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A PATHETIC PARTING.

A writer recently: described the lightheerted manner in which modern people say good-bye at wharf or station. Ho tells how people set out on a long pilgrimage with the prospect of never seeing their friends again, and they say farewell as if it were quite a jolty affair after all. There are still partings at which anguish keeps the tongue silent and the cheek wet. But there are partings which should be merry, partings which we should celebrate like a wedding. It is a pleasure to chronicle such partings, and consequently we make public the parting of Mrs 8. Aust, who resides in Hornsby street, Maldon, Victoria. She said a long good-bye to headaches and nervousness. Her letter reads as follows i—" I have great pleasure in testifying to the good results I have obtained from the use of Dr Morse's Indian Root Pills. For some time I have suffered with severe pains in the head also nervousness, and after taking two bottles of these pills I had great relief, and I can conscientiously give them a good word wherever I go." Dr Morse's Indian Root Pills are a perfect blood purifier, and a positive cure for biliousness, indigestion, constipation, headaches, sallow complexion, liver and kidney troubles, piles, pimples, boils, and blotches, and for female ailments. Sold by chemists and storekeepers, Is 2jd per bottle, or six bottles 6s 6d. Sole proErietors, the W. H. Comstock Company, td. (Austraksian Depot), 58 Pitt street, Sydney. Packed in amber bottles, and the foSbjmaaiMovß. thereofl.—LAdrtJ

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19020213.2.86

Bibliographic details

Evening Star, Issue 11681, 13 February 1902, Page 8

Word Count
255

A PATHETIC PARTING. Evening Star, Issue 11681, 13 February 1902, Page 8

A PATHETIC PARTING. Evening Star, Issue 11681, 13 February 1902, Page 8

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