JOB PRINTING. ,X UU JOB-PRINTING DEPART MENT is now Up-to-date in every particular, and wo can guarantee to turn out work quickly and at ■ s cheap a price ns is compatible with Good Workmanship and Material* Our object is to induce you to gi vo us a trial, feeling com inced that tho GOOD WORKMANSHIP AND MATERIAL. WO put into our work will make you decide to bo a regular customer of ours. Many morclmnts fail to recognise (he amount of money to be made by using only Printing of a first-class order-a badly-printed sale circular is valueless, but a well-printed one will double or treble business. BRING YOUR NEXT JOB TO THE “GISBORNE TIMES” Job Printing Works. We hold completo stocks of stationery, and can quoto bed-rock prices v for MEMO. FORMS CUSTOMS FORMS LETTER HEADS AGREEMENT FORMS We mako a specialty of Cards and invite your inspection of our stock of VISITING CARDS INVITATION CARDS MEMORIAL CARDS MENU CARDS WEDDING CARDS ETC. BUSINESS FORMS ACCOUNT BOOKS RECEIPT BOOKS BILLHEADS I m m sSS IVX-CsX a GS -- RANK JJ ARRIS AND 00., LTD., MONUMENTAL SCULPTORS AND MASONS, ctli ADSTONE-R O AD, GISBORNE. MEMO. —This is a Branch of the well-known Firm at Auckland, where we have the Largest Staff Employed of any Firm in N.Z. Our Gisborne Staff are Picked Men—Tradesmen. You can depend on having your work fixed properly. If von cannot inspect our stock hero, Write for Catalogues. Rough Material in Stock: Marble, Granite, Milestone, Oamaru, Shells. Finished: Tiles, Wreaths, Table Tops, Butchers’ Slabs, Iron Railings, etc., etc. We Contract for all Kinds of Concrete Work and Heavy Railing. ROBERT W. CARY, Manager.
LET US SESWWU FREE OUR. CQLQNIAL^C^TAIXSGUES^ kj utict INS CRETONNES. HOUSEHOLD LINENS, HOSIERY, BLOUSES, GENT.’S TAILORING CATALOGUE. CADIES’ FASHION BOOKLET, BOOT Cs SHOE LIST, FURNITURE LIST, Special Knockdown marie for Shipping Buy British made Goods, Sty, vdy, ReliabicrnaKes. c-rKF Popular Parcel 5 C^JRTA?NS L foil SB'S/® WHITE or^ECRU. 2 pairs superb Diningroom Curtains, real Lace design, 3I yds. long. 1 pair exquisite Drawingroom Curtains, floral Festoons, 4 yds. long, a yds.w me. 2 pairs choice Bedroom Curtains, Sinai! neat design, 3 yds. long. 43 ‘ns- wide. Merit. Taste and Value have increased the sales every year. Well pacKed, Free to your home, 23 o. Lotte.-orders receivo thoughtful attention trouble is taken to meet customers wishes. Yon have C ™iX"^ Why not for you ?. Wo have been in business 50 years and only transmit Reliable goods, have an enormous stock, Sell for Cnsh, direct from the looms at makers prices. We can help you. WRITE FOR OUR CATALOG UES, FREE ! f REn- ll Oat. 1857. Price Lists may be obtained from the office of this paper,' ‘JR? ® BAM <• PEACH & SONS, Manufacturers, Box 636 NOTTINGHAM, ENGLAND. The torments which are suffered when the digestive organs fail to do their work thoroughly are, unfortunately, so well known to most of us that it is not necessary for the various symptoms of indigestion or dyspepsia to be given in detail here. Indigestion has several sources of origin, the principal being Gastric Catarrh, in which the food becomes covered with mucus, and consequently resists the action of the digestive juices; Gastric Flatulency, the development of wind or gas; Gastric Diarrhoea, caused by the food being hurried through the digestive organs unassimilated, and Constipation. Constipation is by far the mo3t frequent and obstinate cause of indigestion, and it must be rectified or digestion cannot be otherwise than imperfect. Food must be eaten in sufficient quantity, and must be digested and be converted into blood Nature makes this one of her most imperative laws of life. During the process of digestion food is entirely changed in composition by the action of the juices of the internal organs through which it passes. In the mouth it is thoroughly mixed with the saliva. Then it is swallowed, and enters the stomach, where it is acted upon by the gastric juices, and becomes partly liquefied. From the stomach it passes to the smaller intestine—which is about 18-feet in