A SQUARE PUZZLE Prizes Paid in Full. m Encouraged by the enormous demand for our picture postcards, we have devised this simple method of advertising svltti Hie ohjcc of nuking our name more widely known and to introduce our new Catalogue, we olfer vou a graud opportunity to display your ingenuity, and receive the generous reward of a Silver Watch (Ladies or Gents) or any articles picked from our catalogue to the value of M tor a little study. We expect by this competition of brains to make such an impression on your mind that you will frlends, and tan ttSK£« the The satisfied customer is the best and most effect VC ad'e ran oe i sec » enM9 {, y nwxrilinf as priiesmany^howutne'FStmds 1 worth of Watches which would otherwise be spcivUiuidveUislngaiu^pniiting THIS IS WHAT YOU ARE TO DO, Here is a square puzzle, ancl everyone who solves it will receive the Solid Sil.er Watch or other prizes without any other conditions whatever. Ihe diagram she as nine sennres with the figure 5 occupying the centre square. The puzzle is to p ,>cc i number on each of the eight empty squares, so that they shall,add up to 15 in a straight line in as many ways as possible; no two squares may contain the.same figure. Our decision is to be final in every instance. PRIZES WILL BE PROMPTLY SENT. lion whether you fro'm Svdncy mnkrs no difference whatever to us. arc nil have nn equal opThe distance you may hcr c f 0 r Aml exchange light brainwork for solid cash. portunity for winning, bturlj. Ihercrore ro ,tal note for -/- for which we will send you six dozen With your solution of this ve e?cr seen. Everybody wants picture postcards, and if of the most artistic penny | picturei nave of fl ! i<:nds act]uni ,nances yo« do ,"° h ' o'd o rav '-ou a ?cnAy for each one you wish to dispose of dims you get double the value who will be dclightedto pav you a chancco t, w |uning a S olid S ilvcr Watch, for the money you sen together with postal note tor 35., and a stamped addressed envelope, so that w. mavUonn youlf XIn writing? state whether” Mr., Mrs, or Miss, and address your letters very plainly to ►SLITsDON &C 0„ Angel Place, Pitt St., Sydney, N.S.W. I
WE HAVE A BRANCH MONUMENTAL WORKS AT GLADSTONE FIOAD, GISBORNE. AN UP-TO-DATE STOCK KEPT IN ALL. KINDS OK MEMORIALS. OD CO SCULPTORS AND MASONS. ROBERT CARY, Manager.
nrhin VftSID for TEACII’S IUOGILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE&BUYER S GUIDE, SEND YOUR ADDRfcbS £. putsvou intc immediate touch with the World's greatest Lace Centre and shows yon just how to buy divo.-t at factor prices Saves you pounds and gives you the best. DIRECT FKOSVI THc LOOMS. LACES. LACE CURTAINS, LINENS, HOSIERY, LADIES & GENT’S CLOTHING. n I n 1 l<n* r nna 5 pairs of Curtains made specially for this Parcel. Popular Parcel 23/6 Postage rree. Ecru if desired. Sent separately as follows- - 1 pair superb Drawing-room Curtains, 4 yds. long, 3 yds.wide, post free S 9 * 2 pairs handsome Dining-room Curtains, 3* yds. long, 60 Ins.wide, post free 11 o 2 pairs choice Bed-room Curtains, 3 yds. long, 43 ins. wide, post free o The 5 pairs if sent in one Lot, 23/6, post free, _r> -* » a well packed in oil cloth, direct to your address in >*ew Zealanu. DRESS MATERIALS, BOOTS and SHOES, etc. You will be astonisnea a* our pn with this hnndsomo book. VTo put the besti materials and Jga, 8 Es?bb 1857 Our 49 years reputation is your guarantee. Prize Medals, Toronto 189-, Chicago 1893. I,stbd. 1807. Price Lists maybe obtained from the office of this Paper ; apply;at once. SAML. PEACH & SONS, The Looms, Box NOTTINGHAM, ENGLAND.
