MOTHER, YOUR CHILD NEEDS A LAXATIVE. IF TONGUE IS COATED', STOMAC-C SICK, OR THE CHILD IS CROSS, FEVERISH, CONSTIPATED, GIVE CALIFORNIA SYRUP OF FIGS. Don't scold your fretful, peevish child. See if the tongue is coated; this is a store sign that the little stomach, liver, and. bowels are clogged with bile and imperfectly digested food. .. When listless, pale, feverish, with tainted breath, a cold, or a sore throat ; if .the child does not- eat, sleep, or act naturally, or has stomach-ache, indigestion, or .diarrhoea, give a teaspoonful of California Syrup of Figs—"Califig," and in a few hours all the waste-matter, bile, -and fermenting food will pass out of the bowels, and you have a healthy, playful child again. Children love this harmless fruit laxative, and mothers can rest easy after giving it, because, it never fails to make their little "insides" sweet and wholesome. Keep it handy, mother! A little given to-day saves a sick child to-morrow, but get the genuine. Ask your chemist for a bottle of "Califig'.'—California Syrup of Figs, which has directions for babies, children of all ages, and for grown-ups plainly on the bottle. Remember, imitations are sometimes substituted,, so look and see that your bottle bears the name of the California Fig Syrup Company. Hand back with contempt any other fig syrup. All chemists sell ''Califig"—. California Syrup of Figs, in bottles of two sizes, Is 3d and 2s.—Advt. . WATCH NERVOUS CHILDREN FOR SIGNS OF ST. VITUS' DANCE. It is far better to prevent St. Vitus' dance than to wait until a cure is necessary. Nervous children should therefore bo carefully watched for symptoms of the approach of this disease. Long before the child become, awkward and begins dropping things there is a period during which the appetite is fickle., and the'child is tired and listless. The jerking, nervous movements characteristic of tile disease come much later. In the early stages a good tonic for the blood and nerves, such as Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, will go far°towards preventing the. development of the disease, but a true toriio such as the above is necessary, care being' taken to avoid mere stimulating medicines, for these malts the nervous condition much worse. When your child grows listless, prefers to sit audi read rather than go out and play, and requires altogether too much time to do his or her lessons, take prompt steps and give a course of treatment with Dr. Wilj hams' Pink Pills. These pills build up the blood, nourish the starved nerves, and improve the'-gen-eral health. If you are suffering from any nervous ailment, you cannot do better than begin Dr Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People to-day. Any dealer can supply them, but ask for Dr. Williams' ; 3s per box, six boxes 16s1 6d. Write for the free booklet, "Diseases of the Nervous System" to the Dr. Williams' Medicine- Co., Box 845, G.P.0., Wellington.—Advt. FOR BUSY BUSINESS MEN. A SAFE AND PLEASANT STIMULANT AND BRACER. x Keeping pace with business these days of keen competition and abnormal conditions taxes a man's strength and energy to the utmost. Now, more than ever, does he feel the need of a stimulant to replenish his supply of vigour and nerve force. Wilson's Malt Extract—Nature's great tonic food—serves the purpose admirably. Prepared solely from prime malted barley, it stimulates without exciting or producing unpleasant after-effects. Drugs or spirits have nowhere near the'same lasting beneficial effects. • Wilson's Malt Extract also cures, in-. digestion, removes constipation, enriches the blood, and tones up the nerves. Doctors all over the Dominion are recommending it for people run down, anaemic, nervous, or who suffer from indigestion and malnutrition, while it is extensively used in our public and private hospitals. Your grocer and chemist can supply Wilson's Malt Extract, with or without Cod Liver Oil. But get Wilson's. Wilson's is the purest, freshest, and most effective. —Advt. Most edible articles remain at high prices—not so C.M.C. Sheep Tongues. The price has been considerably reduced. To-day 'tis cheaper to purchase a tin of delicious tongues than to buy fresh meat. They save the cost of firing, are no trouble to prepare, and are appreciated by ever.body. Ask your grocer for C.M.C. Tongues.—Advt. "Stetsons," the hat famed the world over for finish and quality of fur. Large range in plains and velours, at Geo. Fowlds, Ltd.—Advt. The stockman proudly bowed- his legs, and Hopped upon his steed. "I'll ride him cure as eggs aro eggs, no matter what his broed." ■ But later said the horseman bold, "A hoarse man sure am I. I have a most outrageous cold, and running is each eye, So hop upon the l'n«fc Flaneur And ride for Woods' Great Peppermint .Curs,,'-'—-Advtv
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Evening Post, Volume XCVII, Issue 130, 4 June 1919, Page 11
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782Page 11 Advertisements Column 3 Evening Post, Volume XCVII, Issue 130, 4 June 1919, Page 11
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