BAD TEMPERED AND PEEVISH.
I t Nervous exhaustion is often the ] cause oi great unhappiness, because the * sufferer and his friends do not recognise it as an ailment. To them he seem i merely ill-tcmpcred and irritable. The ' peevishness, too, for which women and girls are often blamed is not their 1 fault; it. does not mean bad temper, 1 but starved exhausted nerves. Head- J aches, depression, poor a.ppetite and 1 weariness are mostly present, but the 5 remedy is quite simple. The whole es- r sence of it is that starved nerves need special food —Dr Williams’ Pink Pills. * By their remarkable blood-making * powers they do wonders; nervous meu and women become calm, steady, energetic under their influence. Nothing * else is iiIS i as good. Sold everywhere, j ' per lift's, u -
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Bibliographic details
Star (Christchurch), Issue 17524, 29 April 1925, Page 6
Word Count
133BAD TEMPERED AND PEEVISH. Star (Christchurch), Issue 17524, 29 April 1925, Page 6
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