"A NEW ZEALANDER'S HOME"
■ MAY AT ANY- TIME BE INVADED BY SICKNESS. In the best regulated families tho little ills of lifo will creep in. Some member of the family circle may occasionally suffer froui Biliousness or Indigestion, and one or the other will'from time to-'time exhibit the well-known symptoms of' Constipation. From these little troubles more serious complaints arise, and should, therefore, not be' neglected.'. The-slight headache, bad. breath, and discoloured tongue are the index to a disordered 'stomach,'and the necessity.of keeping a safe, sure, and reliable remedy in the house is apparent. By following such a course'tho more expensive method of-call-ing in a doctor-will bo quite unnecessary. That Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills are tho very best family medicine is vouched for 'by thousands of grateful "men and women who have proved' their wdndcirful corrective; merits.' Taken occasionally, Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills are a great protection against all common ailments. .Mrs. L. A. West, Hurimoana.Et. Road, Taranaki, via Stratford, writes:—"l have always, found Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills a splendid corrective medicine, and my experience of two years' use enables me'to conscientiously-state that they do all that you claim for them. They relieve costivenoss at once, and "do • not cause pains or sickness. For children I find thorn'invaluable, and a dose occasionally .keeps them : in good health. I recommend them to my neighbours, and vhey speak highly of Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills, nnd I consider that no household should be without them, as they are a splendid Family Medicine."—Advt.
1 Miss Kate Stewart, of the Langer Dressoutting School, notifies in'this issue that she hits postponed her exhibition of fancy work until Saturday afternoon next, on account of the boisterous weather. Nurso Everitt notifies in this issuo that she will 1)0 pleased to interview new'and old pntionts at her rooms, Marino Engineers' Building, Aitken Street. The children coughed and sneezed in school; , ' The Lady Teacher, calm and cool; . Remarked: "The Government's pretty sure To let mo buy Woods' Peppermint Cure. For all this sneezing, coughing crowd, And not a sixpence I'm allowed! let I must doctor all the lot, Or else the school will go to pot!"—Advt. 22 America. h.as added the lift-girt to its numerous innovations. In its halls of residence for women, Chicago University, an institution always ready to break ground with new experiments, has begun to employ girls to run the lifts. It is held that tho smooth-running type of electrical elcvutor makes no undue demands of the capabilities of the "weaker sex," Dancing, theatrical performances, cricket matches, and a library of GOOO volumes, are a few of the attractions at the Middlesex County Asylum. ' For Children's Hacking Cough at night. Woods' Great Peppermint Cure, la, Oil., is. 6d,-Advt.
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Dominion, Volume 3, Issue 920, 13 September 1910, Page 9
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455"A NEW ZEALANDER'S HOME" Dominion, Volume 3, Issue 920, 13 September 1910, Page 9
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