PEOPLE YOU KNOW.
-No. IV.— THE NURSE. Nurse Roberts writes "I cannot speak too highly of Dr Tibbles's Vi-Cocoa. My voungcst son, who has been feeling very badly, assures me that he feels much better and stronger since lie has taken Dr Tibbles's ViCocoa, and we shall continue to tise it. I find it has a pleasant flavour, and it is also the most sustaining and invigorating beverage I have ever met with. I shall have much pleasure in recommending Yi-Cocoa to my friends and patients, and you may use this testimony if you like." Dr Tibbles's Vi-Cocoa has become a household word, and this wonderful Food-beverage has come to take an important place in the dietary of the best regulated families. Dr Tibbles's Yi-Cocoa is a natural food, and by its merits alone — having been once fully and fairly placed before the public — it must become a national food, to the general advancement of British health and vigour. But the expense? You can try it free of expense. Merit alone is what is claimed for Dr Tibbles's Vi-Cocoa, and the proprietors are prepared to send to any reader who names the Otago Witness a dainty sample tin of Dr Tibbles's Yi-Cocoa free and post paid. There is no magic in all this It is a plain, honest, straightforward offer. It is done to introduce the merits of Vi-Cocoa into every home. Dr Tibbles's ViOocoa is not sickly or insipid like the ordinary cocoa extracts ; on the contrary, it has a pleasant and distinct flavour all • its own, and which is much liked. It has all the refreshing properties of fine well-made tea, but with a hundred times its nourishment. Dr Tibbles's Vi-Cocoa, in 8£d (i packets and Is Id and 2s 2d tins, can be obtained from all Grocers, Chemists, and Stores, or from Dr Tibbles's Vi-Cocoa (Limited), 269 George street, Sydney. Trooper White, of the first New Zealand contingent, has forwarded to his mother from Arundel a curiosity in the shape of a cheque for £50 on the Standard Bank of South Africa (Limited), drawn by a Boer. Sister Ruth received a cable from Adelaide on Thursday informing her of the death of her father on the previous clay. She lefb for her home by the Mokoia the same afternoon, and will probably lje absent about & month.
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Bibliographic details
Otago Witness, Issue 2397, 8 February 1900, Page 23
Word Count
389PEOPLE YOU KNOW. Otago Witness, Issue 2397, 8 February 1900, Page 23
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