TEA DRINKING.
The New Zealanders are such confirmed tea drinkers that it is no use talking or writing about any injurious effects therefrom. There are no serious aftereffects from tea except when it is taken too freely with food. It is considered unwise to take any kind of drink to excess with meals, for the renson that it dilutes tho digestive juices to such an extent that they are not slroiu; enough to act on the i'ood .properly. The first effect of this kind of enting and drinking is Constipation, and that leads, as we all know, to all kinds of disorders. , At the first sign take a Dr. Morse's Indian Boot Pill and keep the. system in order. They aid in the digestion and assimilation* of the food, and are not like an internal lubricant which leaves the liver and. digestive- organs in the same stale as before taking. If reasonable care is taken at the first sign of constipation by taking a. Dr. Morse's Indiau Root Pill, tea can be. used without fear within reasonable limits.
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Dominion, Volume 11, Issue 130, 19 February 1918, Page 7
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178TEA DRINKING. Dominion, Volume 11, Issue 130, 19 February 1918, Page 7
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