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Mr Lloyd George confesses that his greatest pleasure still is in hearing a sermon, “It is a. far greater pleasure t-o me than to go to an entertainment,’ 5 he said. He recalled how he had listened in Males to three sermons in succession. We asked u'hether he was tired at the end, and he replied, **Not at all tired. 11 A clergyman claims to have buried an old ■woman in the same grave as her sister, who had died 150 years earlier. They were, of course, half-sisters. Their father, at 20, married his first wife in 1740, and the first daughter, horn in 1741, died in infancy. He was 70 when he married a second wife, and she, in 1790, boro him a daughter, who lived to be 102. Thus in the same grave were laid two sisters, in 1741 and 1592. DIPHTHERIA AND THROATS. With Diphtheria and other throat epidemics ' prevalent. every e* o ™®* should keep Eiuenzol (Is 6d and 2s 6d) handy. Health authorities recommend it for disinfecting the noefi and throat. Young children who cannot gargle should lie on their backs while halrteaspoonfule of Fluenzol ate poured into each nostril.* Boob: Most things that are bought.go to the buyer. Simp: Yeah, all except coal, and that goes to the cellar.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZTIM19171013.2.19.5

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

New Zealand Times, Volume XLII, Issue 9790, 13 October 1917, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
214

Page 3 Advertisements Column 5 New Zealand Times, Volume XLII, Issue 9790, 13 October 1917, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 5 New Zealand Times, Volume XLII, Issue 9790, 13 October 1917, Page 3

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