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THINGS WE LIKE BEST. WHY IS IT THEY SO SELDOM AGREE WITH US? What’s the reason the tilings we like best so seldom seem to agree with os? Maybe it’s because we over-ea of them. Then follows a fit. of INDIGESTION. Only lasts a day or two perhaps. But it’s .a- most uncomfortable day or two. If we disregard consequences, and indulge our appetites the certainty that we must suffer spoils the- pleasure. We don’t mean to abuse our stomachs, but we all do it more or'less. We see things we want, and can’t resist the longing for tnem. ~iVlien it’s too late we regret our rashness. But there’s a way to escape the consequences of such indiscretions. A dose of a good digestant like DR SHELDON’S DIGESTIVE TABULES, which digest what you eat, will relieve- your trouble at once. That is a sensible remedy. These TABULES are sold everywhere at 2s 6d for a tin containing 80 TABULES. Buy a tin, eat a good square meal, and then take the TABULES according .to directions, and note the result. You will forget all about it if yon are not careful, for there will be NO PAIN or disturbance, and the food will be DIGESTED just as it used to be when your STOMACH was WELL and STRONG. .Furthermore, your stomach will soon be restored again, if you keep on taking them, just .as thousands ttpon thousands of other stomachs have been by the sole and exclusive - use of DR SHELDON’S DIGESTIVE TABULES Obtainable Everywhere.

"Blessed be Drudgery” is the title of a boo'k wrdten By Thomas a Kempis. There ds drudgery -enough to satisfy the most exacting on a large dairy farm where the cows arc hand-milk-ed. Most folk like to avoid drudgery, and when tho "Lawrcnce-Kennecly-C 1 lilies” machine came along, doing the milking in half the- time with less than half the labor, they felt more inclined'to say "Blessed be the ‘L.K.G.’ milking machine.” Messrs Peacock and Andrews, Dannevirke, say: "The machine milking is heaven compared with the old drudgery.” J. B. MacEwan and Co., Ltd, sole agents, Fort Street, Auckland. y . ’

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GIST19081202.2.56.1

Bibliographic details

Gisborne Times, Volume XXVI, Issue 2363, 2 December 1908, Page 6

Word Count
354

Page 6 Advertisements Column 1 Gisborne Times, Volume XXVI, Issue 2363, 2 December 1908, Page 6

Page 6 Advertisements Column 1 Gisborne Times, Volume XXVI, Issue 2363, 2 December 1908, Page 6

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