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Parent Issue
Day
15
Month
June
Year
1893
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

AN ILLINOIS MIRACLE. A CASE OF EEP INTEREST ÏO MOHÍN EVEIlïWIIEBE. Savt-d TliroiiKli 'asnal Glance at a BTttwspaper- WeaK, lale and la ■ Deplorable Coiidlilon when Belief nme _ a Keraarkable SarraUye Carefully IiivestlcateU by a que Tlinc Kcporter. (Dubuque lowa, Times.) Among the peculiar conditions with which the people of the present age are mdowed is a remarkable capacity for doubting. A f uil belief only comes after a caref ui investigation, and atter positive proofs have been presented. Current report said there had been a reinarkable cure in the case of a lady of öavanna, 111., but as current report is not alvvays accurate, and as the story told was one possessing deep interest lor the public, The Times deterinined upon a thorough investigation into the matter. The result of this investigation proved that not only was the story true, but that the case was even more remarkable than the public had úeen given to understand. Mr. A. K. Kenyon Uves on Chicago Ave., Bavanna, 111 , and it was there the reporter sought hiin to learn of the sickne'ss of his wife, and the cure of which so much is bemg said. Arnved there Mrs. Kenyon told your reporter the following: "Iwasborn in Warren County, Aew York, thirty-three years ago. 1 was married when 1 was nineteen and came to Savanna seven years ago. With the exception ot being at times subject to violent sick headaches 1 consider myself a healthy woman upto live years ago. At that time 1 was very much run down and an easy prey to the ever present malaria in and about the Mississippi bottom lands. 1 was taken violently ill and during the succeeding live or six months was the greater part of the time helpiess. The local physicians said I had been eft'ected by malarial and interinittent tever. 1 coniinually grew weaker and iinally went to see Dr. MeAvey of Clinton, lowa, who is reputed to be one of the ablest physicians in the Mississippi valley. 11e" treated me fat a time without beneücial elïects, a 'd iinally told mehethought he could help me if 1 would absolutely abstain frotn work. That was not to be thought of. If able to go about i had to look after ïny household duties. 1 then consulted a prominent doctor of Sayanna. My stomach would not retain the mtdicine he gave me and he came to tlie conclusión that my stomach was badly diseased. üecasionally I would choke down and nearly suffocate. 1 then went to Dr. Maloney and he pronounced it a case of heart trouble. lie helped aie temporarily, but like the rest said 1 must stop all work or nothing could be done íur me. All this time I liad grown weaker and paler until 1 was ia a deplorable condition. I had a continual feeling of tiredness.my muscular power was nearly gone, and 1 could not go up half a dozen uteps without resting, and often that ïuuuh exercise would cause me to have a terrible pain in my Blde. S emingly the blood had lelt my veins. 1 was pale as death: my lips were blue and cold and 1 had given up all hope of ever being better. About the flrst of April last a young man boarding with u received a Fulton, 111., paper. It Was his home paper sent tiim by his niother. I picked it up one day and m casually glancing over ita columns, carne across an account of a marvelous cure through the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pilis for Pale People. Candidly, 1 did not believc the story, and whèn my husband suggesttd that it would do no harin for me to try the pills I laughed at the dea. He insistid and I BUbmitted, bat I had no faith whateviT in the pills. My husband Bent iortwo boxes and i tooK tnem. When these had been used I was sonirwhat improved in hcalth. I continued their use and feit I was growing stronger, my sleep refreshed me and it seemed as if I could feel new blood coursing through my veins. I kept on taking Pink Pilis until i short time ago and I now consider myself a healthy rugged woman. My house is f uil of boarders and 1 superintend all the work myself. In other words I work all the time and am happy all the time. 1 am positive that Dr. Williams' Pink Pilis lor Pale People saved my lile and 1 belleve there are thousands of women who could find great elief if they used them. The sick leadaches J was subject to lrom girlïood have disappeared and I have not uut a single attack since I commenced aking Dr. Williams' Pink Pilis." "Wen: there any disagreeable affects rom the medicine V" asked the retorter. "None whatever," replied Mrs. Kenyon. They are pleasant to take and the conditions imposed by the directions are eaailv complied with. In (muñón parlance 1 took Pink Pilis mil they did the rast." Mrs. Kenyon d that all her neighbors knew (if ïer former condition and her restoration, and one of thetn was called in, md when asked of her knowledge of he case said,- "I have been intimately icquslnted with Mrs. Kenyon, and mow of her illness. I look upou her recovery as something marvelous. It is surely the unexpected that happened in her case. Of my own knowledge she was reducedtoa mereshadow; was the palest and most ghost-like person I had ever seen. Hers was a retnarkable cuse. She would be helpless one day and the next would besupervising the work of her house, but all the time there was a noticeable loss of Btrength aud the natural vivaciousness of her nature had disappeared. It was generally thought she must die as none of the physicians who attended her seeraed to understand her case or help her in the least. 1 was told of the sending for Dr. "Williams' Pink Pilis and of course thought it the whim of a dying woman, or perhaps a sign that her husband still insisted in hoping against hope. lint you can see the result lor yourself, and if miracles not performed in these days 1 would be pleased to know how to describe a case of this kind." it is a remarkable cise. There is no reason to doubt the sickness of Mrs. Kenyon and in just the form she describes it. Huudredsof people in that itnmediate neighborhood are fully conversant with the facts of both sickness and cure, and discuss it with sympathizing earnestness. But few persons have goue so close to the flivíí ing line between life and eternity and returned; and from the facts stated there is but a single conclusión to be drawn- Dr. Williams' Pink Pilis for Pale People did it. Dr.WifiiMns' Pink Pilis are a perfect blood builder and nerve restorer, curing such diseases as rheumatism, neuralgia, partial paralysis, locomotor ataxia, Öt. Vitus' dance, nervous headace, nervous prostration and the tired f eeling resulting' therefrom, the after effects of la grippe, influenza and severe colds, diseases depending on huniors in the blood, such as scrofula, chronic erysipelas, etc. Pink Pilis give a healtby glow to pale and sallow complexions, and are a speciíic for the troubles peculiar to the female system, and in the case of men they effect a radical cure, in all cases arising from mental worry, over-work or excesses of any nature. The Pilis are manufactured by the Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schnectady, N.Y., and Brockville.Ont., and are sold only in boxes bearing the lirms's trade mark and wrapper, at 50 ets. a box, or six boxes for $2.50. Bear in mind that Dr. Williams' Pink Pilis are never sold in bulk, or by the dozen or hundred, and any dealer who offers substitutes in this f orm is trying to defraudyou and should be avoided. The public are also cautioned against all other so-called blood builders and nerve tonics, no matter what name may be griven them. ïhey are all iiuitations whose makers hope to reap a peeuniary advantage from the wonderlul reputation achieved by Dr. Williams' Pink Pilis. Ask your dealer tor Dr. Williams' Pink Pilis for Pale People, and refuse all imitations and substitutes. Dr. Williams' Pink Pilis may be had of all druggists or direct by mail froin Dr. Williams, Medicine Company from either addreefl. The price at which these pills are sold makes a course of treatment coraparatively inexpensive as comparecí with other remedies or medical treatment.

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Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Register