Dkafebs, Etc. L. CULLEN. DRAPER SPECIAL NOTICE We are now opening up NEW SEASON’S GOODS in all departments, including the most beautiful assortment of Ladies’ Blouses ever shown in Te Aroha. OYER 100 BLOUSES TO SELECT EROM All in very latest styles and marked at lowest prices to secure speedy sale OUR MILLINERY DEPARTMENT Is still to the front and comprises the very latest and choicest styles, specially selected by Mrs Cullen to suit local requirements, and carried out by one of Auckland’s most expert milliners. OUR DRESS and PRINT DEPARTMENTS Include a lovely collection of. the Choicest Goods, including Embroidered Muslins and Lawns, carefully selected by Mrs Cullen, who has had special experience in this department, LADIES’ NECKWEAR INSPECTION INVITED In all the newest styles ; also a beautiful lot of fancy and washing Belts. Without being pressed to buy. 12 THE BRITISH & CONTINENTAL THE STRAND, AUCKLAND. Me invite Inspection of our Stock by intending purchasers and the musical public in general. Our Stock is the largest and best fleeted in New Zealand and comprises Instruments by the foremost Munufat • turers, frcm whom we have secured the Sole Agencies for our districts. Ye SOI good Instruments only, fully guaranteed, and (jt. lowest prices, lur Term on the Deferred Payment System are the easiest ever offered. We allowhigrhest value for Old Instruments taken in exchange from custom *rs. The british & Continental Piano Company, THE ST RAND. OUEEN STREET- ' J ■ Catalogues and any Information can be obtained from .Via W. Y. IvUmr »<, • V•■ >- 'Y’HIS CANDLE IS SURE to you ase “SYLVIA gOOKSyy’ELL. WAX IT GIVES A VERY STEADY f LIGHT, AND IS MOST PLEASANT TO USE. BEiSURE & OROE'I C ICI INFLUE FT7 /■/ IlLa AND CHAMBERLAIN’S COUGH REMEDY.
WHAT IS INFLUENZA? ITS EFFECT. r:Ec:cAL ken interviewed. These questions are best answered by rcveral eminent medical men in pub- !:■ hed interviews. The most important j i-ir.ts emphasized by the doctors are ti.eso : ImTjenza is highly infectious. Influenza stimulates other diseases. Influenza has an extraordinary effect on the mental function. Influenza picks out the weak points in a j arson’s constitution. The victims of influenza are adults who perish from pneumonia or bronchitis and the aged who sink from heart exhaustion. Children while prone to the disease, enjoy comparative immunity from its complications and dangers. Influenza shows a decided tendency to relapses, afeatureto which the indirect fatality of the disease isin a great measure due. Alcoholic stimulants are not only unnecessary but positively harmful. An attack of influenza seems to render the individual more liable to contract the disease from future exposure. The attack comes on with lightning like speed. A person in apparently perfect health is suddenly overcome by a feeling of discomfort. He feels chilly or shakes with the rigor worthy of an ague. His head aches. There are pains in his eyeballs and other symptoms characteristic of the disease eoon' follow. Can Be Cured. Commence at first symptoms to use Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. < Thousands have used this Remedy . during the last few years, and we have yet to learn of a single case where they w«£6 not pleased. i
HOW TO CURE INFLUENZA. READ. REFLECT. REMEMBER. Rest, warmth and quiet are the three sovereign remedies for this disease, j and the best preventives of its secondary complications. Go to bed and remain in bed until well on the way toward recovery. Two or three days in bed when you first contract the disease is better than two or three weeks later on. Also take a double dose of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy to begin with and then the regular dose every hour. If it should nauseate, discontinue it until the nausea subsides and then take it in smaller doses or less frequently. . Before going to bed take two of Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets and bathe the feet in water as warm as can be comfortably borne. If the attack is a severe one take sulphate of quinine in doses of two grains each, every four hours, for a few days. It will keep up the vitality and enable the system to withstand the attack. Always in the House. You should always have a bottle of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy in the 1 house. You cannot tell just the hour 1: you will need it, for you do not know when you will take cold. You could 1 not bring home a better present than Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. It may iv >t be needed to-day. but what about ] 1 norrow? Colds come into every i ne. Be prepared for them. Be r . e and have a bottle of Chamberlain’ ‘ < •-•ugh Remedy always on hand. CHAMBERLAIN'S COUGH REMEDY t Officially declared free from all poison. c Sold Everywhere 1/6, 1
THREATS OF INFLUENZA. US DANGERS. ENGLISH AND CONTINENTAL ADVICE. The increased mortality last season from Lung Affections following attacks of Influenza emphasizes more than ever the necessity for nursing an initiatory cold. Especially since the advices from England, The Continent, and America indicate that there has been raging in all those countries an epidemic of Influenza of the most virulent type. It is only natural that Australia will in turn have the same. It is well to take into account in such connection that our winter months are generally considered the most fatal for pneumonia, especially when influenza is prevailing even in mild epidemic form. Thus far we haveescapeda visitation of a virulent form of the latter malady, but there is abundance of time and opportunity for the development of a severe epidemic, with the usual aftermath of alarming mortality. The effective treatment of an ordinary ' cold ’ is a matter of a day or two against a possible subsequent sickness for weeks. The indications of a severe attack of influenza are headache, chilliness, general muscular pains, fever, sore throat, cough and systemic lassitude. When these show themselves no time is to be lost and the patient should give up work at once and promptly place himself .under proper medical care. There is no danger whatever of any serious consequences from an attack of influenza when Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy is used, as it counteracts any tendency towards pneumonia. This fact has been abundantly proven in many thousands or cases during the epidemics of the past few years
PHYSICAL r, ago;:y. LACK OF SYMPATHY. Before we can sympathise with others we must .have suffered ourselves. No one can realise the suffering attendant on an attack of Influenza .unless he has had the actual experience. There is probably no disease that causessp much physical and rnentaJ agony, or which so successfully defies medical aid. A}l danger from Influenza, however, may be avoided hy the prompt u e of. Chamberlain’s Cough liemcd/ ii.fe pain in the chc-st disappears, the lever subsides, and tjfie whole body becomes more comfortable. .Many persons find themselves affected %’ith a persistent cough after an attack ®f. Influenza. As this cough can be promptly cured by the use of Chamberlain’sCo*.ugh Remedy, it should not be allowed toron on until it becomes troublesome. Aitnong the tens of thousands who have tsised this remedy, not one case has ever been [ reported that lias resulted in pmsUEPiinia, j or that has not recovered. What Foil ows. Often it is the persistent cough, which is not only dangerous but annoying. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy has been used most extensively, and always with success for the relief and cure of this cough. EVERY BOTTLE GUARANTEED If you fail to get beneficial resulti after using two-thirds of a bottle of CHAMBERLAIN’S COUGH RELIEDY according to direction, return it to yatT deaSer and get your money back. It it welt known for its prompt cures of toys fo, fold and croup
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Te Aroha News, Volume XXVII, Issue 43382, 13 October 1908, Page 1
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1,278Page 1 Advertisements Column 4 Te Aroha News, Volume XXVII, Issue 43382, 13 October 1908, Page 1
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