Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 38, Number 18, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 October 1905 — THIN BLOOD-WEAK NERVES [ARTICLE]

THIN BLOOD-WEAK NERVES

On* Follow* tho Other, but Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills Qulekly Cura Both. The steady use of a particular set of muscles tends to chronic fatigue, which prodaces faulty or difficult motion, trembling, cramps and even paralysis. Writers, telegraphers, tailors and seamstresses are among the classes mosl threatened in this way with the loss ol their power to earn a living. The following instance shows that nerve power may be recovered after it seems entirely lost, if the right means are taken. Mrs. O. S. Blacksten, of No. 684 North Bowman street, Mansfield, Ohio, says: “ For years my hands would become so numb at times that I would drop anything I attempted to lift. Later they became so bad that I could not sew any longer, and at last I could scarcely do anything at all with my bands. At night the pricking sensations wonld come on worse than ever, and my hands and arms would pain so that I dreaded Itogo to bed. My family doctor gave me some nerve tablets. They helped me a , little, but only for a short time after I had taken them and if I happened to be without them for a day or two I would be as bad as ever or even worse. Finally X got a box of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills and began to take them. . “The result was surprising. By the time I had taken the last pill in my first box I could see a gain. Thanks to Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, lam now all right. I can sleep undisturbed by pain, and for two years I have been as Well as ever.” Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills feed the nerves by making new, rich blood and in this way have cured nervous diseases of every description from simple restlessness to paralysis. T?hey have banished the tortures of neuralgia, the weakness of nervous prostration, the disability and awful pain of locomotor ataxia. They are sold by all druggists or direct by the Dr. Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y.