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SWALLOWING.

Swallowing a sword is a trick not conducive to health or longevity. ; ; Bub it is not more injurious than the hasty swallowing of half-masticated food washed down by gulps of tea or water. Hasty eating is the fall of health. Sooner or later it must result in indigestion, or some other form of stomach disease. For the cure of the diseases of the stomach, and allied organs 'of digestion, there is no medicine so effective as Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills. Mr. Vine is a well-known greengrocer, residing in Deni-; son-street, Kingston, Sydney. He has a few words to say about his suffering and cure. " For some considerable time," he said, "I have had a bad set to with acute indigestion, which at last took me to a doctor. The pains would catch me sharply in j the pit of the . stomach, and with • such severity that when the doctor told me what my complaint was I could scarcely believe him, thinking that indigestion could never use a man so badly. His advice and medicine, however, did me no good, and I was advised by friends to try different remedies. | I followed this one's advice and that; but my complaint was still as bad as ever, when I resolved to give Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills a trial, as I had heard them praised so much by many I knew who had used them. From the first dose they acted very well upon me, giving me more relief than anything I had ever taken, and I can recommend them to all who suffer as I have done." Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills are a perfect blood purifier, and a p6sitive cure for biliousness, indigestion, constipation, headaches, sallow complexion, liver and kidney troubles, piles, pimples, boils and blotches, and female ailments. Sold by chemists and storekeepers, Is 3d per bottle, or six bottles 7s. , Sole proprietors, The W. H. Comstock , Co., Limited (Australasian Depot), 58, Pitt-street, Sydney. Packed in amber bottles, and the full name blown thereon.: ; .

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19010723.2.7

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 11712, 23 July 1901, Page 3

Word Count
337

SWALLOWING. New Zealand Herald, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 11712, 23 July 1901, Page 3

SWALLOWING. New Zealand Herald, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 11712, 23 July 1901, Page 3