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Eat less meat, . vifCr J ■ Make vegetables appetising I and increase their nutriment m by serving them vvith one or i other of the delicious sauces ?> made with Brown & Poison's jig Com Flour. It has great thickening % power, and every atom of it gg is so pure that it does not w cover up the delicate flavour m > of the sauce. L m p a ßrown & Poisons^ 1 Corn Flour [ — makes also puddings that are nourishing and delicious ; and * nutritious savouries that will | take the place of meat and g m cost less. - W Free.— The Brown & Pol- L son book of recipes from J. T W\ B. Gilfillah <&» Co., P. O. Box b y 848, Aucklatid. Write for L a copy to-day. p3 jr^rwrr» k as When the unexpected visitor calls, you need make no apology for having "nothing to eat" with afternoon tea if there is a tin of Aulsebrooks I Khaki I I Biscuits I m the house. | I =_ I Ladies Love these Dainty Biscuits ;: ■ I ■ ■ '■) - -■■■. ; j Ask for 1 Khaki Biscuits 1 37 1 Soothes <C \Js^ throat<s.lxings |^SK« *~~" <^™™-i"«S * lIRISH MOSS Fo*. over hail a oonttiry | != s£ : £~~r=a ' Bonning ton's Irish Moss (sSrnߣsSeSd {.. has been made by careful, |j~a.~-.~ : T.-*ad fully qualified chemists, l^^^^fesra That's -s^hy it is always the ISwKg" ;r ~- ge j • nine— quick. and Bore m iwAm oaring cooghsjand colds. ■■""""■■§■ 3onniigton's Irish Mbss eared ooagbs and colds over I^Hk^ SO years ago— many a prei^B^P^ lent day grandmother was ■^^Kgv .o tired by "Bonning ton's" B^^^^ when a girl! Mrs. J. C. Euf>WSfrf sell, Severn Street, Oamarn B*"*^ writes:— "l can remember ■v) Bonnington'a Irish Moss JT ' for,^o'yearß. It was used j by mother for me as a -»■• child, and now I use it m my own home for my children I consider it the best remedy that can be * t»ed." Avoid _ „' _ « imitations — mj^ sist on Conning- AHf£jf WN ton's. Free from f^^tZkA lV(\ l^^rl opiates or harm- |^^ i\\vJrp^") fnl dru XK 8 > there I i> nothing to I li-^f'4^r eqnal it for W^^fe Mi I . :T young and old. W **5^ "The Best Investment ' I Ever Made." Vigorous, healthy folk simply cannot imagine what a horror, what a death-in-lifo Indigestion can be. They speak lightly of it! "I think, l have a tonch of Indigestion," they say ; or " poor Mrs. So-and-So has aome trouble with her stomach." "A touch," or "some trouble," forsooth! Of all the ills that afflict humanity none causes such an ocean of misery as Indigestion. 'Mrs., E. Davies realised this to the full, as so many others have done, through painful experience. „ Read her story and you will • understand why 'she'reßfdrds the purchase of ' lier first bottle of. Mother Seigel's Syrup as "the best investment I ever made." Here it is : — **5 Woides Avenue, Hurstville, N.S.W. " EJor a long and dismal period, which was the unhappiesi time of my life, I was a disconsolate unit m the great army of confirmed Dyspeptics. As a, consequence of not being able to digest and assimilate sufficient nourishment my strength and energy ebbed steadily and dwindled away to zero. I became excessively nervous and depressed m spirits, and was unable to sleep or rest at night. My whole system was unstrung, run down, and out of order, and I suffered from She most distressing and uncomfortable symptoms after eating. It is now almost a year back since I was induced to try Mother Seigel's Syrup. When I bought the first bottle I thought it might prove a waste of money, but it turned out to be about the best investment I hctee ever made, for, m buying (hat bottle, I also purchased the first instalment of renewed health. I felt the benefit >£ every dose, and as 1 continued to übc it ill the weaknesses, pains and impairments irere gradually overcome, until m less time ihan I could Lave thought euch a transition jossible, I was transformed from an ailing lebilitated dyspeptic into a perfectly hale tnd hearty individual." When you need the help of a stomach and iver tonic get the best— the world's Ilemedy -Mother Seigel's Syrup, which has prpved . (self m thousands upon thousands of cases.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PBH19170703.2.73.1

Bibliographic details

Poverty Bay Herald, Volume XLIV, Issue 14340, 3 July 1917, Page 7

Word Count
698

Page 7 Advertisements Column 1 Poverty Bay Herald, Volume XLIV, Issue 14340, 3 July 1917, Page 7

Page 7 Advertisements Column 1 Poverty Bay Herald, Volume XLIV, Issue 14340, 3 July 1917, Page 7

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