ho says: “A complication of female ailments kept me awake nights and wore the out. I could get no relief from medicine and hope was slipping away from me. A young lady in my employ gave me a box of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. I took them and was able to rest at night for the first time in months. I bought more and took them, and they cured me as they also cured several other people to my knowledge. I think that if you should ask any of the druggists of Detroit who are the best buyers of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pilla, they would say the young women. These pills certainly build up the nervous system and many a young woman owes her life to them. “As a business woman I

am pleased t o recommend them as they did more for m e than any physi-* ‘ cian, and I can give Dr. Williams’ Pink" Pills for P ale People cred i t for my

general good health to-day.” No discovery of modern times has done so much to enable women to take their proper place in life by safeguarding their health as Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. Acting directly on the blood and nerves, invigorating the body, regulating the functions, they restore the strength and health to the exhausted woman when every effort of the physician proves unavailing. For paralysis, locomotor ataxia, and other diseases long supposed incurable, these pills have proved their efficacy in thousands of cases.

Sud[?]enly Pro strated.