BLOOD TOO THIN.
X DR. WILLIAMS’ PINK PILLS Actually Make New Blood. Hundreds of women suffer from headaches, backaches, dlsziness, restlessness, languor, and nervousness. Few realise that their misery all comes from the bad state of their blood. They take one thing for their, head, another for their stomach, and a third for their nerves—and yet all the while It is simply their blood that is the cause of all the trouble. For Instance, Mrs John Murray, of 15S, Caledonian ltd., Christchurch, had been ailing for years before she found out the real cause of her trouble. For years she suffered unspeakably from headaches and backaches. Bbe was always nervous and bilious. She could not cat and she could not Bleep. Yet ail those different ailments disappeared like magic as soon as she
•truck at the cautr and set her blood right with nr. Williams* Pink Pills for Pale People. They actually "made” new rich red telvod for her. And good blood Is the great secret of good health. “For flve years no one could have Buffered more than I—and nil for want of good, pure blood,” said Mrs Murray. "1 was always doctoring myself, but nothing did me the least good. Every morning 1 got up with h thumplug, throbbing liendacbe. Often I bad hardly enough strength to dress myself. All day long my back used to ache till I thought it would break. “My Illness began with a terrible pain in the stomach—and my stomach seemed to suffer all through. I toad bilious attacks that laid me right out. My blood seemed to be full of bile and poison. The smell of cooking turned ms sick. I never had ths least appetite for my meals. “Soon I gave up all hope of geVtiug well,” Mrs Murray went on to say. “I lost all heart, and then my nerves broke down. The least thing made me jump with a start. The slam of a door would ’eave me for the rest of the day with a splitting headache. T got so bad that my sight began to go. At night I was too nervous to sleep. I used to lie and toss listening to the ticking of the elock, and thinking that daylight would never tome. Tn fact, I was a nervous wreck. I was so weak and worn In every way that I jras afraid I might drop dead at any mouieht.
“I bad not been fit for housework for a long lime when I read of a case very much like my own that had been cured by Dr. ■Williams' Pink Pills,” said Mrs Murray. “I got a few boxes at once, nnd made up my mind to give them a fair trial. If four or flve boxes aid not cure me I would have taken a dozen. But the first box gave me a little appetite, and 1 knew that 1 bad got the right medicine at last. My biliousness and nervousness disappeared, and I began to gain in weight and colour. By the time I had finished my supply J had not a hendaCbe or a backache. I was eating like a schoolboy and steeping like a tep. I married happily soon afterwards, and to-day there isn’t a healthier woman In all Christchurch —thanks to Dr. Wi'llams’ Pink Pills. What Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills did for Mrs Murray they are doing for scores of other women in New Zealand. Every dose sends galloping through the veins pure, strong, rich red blood, that strikes straight at the cause of all secret ill health. The new blood restores regularity and bva.es all the organs for their special tasks. Dr. Williams’ rink Pills actually "make” new blood. That Is al! they do, but they do It well. They don’t act ou the bowels or trouble with the mere symptoms of disease. They just root out the “cause” of disease from the blood Itself. It Is through the blood and the blood only that Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills cure paleness, skin troubles like eczema, anaemia, indigestion, headaches, neuralgia, rheumatism, backache. kidney and liver complaint, lumbago, sciatica, partial paralysis, locomotor ataxia. failing powers, and the special Irregularities in tlio health of growing gtrls nnd women. But, of course, yon must get the genuine Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People—always hi boxes, never in bottles. From storekeepers and chemists, or post free from the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Old Custom House-st., Wellington—3/ a 1>ox; six boxes Id. 0. Medical advice given free.
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZGRAP19050318.2.79
Bibliographic details
New Zealand Graphic, Volume XXXIV, Issue 11, 18 March 1905, Page 53
Word Count
752BLOOD TOO THIN. New Zealand Graphic, Volume XXXIV, Issue 11, 18 March 1905, Page 53
Using This Item
See our copyright guide for information on how you may use this title.
Acknowledgements
This material was digitised in partnership with Auckland Libraries. You can find high resolution images on Kura Heritage Collections Online.