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INDIGESTION.

Dr Williams' Pink Pills Cure with. Rich Red Blood,

Every case of indigestion, nn matter howbad, can be cured by Dr Williams' Piulc Pill*. Not only cured, but cured lor good. Thafr. a -sweeping --taternenl. and you are quite right in demanding evidence to back it. And it is backed by evidence ni plenty — living evidence am ing- your own neighbours.

Ask thorn, and they w ill tell you oi dozens in your own district who limo been cured by Dr Williams' Pink Pills of dizzine 1-*.1 -*. palpitation, biliousness, sour stomach, sick headaches, and the 'nternal pains of Indigestion.

Dr Williams' Pink PjIU cure because they strike straight ot the root of all stomach trouble. They actually make new pure- red blood. And new blood is just v\har the stomach needs to =et it right and gi\c it strength for its work. The first box; o>- two will give- you a wor.dorful appetite.

"A year ago I was a maityr to a bad stomach." said Mr Joseph Wihon an honest old garebner, who has lived for 20 years at Te Aroha. near Auckland. ''A strange thing about my iliae-s was that it affected my eyes lir^t. It -tart?d with a thumping,^ throbbing pam in my nead, rjoht between* the eyes. Sometimes it nearly blinded me. If I took a mouthful of food, a cutriit" pain soon catight iv-e at the end of the- lucast.bone. Often the pain seemed to go =t;aight through my lung*. My head used to ac-be by the hour, and every morning I p,ot up heavy and drowsy with a horrible brassy, taste in my mouth.

"Of course. I couW it eat. and 1 lost weight, ily cioth-e? were iike bags on me," Mr Wilsou went on to .->ay "When I stood up after lying down, a strange feeling would com© in my i.eck, and my head would swim with dizziness*. Ofl^n I've nearly fainted in the street. Every little while I hvd a bilious attack. Just before it came on I would grow cold all ovur. and great hea\y beads of perspiration vrould stand ov my forehead. After it was o\er I would ~hi\er and shake and feel as weak aa n kitten

'I fe-it -,o ipi^orabli> and down-hearted, that I didn't care v. hclier I lived or died. Still I wfiit on taking all <;ort-> of medicines. I wasted many a pound this way before I read about- other caso^ hko niir.-p that were' cured by Dr William*' Pink PiIK I made up my mind to she them a fair trial, so I got a supply. To my dcJ'glic ilie fir=+ box ga\e me a womlorful appetite Fiom that on ovory dc.~-e did m<* good. Soon I was fee-ling a? healthy and strong as a mart twenty ye3rs 3oungcr Xou mj- tligestion is perfect, thank* entirely to Dr Williams' Pink Pills "

Di William-" Pink Pill- cured iJr Wilson* Indigestion because thoy went down to tlio root of the trouble in Ins blood. That is why They never fail. Bad blood ia the oau«e of all common diseases like anaemia (bioodle-^nesi), eczema, paleness, headaches, neuralgia, sciatica, rheumatism, lumbago, general weakness, and the special ailments that only women folk know. Badblood i« the one cause, and Dr Williams' Pink Pills are the one cure, becau?© they uoiually n \ke new blood. Thoy do jusfc' one thing, but they do it well. They don't bother with mere symptoms. They don't; cure for a day— they cure for srcocL Do not take any pills without the full pame, " Dr Williams' Pink Pills for Pale- People," orJthe wrapper round the box, and rein-ember that they ovs always in boxes, never in." bottles. Sold by all chemists and s>tore-k«epe-rs, or sent p<yst free by the Dr "Williams' Medicine Co., Old Custom House street. Wellington, at 3s a box. cr six boxes for 16s 6d-. Medical advice given free.

The War Hong of the Greek*. TO THE JEIUTOR.

Sir, — One of your subscribars some time | ago asked through the medium of the Witness ! if anyone could give him the words of this , song. I informed him, through your columns, j where I had seen it (quoting one verse), not being aware at the time that I had it in the" house. In looking over "Bell's Standard Elo- | cubionist" the other day I found the words, which I herein enclose, if not too late to be of use. — I am, etc., j

D. Murray, Bay View road, South Dunedin, March 3.

—War Song of the Greeks. (By Barry Cornwall.) — Awake! 'tis the terror of war! The crescent is tossed on the-wind ; But our flag flies on high like the perilous Star of the Battle. Before and behind, Wherever it glitters, it darts bright death Into tyrannous hearts. Who are they that now Bid us be slaves? They are foes to the good and the free. Go, bid them first fetter the might of the waves !^ The sea may be conquered, But we have spirits untameable still, And the strength to be free — and the will! The Helots are come; In their eyes proud hate and fierce massacre burn ; They hate vs — but shall they despise? They are come; shall they ever return? Oh, God of the Greeks, from Thy throne look down, 'And -we'll conquer alone! Our fathers — each man was a god, . His will was a lav/, And the sound of his voice, like a spirit's was worshipped : He -trod, and thousands fell ~ worshippers round ; I*rom the gates of the West to the sun, he bad°

, — And his bidding was done. And we — shall -we die in our chains,. -Who once were as free as the wind? Who is it that threatens? — who is it arraigns? 'Are they princes of Europe or Ind? Are they kings to the uttermost pole? — They are dogs, with a taint on their soul!

Petty thieving appears *to be carried on to 'a great txtent on steamers engaged in the intercolonial trade, and robberies are not infrequent. A lady who arrived in Riverton recently from Melbourne states that she lost a -valuable brooch, taken from a drawer in 'h&c cabin, while several other ladies had similar losses. A gentleman on the same boat was relieved of £30. — Western Star.

"' We were- never meant to sleep in houses as we do," says Nures Maude, of the Sanatorium for Consumptives at New {Brighton, Ohristchurch. "Animals don't, plants don't, primitive man didn't. We ihaTO taken tipon ourselves to make- a new law of Nature, that man must sleep shut up in a house, and as might be expected hare made a bad law, and have to pay the penalty for it."

"If we could eliminate the lahour agitator," said Mr W. Cable^at a banquet to Mr G. T. Booth afc Ohristchurch last week, "the work of the Arbitration Court would be almost infinitesimal." He jocularly' suggested the' removal of labour agitators to some- island " a hundred miles from nowhere," where they oould their own living. Then employers here would live in peace with mankind.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/OW19050308.2.219

Bibliographic details

Otago Witness, Issue 2660, 8 March 1905, Page 69

Word Count
1,175

INDIGESTION. Otago Witness, Issue 2660, 8 March 1905, Page 69

INDIGESTION. Otago Witness, Issue 2660, 8 March 1905, Page 69

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