LEFT SIDE PARALYSED.
Mm. B. M. Ryan, Thames la. Wellington Hospital . Doctors Give Her Up Bed-Ridden for Months Busy Housewife To-day Dr. Williams , Fink Fills. "When I left Wellington Hospital, I was so paralysed that I could not even speak," said Mrs B. M. Ryan, of ilackay-street, Thames. , "Doctor after doctor had to own that my case hopeless. They all said I wouldxnerer walk again. Yet. here I aci to-day in perfect health, able to walk from one ena of Thames to the other. My cure is a positive miracle—a miracle worked by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills'for Pale People." Mrs Ryan's statement is so sensational that it is -well there is positive proof of its truth. The main facts of her case are oa record in the books of the Wellington Hospital, Tvhere ehe was treated without success—and her present health is plain to anyone who sees her. Her story (told in her own straightforward words) is one of tne most interesting that ever appeared ia print. "I was travelling by boat from Thames to Wellington," said Mrs Ryan, "and, went to my berth in the best of health. During the night I was suddenly struck with paralysis. It was jnst a sudden twinge of the muscles—and I lay unable to speak or move. The whole of my left side became useless, without a minute's warning. At Wellington they took mc ashore to the hospital—a hopeless paralytic. For nearly three months I was like this. I couldn't speak or move. My face was distorted in a terrible way, and my mouth, was dra"wn back nearly €o my ear. My food wouldn't stay in my mouth, and I was in a most pitiable state. ' "In. fact," added Mrs Ryan, wTiils't "her eyes filled up with tears, "I was a misery to myself and a burden to my family. In spite of the kindest treatment, the Wellington doctors and hospital staff didn't do mc any good. At last I was taken home, and never knew the hour the paralysis woud pnt an end to mc. It was then I began taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. "After the hospital had failed, I didn't think that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills could do mc much good—so it was not a case of a faith enre," Mrs Ryan went on to say. "To my surprise, however, the first bos gave mc an appetite—but it was a long time before I could see that they were doing my paralysis any good. Then one day I noticed a strange tingling in my paralysed -side and face. I suppose it was caused by new blood that Dr. Williams' Pink; Pills were making for mc. A few days later I began to get back my power of speech. After that, every dose gave mc new strength ana life. At last, one morning, 1 was able to get out of bed and walk out to the kitchen. From that time on I gained rapidly. ■ My mouth gradually came back to its right position, and my -whole left side became sound and well again. My cure is nothing less than a miracle. IJ I live to be a hundred," added Mrs Ryan, with intense earnestness, "I shall never be able to give half enough praise to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. I owe my life to 36 boxes of them. . When Dr. ■ Williams' Pink Pills cure diseaseg like paralysis, consumption and locomotor ataxia, no wonder they have such success in curing every-day ailments, like anaemia, indigestion, headaches, neuralgia, sciatica, rheumatism, lumbago, kidney troubles, liver complaint, skin diseases, general weakness, and the special secret troubles of growing girls and women, whose whole health depends upon the richness and the regularity of their blood. All these diseases, in fact, spring from bad blood—and Dr. Williams' Pink Pills actually make new blood. They do just that one thing—but they do it -well. They dou"t act on the bowels. They don't bother with mere symptoms. If you want free ifedical advice. write to the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Wellington. From the same address, you can also order by mail at 3/ a box, or six boxes 16/6. post free, the genuine Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People, if you have any difficulty in getting them from your local chemist or storekeeper.. Remember, substitutes never cured anyone. Get the pills that changed Mrs Ryan from a paralytic cripple into a healthy woman.
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Bibliographic details
Auckland Star, Volume XXXVII, Issue 73, 26 March 1906, Page 3
Word Count
741LEFT SIDE PARALYSED. Auckland Star, Volume XXXVII, Issue 73, 26 March 1906, Page 3
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