CROSS EXAMINATION 



Prosecuting Attorney: Q. Your case was awfully bad, wasn't it ? 

 A. Very. 



Q. And there was almost no hope for your recovery, you thought, 

 from what the doctor told you ? A. That was my impression. 



Q. The doctor seemed to indicate to you I mean this osteopath 

 that if you didn't do something right away about it you would die? 

 A. That was not the osteopath. 



Q. Well, the other doctor. A. Yes, he indicated it was a terrific 

 case. 



Q. And in an hour after you took those herbs you were a perfect 

 woman ? A. No, I was not a perfect woman. 



Q. But you didn't have any more pain ? A. I won't say I didn't 

 have any pain, but I was relieved, and I went to sleep. 



Q. Didn't you feel altogether relieved one hour after you took 

 those herbs ? A. I can't say I did in one hour. 



Q. But you said that a few minutes ago, didn't you? A. I was 

 relieved; I didn't say, however, I was greatly relieved. You can't get 

 over such agony as that in an hour. 



Q. You are quite a nervous person, aren't you, Mrs. Callahan? 

 A. No, I am not nervous. 



Q. The type of work you do is very nervous work, isn't it? A. It 

 is all mental work. 



Q. You are not the calmest person in the world, are you ? A. I 

 don't think mental work gives you a calm, phlegmatic temperament. 



Q. You are rather a high-strung woman, aren't you? A. No, I 

 am not. 



Q. The osteopath that came first, why didn't you call up a recog- 

 nized physician and surgeon instead of sending for an osteopath ? A. 

 He was all three. 



Q. He was all three in one ? A. Yes, he was all three in one." 



SPEEDY RELIEF FROM TERRIBLE SUFFERING BY 

 FONG WAN HERBS 



Berkeley, Calif., June 27, 1931. 

 To Whom It May Concern: 



While working in the copper mines at Ely, Nev., I twice contracted 

 Flu. The physicans at the hospital called the second attack "Intestinal 

 Influenza." I was very weak, could not eat and had pain throughout 



152 



