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CRIPPLING BLOOD-POISON.

DYE GOT' INTO SIMPLE SCBATCH. ARM SAVED BY ZAM-BUK. Some dye which got into her liand whilst she was washing out curtains caused Mrs. E. Jeffrey a long and painful attack of blood-poisoning. Writing from Brisbane Street, Brown Hill, W.A., Mrs. Jeffrey says: "The dye caused fearful festering and inflammation. Night after night I was kept awake in agony through the intolerable pains which used to sliont from the lip of my finger riuht up the arm. "A well-known doctor in Boulder said the limb could not be heah'd by ordinary methods, find operation was necessary. Neighbours, too, who saw the hand wero convinced that 1 would have to lose it eventually. "But T determined to avoid this operation if at all possible, and, haying hoard so much about. Zam-Buk. ] decided to try the balm. A fow regular dressings ot Zam-Buk booh vonvinced me of its remarkable healing and discnsp.-dispellinß power, for there was such a striking improvement, f.h at I lost all fear of the surgeon's knife. "Zam-Buk proved wonderfully mild and soothing. ]t speedily subdued the inflammation and soreness, and drew away the mass of bad matter which had formed in. the hand. I persevered with ZiimBuk for another fortnight, itnd within that time- the hand was hrah-d and wonderfully cured." , Zam-Buk's powerful soothing and anliseptic properties mako it the ideal healer for use at home and at work. For eczema, pimples, .boils, bud logs, ulcers, piles, poisoned wounds, ringworm, cuts, burns, eraltis, etc., /AMHTJK is to be relied upon. Is (id. and 3s. Cd. everywhere.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19180426.2.11

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Dominion, Volume 11, Issue 186, 26 April 1918, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
260

CRIPPLING BLOOD-POISON. Dominion, Volume 11, Issue 186, 26 April 1918, Page 3

CRIPPLING BLOOD-POISON. Dominion, Volume 11, Issue 186, 26 April 1918, Page 3

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