WHAT DYSPEPTICS SHOULD EAT.
THE MEDICAL VIEW. Every doctor knows that about nine times out of ten stomach and digestive troubles are due to acidity and food fermentation; stomach sufferers should, therefore, avoid eating foods liable to ferment and develop acid. Unfortunately, a rigid observance of this rule debars one from the most nutritious and tmpting foods, which is why dyspeptics are usually so thin and debilitated. The problem is easily solved by the use, when needed, of the antacid corrective, “Bisurated” Magnesia. Half a teaspoonful taken in a little water instantly neutralises all trace of acidity and prevents the possibility of food fermentation. Even the richest foods will then agree with you perfectly, and stomach distress will become a thing.of the past. There is no sense in dosing weak stomachs with strong drugs when a little “Bisurated” Magnesia will speedily remove the cause of the trouble and so make you well. Knowing this, doctors prescribe “Bisurated” Magnesia and hospitals use it, while chemists everywhere sell it in both powder and tablet forms at trifling cost. Be sure to ask for BISURATED Magnesia, the kind that enables you to eat what you want, when you want it, without fear of pain or discomfit to follow.
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Thames Star, Volume LIX, Issue 16799, 29 May 1926, Page 2
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205WHAT DYSPEPTICS SHOULD EAT. Thames Star, Volume LIX, Issue 16799, 29 May 1926, Page 2
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