■aw*rrarwjMmnw!Mantva The tailor was ill with a dangerous chill. And his breath camo in flutten v "pants." Hi., life, so they said, just lump- bv a "thread," For the doctor had murmcred "no chance." No words can ox-"press" his awful distress, But it "seams that he put up a fight; He took the thing sure, Woods' Peppermint Cure, "Sew," "needless" to say, he got right. ' g A good liniment, and one that can always be relied nnon is nouliere more appreciated than in tJhe country. Scarcely a week passes but some member of the family has need of it. Chamberj" 1 " ® £ n]n Balr " is more widelv known than any liniments for cuts burns and sprains, and it not only give,? relief but heals the wound in about one third the time required by any other treatment. The great power Chamberlain's Pain Svf v S l rev . P ai . n is in the relief it affords in eases of acute nut. rheumatism. Chamberlain's Pain Palm is also an Advt 0 everywhere.—
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HC19100929.2.36.4
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Horowhenua Chronicle, 29 September 1910, Page 4
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170Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 Horowhenua Chronicle, 29 September 1910, Page 4
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