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FOR A BETTER APPETITE. DR. WILLIAMS' PINK PILLS. Pleasurable anticipation of a meal cheerfulness at the table and a calm state of mind during digestion are all necessary if wo are to get the most good out of the food we eat. But if your.stomach is out of order and you never have a good appetite any more, and everything you eat distresses you, • how are , these thin"3 possible ° Worry interferes with digestion and if you are nervous you will worry. If your b.ood is thin and your stomach has lost tone you will be troubled with gas pains after eating. Loss of appetite is a symptorn of a general run-down condition. If this is your case try building up the blood and strengthening tHe nerves by the tonic treatment. See if-you don't "soon notice an improvement in your appetite. It is usually the first /sign that the tonic treatment is helping you. ' Then as the digestive organs are toned up to do the work that nature Intended,, you are able to eat with comfort things that formerly disagreed with you. , ■~,., To build up the blood there is one remedy. that has been a household word for a generation, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. They tone up the entire system, make the Wood rich and red, strengthen the nerves,, increase the appetite, put colour in the cheeks and lips and drive away that unnatural tired feeling. Plenty of sunlight, good wholesome food and fresh air will do the rest. Free— valuable little book, ; "What to Eat and How to Eat," sent free on request. Dr. Williams'- Pink Pills are sold by all chemiste and storekeepers or will be, sent, post paid, on receipt of price, 3s per box, s ; x boxes 16s 6d, by the Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, ' Box 845 G.P.Oy Wellington. 'i,:•:■ , '

Crops in general in the - back country districts, says an Oamaru paper, are looking better than for several years, but are ratner late. The number of small acreages in crop are remarkable. The quality of the grain is forecasted by experts as excellent, owing to the slow ripening occasioned by cool weather and occasional shower's; the berry should be full and heavy. So far no binders are at work for grain, though several lots of oats have been cat for chaffing. a, -

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19200119.2.89.6

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume LVII, Issue 17371, 19 January 1920, Page 6

Word Count
388

Page 6 Advertisements Column 6 New Zealand Herald, Volume LVII, Issue 17371, 19 January 1920, Page 6

Page 6 Advertisements Column 6 New Zealand Herald, Volume LVII, Issue 17371, 19 January 1920, Page 6