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REPUTATION I BUILT UP BY YEARS OF CONSISTENT SERVICE. i j To-day Dr. Morse’s Indian Root Pills stand | higher in public estimation than ever before, j. and have the reputation of being second to | none. This is a big thing to say of a small | pill, but is nevertheless a fact, and the reason for it is | because the public know by long experience that these pills | always can be relied upon, which is contrary to the ex : | perience of most medicines that are popular for a time and j then forgotten. The demand for Dr. Morse’s Indian Root [ Pills is steiVlily increasing. No amount of advertising 1 could sustai/i such a demand unless the article possessed | the qualities claimed. Exaggerated claims are not inade | for P r - Morse’s Indian Root Pills, the object of the | proprietors all the time being to present them to the j public as an everyday household medicine. For nearly a century j D f* Morse’s Indian Root Pills have been in use as a remedy for liver ■ tvt lll6ll * s a * the cause. They open the ducts and allow the | Bile to flow, aiding and assisting Nature, not in any degree superseding or j weakening the natural functions. A pill occasionally produces regularity j and good health, and, with reasonable care regarding overtaxing the | digestive organs with either food or drink, a healthy condition can be I maintained. This is the secret of good health in man, woman and child, jj and there is no getting away from it. II Made in New Zealand, By New Zealandert. For New Zealanden.

“A STEADY STREAM” RESPONSE TO ADVERTISEMENT IN’ THT; “STAR.” A/TESBES BOOTH, MACDONALD AND aerted a “Wanted Advertisement in the "Star" (cm* insertion and one adwtuemon* only) for lour threshing machine hand*. Th* result k told by the firm's manager u Jqj. kum:— At the time and place mentioned fa fhe advertisement there were over a Dozen Applicants, from which the required quota was selected. and A —• STEADY STREAM OP APPJjI CANTS WERE TURNED AWAY RIGHT UP TO MIDDAY, THE MORAL OP THIS IS PLAIN—IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE IN THE “STAR.”

A lady , observed a small boy sprinkling sawduit on the ice to" prevent pedestrians falling. “That’s real benevolence,” declared the good lady* “No, ’tain’t,” growled the boy In, dignantly, “it’s sawdust!” “ I am sensible of the honour you do me, Mr Mitchell, in the proposal’ of marriage you have just made,” said the young lady, “but circumstances over which I have no control compel me to decline the honour.” “What are those circumstances?” demanded the young man. “Your circumstances Mr Mitchell.”

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TS19190925.2.13.4

Bibliographic details

Star (Christchurch), Issue 12754, 25 September 1919, Page 2

Word Count
437

Page 2 Advertisements Column 4 Star (Christchurch), Issue 12754, 25 September 1919, Page 2

Page 2 Advertisements Column 4 Star (Christchurch), Issue 12754, 25 September 1919, Page 2