JiR, MQRSE'S itypiANl ROOT Pli.L.B STIU. EFFECTIVE-AFTER TWENTY YEARS' ÜBE. . It is said that after repeated ind lengthy use, of certain medMJttie! that the patient becomes immuhie to : -, ■ "i'-j their-' v'it« fects and then it is n e cossary resort . to some ( other remedy, and ;•;' while thai 1- may often J be true, it f is not so /..with Dr. Morse'D I n d i.a.n Root Pllh, sand is <H\» ~i "/'"proved by. ... .r, 1..-,,. the fact Fi>.om a pmo. that they are still; the. everyday remedy in thousands of, alter years of satisfactory .use. \k convincing example is contained;in. the letter from Mrs. Jane Skeltdn, of 87 Huxley St., Sydenham, Christohurch, N.Z., who writes:—''! can s,ay that after ■twenty years' experience in the use of Dr. Morse's Indianvßoot Pills that they still occupy a place in my household as a good family medicine; thev seem to combat most Of the little ills that flesh is heir to, and I And them accordingly; most" effective is well for the children when Indisposed. You have, jny consent to publish this testimony if required." Mrs. Skelton's statement will be endorsed by thousands .of people throughout New Zealand who have been using Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills for years and are still finding them effective as a family medjciflfc | CLIPPINGS. A room full of boots and shoes, modern and historical, and worth over £I2OO, was left in his will by a wealthy and eccentric lawyer named Sauter, of Arbon, Canton of Thurgovie, to bis wife. On his marriage Sauter presented his wife with three dozen, pairs as a wedding present and forbade her to enter the room where the footgear was-piled in hundreds of pairs. • " - For Children's. Hacking Cough at night, Woods' Great Peppermint Cure; 1/6, and 2/6. Caleb Chapman, a gipsy, tlqts instructor to a basket-making class atjßusbridge, near Godalming, which has been established to revive a village industry, and is attended by thirty-four men and women. Chapman never takes' off his hat whiig teaching, and sits on a chair without a back. He lives in a tent at Forest Green", and walks thirteen miles to Busbridge every week to attend to his class. Jas. Rivers and Co. stock Linwoar which is an entirely new fabric and quite, unlike any other on the market. It will give the hard wear of linen at half the cost, and will keep clean longer than any other cloth', Suitable for blouses, shirts, dresses, aprons, overalls, skirts, pillow cases, etc. Looks like linen, wears like. linen, but half the cost. We have also purchased a large and varied assortment of toys and presonts. These' will be offered at a reduced price to clear.—■ Call and inspect.—[Advt.] . "Baldness," says Dr Cole,of ington, "is the result of intellectual elevation. Men used to be hairy all over. Gradually Ihey lost their hair as intelligence advanced. That is to SBy, the hair. receded upward, making a last grand stand upon the head. And now in the ilowcr 4t the race it is about to abandon the head also, and if women persist in their wild career of culturo they, itoo, must pay tho penalty. But-jiauey a platform filled' with bald - headed
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Alexandra Herald and Central Otago Gazette, Issue 931, 10 June 1914, Page 3
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531Page 3 Advertisements Column 5 Alexandra Herald and Central Otago Gazette, Issue 931, 10 June 1914, Page 3
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