Rensselaer Journal, Volume 10, Number 39, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 March 1901 — AFTER EIGHTEEN YEARS. [ARTICLE]
AFTER EIGHTEEN YEARS.
Mr*. Doty, of Highland, lowa, Rea to rod to Health—A Miraculous Case —Her Husband Is Cured of Bright’s Disease by Same Means. Highland, la., March 4. —(Special.)— Friends of Mrs. W. H. Doty are very much pleased to notice the wonderful improvement in her condition. For eighteen years she has been a sufferer from rheumatism, and the torture she has endured during this time is past all description. Mrs. Doty tells the following story: “I have suffered for the past eighteen years with Kidney Trouble and Rheumatism. I have tried doctors, patent medicines, plasters, liniments, electric treatments, and nothing did me any good. I had nearly lost all faith in anything, when I sent for six boxes of Dodd’s Kidney Pills. I said to my husband I expected that it was some more money thrown away, but when I had taken them a week I could see that they were helping me. The lameness I had suffered with for so long is nearly all gone. It is not a quarter as bad as it was. For years I had to wear a warm bandage around my forehead to prevent the pain. Since using the Pills I have been able to remove this altogether. “I cannot find words to express my heartfelt thanks to Dodd’s Kidney Pills for their wonderful cure of my case. My husband has suffered from Kidney Trouble for years. Last spring a doctor said he had Bright’s Disease, and treated him, but he received no benefit, and he kept growing thinner and weaker all the time. When I got Dodd’s Kidney Pills he commenced taking four a day. He has taken them three months and is nearly well. His strength is increased, and the improvement in his case is almost miraculous. Dodd’s Kidney Pills have certainly been a God send to us.” It is just cases like those of Mr. and Mrs. Doty that have made Dodd’s Kid»ey Pills so very popular in lowa. They are 50c a box, six boxes for 32.50. Buy them from your local druggist if you can. If he cannot supply you, send to the Dodd’s Medicine Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
One French journalist proposes to exclude all accounts of duels and the names of duelists participating therein from the newspapers on the grounds that if no notice were taken of them most duelists would be willing to let their honor protect itself.
