Jasper County Democrat, Volume 22, Number 42, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 August 1919 — Page 2 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
1 YEARS IN BED IROLEING CHAIR Mrs. Wilson Gave Up Hope—Gains 25 Pounds on Tanlac and Is Now a Well Woman. “For two years I spent all my time either in the hospital, in bed, or in a rolling chair, and during that time I was given up to die, and I don’t guess I wogld be here now if it hadn’t been tor Tanlac,” said Mrs. E. O. Wilson. Mrs. Wilson is well known in Atlanta, her husband having been emiployed by The Constitution for a number of years. “I was a gieat sufferer from chronic Indigestion,” continued Mrs. Wilson, “and don’t guess anybody ever had to go through with what I did. I was very weak and nervous, and at times had those dreadful smothering sensations to the point of . fainting. I had dreadful headaches, severe pains in my back and over my kidneys and my joints ached all the time. For two years I had to live entirely on boiled milk, toast and soft boiled eggs, and even that didn’t digest well, and would sour on my stomach, I didn’t know what It was to get a good night’s sleep. I took one kind of medicine after another until our house was almost filled with empty bottles, but instead of improving I was getting worse all the time. Finally they took me to the hospital for treatment, and I lay there for five long months, biit even that didn’t make me well. It was taking nearly every cent of my husband’s wages to pay my doctor and drug bills —our drug bill alone amounted to sl4 or sls a unonth, and one doctor bill
amounted to SIOB. “It looked like everything had failed to help me, and I had about given up all hope when one day my husband brought a bottle of Tinlac hoiue with him and asked me to take it. He said he had been reading and hearing a lot of good things about it, and didn’t see any reason why it shouldn’t help me. I was confined to my rolling chair when I began taking it. * Do I look like an Invalid now? I ceitalnly don’t feel like one, and I have actually gained twenty-five (25) pounds on eleven bottles of Tanlac, and feel as well as I ever did in my life. I can eat anything J want —such things as meat, turnips, hard-boiled eggs don’t hurt me a particle, and I sleep as good as I did when I was a girl in my teens. I can get about as well as anybody and just the other day I walked down town, and I am running around the neighborhood calling on my friends nearly all the time now. I haven’t a pain about me. I believe I an); the happiest woman in Atlanta, and I think I have a right to be. I think my recovery is almost a miracle, and everybody in our neighborhood thinks the same.” Tanlac is sold in Rensselaer by Larsh & Hopkins, and in Remington by Frank L. Peck. —Advt. FARM FOR SALE 240 acres of land to be sold at at 2 o’clock p. mu The place to be sold on account of old age of the owner. Location: 6% miles northeast of Medaryville; 6% miles southeast of San Pierre. Good 5public auction on Tuesday, the second day of September, 1919, room house, fair stable, new henhouse, new double corn crib and grainary; 40 acres of good timothy hay land; the remainder of the farm is all tillable soil, except several acres of timber pasture. The land bekoags to Mrs. Margaret May, Route 3, Medaryville, Ind. a3O Try a want ad in The Democrat.
consisting of 6-room house, good barn, double crib, hog house, windmill, some tile. Price SIO,OOO. Terms. 40 acres, 1% miles from Rensselaer, on stone road, good improvements, woven wire fences, all hedge posts, good orchard, adjoining S4OO land; price SIO,OOO. 200 acres, pasture and farm land, %-mile from gravel road, fairly well drained, practically level, no sand hills, small house and bam, telephone, rural delivery. Price $75 per acre. 70 acres, Marlon township, 40 acres In cultivation, balance pasture, . a good hog farm; 6-room house, good new barn, silo, windmill. Price $l5O per acre. We will make reasonable terms on any of the above farms to suit purchaser. See JOHN A. DUNLAP, Rensselaer, Indiana.
- OWNERS.
