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D.I.G. Saddle Tweeds Are Best for Men of the Saddle, Many a “man on the land” has often wondered “Where can I buy better‘Saddle Tweed Trousers?” The answer is positive: “D.1.C.!” . ‘At the & ~1 B vool — B Hr wool ■ rJE know ■ would ;cds. | There is no question about D.I.C. Saddle Tweeds —they are made in the Dominion from Dominion grown wc perchance some of your sheeps’ goes into the weaving and you the quality and staple are just what make the strongest and best Saddle Tweeds. That is the kind that goes into D.I.C. Saddle Tweed Trousers further the tweeds arc cut, made up and finished in the factory where the tweeds were made—the very soundest workmanship and material goes into every pair. Any size from 3 to 7 can be had—yours among them— and what is worth knowing, it costs you nothing for carriage—the D.I.C. Pays Postage. Write to-day for a pair of these strong All Wool N.Z. Made Saddle Tweed Trousers. Colours: Greys, Browns, and Fawns. Sizes 3 to 7. Price#, 19/11, 21/-, 23/6 POSTAGE PAID. D.I.C. Box 1478 Wellington HE 3'i CHEAP LINES NOW BEING CLEARED AT Radford’s Furnishing Sale Duchesso Chests — From 375. fid. Roll-top Desks— £8 Bs. Couches — From 255. Music Stools— 15s. 6d. Washstands— From 12s. 6d. Carpet Squares— From 12s. 6d. Sideboards— From £3 15s. Carpet Runners — From Is. yard. Wardrobes— From £3 10s. Oilcloths— From Is. 9d. yard. Chesterfields — From £5 ss. Linoleums— From Is. 9d. yard. Door Mats — From Is. each. Hearth Bugs— From 2s. fid. each. Fenders— From ss. 63. ALL FURNISHING IRONMONGERY AT REDUCED SALE PRICES. CROCKERY ALL REDUCED TO CLEAR. High-back Chairs — From 10s. fid. Cane Chairs — fis. fid. Rattan Chairs — • 10s. fid. Hall Stands— 17s. fid. RADFORD’S COMPLETE FURNISHING IMEUOUSE, 43, 45, and 47 MANNERS ST., WELLINGTON.

Masonic Hotel, Blenheim. rjlHB MABONIO offers to permanent and transient Quests excellent Accommodation combined with Moderate Ta iff. H. J. Kirkwood, Ppoorletop, The Great National Remedy For more than twenty years Ur. Morse’s Indian Root Pills have been before the Australasian public, gaining each year in popular esteem, and each year showing a large increase in the sales uu'il now nearly One million bottles are so!d annually. Very often medicines appear on the market and for a short time have a popular vogue, for just what reason it is difficult to say, not having any genuine merit, but the public soon finds this out, and they soon disappear and are never heard of again. When a remedy like Dr. Morse’s Indian Root Pills for twenty years shows a constantly increasing sale, it indicates the solid confidence the public have in it. No exaggerated claims have been urged for them. No attempt lias been made to induce the public to believe they had any miraculous power, but on all occasions the idea has been presented that they were simply a good Pill In every sense of the word. They are based on a sound formula, and made by men of experience,' and the ingredients are in such quantities and proportions as best to perform the special objects they are intended to accomplish. The peculiar climate of New Zealand and the mode of living is such that the Liver gets out of order quicker than any other organ of the human system, and when the Liver does not do its duty, the whole system is disarranged. A remedy that reaches the Liver Is what New Zealanders want, and they know after twenty years' use that Dr. Morse’s Indian Root Pills always act on the Liver, regulating and toning the entire system. It Is this simple fact that make's Dr. Morse’s Indian Root Pills a household necessity throughout the length and breadth of this Great Island Continent with a sale larger than any other remedy south of the Equals

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PGAMA19180308.2.56.2

Bibliographic details

Pelorus Guardian and Miners' Advocate., Volume 30, Issue 19, 8 March 1918, Page 8

Word Count
636

Page 8 Advertisements Column 2 Pelorus Guardian and Miners' Advocate., Volume 30, Issue 19, 8 March 1918, Page 8

Page 8 Advertisements Column 2 Pelorus Guardian and Miners' Advocate., Volume 30, Issue 19, 8 March 1918, Page 8