PILES CURED.
Piles rarely kill, but they cause constant torture. This is especially true in the case of those who are over so slightly constipated. Piles can be quickly and permanently cured, without pain, cutting or detention from business. This has been proved in thousands of cases in both sexes, and of all ages, and in the very worst as well as in ordinary cases. No one who has not suffered the torments of bleeding, itching, ilnd painful piles, can appreciate for a moment the marvellous sense of relief which follows the use of Doan’s Ointment. Go at once and get a pot of this ointment, it will end your sufferings. Mr F. W. Gardes, Proprietor of the Family Hotel, Foxton, says;— “For five years I suffered from that awfully trying complaint, itching piles. The pain and irritation were at times almost unbearable, particularly at night, and during the warm weather. I tried many remedies in the hope of finding a cure, but could get nothing to do me any lasting good. I then consulted a doctor, but his treatment failed also. At last Doan’s Ointment was recommended to me, the recommendation being that it had effected a wonderful cure. I bought a pot at once, and by the time I had used about half of it I found that the irritation was much less, so I persevered, and before long I was completely cured. It is three years since my cure was effected, and as 1 have not been troubled with piles since, I am safe in saying it is a permanent' one. I always keep a pot of Doan's Ointment in the house now, and use it occasionally, Just as
a preventative against any return.” Six 'years lately Mr Gardes confirms the above: —“It is now nine years since Doan’s Ointment cured me of piles, and I am still free of this complaint.” 4 Doan’s Ointment is sold by all chemists and storekeepers at 3s per pot, or will be posted on receipt of price by Foster-McClellan Co.„. 76 Pitt Street, Sydney. But, be sure you get DOAN’S. — Advt.
The'Waimate Witness passes thislibel on Patea : “Patea, according to the -local paper’s version, has great clays ahead of it. It may, perchance, have, and anyway it needs all the'consolations and compensations that stimulating, if delusive, prediction of this kind can promise it, for ‘it is beyond question the most unpie hires que, the most slatternly, insanitary and mephitic looking place not only in the provincial radius, but among the country settlements of the Dominion. Passing it on the railway, one instinctively applies his handkerchief to his nostrils, and turns away to shut out the nightmare of unredeemed, unmitigated, incarnate and sterile ugliness. It is impossible to. conceive of anyone accepting the conditions of existence in such a place except under the direst stress of physical necessity, and the melancholy residents certainly look as if they needed to be sustained and cheered by reminders of the great days ahead of the village. Patea’s little industrial flurry which induces dreams and delusions, is entirely transitory and impermanent, and due to a concatenation of accidental circumstances that may disappear any day and ; a-/c it empty, forlorn and unhappy.”
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Manawatu Herald, Volume XL, Issue 1800, 12 March 1918, Page 4
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536PILES CURED. Manawatu Herald, Volume XL, Issue 1800, 12 March 1918, Page 4
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