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IRRITATION OF THE SKIN,

Ever have any irritation of the skin? There are luauy forms «f it, any of them bad enough to tax your, patience. Piles a plague of the night. No rest for the ' sufferer that complaint. Hives don't sound dangerous, but they cause much misery to those unfortunate enough to be troubled with them.' Eczema, too, the most torturing and obstinato of all skin diseases. But Doan's »Ointment ■' cures every skin trouble. .No such ailment can resist its healing, soothing in. • fiuence. Lots of. people know, this now. Mrs. J. Duncan, 10 York Street, Welliugton, suys:--"I used Doan's Ointment for an itching skin trouble, and this pro- . paratioc cured me. It is a splendid remedy for skin disease, aud sufferers should not' waste time aud money trying other remedies, but get Doan|s Ointment to. day. I am pleased to recommend Doan's Ointment. X got this preparation . at. Fletcher's Pharmacy." ' Mrs. Duncan says later on: "Seven years ago Doan's Ointment cured mo of 'an irritating skin trouble, and I have been quite free of it ever since." Doau's Ointment is splendid iu all diseases of the skin; it is perfectly safe and very effective. Very often two or three pots have cured chronic cases which had resisted other remedies for years. Doan's Ointment is sold by all chemists and storekeepers at'3s. per pot, or will be posted on receipt of price by Foster- ' M'Clellan Company, .76 Pitt Street/Sydnev. ■ But, be sure you get DOAN'S.-Advt. Iβ,

No fewer than fifty men appeared before the Liverpool magistrates recently on charges relating to betting 'jireucos. It appears that premises known as (he Vauxliiill Social Club in Tichiield Street, Liverpool, hud been laidetl by the police.' Throe hap of brief size, were required to contain all the betting slips found upon Ihe promises, and in addition the books, papers, and other articles secured by the police formed a substantial accumulation. The men. found on .the jfremiats at the time, of the raid were, it was slated, mostly uf the dock labouring class, and the bank-book that \v»s femnd belonging'to a man named j'llm Henry Kennison, .showed that whereas when he started the club in 1907 his bank , balance amounted to only jl'l2, it had increased put of the earnings of the class of men before the court to ,£I4OO. It. was urged iii defence that Kennistou, being n cripple suffering from spinal disease, had chosen betting as one of the' simplest and easiest occupations he could find. He was fined .£IOO, or three months' imprisonment, and the other men bound over. '. ■. ' ,

An enterprising motor firm has erected a notice board in a field near' Wostgate-on-Soa, on which is painted "in large'\ l< tiers, "AuehoragOujor Aeroplanes.'

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19100827.2.93.3

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Dominion, Volume 3, Issue 906, 27 August 1910, Page 12

Word count
Tapeke kupu
453

Page 12 Advertisements Column 3 Dominion, Volume 3, Issue 906, 27 August 1910, Page 12

Page 12 Advertisements Column 3 Dominion, Volume 3, Issue 906, 27 August 1910, Page 12

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