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START RIGHT TO CURE AN/EMIA. ♦ Begin to Increase the Blood Supply* « The Complaint is Readily Cured if the Proper Treatment is Taken. Starting right is half the battle in curing anaemia or bloodlessness. It is important that pale, listless, bloodless people should know that they will be cured as soon as their blood supply is increased. The headaches, indigestion, weakness, languor, heart palpitation, backache, are only symptoms of the great main trouble— bloodlessness. Wafers for the headaches; laxatives for the indigestion; something else for the heart palpitations will not increase the blood supply and cure the cause of the w"hole trouble. Start to cure the cause— that will be a right start. Start to increase the blood supply. When the blood supply is normal it will be found that the other symptoms are gone, because there is nothing to cause them. . Make a good start by getting the best blood-ma'ker you have ever heard of. That will bo Dr Williams' Pink Pills. They actually contain ingredients that will combine with food and air to make rich, red, new blood. We offer proof of this in the case given below: — . "I was never very robust as a girl, and some time back I began to fall away in health. I got quite run down," saia Mrs Rosina Coom, Freswick Street, Blenheim, N.Z. "My appetite failed bit by bit till at last I couldn't fancy anything. Some days I'd bring up everything I had swallowed. I had attacks of Indigestion and only got relief that way, as my food would lay so heavy on my chest. For hours after eating it gave me burning pains right through to my very shoulder blades. I dare not touch a bit of new bread or potato, my digestion was so weak. I'd get a choking feeling in the throat as if I could hardly breathe, and I'd wake up at night sometimes gasping and trembling all over. My heart would thump at odd times as if it was pounding away in my chest. I dare not hurry if walking or doing any housework, or I'd get a bad turn. I became very thin and quite fallen away in flesh; when I took a trip to Wellington my friends hardly knew me. Each morning I'd wake up with a coated tongue and a most unpleasant sour, bitter taste. I'd be a martyr to sick headaches in the temples, such a dull heavy pain pressed down on my eyes as if some weight were closing the eyelids. I'd get so dizzy sometimes I'd have to sit down till I felt better. There were specks and motes dancing before me, and queer flashes of light, so that my eyesight would be quite hazy. All through my head I'd feel as if bells were jangling. I had to manage my housework somehow, but I'd have to stop and rest sometimes, as I had no briskness or strength, least thing tried me. All the time I felt dragged out and weary. I got no good rest at night. I'd toss about and dose off and wake up in the morning fit for nothing and very low spirited. I seemed to be getting no better, in fact worse, till I started a course of Dr Williams' Pink Pills, and I am thankful I tried this remedy, it has done me all the good in the world." It is well to remember that it was Dr Williams' Pink Pills, and not an imitation that cured Mrs Coom. Getting the genuine is the important thing in a cure. They are sold by most chemists and storekeepers, or will be sent direct by the Dr Williams' Medicine Co. of Australasia, Ltd., Wellington, on receipt of price 3s per box, 6 boxes 16s 6d.

THE NEW WAY. This is the tabloid age. Modern methods demand goods, small, compact, and portable, without sacrificing efficiency. To the traveller, the excursionist, the shooting, picnic, or fishing party, the weight of the hamper has frequently told against the pleasures of the trip. The commissariat department is usually responsible for a plentiful supply of liquid refreshment, and when this is only obtainable in "pints" or "quarts," the picnic party take with them the smallest possible quantity. There has" been an insistent demand fer something portable, and it remained for Messrs Sharland and Co. to meet that demand in the production of their FRUIT ESSENCES. Whon wo toll you that a four ounce bottie is sufficient for over 100 delicious drinks, you will realise its worth. Can be made on the picnic ground in a few moments, or a few drops added to a glass of sweetened water makes it ready for immediate use. Ask your grocer for a bottle. Price, Iβ.—Advt.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MS19100305.2.15.5

Bibliographic details

Manawatu Standard, Volume 9157, Issue 9157, 5 March 1910, Page 2

Word Count
791

Page 2 Advertisements Column 5 Manawatu Standard, Volume 9157, Issue 9157, 5 March 1910, Page 2

Page 2 Advertisements Column 5 Manawatu Standard, Volume 9157, Issue 9157, 5 March 1910, Page 2

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