THE LITTLE AMBER BOTTLE IN WHICH DR. MORSE'S INDIAN ROOT PILES ARE PACKED. THE FAMILY MEDICINE OF THOUSANDS. There is no more familiar bottle than the little amber one, the contents of which minister alike to the rich and to the poor. It is to be found everywhere, apd where it goes once it stays. Thoussands of people are using Dr Morse’s Indian Root Pills, and their ever-in-creasing sales bear testimony to their merit and popularity. They are -the ideal family medicine. They keep the system in proper working order, cleanse the blood, and aid in the digestion and assimilation of food. The marvellous cleansing and healing properties of these Pills are no new thing. Thousands of people are using them, and those who have never tried them will find neighbours,, friends and relatives echoing and re-echoing their praise. They are the household remedy of millions, and their ever-increasing sale bears testimony to their merit and popularity. They are a purely vegetable remedy, carefully and- skilfully compounded solely by the proprietors, and are never manufactured except under their direct supervision. A dose or two of these Pills taken once or twice a week regulate the system perfectly. They are a positive and permanent cure for Biliousness, Indigestion, Constipation, Sick Headaches, Liver and Kidney Troubles, Piles, Pimples, Boils and Blotches, and for Female Ailments. St 55^ DIRECTIONS ADULTS TWO TO FOUR PULS CHILOREfI A HALF TO A WHOLE PILL OISSOLVED IN SWEETENED WATER. 7o betoken be/oneretiring. > l “The Excursion Journal,” published by T. Minami and Sons —the “Cooks” of Japan—is a sample of the enterprise that characterises the Japanese. This finely-illustrated periodical gives full details of the methods of travel in Japan and the facilities offered to visitors to see the wonders of the country. Among the facilities there is mentioned the fact that tourists arriving by Pacific steamers are allowed to travel free or at greatly reduced rates over the Government railways. On the Sanyo railways all trains except local ones are made up of fine corridor carriages, fitted with electric light and heated by steam, while each train carries several attendants to minister to the convenience and comfort of travellers. There are no fewer than seventeen electrical tramway companies in Japan —the first line to 'be constructed being that built in 1895 in Kyoto, eight miles in length. The totaL extent of electric tramlines now open is 120 miles, and there are 85 miles more in course of construction. “The Excursion Journal” is published in English. •Mr Orlando Kempthome has returned to Wellington after a fifteen months’ tour through the Orient. A SIMILE AND A MORAL.—“What the dustman is to the dwelling in which we live, that Hunyadi Janos is to the local habitation of the human spirit.” Thus writes a well-known medical writer* 8
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Mail, Issue 1746, 23 August 1905, Page 62
Word Count
466Page 62 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealand Mail, Issue 1746, 23 August 1905, Page 62
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