PMN Death is hastened by ignorance. Nature has endowed us with the sense of pain •Olely in order that, by seeking relief, we may avoid playing into the hands of death. When wo feel pain we are out of health. Pain long endured is a strain upon the system which Nature cannot withstand. Many of ns, however, go on .uffenng certain kinds of Min, just aa if Science could not come to the help of her sister Nature. Ihere is, lor instance, no necessity for anyone to suffer from Rheumatism Gout Neuralgia Backache Sciatica Indigestion Anmmia Blood Disorders Biliousness Jaundice Oravl - Stone Bladder Troubles General Debility Sick Headache The pains caused by this long list of disorders are but Nature’s means of letting us know that the kidneys or liver are for some reason unable to perform their work Know 6XI lib 6110 Riuuojfa A* ~ , . ,v „ rv/ •fficiently, for all of these disorders are produced by the retention m the system of • ._ a : ~ —h:Ten Hirnnm nff nn.f.nVH.llv if the kIQ.HOYB and liver were doing their duty. Pew people realise how important m the scheme of life is the healthy action of the kidneys and the liver, therefore the following description of tha functions of those vital organs will be of the deepest interest to many. Th« Kidneys filter and extract from the blood about three pints of urine every d»T. In this quantity of urine are dissolved about an ounce of urea, ten to twe.vc rains in weight of uric acid, together with other animal and mineral matter v arymP from a third of an ounce to nearly an ounce. When the kidneys are in health, all this aolid matter is in solution and is invisible. Directly the kieneys, through either weakness or disease, become unfit to do their duty properly, a proportion of the solid matter remains in the blood, becomes actively poisonous, and causes us to suffer from uric disorders such as Rheumatism, Gout, Neuralgia, Lumbago, Backache. Sciatica, Gravel, Stone, Bladder Troubles, and Bngnt s Disease. A simple test to make as to the condition of the kidneys is to place some urine, passed the first thing in the morning, in a covered glass, and let it stand until next morning. If it is then cloudy, or there is a brick-dust like sediment, or if particles float aboufin it, or it is of an unnatural colour, the kidneys are not healthy, aud no time must be lost in adopting remedial measures, or Bright’s Disease, Diabetes, or some less Benous bn more painful illness will result. ■$ The liiver. —In the liver various substances are actually made from the blood. Two or three pounds of bile are thus made from the blood every day. The liver takes H ~ r from the blood, converts it into another form, and stores it up so as to be able to again supply it to the blood gradually, as the latter requires enrichment. The liver changes urio acid, which is insoluble, into urea, which is completely soluble, and the, liver also deals with blood corpuscles which have lived their life and are useful no longer. When the liver is inactive or diseased we suffer from Indigestion, Biliousness. Anaemia, Sick Headache, and Blood Disorders. The health of the liver and of the kidneys i 3 so closely connected that it is almost impossible for the kidneys to be affected and the liver to remain healthy, or vice versa. It is nearly thirty years since scientific research directed specially to diseases of the Kidneys and Liver waß rewarded by the discovery of the medioine now known throughout the world as Warner’s Safe Cure. It vwi realised, at the outset of the investigation, that it was necessary to find a curative agent which would act equally upon the kidneys and upon the liver, these organs being ■o immediately associated in the work of dealing with the body’s waste material, and . after many disappointments the medicine which possessed the required action in the fullest degreo was at length discovered,® Warner’s Safe Cure cures all diseases of the kidneys and liver, and, by restoring their activity, these vital organs art enabled to rid the body, through the natural channels, of tho urinary and biliary poisons, the presence of which, in the system, is the cause of Rheumatism, Gout, Neuralgia, Lumbago, Backache, Seiatica, Blood Disorders, Anosmia, Indigestion, Biliousness. Jaundice, Sick Headache, Gravel, Stone, Bladder Troubles, and General Debility. Warner’s Safe Cure cures all these disorders simply by removing the cause of the disorder This is the reason why cures effeoted by Warner's Safe Cure are permanent cures.
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Gisborne Times, Volume XXV, Issue 2071, 4 May 1907, Page 4
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1,395Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Gisborne Times, Volume XXV, Issue 2071, 4 May 1907, Page 4
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