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Winter Underwear for Women and 'Prudent women will see loathe Underwear%f themselves and tho Child- _ ren, for warm Underfvear will save much expense for medicine. Ladies' Creme Flannelette .Petticoats Ladies' Coloured Felt Petticoats at with embroidery at 3s lid. 4s 6d\fe 6d, 8s 6d. Ladies' Woven Bloomers in Navy, Children'^ Hand-knitted Petticoats, V.Grey, Black and Creme at 3s 6d, at 3s IMI and 4s 9d. w 5s 6d, 6s 6d, 8s 6d and, 9s 6d. Children's Hand-knitted Overalls at Ladies' Woven Nightdresses in pink 2s 4d. ' -, and natural at6s6d, 9s 6d, 10s 6d> Children's Hand-knitted Jackets at 125,6 d and 14s 6d. , 4s 6d, 5s 6d. Ladies' Creme Wincey Nightdresses, Children's Heavy Knitted Vests, long trimmed with real torchon lace at sleeves or short sleeves, sizes 1 to 17s 6d. 8. Prices "10-Jd fa> 2s 9.d. Combinations in Orerae and Natural Ladies' Woven dressing Jackets at at 3s lid, 4s lid, 5s lid, 7s 6d, 5s lid, Us Gd, 12s Gd, 14s 6d. 8s lid, 10s 6d, 12s (id, 13s 6d, and Ladies' Pyrreneam Dressing Gowns, itt s 6d-' ;- in all tho latest shades at 19s 6d, Woven Wolsey Spencers with long 25s and 27s 6d. sleeves at 4s 6d, 5s- 6d. ■-. Children's Wool and Silk Vests, long Woven Woollen Spencers at 3s 6d, or short sleeves at Is 3d to 2s (3d. and 4s 3d. Children's Woven Combinations, 2s Woven Spun Spencers, long sleeves, IIVI, 3s lid, 4s Gd and 5s 6d w a* ls ®$' Is lld > 2s 3d, 2s 6d. Children's Woven Bloomers in Creme " Qlsey Woven Vests, extra sizes at Navy and Grey, sizes 0 to 6, from „.6s 6d-; , XTT , 3s 6d to 5s 6d. l<ine-Ribbed Wool Vests, long sleeves Children's Creme Flannel Petticoats at Is lid and 2s Gd. at 3s 9d. Fine Woven Vests at ls, Is Gd, Is Children's Knitted Coloured Petti9d, Is lid, 2s 6d. < ;O ats at ls lid. • Navy Woollen Woven Bloomers at 6s Children's Machine-knitted Overalls, 6d, 7s , 6d, 8s 6d, 9s 6d. at Is lid. brey btockmette Bloomers, shapes Children's Knitted Gaiters, Bootees, bands at^3s 6d. and Jnfantees. Ladies' Creme Flannelette Petticoats Children's Knitted Hoods and Caps at 2s lld- ■•' at ls 3d, Is 6d and Is lid. ■valuS UL^rtaS^%? C^iOnn"y larS° "nd - WeW °WrtcdROBERTS . "■•■■. ■■.■! . ■ SATISFACTION STORE, A MEDICINE THAT IS BACKED BY HIGH MODERN MEDICAL TESTIMONY AND SUPPORTED fcV HALF A CENfTURY'S PRACTICAL EXPERIENCE IS WORTH YOUR ATTENTION. WILSON^ PILLS. $9 '■ . _■ .- ' ' -' ... ''" v'- ■''.>■' ' '"■ WILISNiS PILLS will NOT, cure all the Ills that flesfc-Ui heir to. No medicine that has ever been compounded can perform that miracle. Your experience, like ours, has been that the preparation which claims to cure ALL the ills is usually capable of curing NONE. It is claimed, however, for Wilson's Pifls that they will keep your blood and stomach in good order, or put them right if they happen to be wrong. In short, they are a SAFE AND SURE REMEDY FOB SUCH TROUBLES AS ARISE PROM THE BLOOD AND ' THE STOMACH, and, also act like magic in stimulating the liver and kidneys to healthy action. You know those "ordinary, every-day ailments which make life a.burden-^-Biliousness, Dyspepsia, Headache, Backache, Eczema, Boils, etc. 'All these things are susceptible to the remedy scientifically blended in the formula known as Wilson's Pills. In that formula there is nothing but Pure and Wholesome Drugs. There is not an atom of any harmful ingredient. There is not a particle of anything that is not actually an honest and essential ingredient. The whole pill is made up of honest medicine, so scientifically proportioned as to win from a prominent member of thejnedical profession the testimony that "it is the best balanced pill.formula he "had met with in the whole course of his practice." : 1_ . £ A LITTLE HISTORY. WILSON'S PILLS flats back to the days before the iron horse, to tho d»yi when there were no ' railways, and when the means of travel and communication were slow ana primitive. There are many old colonists who remember what an English village was like in those days—quiet, peaceful, secluded, practically