A WOMAN IN TROUBLE
Muddy gomplexion— rheumatism — overweight — too tired to work If this woman had taken a different remedy for each of her complaints, she would have been kept very busy! Imagine too the length of time that would have been required to effect an all-round cure! In actual fact, she took only one medicine. And she took that medicine for but six weeks before she saw 'every one of her complaints fading away. The simple explanation is that all her troubles arose from one common cause. In a letter she says: — "Since I started taking Kruschen six weeks ago, my health has greatly improved. My complexion, which had a muddy appearance, is changed to a clear and , healthy look. My rheumatism has almost gone. My weight two months ago was 11 st. 6 lbs., and yesterday when I was weighed by the same scales I weighed lOst. 81bs. This decrease has helped me wonderfully, for | I don't feel half so tired, and am able to work better than I have done for months. I shall never be without Kruschen after this." (Miss) A. L. R. Half the complaints that „ afflict humanity — from simply feeling "off colour" to acute rheumatism — can | all be traced back to one root cause I — internal sluggishness. There is one sure, safe way to keep yourself regular inside — the \ "little daily dose" of Kruschen Salts. Kruschen is a scientific combination ' of six mineral salts which keep your eliminating organs in proper tune and so clear away the waste matter that clogs your system and poisons the blood. And Kruschen has a direct tonic influence upon the blood-stream, too, purifying it and invigorating it so , that it floods every fibre of you with Vtingling energy. j Kruschen Salts is obtainable at all Chemists and Stores at 2/6 per bottle.
i to take: it must bring- back the red, or danger, flag for cars. i Speed a Blessing. ,1 Wlhen, in the name of all that is sensible, shall we realise that speed is not a danger in itself; that it is one of the greatest conveniences and 'iblessings of modern times? Only the thoughtless, ignorant, or callous people who misuse it are dangerous. It is th'ey ,who should be "limited" — by penalties until they quickly learn, or otherwise ar.e not .^.llowed to drive. ' j,panno:t this he understood? I am tj^-ed of writing it, of saying it in ^peeehes; I got tired of broadcasting the National programmes. Every ' g^perienced motorist knows it to he 1 t£hejp'Danger lies not in speed, nor yet irr-any single class of traveller. . It : lies in f ools, f ools who walk, or ride, or drive. They, also, are not g.uiltless of r.esponsibility who made the law and see its penalties unused; who made a Highway Code — land quite a good o.ne — tbut do not see it read: who do ! not treat the traffic problem as a national one, but will persist in narrowness of vision, toying with "limits" and such futile things. • What they must limit is the degree of carelessness with which some men | and women move about. the ignorance with which they drive their cars; the obstinacy with which they cross the road.
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Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 3, Issue 723, 26 December 1933, Page 2
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534A WOMAN IN TROUBLE Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 3, Issue 723, 26 December 1933, Page 2
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