Thank you for correcting the text in this article. Your corrections improve Papers Past searches for everyone. See the latest corrections.

This article contains searchable text which was automatically generated and may contain errors. Join the community and correct any errors you spot to help us improve Papers Past.

Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

ACHING RHEUMATISM.

BAD BLOOD CAUSES - ALL THE • V ' ■ PAIN. DR WILLIAMS' PINK PILLS CUKE IT. "My health waß always good until about five years ago," said Mr John Kennedy, 95 Arthur street, Dunedin. "Then Rheumatism started in my joints and muscles. I was just riddled with pain, and couldn't budge from bed. After- doctors had failed, Dr Williams' Pink Pills cured mo completely by driving evory traco of rheumatic poison out of my blood. "Most of my life has been spent at sea, and, of course, 1 have had to rough it a good deal," Mr Kennedy went on to say. "Sea fare often gets the blood in a bad state, and then exposure in cold stormy weather soon sets a mau's joints aching. On one trip a blinding storm came on just off Cape Horn, and for three weeks tho cold was terrible. Every wave swept the deck, and the cold soaked right into one's bones. That soon started the Rheumatism. It got into my shoulders, arms and legs, N and practically crippled me. I lay in terrible .pain, as helpless as a log. They bathed me with hot salt water, and rubbed mo 'well with liniments—but these tilings couldn't shift the rheumatism. It was rooted in the blood, and I knew I would be a helpless cripple till I found some blood medicine to drive the painful acid out of my system." Mr Kennedy is quite right. His Rheumatism was rooted in his blood. The cold and wet only started tho pains going. The real cause was in his veins—the uric acid that stiffens the joints, cramps the muscles, and inflames the nerves. There is absolutely no hope for the poor pain-racked rheumatic till he grasps the great medical truth that Rheumatism is a disease of the blood. Then his remedy is certain, for Dr Williams' Pink Pills actually make new blood. That is the secret of all they Hid for John Kennedy, of Dunedin. "In London I lay for three months in the hospital bed, suffering untold torture," continued Mr Kennedy, "till i at last the doctor said my _ only hopo was to go back to Australia and get a shore- billet. I shipped for Queensland, but suffered terrible pain on that voyage. My hands were still and crippled with pain. Luckily one of the crew, named Charlie Morely, told mo that Dr Williams' Pink Pills had cured his uncle of chronic Rheumatism, and that he had never had it since. I got some as soon as I landed. They didn't seem to do me any good at first. They gave me a groat appetite, that was an. Only for Morely I would have given them up. 'You must not expect two or three boxes to work miracles,' he said. 'Give them a fair trial, and they will do more for you than all the hospitals in London could do.' And sure enough they did. They toned me right up, and then the pain started to ease up. Gradually my joints and muscles loosened, and soon J. was rid of that gnawing acho that had made my life a misery. At last Dr Williams' Pink Pills left mo as strong and supple as when I was 18. Best of all, they cured me for good, for I have never had a twinge of Rheumatism since I was cured by Dr Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People." | And Dr Williams' Pink Pills cure lumbago, sciatica, and neuralgia, just as surely as they cured John Kenne- [ cly's Rheumatism. Some people think it strange that one little medicino can cure so many different diseases, but doctors know that half the common diseases spring from the one cause of bad blood. The medicino that strikes | at bad blood cures 50 different' diseases in the most direct way. That is the secret of the success of Dr Williams' Pink Pills. They actually make new blood. They do only that one thing, but they do it well. They don't act on the bowels. They don't bother I with mere symptoms. They won't do I anything but root out tho cause of disease in tho blood. But in that one simple way they strike at the root of anaemia, indigestion, headaches, back- | aches, kidney disease, liver complaint, I 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. If you are in any doubt about your particular ailment write for free medical advice to the Dr Williams' Medicine Co., Wellington. Prom the same address you can also order by mail at 3/- a box, !or six boxes for lfi/(i 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. Always in boxes—never in bottles.

| The editor and proprietor of the Vernan (Indiana) •jwwnal, who was ; married recently, suspended the issue of his paper for the week he was on his honeymoon. Lifc has many a weedy row. 1100 tjicm out and reap many a golden harvest: Let the weeds run rampant and gather only tears and sorrow. Those who like cold tea when on a (journey, need only provide themselves with some tea in a bottle, as it can be made with cold water by standing longer. If it is necessary to wash the faco while it is smarting with sunburn, do not use cold water, but as hot as it can be borne, which will relieve tho inflammation. 1 An investigation by Dr Konradi has shown that the anthrax bacillus may survive in water for years, and tho typhoid bacillus for more than 500 • days. A ledger kept in the Irish language was produced at the Roscommon Assizes, Mid the witness had to go on the bench to translate the terms for the judge. Whooping Cough.—My three children, suffering severely from whooping cough, have been entirely cured after using two bottles of Chamberlain's „ Cough Remedy.—John Grainger, Grafeon, N.S.W. There is no danger whatevor from whooping cough when the cough is loose and expectoration tion easy by the use of this remedy, It renders the paroxysms of coughing less frequent and less severe. For sale by G. W. Hutchins, chemist, Balolutha. 005

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CL19041021.2.6

Bibliographic details

Clutha Leader, Volume XXXI, Issue 1855, 21 October 1904, Page 2

Word Count
1,050

ACHING RHEUMATISM. Clutha Leader, Volume XXXI, Issue 1855, 21 October 1904, Page 2

ACHING RHEUMATISM. Clutha Leader, Volume XXXI, Issue 1855, 21 October 1904, Page 2

Help

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert