YOU CAN DEPEND ON IT
that if you procure the GENUINE SANDER EUCALYPTI EXTRACT you will not only be benefited, but you will be safe from the harmful effects of the common eucalyptus oils and the so-called “extracts.” The importance of this is brought home forcibly by the report in the Melbourne “Age,” August sth, 1916, of poisoning of about 30 girls by eucalyptus lollies, which were evidently made from the common eucalyptus, SANDER’S EXTRACT can always be relied on. It prevents meningitis and all other infectious diseases; sniffed up the nose and three drops on sugar. Applied to ulcers, poisoned wounds, bums, sprains, eczema, it gives prompt relief and cures permanently. Colds, bronchitis, lung trouble, rheumatism, neuralgia, are banished by it. SANDER’S EXTRACT is beneficial in so many affections that no household can afford to be without it. Specially refined and prepared by Sander’s process it has no harmful by-effects; you run no risk with SANDER’S EXTRACT.—Advt.
TO DROP BOMBS ON BERLIN. Remembrance of some of his American friends who were lost in the Lusitania has caused a German - American chemist, Mr Segmond Saxe, to offer a reward of 1,000 dollars, in the form of a Liberty Bond, for the first American aviator to drop bombs over Berlin. Mr Saxe wishes that his contribution might form the nucleus of a fund which the Aero Club of America might establish for the same purpose. He says:—"My thought is to avenge my friends. Sherman said that war was hell. Well, let us give them all the hell we can and as quick as we can. It is the quickest way to end this war. Let the Prussians have a taste of their own wicked methods. It is the only way to bring home to them the horror of their acts. The raids on London were barbarities. The only way to stop them is to fight Germany with her own weapTHE KAISER'S PHOTOGRAPHS. The Rundschau announces that the Kaiser is making a collection of all the war books published in or out of Germany. He has already 10,000 volumes. A special section of this war library includes the photographs of himself taken at the front. They numbered 11,000 after five months of war. CAN'E KEEP IT SECRET. TSe splendid work of Chamberlain's Tablets for the stomach and liver is daily becoming more widely known. No such grand remedy for stomach and liver troubles has ever been known. For sale everywhere. —Advt.
Wanted: Housewives to realise that it pays to purchase groceries and household requisites at Walker and Furrie’a. . ,
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH19171025.2.33.3
Bibliographic details
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Manawatu Herald, Volume XXXIX, Issue 1745, 25 October 1917, Page 4
Word count
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426Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 Manawatu Herald, Volume XXXIX, Issue 1745, 25 October 1917, Page 4
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