Bhut oft from the'rest tif the world. There was no calling the doctor by telephone, no bicycle on wbich to jump if the telephone wasn't handy. And, most important of all, there'was very likely no doctor to do had, except from the nearest marked town. What more natural than that the village folks, thrown so largely upon their own resourced, made it their business to KEEP WELL I They went to Nature for their Medicine, and Nature, from her storehouse of medicinal roots and herbs, gave them many very wonderful medicines. It was under these circumstances that WILSON'S PILLS came to be compounded. Their secret was discovered by a clever old villager in the North o( England, and for years he went about among the villages curing the people of the common every-day ailments which befel them. His pills became the standard medicine of all who became acquainted with their remarkable curative properties, aid people used to wait for his coming and then bny a sufficient supply for use until the time fixed for his next visit to their neighbourhood. Fifty years ago these pills came under the notice of the Wilson family, and ever since they have been in regular use by the members of the family, their friends, and many of their employees. The original owner of the formula died many yean ago, and left his precions secret to his Bon, from whom Mr Samuel Wilson purchased the sole right to compound and sell this wonderful medicine. He brought hi 3 family out to the colonies, first to South Africa, then to Australia, and finally to this colony, where he settled as a country gentleman on his tfroperty," Cornholme," near Wanganui. Of course he brought the formula of the pills with him, and it is to his credit that while he refused to put them on the market he nevertheless spent much time and money in preparing them for free distribution among his friends and relatives in all parts of the world. He gave away many hundreds of boxes and frequently sent packages to England, France and Australia. But, although often asked to do so, Mr Wilson declined to pat the pills on the publio market. He was wrong, for no man has a right to withold a valuable medicine from his fellows, and Mr Wilson ultimately came to see it in that light. Unhappily, ii happened that on the very day (June 10th, 1907) on which he completed the necessary arrangements preliminary to placing the Pills on the market Mr Wilson met witb a trap accident in Victoria Avenue, Wanganui, and sustained injuries from which he succumbed a few hours afttrwards. H« had, however, made known his intentions to his wife, and that good lady did all In her power to facilitate the marketing of the pills. This is the history of WILSON'S PILLS, and it only needs to be added that the faith of Mr Wilson and bis family in their curative properties has been endorsed by high medical testimony as to the medicinal excellence of the formula. The Pills have been registered as " WILSON'S PILLS," and are now offered to the public at a price which brings them within easy, reach of everyone—l/ 7* per box. They are compounded of the purest inirredients, in faithful accord with the original formula, to which a pure sugar-coating has beon added. Eemember, then, that WILSON'S PILIi ia ALL MEDlClNE—medicine that has been proved by long years of experience, and approved by modern medical science. ;. ;■' DIRECTIONS AND LITERATURE WITH EACH BOX. READ IT. YOU CANNOT LEARN TOO MUCH ABOUT A GOOD THING. If you cannot get WILSON'S PILLS from your Chemist or Storefc»ager write direct to The Wilson Pill Coy., Ltd., Wanganuf, enclosing t 'j when aample box will be mailed to you by return. r^

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WC19110627.2.7.4

Bibliographic details

Wanganui Chronicle, Volume L, Issue 12768, 27 June 1911, Page 3

Word Count
1,314

Page 3 Advertisements Column 4 Wanganui Chronicle, Volume L, Issue 12768, 27 June 1911, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 4 Wanganui Chronicle, Volume L, Issue 12768, 27 June 1911, Page 3