Crops and vegetation in the North Canterbury district arc still (says yesterday’s Press) awaiting rain showers, and the growth of the grain up to the present has been very slow. The season for lambing has been perfect, which on all sides has bean satisfactory and the percentages good, with very few subsequent losses.' Of course, now the lambs are here, the farmers are most anxious to have some grass. Upon the high country matters are rather better than on the plains for there passing showers have freshened the herbage, and the new stock are thriving.
When they put a man in gaol, he cannot follow his natural inclination. His enjoyment of life is limited. He cannot eat what ho wants to. He is limited to a very frugal diet. He is alive, to be sure, hut life doesn’t possess very many advantages. Are not all these things equally true of the dyspeptic ? For all the real enjoyment he gets out of life, he might as well be in gaol. He cannot cat what he likes, nor as much of it as he would like. If he transgresses any of the rules of his diet, ho is punished for it. He suffers much ; gets little sympathy. Dyspepsia starts with indigestion, and may load to almost Indigestion means a variety of t shows itself in many ways. At first, perhaps, a little heaviness in the stomach, a little sourness, windy belchings, and heartburn. I load aches begin to come pretty soon after that, and biliousness and a foul taste in the mouth id the morning. Chronic constipation is almost inevitable, and it is probably the most serious trouble that ever takes hold of a man. Its seeming simplicity is the thing that makes it most dangerous, because it loads to neglect. Constipation means that the bodyh holding poisonous, impure matter, that should bo gotten rid of. The poison is being reabsorbed into the bleed, and the whole body is being filled with it; impurity in the blood may lead to almost any disease. There is no tolling what may come of it. And yet people are careless about it. It ia the most serious thing ia the world, and the easiest tc cure if you go about it right. Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills cure Constipat'oll - it positively, certainly, infallibly. Core it so it stayi cured. Cure it so you can rtop taking medicine. And that ia n metbing that no other remedy in flic world will do. They positively cure Ribousarss. Indigestion, Constipation. Dyspepsia, fallow Complexion, Liver and Kidney Trouble", Piles, Pimples and Riot lies. A perfect blood purifier, and for female ailments iii'y stand alone as a woman's best friend. *S 1-i by chemists and atoreheer era, price. 1.- ;! I per bottle, or six h .ttle.r ’s. or same will b ■ mailed, pust paid, npntimwtpfe of p.ic f. hole proprietors, The W. 11, Collision., -i'o.. Ltd. (Australasian Depot), fcS I’ilt-i‘tia et, Sydney. They are pae'-o .1 in amber bottles, and the full name blown thereon. m m 'cli'ij IH mi mw ms Li feast MU ana* w V.t.f VM anything. thlDSfS —i
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Greymouth Evening Star, Volume XXXI, 28 September 1901, Page 4
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522Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Greymouth Evening Star, Volume XXXI, 28 September 1901, Page 4
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