To Flood Sufferers YOUR HOUSES AND SURROUNDINGS REQUIRE CLEANSING. I am selling—“HYCOL” from bulk in whisky bottles, containing 26 ounces, at A'4-ounce Bottle of any Disinfectant at any shop costs 1/.' THINK OF IT! 26 Ounce s for 2/6 as Against 4 Ounces for 1/, “HYCOL” IS THE STRONGEST AND BEST DISINFECTANT I CAN BUY! GEORGE KITCHIN PER BOTTLE “ The Wide* A wake Grocer,” 680 GEORGE STREET,
corns Gone After 3 Radox Foot Baths . PLASTERS, caustics, and corn knives only take off the top of a corn. The painful root needs the softening powers of Radox, before it is dislodged. See what 1 Radox Bath Salts did_ for this gentleman. Three soothing Radox foot baths, and out came the i, corns, root and all! Read his .letter: ; ' “Since 1914 I have been a martyr to pain from corns on both ' feet and have tried all kinds of ■ plasters, pastes, etc., without rei lief. On being recommended by a ; friend to try Radox Bath Salts, ! thought I would do so, and much [ to my surprise, after S foot baths, ; in which I put about 4 dessertt spoonfuls of Radox, I pulled the corns out with my finger, roots as ■well.” C. S., Twickenham. Uth Sept., 1928, When you dip your foot into a foot bath containing Radox Bath Salts, the dead skin combines with the Radox Bath Salts to form a protein salt of the actual corn itself. This protein salt dissolves in water like ordinary salt, and so loosens the corn that it may be lifted out bodily, root and all. Radox does not affect the living skin; it is only the dead skin of the actual corn which is dissolved. Ask for Radox at your I"| chemist's, price 2/1 per toi / Jl 51b. pink packet, and Half Pound 3/6 double quantity. PiakPnckel Radox Bath Saits IK Manufactured by K. Griffiths Hushes J.td., Manchester (Established 1736). Supplies stocked by Kairbairn, Wrigrht & Co., Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch nnd Dunedin, and by ail Wholesalers, Chemists & Stores throughout Xew Zealand. 11-054 U Please! is that George Dyer & Co. 32 King Street ? Your plumfoistg work ■ is a credit to you! It gives every Satisfaction I
I ■ n i i i •> «■-,*«& - K ;' ■ Many people accept floating specks before the eyes as a manifestation of temporary digestive trouble, and give the matter no further thought. It has remained for specialists definitely to associate “ floating specs ” with “eye strain.” Defective eyes use up two or three times more nerve energy than they have a right to! When wo strain our eyes other organs of the body have to suffer because of this wastage of nerve force. Floating specks are often symptomatic of digestive trouble, which in its turn disappears with the correction of defective vision. CALL on: US AND LEARN THE TRUTH ABOUT YOUR EYES! MR F. G. HAYES TOWNS, F.8.0.A., F.S.M.C., F. 1.0. , (Late Refraction Hospital,, London,, Consultant). ' The work of testing sight and providing for scientific correction with Classes is best entrusted to—- * Kill e MORAY ,/■ I.ACE DUNEDIN
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Evening Star, Issue 20136, 28 March 1929, Page 14
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502Page 14 Advertisements Column 1 Evening Star, Issue 20136, 28 March 1929, Page 14
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