Mrs Hamer, of the Economic, has just received a beautiful assortment of runners, cushion covers, fancy table cloths, brush and comb bags, etc., etc., which she bought at exceptionally low prices, being a lot of travellers’ samples. The same are being shown in window.* " Yorick ” in the New Zealand Times tells the following ;—The Cockney new-clium had taken up his abode with the New Zealand farmer and was farming for the same reason that induces people who have sold tape in England to come to the colonies in order to take a position as manager of a fruit farm. This cockney returned to Wellington after two days in the country. “ W’y,” he said, ‘‘in London we buys our milk aht of a nice clean dairy, but in this ’ere country they squeezes it aht of a beastly cow.” Unfamiliarity breeds discontent. Another cow story, showing the value of a habit ot sitting back and thinking. Another new-chum willing to I ‘ tackle anything ’’ : He told the farmer he could milk cows. Busy, the farmer sent him to do so. The youth returned in half-an-hour, with the perspiration streaming from every pore. ‘‘ ’Er ’ouldn’t let I milk ’er,” he said. The farmer remarked that the cow was the quietest beast in the district and himself took the new man to the old cow. The farmer milked her with ease. The newchum stood amazed. " Well, ah’ll be dinged,” said he. II Ah’ve bin try in’ to throw ’er on ’er back for ’alf-an-hour ! ” The surest defence against the attacks of competition, and the safest offensive and defensive business weapon, is the advertisement. No matter how good the store how choice the goods, and how low the prices, there’s "nothing doing ” unless the public knows about it. prosperous country must also be a free country. Extensive advertising cannot be conceived without the unlimited freedom of the press. In countries where newspapers have to pay a heavy tax to the Government for each advertisement—as in Germany and Austria—advertising can never be brought to a level where it will create industrial prosperity. A country which hinders the freedom of the press and its prosperity by laying burdensome taxes on newspapereadvertising, hinders its own prosprity.
GO TO THE ROOT OF IT.
THAT IS THE WAY TO CURE DISEASE, AND MOTHER SEIGEL’S SYRUP DOES IT. FACTS FROM NEWCASTLE. The best way to be rid of trouble is to remove the cause of that trouble, then it is less likely to trouble you again. If your head aches to-day you may get relief by using some of the many headache powders, but it is just as likely to ache again to-morrow or next day. If you have constipation you can, of course, use salts or some of the drastic drugs. If your back aches you can use lotions, embrocations, liniments. These may ease you for the day or hour. But the sensible way to go about remedying your trouble is to change the conditions which make the trouble. Put your stomach, your liver, your bowels, into nealthy natural action, drive out the cause of your aches and pains, tackle them at their source. That is what Mrs Florence Erickson, wife of a confectioner doing business in Hunter Street, Newcastle, N.S.VY., did, but she suffered two years of wretched existence before she found a medidiue that went to the root of her distress. Read her own version of it from a letter dated January 10th, 1907. A LADY’S TESTIMONY “For two years,” she says,“l was in very poor health due to a compli cation of ailments, including constipa tion, chronic indigestion and kidney troubles. I was then living in Sydney. Medical treatment and alls sorts of socalled remedies were tried, but nothing did me any lasting good until I used Mother Seigel’s Syrup. The pains in my chest and back, and in fact all over my body were excruciating. Food of any kind upset my stomach, and I was very weak and debilitated. Often I felt so despondent that I almost gave up hope of getting well again. “ After two years of this wretched existence, a small book about Mother Seigel’s Syrup was left one day at our shop, and my husband urged me to try that remedy, and when I consented he bought a bottle. To my glad surprise I began to feel better when I had used the Syrup only three or four days. My appetite came back, and I was able to digest my food; I began to sleep well, and gradually ceased to suffer from constipation, backache and all the other bad andpainly symptoms which had distressed me so long. “ In fact, Mother Seigel’s Syrup sent new life, health and strength through my system, so that after taking some half-a-doxen bottles I was perfectly cured, and as well as ever I had been in my life. Pour years have passed since then, and I still, I am thankful to say, remain in a sound state of health.” There is no medicine in the world that goes to the root of Stomach, Liver, and Kidney Disorders so quickly and thoroughly ■ Mas other Seigel’s Syrup.
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Manawatu Herald, Volume XXIX, Issue 3769, 22 August 1907, Page 4
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857Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 Manawatu Herald, Volume XXIX, Issue 3769, 22 August 1907, Page 4
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