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IF FOOD DISAGREES DRINK

HOT I"ATER. When food lies like lead in the stomach and you have that uncomfortable, distended feeling, it is because of insufficient blood supply to the stomach, combined with acid and food fermentation. In such cases try the plan now followed in many hospitals and advised by eminent specialists of taking half a teaspoonful of bisurated magnesia in hall a glass of water as hot as you can comfortably drink it. The hot water draws the blood to the stomach, and the bisurated magnesia, as any physician or chemist can tell I you, instantly neutralises the acid and stops the food fermentation. Try this simple plan and you will be astonished at the immediate feeling of relief and comlort that always follows the restoration of the normal process of digestion. But be sure you ask the chemist very distinctly for bisuni- | ted magnesia, thus avoiding confusion with the sulphates, oxides and 'citrates or bismuth and magnesia 'mixtures which are often unsuitable. Soldiers at the front and travellers I who are frequently obliged to take hasty meals poorly prepared should always take two or three five-grain tablets of bisurated magnesia alter meals to prevent fermentation and neutralise the acid.

1 IMJTTER-WRA ITERS.—To Dairy 1 farmers •' lio make their owr nutter; Obtain juur but ier-wi uppers at the '‘Stratford Post” Job Printing .Office,

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/STEP19160918.2.35.4

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXI, Issue 43, 18 September 1916, Page 7

Word count
Tapeke kupu
225

Page 7 Advertisements Column 4 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXI, Issue 43, 18 September 1916, Page 7

Page 7 Advertisements Column 4 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXI, Issue 43, 18 September 1916, Page 7

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