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Womes and the Mirror

A NEW USE FOR THE LOOKING GLASS. We invariably associate a lady's dressing-table with a large and complete mirror, and the fair sex has always to bear the brunt of innumerable harmless remarks regarding the time they spend in front of their lookingglasses. A. new but valuable use has, however, been found for thiß most indispensable toilet article. Mrs Lordelli, of 162 Dowling street, Sydney, is the lady to whom this discovery is due. Speaking recently to a ' Balmain Observer ' mau, she said : — 14 1 am quite well now, and don't think I ever enjoyed .better health— thanki to Dr Williams' Fink Pills for Pale People j but I was very bad indeed. The first start of my illness wm loss of appetite, and as I pegan to feel a bit low in spirits occasionally, and also was growing rather pale. I went to a chemist. * Why,' be said, * you're ausemic,' and he showed me in the looki&g-claaa how white my gums were getting, and the bad color of the inside of my eyelids. He said, ' You w<mt a strong tonic, and he gave me one. However, I continued to grow paler and more sickly looking, my appetite grew gradually lets till I felt I hardly cared whether I ate anything or not, and when I did manage to get a little food down, it loomed to stick like a hard lump on my chest. 1 was losing flesh rapidly, and was growing so weak that I could hardly get out of bed in the mornings, and when I did do a little work, it knocked me up completely, and I had to go and lie down to recover. At last everything became a trouble to me. I got into a low hopeless sort of state and hardly cared what bectme of me. Nearly all the time I had suffered from a peculiar dull pain in my back, bo I went to another chemist and asked him what this pain meant. He told me my liver was out of order, and he gave me some pills and medicine ; but these did me no good. Altogether I must have tried a dozen different kinds of medicine without any goud effect. I used to lie down all day on the sofa, hardly able to move anything but my eyes. However, I could read, and it was because of an account or a remarkable cure that I saw in the ' Daily Telegraph ' that 1 decided to try Dr Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. I tent my daughter for a box. In less than a week's time there was a great difference, I can assure you. My friends congragulated me on & change for the better in my appearance. I continued the pills, and very soon I was able to do a little work again. My appetite come back, and a •light tinge of color appeared in my cheeks. I got slowly, but surely, better every day, and felt as brisk and lively as e girl of 18. As I have said before, Dr Williams' Pink Pilla for Pale People did this for me when lota of other medicines failed to do me any good at all, and I shall always recommend them to my friends. I give my full permission to the Dr Williams Medicine Company to publish the facts of my care wherever and whenever they may think fit." The genome Dr Williams' Fink Pill* are sold only in wooden boxes, about two inches in length, each of which is encircled by a blue warning label, The outside wrapper" has the fall name, Dr Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People, printed in red. In case of doubt it is better to send direct to the Dr Williams' Medicine Company, Wellington, N.Z . enclosing the price, 3i. a bax, or six boxes for 16* 6d. These pills are nob a purgative, and they contain nothing that co aid injure the most delicate. These pills have a remarkable efficacy in curing diseases arising from impoverished condition of the blood or an impairment of the ner. nervouß system, such as all skin troubles, rheumatism, neuralgia, partial paralysis, locomotor at aria, St. Yitus' dance, nervous headache, nervous prostration, And the tired feeling arising therefrom, tha after-effects of la grippe, influenza, and severe colds, dengue and typhoid fevers, diseases depending on humors in the blood, such as scrofula, chronic erysipelas, &e. Dr Williams* Pink Pills give a healthy glow to pale and sallow complexions, and are a specific for the troubles peculiar to the female system ; ia the case of men they effect A radical cure in all cases arising from mental worry, overwork, »ai excesses • t «y aitero,

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/BH18980503.2.34

Bibliographic details

Bruce Herald, Volume XXIX, Issue 2957, 3 May 1898, Page 6

Word Count
785

Womes and the Mirror Bruce Herald, Volume XXIX, Issue 2957, 3 May 1898, Page 6

Womes and the Mirror Bruce Herald, Volume XXIX, Issue 2957, 3 May 1898, Page 6