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And its foe To the person who is bilious, life is practically a burden. The sleep h troubled, a bitter taste remains in the mouth; the tongue is often furred; theic is a sudden dizziness when arising from a sitting or stooping position, and while the bowels may be loose and natural one day, constipation is present the next. All this is brought about by the natural sewers eof the bod> © becoming clogged up and the bile denied its rightful channel, is turned into the blood. It may, and often does, lead to the most dangerous forms of disease, as when suffering from biliousness one's body is much mora susceptible to the lodgment of disease than when in its normal stated Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills are the foe to Biliousness. <

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WHDT19410620.2.27.5

Bibliographic details

Waihi Daily Telegraph, Volume XXXX, Issue 9682, 20 June 1941, Page 4

Word Count
133

Page 4 Advertisements Column 5 Waihi Daily Telegraph, Volume XXXX, Issue 9682, 20 June 1941, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 5 Waihi Daily Telegraph, Volume XXXX, Issue 9682, 20 June 1941, Page 4

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