'A STOMACH TONIC. DR. WILLUMS' PINK PILLS. There are many people suffering daily from what they firmly believe to be a serious organic malady when, in fact, they are simply in need of a tonic that will build up the blood. This is pni-t'cu-larly true of many cases of indigestion. Because of the distress which follows meals, tho dizziness and gas, they feel there is something radically wrong with the stomach. Plenty of rich blood is necessary for the processes of digestion, and if' the blood supply is impaired digestion suffers The food, instead of being converted to the uses of the body, remains in tho stomach until fermentation begins and the accumulated gas causes distress. To build up the blood there is ono remedy that has been a household word for a generation, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. They tone up the entire system, make the blood rich and Ted, strengthen the nerves, increase the appetite, put colour in the cheeks and lips and drive away that unnatural tired feeling. Plenty of sunlight, good wholesome food and fresh air will do the rest. FREE—Valuable hints on diet will be found in a little book "What to Eat and How to Eat," to be obtained free; send a post-card for a, copy to the Dr. Williams' .Medicine Co., Box 815, G.P.0., Wellington. The price of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills is 3s. per box, or six boxes 16s. 6d. Your own chemist or storekeeper sells them or they will be sent, post paid, on receipt of price.—Advl.
Few places have been more in,i(»:es.sfble during the war than Ireland. For more- than a century the British and Foreign Bible Society has supplied the island with Scriptures in Icelandic Fortunately a large stack of a newly rjvi-pil Bible and Now Testament was 'sent to Reykjavik before the outbreak of war. last year more books w/re sold than at any previous period, and the stock is now exhausted. A further supply of 1-JflO Icelandic Bibles and 10S0 Testaments has been dispatched. Repatriated German prisoners of war and civil prisoners will receive for the firat six months after their return a special allowance of bread fate, foreign bacon or preserved moat, and vegetables. In Munich the coal shortage is expected to be so acute dining the winter that a number of schools have been dos£d, and the cutting down of the munioipal forest ie contemplated.
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Dominion, Volume 13, Issue 42, 13 November 1919, Page 5
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402Page 5 Advertisements Column 1 Dominion, Volume 13, Issue 42, 13 November 1919, Page 5
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