Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 20, Number 42, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 January 1899 — PERIODS OF PAIN. [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]
PERIODS OF PAIN.
IpPlenstruation, the balance wheel of ■Toman's life, is also the bane of existBn to many because it means a time of Kwat suffering. ||While no woman is entirely free from ■periodical pain, it does not seem to have
Jpeen na■ne'spl&n Taj ’that women Ejplthy ' ' Hhonld suffer lb severely. fcydiaE. Pinkpam’s Vegetable ComImpound is f the most male regula- ' tor known to pnedical sei-
|ifcnce. It relieves the condition that pm t duces so much discomfort and robs men■ptruation of its terrors. Here is proof: P'Deab Mrs. Pinkham: —How can 1 thank yon enough for what you have | done for me ? When I wrote to you I f was suffering untold pain at time of % menstruation; was nervous, had headPiche all the time, no appetite, that tired ISfeeling, and did not care for anything, p have taken three bottles of Lydia E. Ipinkham’s Vegetable Compound, one |of Blood Purifier, two boxes of Liver i Tills, and to-day lam a well person. I 1, would like to have those who suffer ||know that I am one of the many who , have been cured of female complaints by your wonderful medicine and advice, f —-Miss Jennie R. Miles. Leon, Wis. j; . If you are suffering in this way, write | «s Miss Miles did to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., for the advice which she offers free of charge to all women. No theatrical production made in many ' years has attracted so much attention as Jacob Litt’s presentation of the great English melodrama, "Sporting Life.” The play is acknowledged to be the of the many of its character sent here from •cross the water, and never in the history of the American stage has a play been staged on so magnificent.a scale. Like all melodramas, “Sporting Life” shows a Wide diversity of scene of action and in this case sixteen huge sets of scenery are used during the course of the play. The -cast includes forty-five speaking parts and there are over 200 auxiliaries used to complete the stage pictures which have been pronounced unsurpassed in beauty. The company includes many of the most - ooted players on the American stage. This great production has been running all winter at the Academy of Music in New York, filling it at every performance, notwithstanding the fact that, barring the Auditorium in Chicago, it is the largest theater in the country. Early in February this immense production will be brought intact to McVieker’s Theater in Chicago with all its great scenery, east, accessories of production, which include a stable of thoroughbred race horses. The story of “Sporting Life” is one which will interest every true American. Here, as in England, the love of true sport is strong in every heart. The play deals with the sports of the English-speaking race in a most delightful manner, almost every known form of sport being shown during the play. A stirring story of love and adventure runs through it, enlivened by incidents both picturesque and thrilling. The run of this play at McVieker’s Theater promises to be one of the sensations theatrically of the year.
