ilt's in the wriggle and twist, the laugh and the dimples. When baby is thin, pale, lifeless and weak, we say it is " delicate." : ,When it is rickety and has crooked legs or some other form of curvature, we say: " Poor little thing." When it is scrofulous we are afraid it can't live. We use all sorts of expressions and forget the remedy. is as good to-day for babies as it was a quarter ]^^MJJsjl^ °* a century ago. Nobody has equalled it yet and probably never will. It has so many beneficial /^^^^S^ effects that even comparatively well babies show WWW^M * m P r <> v ement after taking it. Ask any mother who fplilf ' * ias ever tr * e^ fr> or as^ y° ur doctor. Both will JBipiiß; ' praise it. Baby will love the taste of it, and you will soon see the dimples, the laugh, the twist and the wri gg le i and know what they mean. Trade Mark Ssott & Bowne, Ltd. , London. All Chemists.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/OW18981103.2.152.1
Bibliographic details
Otago Witness, Issue 2331, 3 November 1898, Page 55
Word Count
166Page 55 Advertisements Column 1 Otago Witness, Issue 2331, 3 November 1898, Page 55
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