Article image
Article image

What to do for Nervous Indigestion When nerves go wrong they always strike at your weakest spot. When this spot happens to be the stomach, nervous dyspepsia results. Appetite is turned into an uneasy hollow feeling that keeps up until every nerve in your body seems "on edge," and the food you force down won't digest properly. You're knocked up, down-and-out, for one day at least so far as useful activity is concerned. It's the height of folly to force digestion with some pepsin •>..._ LIIC stomach nerves are in such shape. Nervous indigestion comes from nerves alone. Get your nerves right and you'll feel tip-top, / and eat, and digest vhpf -—- =at, as a,ny normal, healthy person should. Nothing could be Lett r < .rnever you feel blue or depressed and your nerves are working overtime than to eat a couple of Phosphorated Iron which is recognised as the greatest iierve tonic ever found for nervous dyspepsia, nervous headaches, and to calm and steady upset nerves generally. Every tablet seems to go straight to the nerve-cells, stimulates and strengthens them when they are dull, tired-out, and sluggish, and you cannot concentrate your mind on work. Puts ambition, vim, and vitality in every inch of your body. All leading chemists now sell Phosphorated Iron tablets on a positive guarantee that if they do not bring results and give complete satisfaction in 30 days the money will be returned. And scores of people right here in town will tell you their marvellous efficiency.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19360805.2.178.1

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume LXVII, Issue 184, 5 August 1936, Page 21

Word Count
249

Page 21 Advertisements Column 1 Auckland Star, Volume LXVII, Issue 184, 5 August 1936, Page 21

Page 21 Advertisements Column 1 Auckland Star, Volume LXVII, Issue 184, 5 August 1936, Page 21