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Show A FIELD FLOWER. BEAUTIFUL AS THE ROSE. "She looks as clear as morning roses newly washed with dew." Shakespeare. fg3r,T FRESH young face like the V&ii lilies of the field attracts v Vwu a man. Hut what holds a Wt man is charm, and a woman jyT''v may be very lovely yet por scss no charms. There is no reason why a woman in good health should not retain her looks until she is quite old. Girls grow up like flowers in the field, and if weeds do not smother their good looks by which we mean disease of the feminine organs they should grow up beautiful. There is no reason in the world why the majority of our women shouldgrow old looking and haggard as young as they do. The influence of flowers is good. A woman who loves flowers is usually one who enjoys tranquility and cheerfulness, cheerful-ness, has usually channiug feminine ways. Men do not like a mannish woman. The sight of flowers often tranqailizes a woman's nerves and the perfume soothes the temper. In America wrinkles are the greatest drawbacks to beauty that we have to fight. It seems as if we even see wrinkles in the faces of our very young girls. Life in the open air assists people to keep young. By living in stagnant air in a close ro'm night or day the beauty of the cc 1 1-plexion 1-plexion is spoiled. "Many people imagine im-agine night air is ' gerous," says Dr. Pierce, tne great specialist in woman's diseases. "They exclude it from the sleeping rooms as far as possible by keeping doors and windows closed. This is a mistake. Young women are apt to hover about the register or stove, spending too much time in the warmth indoors, with the result that they become tender and sensitive and are almost certain cer-tain to catch cold. The young girl is like a plant which, set in a dark corner, cor-ner, becomes scrawny and struggles hard for an existence, but if put in the sunlight puts on more vigorous growth. Thousands of girls in America lose health and strength and grow thin and sickly because the' do not take proper hygienic methods or take proper care of their womanly health. When there is disturbance of the female organs the effects are wide spread and disastrous." About thirty-eight years ago, Dr. R. V. Pierce, then a practicing physician, found that a certain compound made from roots and herbs, without the use of A alcohol or narcotic, was a specific for those diseases peculiar to women. There is nothing that will produce wrinkles and a bad complexion so surely as displacements dis-placements of the organs essentially feminine. When paius and aches rack the womanly system at frequent intervals, inter-vals, take Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre-scription. Pre-scription. It will cure those ailments and stop the drains which arc such a drag on the vitality of womanhood. If you are at a loss to know what is the matter with you, write Dr. Pierce, who will answer you in strict confidence ; he is a physician and surgeon who has had a thorough medical training and a large experience in diseases of women, and will give you advice free of cost to you. Backed up by over a third of a century of remarkable and uniform cures, a record such as no other remedy for the diseases and weaknesses peculiar to women ever attained, the proprietors of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription now feel fully warranted in offering to pay $500 in legal money of the United States, for any case of Leucorrhea, Female Weakness, Prolapsus, or Falling of Womb, which they cannot cure. All they ask is a fair and reasonable trial of their means of cure. Miss May Rohrback, No. 73 Amsterdam Amster-dam Ave., New York City, Treasurer of the Woman's Progressive Union, writes : "I am satisGed that half the doctors do not know what really ails their patients, while you have carefully studied the needs of the sick aud worn-out, and have skilfully prepared a reliable remedy rem-edy which will cure in a short time. Two years ago I began to feel 4 run-down,' run-down,' the extreme heat of the summer nearly prostrated me, and when fall came I was ill prepared to take up anew the burdens of life. I had headache, backache, and was very nervous; scarcely able to sleep more than two hours at a time. I was advised to try Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, and was delighted with the result. Within a week I was sleeping splendidly. Continued using the ' Favorite Prescription ' for eight weeks, and then stopped, for I was perfectly per-fectly well, Ever since then your medicine medi-cine has been my ' Favorite Prescription,' Prescrip-tion,' too. I recommend it to every one." Every woman, young or old, should know herself. To arrive at this knowledge, knowl-edge, secure a good doctor book, by ad-dressing ad-dressing Dr. JL V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. "The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser" can be procured by sending twenty-one cents in one-cent stamps for paper-bound volume, or thirty-one stamps for a cloth-bound copy. |