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DOAN’S Backache Kidney Pills. renewing— EMM it sparkle in the glass. See it dance for joy. There’s a glorious morning drink for you! There’s a welcome wakening for a sleepy head! ENO—first thing every morning! ENO kelps your system to carry out thoroughly and regularly that little dai y duty on which good health depends more than perhaps you realize. ENO keeps your blood flowing freelv and vigorously through your whole body. ENO helps to bring you good health ! And with good health, like sunshine after cloud, come freshness, cheerfulness and vitality I And though it acts so surely and beneficially ENO’S “ Fruit Salt ” does nothing that Nature herself would not approve—its purity and safety have been famous for over fifty years. Take a bottle home, and begin from tomorrow this go'den rule of healthy living! 2he wards ‘Eno' and ‘Fruit Salt ’ are registered as trade marks, SOLD EVERYWHERE IN TWO SIZES. £ate« Agents: The British Harold F, Ritchie & Co. of N.Z. Ltd, Good Eyesight is Essential for Good Work. .... Y OU cannot feel at your best if conscious of' some weakness in your vision or pain in the eyes. These unhappy conditions constitute a serious handicap, becoming daily more embarrassing and distressing. It is impossible to over-estimate the value in one’s daily work of good eyesight ! If your eyes are giving you trouble—even in the slightest degree—have them examined by Us. In ths majority of cases skilfully prepared Glasses will afford th. desired relief. Mtsb jm Consulting Opticians 93 George Street. * m & J ter. 4 Wi Hawaii is Calling You Answer her, and the most glorious experience of a lifetime is yours. Arrange to stay at least a week. Fascinating Honolulu with its varied native life and colour, surfing at countless beaches where the waters are always" warm, Kilauea Volcano and enchanting inter-island cruises, are but a few of tbe wondrous adventures that this Paradise of the Pacific holds for you. Honolulu, the Capital of Hawaii, is only ten days from New Zealand, Watch Steamship advertisements,for excursion rates. First-class accommodation from 15/- a day, including meals. Hear Hawaii’s “Aloha!” (Greetings). Scud ns your address and we will forward to yon descriptive booklets of the Hawaiian Islands, attractively illustrated in colour. w a W i % ?Z IttMl WeUlngtoa, Hawaii Tourist Bureau Dept. 5 G.P.O. Box 821 WELLINGTON. Graphic Pages from New Zealand’s Early History i A GREAT COLONISER: | The Rev. Dr. THOMAS BURNS 1 Pioneer Minister ol Otago, New Zealand, and nephew of the poet Robert Bums. By the Rev. Dr. £. N. Merrington, Master of Knox College, Dunedin. In this book the author traces the interesting lifestory of the Rev. Dr. Thomas Burns. It is an important contribution to the history of colonisation, which has been called “ the romance of the nineteenth century." The letters of Burns-to Cargill, written during the, four years which followed the Scottish Disruption, now published for the first time, reveal the apparently insurmountable obstacles which confronted the leaders of the proposed Scottish enterprise, and the spirit in which the difficulties were finally overcome. The book describes the voyage of the pioneers, the hardships of the early days, the successful establishment of the church, the school, the town of Dunedin, and the province of Otago. HEAR WHAT THE REVIEWERS SAY OF THIS NOTABLE BOOK. The N.Z. Herald (which devotes two columns to its review): The personality stands revealed with a wealth of background, and the book is more than a * life.’ An important branch of New Zealand pioneering is drawn with scholarly hand and a nice sense of the obligations that rest upon a historian.” The Evening Post:——" Dr. Merrington' ... has endeavoured, and that with outstanding success, to show not only what a remarkable man the Rev. Thomas Burns was, but also what he did, * with his coat off,' so to speak, in laying the foundations of the British settlement of New Zealand.” The Evening Star:—" Dr. Merrington has done' a fine piece of work. . . This admirably written hook is more than a life of Dr. Burns and the development of tke Presbyterian Church. It is a valuable addition to the history of the founding of the city of Dunedin and the province of Otago.” The Christchurch Times;—” What this carefully written book is about is the Rev. Thomas Burns’s activities in the founding of the Scots Presbyterian settlement of Otago, He seems to have been a Godley and a Selwyn, of Canterbury fame, combined.” The Auckland Star:—” The story is a moving, enthralling, and refreshing one. . . . Every son of Otago will take pride in reading this' book, but it will interest many other New Zealanders." ... No Public Library, no'School Library, no Private Library is complete without a copy of this book. NOW ON SALE (with illustrations). Price 7/6 (postage 4d extra). Address orders to Manager Otago Daily Times and Witness Co,, P.O. Box 181, Dunedin, or ask your Bookseller. it A rolling stone gathers no moss but— A business with tbe impetus of Advertising gathers profit! Advertise! And Gather Profit

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ODT19300301.2.23.3

Bibliographic details

Otago Daily Times, Issue 20964, 1 March 1930, Page 6

Word Count
1,151

Page 6 Advertisements Column 3 Otago Daily Times, Issue 20964, 1 March 1930, Page 6

Page 6 Advertisements Column 3 Otago Daily Times, Issue 20964, 1 March 1930, Page 6