BISURATED MAGNESIA GIVES QUICK RELIEF FROM INDIGESTION, When you havo oafcon too much or too fast, when "you feel so full and distended to breathe, and your heart pounds because of the pressure against it just take two or throe little tablets of Bisurated Magnesia with a sip of hot water. You will K et relief at once, and the trouble vri cn f' rro ly disappear in a fow minutes. y\Jiat else could give such quick relief from indigestion, gastritis, and dyspepsia caused by the presenco of an excess acid in the stomach? Now, when Bisurated Magnesia oomes into contact with acid, whether in tho stomach or elsewhere, there is only one thing that can possibly happen—the acid is neutralised, nullified, counteracted. Tho component elements of Bisurated Magnesia are as violently opposed to acid as are light to dark, heat to cold, death to life. And that is why you obtain relief, and that is also a very potent reason why, if you are suttenng from ailments arising from aciditv, J ° bfcam a TOcka °f Bisurated iahlets from your nearest ohemist to-day. .then you can eat a hearty meal composed ?J;n! whl ?! 1 Previously have disagreed with you m the full knowledge that your sour stomach troubles are over, and you will soon be able to say to your friends: ,a » " Bisurated Magnesia is one of the best remedies for Indigestion, and is also obtainable m powder form.—Advt.
Belts that |l ja-B "take you there |§ and back" with i| pf no trouble— f§ §[ "RHBLSY' j I JTbelts. | — j se > "Pedley" and you will |§| ~ j prove the superiority of this E5 — best British belt. == AL^i s^ SE^ L T " em! DTAGrO WITNESS.—New stories. A iar«»e amount of reading matter. Price, 6d
REDMILL I COCOA j You are sure to like it. Everybody does, once i they try it. " Redmill " has the true chocolate j flavour, has valuable dietetic qualities, is easily ! digested, /.and is absolutely pure. Perfectly soluble. Half a teaspoonful is all that is needed. j Your grocer will supply it. Ask for "Redmill." j MILNE, BREMNER, LTD., Wholesale Agents, Dnnedin. j How I Learned at Home to Make My Own .Dresses' By Ellen Purdy Clarke A Grand FREE Offer Yesterday, after lunch, I had just slipped my new blue one-piece dress, and was getting ready to go down town, when tho door-bell, rang, and who should it be but Janet Whitelaw. Janet used to live next door, but they moved to a little place in v tho and I hadn't seen her for Perhaps it was because we used to go on all ou- shopping- expeditions together; but anyway, the first thing Janet exclaimed / as she stood in the door was, "Oh! Ellen, •''► V tell me where in the world did you get </ ' k v "\ that lovely dress?" v \ y <V , v . \ 'I'll give you three guesses," I said, / ' , j ' \ and I fairly bubbled with joy when e>he > N named the three most exclusive and ex- / " - It\ 1 pensive shops in town. : ' '"V / I "Wrong every time," I announced. "I < ' " \&f - - j made it myself." V ; _ "But, Ellen!" she fairly gasped, "made J it yourself! How, when, where did you - ever learn? You never used to sew a From a photo h V Tristram. stitch 1" "T j-j 10,000 women and girls have already learned . , ,7 nOW ' I dl dn t; but I made this dress to mako their own clothes by this new just the same, and only this, but so P lan > ancJ 3' ou will also be pleased to know many others, that I have more clothes *hey also teach millinery if you than I ever had before; and, if you please, woul( l prefer to make your own hats. You i° , the bank that 1 saved on see > i(; doesn't make the slightest- difference my clothes this season." whero you live—in city, towns, or in the "Well tell mo n,;„ • , , country—all learn with the same success me thls minuto how you as if they were together in a classroom. Isn't it wonderful? , I went to the wardrobe, and came "Well, I took it up, and I soon realised back Wit h nja -arjxrfu l of dainty things that how easy it is to learn without leaving tonishmpnf 111 wlde -ey e d as- borne. Every step is explained so clearly, n snment. and there arc h unc Jreds of illustrations that "To begin with," I said, "this dre*s I r°J exaC I t J y w | lat l to ? 0 ' Wh J> little havo on is an exact reproduction of" an .. y °°w understand it. It was so fasciexclusive model I saw in a shop window " ? 1 wantcd *° Ssend every spare marked £9. It cost me exactly 64s for the ° n my easy tramin «- materials, and I think they are really of "I didn't think about it at first but dress thlt l!.nlr • f f°' S an - ovenin ff after a bit 1 realised that- in learning to T«» Jack says is the prettiest thing make up my own clothes I was also leainI ever wore. I qp.med it from a fashion ing something that I could turn to profit th ° exactly l f 1 CVCT wa " ted t0 " Sin! Ten I W . Ihen I havo made two house dresses, found that numbers of women and trirls r?n/h;n^ r °*w a T p f tticoat ' and under- have taken up dressmaking as a business lothing, that I saved altogether more than and some of them havo opened shops and £2 on. Besides, I've made threo school are doing well." P dresses for Betty, and all her little under garments. Jack would not believe I could , J ane ' broke in right here. "Ellen do it, but when I showed him my bank , ' 3 wonderful! Tell me how I can took and how much I had saved on clothes lcarn all about myself." in such a little time he said, 'Ellen, you're T , a wonder! You've never had such clothes A -! cr , lf silc would send —and to have them for less than vou ever « } Associated School of Dressmaking, spent before." Sydney, and would say that she was most mterested in learning Dressmaking or But you haven't told me yet," insisted | Wlm , ery at Homs . that they would send Janet, where you learned." by return post, absolutely without "W»ll i- , , charge, all particulars of the marvellous Well, then, listen, and you shall hear. Associated System. And if you, my dear "About four months a CO I read in a ™°! ld 't® to know rfloro newspaper about a school of dressmakino' ol lu j Ve more and prettier that had developed a Wonderful new Dlan T a , n f ,- iavo mor -e.V. as lam doing, through which one could leam Dressmaking L; SUS you ;. to °' write promptly, at Home in spare time Z VaH Z ' Ur ° ? h ° Daily idea to me, but I Itemm to h l tat °- whether yoa are Mrs much it would mean if I could mat ° W ° C -mediately, as otherwise e told Sr how 6r * * u re l' and J ust Millinery and send your name ant addresl told exactly how you could learn every NOW to the ASSOCf VI'ED SCHOOL OW step, even though you had no experience DRESSMAKING, 20 r< an b CITa Ho .°f whatever. \\hy think, Janet, more than 295-8 Elizabeth Street, Sydney
rThe Inimitable Grace J ffW which dutinguishes the woman with a ! beautiful figure I can be yours, too if ! < I7"X you wear a Warner's Corset. ft If B \ besides moulding the figure on fashionable f 'IP I 11111 lines, give the wearer the true freedom of ¥(0 /l M§|s movement and a sense of absolute comfort. Obtainable in back and front lacing. ' fej Sffl Guaranteed not to Rust, Break or Tear. : 0 Wholesale Agents: ROSS & OLENmNIN□"(LTD.), DTOEDIIf,
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Otago Daily Times, Issue 18032, 4 September 1920, Page 13
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1,312Page 13 Advertisements Column 1 Otago Daily Times, Issue 18032, 4 September 1920, Page 13
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