M Am 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, lie is alive, to be sure, but life doesn’t pos‘e-.e very many advantages. Arc not all these tilings equally true of the dyspeptic? For all the real enjoyment he gels out of life, he might as well be in gaol. lie r cannot eat what he 1 likes, nor as much of it as he would like. If lie transgresses any of the rules of his diet, he is ppunished for it. He suffers much ; gets little sympathy. Dyspepsia starts with indigestion, and may lead to almost anything. Indig stion means a variety of things—it shows itself in many ways. At first, perhaps, a Utile heaviness in tiie stomach, a little sourness, windy belehings, and heartburn. Headaches begin to come pretty soon after that, and biliousness ana a foul taste in the mouth in the morning. Chronic constipation is almost inevitable, and it is probably the most serious trouble that ever takes hold of a man. Its teeming simplicity is the thing that makes it mo;t dangerous, because it leads neglect. Constipation means that the body is holding poisonous, impure matter, that should bo gotten rid of. The pois nis being reabsorbed into the blood, and the whole body is being filled with it. Impurity in the blood mav lead to almost any disease. There is no-telling what may come of it. And yet people are careless about it. It is the most serious thing in the world, and the easiest tc cure if you go about it right. Dr. Morse’s Indian Root Tills cure Constipation. Cure it positively, certainly, infallibly."' Cure it so it slays cured. _ Cure it so you can stop taking medicine. And that is something that no other remedy in the worli will do. They positively cure Biliousness, Indigestion, Constipation, .Dys . pepsin, callow Complexion, Laver and Kidney Troubles, Tiles, TimpUs ami Blot lies. A perfect blood purifier, and for female ailments they stand alone as a woman's best iti: ml. S .hi bv chemists and storekeepers, pi ice. Is HI per bottle, or six battle.; ’a, -A tiie will lu mailed, post paid, upon receipt , p;ic Sole proprietors, The W. H. Comstock x'o., Ltd. (Australasian Depot), bS L’ilt-str» et, Sydney. They are packed in amber bottles, and the full name blown thereon.
The Chicago stock yards are the largest in the world. They can hold 20,000 cattle daily, besides 20,000 sheep, and 10,000 pigs. They contain 20 miles of streets, and 50.000 miles of feeding troughs. The nest ccugn drops are drops o» Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. The next time you take cold, dose yourself with a lot of home remedies and dilly-dally along until your cough is deep-seated and you are threatened with pneumonia or consumption, That’s one way, to ho sure. Here’s another way: Take at bedtime and bo all right the next morning. Isn’t this the better way? Then continue the Cherry Pectoral a few days until your throat and lungs have completely healed and all danger of future trouble is past. Another grand thing about Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral is that it cures hard coughs, the hardest kind of old coughs, even after all other remedies have failed. Put up in largo and small bottles. When it hurts your lungs to cough, then apply one of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral Plasters directly over the painful iung. It will quiet the pain, remove all congestion, and greatly strengthen. Prepared by Dr. J. C. ky.-r Co.. Lowell. Mass.. U. S. A. GREYMODTH STEAM SASH AND DOOR FACTORY. | OINERY of every description made and kept in stock. DOORS and SASHES of, all sizes made to order in Silver Pine, Kauri, Eimu and Baltic. BUILDING TIMBER, all lengths and sizes, kept in stock, WM. MORRIS, Proprietor
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GEST19011031.2.47.1
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Greymouth Evening Star, Volume XXXI, 31 October 1901, Page 4
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653Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Greymouth Evening Star, Volume XXXI, 31 October 1901, Page 4
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