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INDIGESTION.

FOUND DR. MORSE'S INDIAN ROOT PILLS EFFECTIVE OTER TRYING MANY SOCALLED CURES, SAYS WELLINGTON LADY.

"I have much pleasure in testifying to the great value p,nd inestimable qualities of Dr. Morse's Indian R-oot Pills" writes Mrs E. WUmot, of Devon Street, Wellington, "for the cure of indigestion and flatulenco, from which distressing complaints 1 suffered for a lengthy period. Finding no relief in the many patent ami home remedies I tried, until, your Indian Root Pills were brought under my notice, and am pleased! to acknowledge with sincere thanks' my complete cure after a. course of treatment. I can safely recommend them to other sufferers. . For myself I would not rest without a bottle of Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills in the house. I am now trying your Nerve and Bone Liniment with very sati> : factory results."' The first essential to good health is. sound digestion. If, however, your food does not digest and assimilate, it • causes pain and, sickness, oreating flatulency, palpitation, sour stomach, and inevitably causes constipation, headache, and | nervousness. That Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills are a, valuable remedy is well illustrated in the above case.

Ten sheep to the acre and on grass paddocks is (remaa'ks the Auckland Herald) usually regarded? in New Zealand as a farmer's fable, but with no special form of intensive cultivation, except top-dk'essing with dred flax, it ist a fact, on. the lands nes--r Tokoma'ru,' oWhedj by Messrs Seifert .Bros., the well-known flax manufacturers. Not only that,, but it is a further fact, on the authority of one of the firm, thiat atpresent, ten sheep to the acre are unable to copo with the fast growing pastures, an<l the scytheblade and mower have- to be brought in, in order to keep the areas fairly clear for their fkix beds. The reason advanced for the prolific growth of. grass is that the dust from the dried flax, replenished at short intervals.-., provides a most valuable manure.

At the Sydney Grammar School prize-giving th© other day, the headmaster had something to say about Australian manners. "There is one service," he said, "which the schools can render this State at the present time. Our social lifo just now suggests the danger of a general deterioration in manners—a danger that people may mistako rudeness of conduct for the ijtst expression of a spirit of independence. It seems to nto that the schoolmasters and mistresses of this country should devote themselves to a conscious and specific effort towards education in manners. You can't teach manners from a book of etiquette. You need in teachers a! personality which will infuse into the' pupils, a modesty andj good form which seems to consist in the avoidance of unnecessary offence in word or Vfeed to one's neighbor."

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MEX19120116.2.40

Bibliographic details

Marlborough Express, Volume XLVI, Issue 13, 16 January 1912, Page 7

Word Count
459

INDIGESTION. Marlborough Express, Volume XLVI, Issue 13, 16 January 1912, Page 7

INDIGESTION. Marlborough Express, Volume XLVI, Issue 13, 16 January 1912, Page 7

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