Rensselaer Republican, Volume 26, Number 52, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 August 1894 — A MOTHER'S STORY. [ARTICLE]

A MOTHER'S STORY.

HAPPINESS COMES AFTER YEARS of Suffering. rhe Terrible Experience of a Well-known Official’s Wife—A Story That Appeals to Every Mother tu ‘ . the Land. rom the Chattanooga, Tenn.. Press. No county official in East Tennessee is better known and more highly esteemed than Mr. J. C. Wilson, Circuit, County Clerk of Rhea County, at Day-: ton. the home of Mr. Wilson. He enjoys the confidence and respect of all classes, and in the business community his word is as good as his bond. Just' now Mr. Wilson 4a receiving- heartiest congratulations from his numerous Iriends because of the restoration to robust health of his estimable wife, who has for years been a helpless invalid. Mrs. Wilson s high standing in society, and her many lovable traits of, character have won her a host of; friends, and her wonderful recovery has attracted widespread attention. ' ing to the invalid lady’s attention the remedy that has effected her remark-; able cure, a reporter was sent to Dayton to interview Mrs. Wilson, in order; that the general public might have the benetit of the sufferer's experience and' l>e made aware of the treatment that wrought such a marvelous change inj her condition. The reporter was wel-i corned at the W ilson home, and the en-< thusiastic lady with becoming reluct-: ance gave the history of her affliction and the manner in which she was relieved: “Yes," said Mrs. Wilson, “I was for eight years an invalid with one of the most distressing afflictions woman can suffer. Foi eight years I moped around, dragging myself with difficulty and pain out of bed. My little ones went untrained and were greatly neglected, while I looked listlessly and helplessly, at the eheerloss prospect before me and them. I suffered the most intense pains in the small of my back, and these seemed even greater in the region of t:ie stomach, extending down to the groins. I suffered agony sleeping or awake. Despair is no word for the feeling caused by that dreadful sensation of weakness and helplessness I constantly experienced. • . “ I was treated for my trouble by sev-' eral local physicians, but they were able to give me only temporary relief by the use of sedatives and narcotics. 1 had almost given up all hope of ever securing permanent relief when I saw an account in the Press of a cure which Dr. Williams’ Pipk Pills bad effected. I decided to try them, as I knew the lady who had been cured, and had great confidence in her statement. I began to take the pills in October, 1893, and in two months I was doing lighthousework and attending to the children, without any bad etiects or weakness such as I had formerly experienced. Hitherto,'l had been unable to retain any food, but now my appetite grew stronger, and with it came back that old healthy and’ hearty tone of the stomach. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills cured me, and I assure ycu the cure has brought a great change in our home. I can now rejoice in my hu.-baud’s success, for I fee 1 that I have something to live for. Who has a better right to feel this than a mother? One thing more. I have recommended these pills to others, and many of the womeno£ Dayton have taken thern wjth good resuits, and it is my greatest pleasure to recommend to every suffering woman a remedy that has done so much for me."

An analysis proves that Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale Peojffe contain in a condensed form all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to ithe blood and restore shattere i nerves. [They arc an unfailing specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous h adache, the after effects of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and i allow complexions, that tired fee ing resulting from nervous prostration; all diseases resulting from vitiated humors j. od 4 such as scto.’u a, chronic erysipe as, etc. They are alsoaspe ifio for troubles peculiar to females, such as suppressions, irreg.ilarit'es, and a l forms of weakness. In men they effect a radica’ cure in all cases arising from jnenta worry, overwork, or excesses of whatever nature. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pa’e People are now manufactured by the Dr. Williams’ Medi ine Company, Schenectady, N. Y., and are so d in boxes i never in loose iorm by the dozen or hundred, and the public are cauItion d against numerous imitations sold in this shape) at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50, and may be had of all druggists, or direct by mail from Dr. Williams’ Medicine Company.