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GIRLS WITH HER CRAVINGS' . # Fondness for Starch, Vinegai and Pickles. # <\ certain sign that the Health is out of Order and Needs Attention. Such queer cravings girls and women sometimes have. Good, wholesome food they can scarcely look at, but they will eat groat quantities of starch, vinegar, or pickles. Cravings like these are one of tho commonest symptoms of anaemia—the condition into which people drift when their blood supply falls below the proper level. In anaemia, there is ol' course the customary paleness, listlessness, headaches and heart palpitation, but tho gravest danger is the weakening of tho resisting forces of tho body to other diseases. It is from anaemic ones that epidemics gain their victims and that .recruits for consiimption and decline are found. The great need in anaemia is an increased blood supply, and for this purpose Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Palo People can be recommended with confidence. They have already cured in Australia thousands of cases of anaemia.; and they actually contain ingredients that combine with food and air to make rich, new blood. The case of Mrs Richards, Bath Street-, Parnell; Auckland, shows how good they are in curing anaemia. Mrs Richards, who is a young woman of twenty-four, made the following statement for the benefit of other sufferers: — "As a young girl I slipped into an J anaemic state. Every day found my i strength and energy a little less, and my appetite a bit poorer until at last I was hardly eating a tilling all day, unless. I could Ihavo vinegar on my food. My mother had to hide the bottle, as ' I would make vinegar drinks -when I could or else eat lemons. If I cut my finger the .place hardly bled, and then only pale fluid trickled out. The blood in my body got less and less. My gums and lips turned white, r.nd so did my eyelids. People remarked how dreadfully wasted and thin I was and 'how pulled down in looks. I seemed to fade every day. It was a trouble to walk any distance. I would start panting aiid lose every bit of breath and have to fairly gasp for it. 1 went to business every day when really 1 was hardly fit to stir out and .1 got home fairly tired and worn out and thankful to sit- do win at once. .1 was tired every' hour of the day and felt so wretchedly low spirited. My mother would not know what to do with me for I was tho only one, and she was 'naturally worried. I was always headachy and low spirited., I was always nervous and excitable, too. Fainting turns came on-, and I would be out of 0119 and into another. My feet and hands were quite cold, for the/blood did not circulate. I ached all over in every joint and bone. Neuralgia come on in l>oth sides of the face and settled there; and it nagged and burned for hours. Fortunately J found a cure in Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. They began to makes my blood rich and _tone up my nerves, and I kept 011 gradually improving in strength and appetite till at last I was able to finish the course. They also proved of benefit to my mother, Mrs Beasley." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by chemists and storekeepers, or sent by mail, post paid 011 receipt of price 3s, six l>oxes 16s 6d, 'by the Dr. Williams' Medieiito Co., of Australasia, Ltd., Wellington.

THE FINEST THING ON EARTH. ' 'Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera, and Diarrhoea Hemedy is absolutely tih!e finest thlimg on earth for colic, pains in ith© stomach,, and diarrhoea," says Mr GL H. Hodgson, otf Wangaai.ui, N.Z. "lib will cure eviery time. No oine is- subject to more violent attacks of diarrhoea than myself, but I hjave "never known Ghamiberlain'a Colic, CMiera. and Di'anrhoea Remedy to fail to cuxei me." Sold by all l ohemifitß and storekeepers.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WAG19111205.2.27.3

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Age, Volume XXXII, Issue 10495, 5 December 1911, Page 6

Word count
Tapeke kupu
658

Page 6 Advertisements Column 3 Wairarapa Age, Volume XXXII, Issue 10495, 5 December 1911, Page 6

Page 6 Advertisements Column 3 Wairarapa Age, Volume XXXII, Issue 10495, 5 December 1911, Page 6

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