length—and there certain portions of the food are liquefied by the bile and other juices. The food thus made fluid is in a condition to be al)3 ibed into and becomes a constituent part of the blood. The Indigestible portion of the food is discharged into the larger intestine, whence it is in turn expelled from the body together with other refuse matter. Just as certainly as that it is necessary to life that food must be absorbed; so likewise it is essential that the blood must be in a condition to absorb the food. Torpidity of the liver is the chief cause of nearly every case of indigestion, and when the iivor is torpid the kidneys are always sympathetically affected to a greater or_ lesser extent. The blood, which should be transformed, cleansed, and filtered by the kidneys and iivor, then contaihs urinary and biliary poisons, and is therefore a feeble absorbent of nutriment.' Thiscondition of the blood reacts upon the nervous system of the digestive organs, and prevents the flow and alters the quality of the digestive juices. The entire nerve energy of a.person suffering from indigestion is weakened owing to the contaminated condition of the blood, and the general feeling of mental and physical depression, which is experienced during an attack of dyspepsia, is due to this • the blood must be continuously purified by the action of the liver and good digestion cannot bo expected to occur. *9 Many sufferers from indigestion obtain temporary relief by eating predigested foods or taking medicines, such as pepsin, which act as digestives in the intestines. A course of such treatment merely encourages a slothful action of the digestive organs, and causes them to become gradually weaker and less capable of performing their duty, just in the same way that a porson who takes little or no exercise becomes incapablo of responding to any demand for exertion. Other sufferers irritate the digestive organs into temporary and abnormal activity by taking purgative medicines wo frequently that presently the stomach and intestines refuse to act except under such irritating stimulation. The only rational and permanent cure for indigestion is to create such a condition of the blood that each corpuscle becomes hungry for food, and ready and eager to absorb it. The digestive secretions will then respond to the demands of the blood, and the stomach and intestines will perform their work as a matter of course. When the blood is laden with uric acid and other urinary and biliary poisons, it cannot adequately absorb food, and makes but a feeble attempt to do 80.
Warmer’s Safe Cure la not a purgative medicino. It permanently cures indigestion and dyspepsia, simply Because it restores the liver and kidneys to health and activity, so that the blood naturally becomes free from urinary and biliary poisons, and ravenous to absorb nutriment freely. Nutriment is then convoyed by the blood to the nerves throughout the body. The nerves of the digestivo organs being properly nourished, the organs are in a condition to do their work efficiently. Nature is merely aided in her efforts to preserve a balance in the manifold and complex processes of waste and renewal by whioh life is maintained. Bemembor constipation or irregularity of the bowels must be overcome. Warner's Safe Fills should, therefore, also be taken in sufficient quantities to ensure one free movement daily. « Bo not overload the stomach. Avoid tea, coffee, alcoholio stimulants, and rich or fat foods. Do not'eat generously of any solid food. 9 Write for .treatise on Liver and Kidney disorders. Sent post free by EL H. Warner and Co., Ltd., Australasian Branch, Melbourne. aiso r&, m&sa INSISTiUPON HAVING ' eaiSß i agg??: ; 9; oi 7 y*%,~ v ■
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Gisborne Times, Volume XXV, Issue 2152, 7 August 1907, Page 4
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1,293Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Gisborne Times, Volume XXV, Issue 2152, 7 August 1907, Page 4
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