INFLUENZA.
It is at this timei of the year, wliem the weather is very changeable, hot one day. and cold the next, that colds are caught and influenza becomes lent. . •
Influenza invariably leaves the patient weak and with thin blood, and this anaemia is very stubborn in resisting treatment. It must be corrected, however, before any cure can be considered permanent. As long as the blood remains' thin there will continue the relapses with which most sufferers from "influenza are familiar. Warmth and quiet alone give: comfort and these not for long at a time. Sleetp is restless and does not refresh the nerves, which are always at high tension. The best way to correct this aftereffect of influenza is to build up the "blood and there is no better blood builder than Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. As soon as the revitalised blood courses through the system you are aware of its soothing influence. Gradually the colour returns to the pale cheeks, appetite and'digestion improve and you are on the road to health. Any reader of this paper may have a useful booklet on "Diseases of the Blood" by writing to' the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Box 845, G.P.0., Wellington.
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Bibliographic details
Free Lance, Volume XVIII, Issue 948, 12 September 1918, Page 27
Word Count
200INFLUENZA. Free Lance, Volume XVIII, Issue 948, 12 September 1918, Page 27
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