ANÆMIA, HEART PALPITATION AND SLEEPLESSNESS.
Young girls from fourteen years upwards are at a critical age. Instead of developing gracefully into womanhood as a girl should, they frequently waste away and become thin, tired and pale as Miss Peterson did. She also suffered most severely from Cramps, Heart Palpitation, Sleeplessness and Giddiness. Hundreds of girls die in a Declino as Miss Peterson would have died but for Dr. William's Pink Pillls.
A NEW ZEALAND LADY MIRACULOUSLY CURED. Miss Petrea Peterson, of FeatherstoDj North Island, New Zealand, iu a communication to the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., explains her sufferings ab length : "I am 19 years of age," she says, "and ever since I was 15 I have been suffering more or less. Palpitation of the heart was my principal trouble, and this was induced by ansamia or poorness of the blood. When, for instance, I ran upstairs my heart used the thump most frightfully againgst my sides, and so bad was ifc that on these occasions I was unable to talk for some time afterwards. This was naturally a source of considerable anxiety to my family and friends. Night after night I tossed, weary and worn out, on my bed, trying vainly to sleep. At times, too, I .had fearful attacks of cramps in my legs, and so great was the agony that frequently it oaused me to scream out in very desperation, to the despair ot those around. I was always in a weak, low state, and of course never felt fit for my work. My legs, too, would at times swell up to a considerable extent, and this natuaally occasioned myself and my mother great suspense. Thus, as I grew older, I became worse and worse, being subject also to periods of giddiness, which many a time caused me to almost fall down. I tried plinty of medicins and I had several doctors, one after the other, bub they gave me no relief, I also consulted three doctors regarding an affliction of the eye from which 1 suffered. " Having almost given up my case as hopeless, I one day noticed an advertisement for Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People in the Evening Post. Gathering hope from this, in June. 1897, I commenced taking your pills strictly according to directions. After the third dose, to my surprise, I found a change for the better. I continuced with them until I, bit by bit, improved ao much that six months ago I left them off altogether. I have taken a total of nine boxes, and am now in every way in the most perfect of condition. Insomnia, weakness, giddiness, heart palpitation, cramp and swellings in the legs have all disappeared, and the affection in my eyes has likewise ceased. As there has been no recurrence of these ailments at all during the past four months, it is evident that my cure is a permanent one. Your pills have absolutely cured me, and I will always keep some of them by mo. I feel fit for my work and for everything. My mother thinks the world of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale people, and she has tried several boxes herself. I am awfully thankful to them, and I have recommended them to all my friends. Eour of them speak exactly as I do of the pillp, and cannot praise them too highly. I shall aways continue to recommend them. I am well known here, and numbers of people have been watching my case with interest. You may make whatever use you like of this testimonial." These pills are a touic, not a purgative. They have cured paralysis, locomotor ataxia, rheumatism, and sciatica ; also all diseases arising from impoverishment of the blood, scrofula, riokets, chronio erysipelas, consumption of the bowels and lungs, anemia, pale and sallow complexion, general muscular weakness, los3 of appetite, palpitations, pains in the back, nervous headache, early decay, all forms of female weakness and hysteria. The genuino bear the full name, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People, and are sold by chemists and storekeepers generally, or the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Wellington, N.Z., will forward, on receipt of stamps or post order, one box for 35., or halfdozen for 16s. 6d. Substitutes said to be just as good must on no account be accepted. ___^_
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Bibliographic details
Waikato Argus, Volume VI, Issue 408, 11 March 1899, Page 4
Word Count
718ANÆMIA, HEART PALPITATION AND SLEEPLESSNESS. Waikato Argus, Volume VI, Issue 408, 11 March 1899, Page 4
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