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A WITNESS.

j SHE IS POSITIVE. " % _ ! When witnesses are examined, the court i insists thai they shall tell only what they ' know, not what they think or believe. Tune | and again the wandering witness is brought; hack to the point by the stern voice of the' judge. "Madam, we are not interested in.' what you think; we want to hear what you' actually know." There is no such troubleexperience;! with the worthy witnesses iof the cures wrought by Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills; (hey know what they are talking about, and what cured them. One of ilie-e now 'speaks. The evidence given by Mrs. E. Cant who resides at 338, Youngstreet, Annandale. Her experience is best related in her own word--, which are follow;;:— " 1 have been a sufferer from acuta indigestion. For five or six years I had a, pain in. -the chest, and thought I had filing trouble, and at times 1 raised blood. My husband, a railway employee, and a man at the works, recommended Dr. Morse's Indian Hoot Pills. T had tried many- other remedies, and &> veral doctors, but was unable to get rob .. I bought a bottle of Dr. Morses. Pills, ,-nd after taking half a bottle felt muck better. I continued taking them, and am entirely cured. I can -safely recommend them to all people suffering as, I was. I have lived here for fourteen year* and am well known, and am healthy and strong." 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 Ijd per bottle, or six bottles for 63 6d. Packed in amber bet' s and the full name blown thereon.

The Gardeners' Chronicle says that the' dahlia viridiflora is a perfectly double I flower, well formed, and of medium size, and pea-green in Dolour. Such is the green--flowered dahlia lately to be seen sit its best, in the herbaceous ground at Kew, the sealed of the receptacle represented by leaves. Some of the leaves of the Ceylon palm attain a length of twenty feet and the remarkable width of sixteen feet. The natives use them for making tents. The umbrella, 1 magnolia of Ceylon bears leaves that are so l»:rg8 that a. single one may sometimes-" serve as a shelter for fifteen or twenty persons.' ;,; " Could you lend me an egg, Mrs., Brown?" "No, my eggs are all preserved, and 1 know them by their taste." ".^J I '' well. Til use Tucker's Egg Fonder instead. . Wade's Worm Figs, the wonderful wormi worriers, are a safe and sure remedy; in i.3 boxes; sold everywhere. v That boy said what does a corner in eggs mean? Is that what they call squaring_ the circle She smilingly said: I don t wish to» know— me Tucker's Ess .Powder,

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19020501.2.16

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume XXXIX, Issue 11954, 1 May 1902, Page 3

Word Count
486

A WITNESS. New Zealand Herald, Volume XXXIX, Issue 11954, 1 May 1902, Page 3

A WITNESS. New Zealand Herald, Volume XXXIX, Issue 11954, 1 May 1902, Page 3