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CUKE YOll INDIGESTION. " Some years ago, while living in Ballarat, my" constitution seemed to undergo a complete change. From a robust, healthy person, I became very weak and despondent. I attributed the change, to indigestion and biliousness, from' which I suffered severely. Mv digestive organs became, very weak, and could not perform their functions. I was also afflicted with seveie nervous headaches, from which I was hardly ever free, and life became a burden. I was almost afraid, at times, to walic. as giddiness would runic upon me, and I was in danger of falling down in the. street. I had a sharp pain in my left side, below the ribs, and was unable to get mv proper rest and sleep. I was going from bad to worse, when, fortunately for " |p J v,ils persuaded to try Warner's Safe Cure. I rom the very first a decided improvement look place. I continued taking the. medicine for some little time, getting better each clay. and. at last, (he pains entirely left mo." I could digest my food without difficulty, and was, once again, restored to health and strength." The above letter, from Mrs. A. Langlev 121. Chestnut-street, Jlichmnnd, V'i.' admirably illustrates Jhe wonderful curative effect of Warner's Safe Cure in cases of liver complaint and indigestion Warner's Safe Cure can be obtained from all chemists and storekeeper, both in the original form and in the cheaper "Concentrated, non-alco-holic form, each containing tho same number of doses. A descriptive pamphlet will be sent, post free, on applru tion. by H. H. Warner and Co., Ltd Melbourne.

A totara stump, which has remained intact while seven generations of men have perished, has heen secured for the Wellington museum. It is a stump with a history, which is thrilling enough, says the "Evening Post," but the chief interest lies in the well-de-fined impress of the stone implement. Notwithstanding the. long exposure and the decay which lias set in, the marks are still distinct in many parts of tho timber. So far as Mr Hamilton, the curator, is aware, the stump is the only specimen of its kiwi, showing the impress of tho ancient stone axe. Tho totara from which tho stump has come was a giant, nearly five feet in diameter. It was laboriously hacked down by one To Kai-whakaruaki, in the Opotiki district, Bay of Plenty, and he hoped to make himself a great canoe from the huge bole; but a common distraction of those days, a battle with a hostile tribe, drew him away from his canoe-making, and he was slain. His totara. became tapu, and was known as " the tree of Kai-whakaruaki." Long afterwards a Maori did have a notion to turn the timber to some account, and began cutting at it, but bad luck, attributed to the angry spirit of the dead chief, visited him. The totara was then allowed to lie untouched by man. The fact that tho upper scarf had not been removed from the trunk, and the under scarf had been canted off the ground, assisted in preservation of the log.

fg ~■.•■;<■* m **S $2 #?J. *V4 % I r/oifca^: &^ Sfc | Anyone canfbuy »om« lov-poced ] inferior grade' tea. put it up in a j fancy packet™and mark it 2/- per lb—or anvJCtfier price. I Is pure Ceylon and pure blended •'••tai. and you have a guarantee lof its Purity, Quality ~" J w ~ ! — lis It h-»c tho ijxj fn Is YEARS, irom 1879 to 1909. g>

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THD19091113.2.46.16.3

Bibliographic details

Timaru Herald, Volume XIIC, Issue 14056, 13 November 1909, Page 3 (Supplement)

Word Count
577

Page 3 Advertisements Column 3 Timaru Herald, Volume XIIC, Issue 14056, 13 November 1909, Page 3 (Supplement)

Page 3 Advertisements Column 3 Timaru Herald, Volume XIIC, Issue 14056, 13 November 1909, Page 3 (Supplement)