By Cuticura Soap and Ointment. Doctor Called It "the Itch." She Coufd Mot Sleep and Used to Scratch Herself to Pieces. •—:—_ "I had a young baby left in my care aboirt 1. two years ago, and the child caught a very severe form of skin disease. She was only a few months old when the skin disease first appeared on her body just like little water blisters under the skin, and it used to irritate the child that much, that she could not sleep night or day, an^i she used to scratch herself to pieces. Even in her sleep, she v.'ould scratch. So I took her to tke doctor after trying a patent ointment, and he told me it was a very contagious disease, called the itch. I kept going to the doctor, but nothing he gave me seemed to do the child any good, so I took her to another doctor and he gave me every possible kind of ointment that ne could prescribe, but it all did no good. "Then I saw one of the Cuticura advertisements and I at once* sent for a sample and applied it. I found that it seemed to cool the affected parts at once, so I procured a pot of Cuticura Ointmeot and a cake of Cuticura Soap, and bathes! the child all over with warm water and then applied the Cuticura Ointment. In a few days I was astonished at the difference, the more so. because the child had been suffering so long, for twelve months, and such a state she was in. The whole of her body grid even her head was affected. It is six months since I left off using the Cuticura Remedies, and shehasn't had a sign of the trouble sines. "I had tried everything for it, but notningr seemed to ease or cure it, till I trier} the Cuticura Soap and Ointment. Then she Beemed to get ease directly it was applied and I continued to apply it till the troublo disappeared entirely and she was entirely cured by the Cuticura Soap and Ointment " (Sisrnecl) Mrs. Ethe! Christian. 5 Vincent St., Baimain, Sydney, M. S. W., May 16,1911. Although Cuticura Soap and Ointment are snld throughout the world, a liberal samnle of Oi'tirnra Ointment, with 32-page booklet on affections of the skin, scalp and hair, will be sent, po^t-f^e. on application to R. To^tis '- -"- 7>™t. 6Tv. Sydney, N. S. W. Fleecy Woollens Mrs. Clare Millar, of Enmore, Sydney, writes : — "People who haven't used ' Sunlight Soap' for blankets should try it. The common soaps seem to leave' the ,-bfehkets dull'and heavy to the touch, but ' Sunlight' makes the nap stand well up, and makes them fleecy and woolly as though they had just come out of the Shop, and this with less time and less work than is required with ordinary soap." GOOD LAUNDRY JQAP No. 57. GUARANTEED UNDER THE"PURE FOOD ACT, 1908, N.5.W.," BY LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, SYDNEY, N.S.W. No. 57. jjjj. EVERY BEETLE Hk EVERY BUG BJlIf V\ onceMKeatingV comes ' BJ§|!fl|J' / Jn* nto thorough contact f Bpijra^ Sold in Tins only. fijHr The unrivalled way to fgr kill beetles, bugs and c!I household insects is to ] A \k ' I The Unapproachable M [ I Cheap underclothing is 5 I often useless: there is nei- I I ther worth nor warmth in it. 5 r^ The Dr. Jaeger system B | elothmg won its place in the fj world years ago, and the S *j place has been steadily i *5 maintained. Jaeger gar- m i ■$ ments are made solely and m'■ % absolutely from the finest 1 % pure natural wool. They m I are perfectly woven, and m % do not shrink. The styles m appeal strongly to good f§ • | taste, and conform to every m desired condition of health H ; and hygiene. §9 i Having regard to these a I $ facts, Jaeger is not merely §| p moderate in price: it is §§' extraordinarily cheap. Its ff; first cost may be somewhat m higher than that of cheap m * slop - stuff, but it wears Eg three times as long and is I ! many times as comfortable I • and safe. T » 1 > Ifyouwant | i TOabe/^vMArk something i \ /Mmk, still more g , >@|i§st^k moderate | i the famous n • Jaeger g ! JAEGER is Inimitable! 1 •u116^? 081? 11 ,worsted and Woollen j mills (though the largest in Australasia) are choked with orders for ! KJveral months ahead, so great is the I demand for Rosiyn blankets, ruga, ! tweeds, worsteds, suits, flannels, plaid- • mgs, and unshrinkable underwear for I men, women, and et"Wr«n Advt-
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Marlborough Express, Volume XLVII, Issue 34, 8 February 1913, Page 3
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759Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 Marlborough Express, Volume XLVII, Issue 34, 8 February 1913, Page 3
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