People's Pilot, Volume 3, Number 38, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 March 1894 — Which Will You Be [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]
Which Will You Be
Many times women call on their family physicians, suffering, as they imagine, one from dyspepsia, another from heart disease, another from liver or kidney disease, another from nervous exhaustion, or prostration, another with pain here and there, and in thia way they all present, alike to themselves and their easy-going and indifferent, or overbusy doctor, separate and distinct diseases, for which he prescribes his pills and potions, assuming them to be such, when, in reality, then are all only symptoms caused by some womb disorder. The physicinn, ignorant of the cause of suffering, encourages his practice until large bills are made. Tho suffering Catient gets no better, but probably worse y reason of the delay, wrong treatment and consequent complications. A proper medicine, like Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, directed to the cause would have entirely removed the disease, thereby dispelling all those distressing symptoms and instituting comfort instead of prolonged misery. The lady whose portrait heads this article Is Mrs. Ida Coventry, of Huntsville, Logan County, Ohio. . She had an. experience which we will permit her to relate in her own language. It illustrates the foregoing. She '/rites: “I bad ‘female weakness" very bad—in bed most of the time, dragging down pains through my back and hips ; no appetite; no energy. The family physician was treating me for ‘liver complaint’. I did not get any better under that treatment so I thought I would try Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription and his ‘ Golden Medical Discovery? I felt better before I used one bottle of each. I continued their use until I took six bottles of each. In three months’ time I felt so well I did not think it necessary to take any more. In childbirth it does what Dr. Pierce recommends it to do—lessens the pain and perils to both mother and child ana shortens ‘ labor ’. I would like to recommend Dr. Pierce’s Extract of SmartWeed to those who have never tried it; it surely is tho best thing for cholera morbus, or pain in the stomach I over used ; it works liko a charm. # I try never to bo without it.” Tho following is from Mrs. Harriet Hards, of Montpelier, Idaho: “ I have enjoyed better health since I began treatment with Dr.
Young Lady—“ Mr. Parsons, what did Boaz say when he first saw Ruth!” Young Man—“l don’t know, unless he asked her not to step on his corn.”—Life’s Calendar.
A farm renter or a farm owner? It rests with yourself. Stay where you are and you will be a renter all your life. Move to Nebraska where good land is cheap and cheap land is good, and you can easily become an owner. Write to J. Francis, G. P. & T. A., Burlington Route, Omaha, Neb., for descriptive pamphlet. It’s free and a postal will bring it to you. Teacher—“ What is a right angle?” Boy —“Two straight lines around a corner.”— Hallo.
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, for leucorrhea and uterine debility than I have for sixteen years. lam cured of my trouble, and now weigh one hundred ana sixty-six pounds, whereas my weight for many years stood at one hundred and twenty-five pounds. With pleasure, I remain,” Yours truly, The following is from Mrs. M. A. McAllister, of Lim Rock, Jackson Co., Ala.: “I was in bad health ; age was working upon me, and I had ulceration of the womb ; could not get about. I took Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and it cured mo ; I felt ten years younger. I have not had any return of my trouble. lam the mother of thirteen children and I am fifty-three years old, have never seen a better woman’s friend than your medicine. I have recommended it to my friends here, and it has never failed in any case, so let me thank you for the good it did me.” Yours truly, For “worn-out,” “run-down,” debilitated school teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses, general housekeepers, and overworked and feeble women generally, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the best of all restorative tonics. It is not a “ cure-all,” but admirably fulfills a singleness of purpose, being a most potent specific for all those chronic weaknesses and diseases peculiar to women. It is a powerful, general as well as uterine, tonic and nervine, and imparts vigor and strength to the whole system. It cures weakness of the stomach, indigestion, bloating, nervous prostration, hysteria, debility and sleeplessness. A Treatise (168 pages, Illustrated), on “Woman and Her Diseases,” sent sealed in plain envelope, on receipt of ten cents to pay postage. Address, World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y. It contains a vast number of testimonials with half tone, or phototype portraits of their authors and gives the full address of each.
