DO YOU HAVE INDIGESTION? Tonic Treatment is the Right Treatment—A Wellington Man who Conldn’t Eat a Meal Without Suffering Cured Hmiself. The surest way of curing those forms of . stomach trouble known as Indigestion is the tonic treatment. This treatment goes be- - hind the symptoms and cures the cause, i. Strength for the stomach is the one thing needed. Dr Williams’s Pink Pills, one altar each meal, give this strength. They are a tonic and positively strengthen and purify the blood. The renewed blood restores the digestive organs and gives relief that is permanent. The case of Mr George Taylor, of 128 Thugnco street, Wellington, proves this claim. He said: “Before 1 came here, when 1 was in Sydney, I began to suffer with Indigestion. , After a time I could eat very little owing to the bad pain I knew would follow, and . in consequent I got very run down and weak. . The complaint grew worse and I tried many remedies, but couldn’t get relief. I couldn't take an interest in anything. At - times my head would ache and the room seemed to be spinning round and round, and I had to clutch things for support. I used to go without food to relieve- myself of - the dreadful feeling in the etomach. My sleep at night was very short, and 1 used to lie awake and wait for the daylight to • come. One day my chum next to me at work asked me if I had tried Dr Williams’s Pink Pills. I thought I would try a box. At the end of the first box my appetite returned to me. I was delighted, and continued taking them till I felt well and fife again, and am now the picture of health and never have Indigestion after eating.” ' Dr Williams’s Pink Pills are 5s a box, «x boxes 16s 6d, of all dealers, or from the Dr Williams’s Medicine Co. of Australasia, Ltd., Wellington. As evidence of the' way some working men allow themselves to be-led away. w their own detriment, a case which has just happened in Timaru may .be cited (says the Tirriarn Herald). A worker who had been getting extra pay for night duty, temporarily, was advised by one of bis mates, when he returned to day work, to demand the same rate of pay for day work as for night. He foo’ishly followed this advise, with the result that he .was dismissed, and his job went to a son of the man who had - advised him to make the foolish and unreasonable demand. . . . The Free Press states that Miy David Milne, o! Bonhar. lost his best milk/oow on the 20tb inst., the animal - being killed ' some
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Otago Witness, Issue 3111, 29 October 1913, Page 61
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449Page 61 Advertisements Column 1 Otago Witness, Issue 3111, 29 October 1913, Page 61
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