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The Little Amber Bottle.

A FAMILIAR OBJECT IN THOU' SANDS OF HOMES.

The amber bottle in which Dr. Morse’s Indian Root Pills are pact ed is probably better known as a familiar object about the home than any other bottle ol a like kind, it is not there as an ornament, but for practical, every' day use. In the best regulated families the little ills of life will creep in. Some member of the family circle may occasionally suffer from Biliousness or Indigestion, and one or the other will from time to time exhibit the wellknown symptoms j f 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 repjedy in the house is apparent. By following such a course the more expensive method of calling in a doctor may be avoided. Bo your own doctor, prescribe Dr. Morse’s Indian Root Piils, and always keep the little bottle in the house, so that when sickness invades your home you will have a sure and reliable remedy to banish It from your threshold-

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/LCP19160608.2.21

Bibliographic details

Lake County Press, Issue 2635, 8 June 1916, Page 5

Word Count
202

The Little Amber Bottle. Lake County Press, Issue 2635, 8 June 1916, Page 5

The Little Amber Bottle. Lake County Press, Issue 2635, 8 June 1916, Page 5