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PERFECT DEVELOPMENT.

"I' I!DELIS" ON FEMININE BKMJTY.

Eveiiy wor.an i'c.ircs t> be beautiful (writes " Fidclis" in the course of a chitty article on " Feminine Fancies aid Frailitiea" in the Sydney Sunday j Tines). Flo ad;r:itn, with masculine fr nkness, that tho fickle heart of man is more often takcM by a fair face and a faultless figure than by cleverness or domestic virtues. Undoubtedly i( s;iys he) a woman's shortest road to general admiration is beauty in physical development. The aids, however, which many women invoke to secure this beauty would be lau.-hable to physicians if the matter were not such a serious one. Cheeks dyed with paint — its vivid color softened by powder— lotions of cream -washes of various hinds — cosmetics of every shade—all show themselves at or.co to bo mere imitations of natural beauty. Real ber.uty is obtained in quite another fashion.

Of course it would not be true to say that every woman can be a 1 \nius di Medici by even (.he strictest attention to hygienic laws. This much is b?yond all doubt, however, that piu-o blood and taut nerves give a contour of development, an erect carriage, and an elastic step. When the blood is weak with white corpuscles, the cheeks are pallid and the complexion pasty. Enrich the blood with the red corpuscles which give it color, and the pink roses of perfect health will mantle the cheeks. Every doctor will tell you this —and if he is candid he will tell you more. Ho will tell you that Dr Williams' pink pills—which, by the way, are.manufactured from the formula of an eminent physician—arc the best cure for pale faces, lack-lustre eyes, and thin, undeveloped forms. Ho will toll you that they act as a nerve-tonic, and brace up the nerves, banishing neuralgia, hysteria, nervous exhaustion and despondency, He will tell you, too, that they act as a bloodbuilder, and make thousands of healthy re :\ corpuscles in the blood, purifying and enriching it, and sweeping away ameniia, debility, indigestion, skin blotches and rheumatism, which are all diseases caused by poor blood. When the nerves are braced, and the blood enriched with Dr. Williams' pink pills—good-bye to headaches and heart palpitation, sallow cheeks, bony anus and flat chests. In their stead wiil be sparkling eyes and rosy cheeks, a •■■veil developed form, and a happy heart —a graceful, radiant woman whom good health has made lovely enough to reign in any household.

This has happened often in nearly every town in New Zealand. A typical instance is that of Miss Kate Eraser, who lives in Main Street, Blenheim, and is well-known in that town. " About five years ago," says Miss Fraser, who is now twenty-two yoirs of a'-je, " my health began to fail. My blood became watery, and I w:vi very pale and weak. I became liablo to fainting fits, and sometimes I scarcely had the strength to walk about. I was a victim to insomnia, and would lie awake for hours before I could get any sleep. My face seemed quite bloodless, and my hands were almost transparent. I used to be well and strong, but gradually I became so tliin, weak and otherwise ill that I did not hope to recover. My appetite failed me, and the food I ate seemed to do me no good at all. My spirits were depressed, and I felt too miserable to live. I had been in this state of health for over three years, when an acquaintance recommended me to try Dr Williams' pink pills. Two boxes made a decided improvement, and when I had taken nine boxfuls my figure had filled out, and I had become quite happy and robust. Now I work, eat and sleep well. My complexion and general appearance have It proved so much th it friends who have not seen me for some time fail to recognise me —so you can imagine how great the transformation has been/1

Tho secret of loveliness certainly lie in the attainment of perfect health — ar.d the secret of health undoubtedly lies in pure blood ami strong nerves, Dr Williams' pink pills make the blood warm and red, and tho nerves sharp arid steady. They bring about perfect health, and, before long, pink roses blush upon the cheeks, -the form de velops, and the figure becomes pliant and graceful. Anyone who will write to the Dr Williams' medicine co., Wellington, and describe her present state of health, will be told confiden tinlly just how to treat herself privately at homo. The information is well worth tho trouble of writing, for by following th-3 simple directions many a pale-faced, undeveloped girl has been raised to fresh, vigorous and beautiful woman-

hood.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MEX19020708.2.39

Bibliographic details

Marlborough Express, Volume XXXVI, Issue 157, 8 July 1902, Page 4

Word Count
784

PERFECT DEVELOPMENT. Marlborough Express, Volume XXXVI, Issue 157, 8 July 1902, Page 4

PERFECT DEVELOPMENT. Marlborough Express, Volume XXXVI, Issue 157, 8 July 1902, Page 4

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