HADN'T EHOUCH BLOODAnother Life Saved. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills Actually Make New Blood. " Shortly after my marriage I started to go into bad health," said Mrs. Mary JVturphy, of Featherstone, near Welling--ton. " The- doctor said I hadn't enough red blood in 'my ibody to keep my heartbeating. He had known scores like me I to go off like the snuff of a candle. That ] is just what would have 'happened to me too if it ihadn't 'been for Dr Williams' l " Tiuk Pills for Pale People. liv two -imonths they built me up till I wasn't the same woman. In fact, they saved my life. i " As a girl, I lived all my life in WarTvick, Queensland—'but thte climate there started to turn my blood to water," added Mrs Murphy. " I could hardly •drag anyself about the house. Every day I got thinner and weaker. I was •going straight dnto a Desline. I thought the change to New Zealand ■would do me good—font my health broke down altogether a few months after I *?ame here. No on© knows what I went ■through month after month. Heavy dark rings came under-my eyes, and my face 'looked like Death. I don't know how I ever dragged through from day •to day. Sometimes I could hardly jstand with the heavy, dragging pain in my "back. I went through more than I would like any woman suffer. I was -never one to give in, and so I struggled through and kept my sufferings to myself. If I ever thought there was a •chance of m© going through such misery I again, I couldn't live to face- one day -of it. "Mi* .Murphy was 'Worried to death ■albout me. He said he could sea me thinner every day. My lips -were almost, blue, ray cheeks fell in, •and I lost so much weight that all my •clothes were too big for me. A child -would have eaten more than I did. A few spoonfuls of rice pudding made me feel as if 1 had eaten the biggest meal of my life. There was .hardly any blood left in my foody—but after s .a meal it ( rail rushed to my head till my face burned. My ears started to ring; ;aivy every•thing in front of me seemed to lie jumping up and down. Half a minute later I would faint clean away. _" When I came round, I would be shaking life >a leaf. For days afterward 6 ■looiild not get rid of the thought that ■iSome/fching dreadful wias going to 7iapyen. I was just a. imndlle of nerves. If vu log cracked in the fire, it made me jump with a start and set my heart for ail-hour afterwards. All ■the doctors said-my.heart wis draadlully weak. If I hurried to got the dinner table set, I would hav<; to sit -down and gasp for breath. I never knew the day when Mr Murphy might come Thome and find me lying dead with li-envt. disease. > ■" Month after month I suffered as •only a woman can underswiiid," Mrs Murphy went on. " Like other women, "I tried .to struggle through. 'Earh t:me . it was harder to bean* trie strain. I } Inew I would break down before long, sores (broke out between my fin- , -gers—so that will show you what it Ur- , "<ri'ble state my blood was in. ~\\ hen doe- \ tors and everything else tailed, ;i friend- % *©f mine made me give Dr "Williams' J'inl* >\ Tills a trial. They were njt .i'-rit iiKe r «ny other medicine I had taken. I c.d « not think at first they were going to j <lo me any good at all.' fivjy tlidri t act | on my bowejs, ra-nd didn't SGem (o affect t mean anyway. But Mr" Mn'-phy ck'.d , he notioe'd that I had been eating tetttr ,g ■«yen since I was through the first box. » He said that waiS la sure sigi.-. tlioy ueiv: j .to me. 'You must not expect , n Tbhem to work wondem in a week or ! two,' he said. At the end ;>f «i 'month, J --all my friends said there ns>s'a b!-^ dif „ ferenoe in me .The colour caiue back ' sto my face, >and I was fni- more cheerful. Every, day I got sti%ot:g<;r. Irom "that time out, I never hari a lieafkrhe ■<xc a, backache. Dr Wnli.tins' r-.'^i\ Pills -seemed to pull me toother I had no more fainting fits, and my, hoart gave me no moi'e trouble. After six weeks I " was not the same woman. I was over- " flowing with life and health, an<3 took delight in my honsewwork." ti Dr. Williaims' Pink Pills cu:>d ?v!is. r« "(Murphy after doctors and ;i'i a .'per c •treatments had failed. Still there is no v: mystery about that. They cure disease *• simply because they strike at its root- :n ll tihe blood. Dr Williams' Pink Pi!!s <?j *< -only one thing, but they do it svv." — they actually make new blood. Ti:<-y £* ■ don't act on the bowels. They don't t -tinker with mere symptoms. T!iev 11 won't cure any disease that isn't cau?vd v hy bar! blood. But then, that is the p •cuse of all such common ailments as c paleness, pimples, skin diseases, eczema, s -anaemia, indigestion, headaches, back- F aches, kidney trouble, lumbago, rimi- t matism, sciatica, neuralgia, nervous- \> ness, St. Vitus' dance, rickets, ipian'tial paralysis, locomotor atasia, failing powei's, decline and the irregularities iin the health of growing girls and women. Every day Dr Williams' Pink Pills •ere curing these diseases, because they I all spring from foad blood. If you am in doubt whether that is the cause of your special ailment, write for fn>o medical .advice to the Dr Williams' Medicine Co., Wellington, New Zealand. From the same p.ddress you can order the genuine Dr Williams' Pink Pills— 3s. -a, bos, sis fooses IS? 6d, post fre a. The modern bedroom may be counted -among the national revivals. Its s:mplicitv is saggestive of the earliest Victorian dayi, before the overcrowding of ~ rooms had developKl into a national disease. " Keep a pet plant in your bedroom," said a doctor recently to a -delicate girl, " and if it does not thrive there you .need not expect to either." It is a simple test, and one worth applying to living rooms as well. If there Is "too little light and too little air for a, pot plant, there is certainly" too little for a 'human ibeing.
For Children's Hacking Cough at night, Woods' 'Great Peppermint Cure, 1.
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Wanganui Chronicle, Volume XLIX, Issue 12599, 13 September 1905, Page 2
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1,083Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 Wanganui Chronicle, Volume XLIX, Issue 12599, 13 September 1905, Page 2
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