BO ALL CLAIMED. ♦ SAYS DR. MORSE'S INDIAN ROOT PILLS ARE A SPLENDID CORRECTIVE MEDICINE. "I have always found Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills a splendid corrective medicine," writes Mrs. L. A. Weet, Hurimoana. Egmont-road, Taranaki, "and my experience of two yearn 1 use enables me to conscientiously state that they do all you claim for them. Thej^-elieve costrveness at once, and do not cause pains or sickness. For children I find them invaluable, and a dose occasionally keeps them in good health. I recommend them to -my neighbours, and they speak highly of Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills, and 1 consider that no household should be without them, as they are a splendid Family Medicine." 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 the more expensive method of calling in a doctor may be quite unnecessary. That Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills are the very best family medicine is vouched for by thousands of grateful men and women who have proved their wonderful corrective ineiits. Taken occasionally, Dr. Morse's Indian Boot Pills are a great protection agtuiul ill common ailment*.
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Evening Post, Volume LXXXVII, Issue 72, 26 March 1914, Page 4
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208Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Evening Post, Volume LXXXVII, Issue 72, 26 March 1914, Page 4
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