Rensselaer Democrat, Volume 1, Number 11, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 June 1898 — A FATALITY AVOIDED [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]
A FATALITY AVOIDED
From the Democrat, Goehen, Ind. When neuralgia is accompanied by a dull, heavy pain near the heart, frequently becoming intense, it generally terminates fatally. Mrs. Nancy Flynn, who lives near Goshen, Ind., survived kAi an attack and her advice is “In the fall of ’92.” she said, “I began to have trouble with my heart. There was a sharp pain in my breast, which became rapidly worse. The doctor was puzzled andput me under the influence of opiates. These sharp attacks followed one another at intervals and I became weak and had a haggard look. I was constantly in pain, seldom slept and had no appetite. “At the end of two years I was confined to my couch most of the time and the doctors agreed that my death was only a matter of a short time.
“One day I noticed in a newspaper an item about a woman having been cured o f neuralgia of the he ar t by Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People and I c o ncluded
to try them. When I had finished one box I noticed an improvement in my condition, and when I had taken twelve boxes I was completely cured. ‘Those pills have done for you what we could not do,’ said one of my physicians; ‘they have saved your life.’ That was two years ago and my heart has not troubled me since. I believe I owe my life to Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People, and I take pleasure in telling others about them.” Among the many forms of neuralgia are headache, nervousness, paralysis, apoplexy and locomotor ataxia. Some of these were considered incurable until Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People were formulated. To-day thousands testify to having been cured of such diseases by these pills. Dootors frequently prescribe them and all druggists sell them.
A Serious Time.
