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corns carried rCv away by Radox \ This man thought his corns were a ‘ hopeless case.’ Now he’s foot-happy again! He discovered Radox. Just read his letter: ‘ I have had bad corns for years, and I had given up trying to cure them. However, I bought a packet of Radox Bath Salts, and in five days I pulled the corns out. I am a baker by trade, and get many long hours on my feet, but thank Radox Bath Salts for the happy hours they have given me. You may use this letter in any way you wish.’ R.R. HOW RADOX REMOVES CORNS Y;! C ■>’■//• As soon as Radox ’ .* dissolves in the water, • r/. ° " millions of tiny '‘ ’ ''■W.'*”* ’ bubbles form. These • ' . *• are composedof highly * * • * « ‘ | active oxygen gas. .' • This active oxygen , ' .- penetrates the pores • ®o/ the skin and • • carries the softening • * • . • salts of Radox down •‘ | to the root of the corn. • . . • The hard tissues are \ ’ , IT/ .• ■ . softened. The corn be- • yj ’ ‘ comes detached from ‘ \ / .* its moorings so that \/ ’ * it can be lifted out • ' Y • ‘ I root an d a!l - Of all Chemists and Stores. 2/3 per packet ; double quantity 4/-.

Girl Wins £4,719 Damages MALICIOUS PROSECUTION OF TYPIST A girl of 21 spent all day in Manchester Assize Court picking up pins. ‘ Every time a barrister or solicitor unfolded a sheaf of papers and dropped a pin the girl picked it up. “For luck,” she slid. The jury retired. The girl picked up another pin. Then the jury returned. “Damages of £4.719 for the plaintiff,” said the foreman. The girl, the plaintiff, was Mrs Frances Irene Lowick, of Rhos-on-Sea, formerly a typist. She had -won her action for false imprisonment and mali cious prosecution against her former employers, Philip Lazarus, a Man Chester J.P., and his son Adolph, ol Salford. Mr Justice Atkinson, ii granting ; stay of exectuion, ordered that £719 b> paid immediately, and that £4,000 b< paid in to court within ten days. Mrs Lowick was arrested after sh< left Lazarus’s employ, and accused ol forgery and falsification of books. Th< charges were dismissed at Mancheste' Police Court. Mr Justice Atkinson, summing-up, said: Mrs Lowick, without a single-cheque having been put before her, was taken to the police station and submitted to every indignity imaginable. She was forcibly stripped naked and washed witih carbolic soap. She was taken to a police court in a van be tween a woman of the streets and a disorderly person. The defendants stated, and were still saying, that she had swindled them out of £1,050. The jury found that while Philip Lazarus honestly believed in the charges against the girl, Adolph did not, that neither took reasonable "-are to ascertain the true facts before pro ceeding, and that both were actuated by malice. When Mrs Lowick left the court a crowd cheered her and many rushed to shake her by the hand. “Now that I have been awarded these damages I do not want to crow,’ Mrs Lowick said to the Daily Sketch nt the home of her father, Mr William Thompson, in Ethel avenue, Higthe l Blackley, Manchester. The pretty young wife—she has been married four months to a Rhos-on-Sea garage proprietor —was just beginning to regain her composure after the ordeal of the trial.

“The action was brought because 1 could not have people thinking terrible things about me and I had try to clear myself. “My wish is to-be quietly out of the public notice and to-morrow T shall he going back to my husband and my home in North Wales.

Baby Still Laughed bO-WEEED BY SHEETS FROM BLAZING HOUSE Cut off by flames which swept tht staircase, Dr. and Mrs Andrew Kef alas lowered their 12-months-old baby 30 feet in a piece of bedding tied to knotted sheets from a bedroom window of their home in Broad Green, Liverpool, to neighbours waiting on the ground below. yirs Kefalas scrambled to safety down a rope of knotted sheets. The doctor followed later by climbing down a ladder raised by firemen. Mrs Kefalas told the Daily Sketch that the baby was fast asleep in h&r cot when they discovered the lire, ana while her husband telephoned to the Fire Brigade she knotted sheets together. “ Except for bruises and scratches and a little shock none of us was hurt,’’ she added. ‘ The baby laughed all the while and was still laughing when a police officer held her safely in the garden.”

“J7EAVER” is the only Sauce I dare give father. Tomato and Worcester. Real appetisers. New Zea-land-made,

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TCP19361130.2.11.2

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Taranaki Central Press, Volume IV, Issue 297, 30 November 1936, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
754

Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 Taranaki Central Press, Volume IV, Issue 297, 30 November 1936, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 Taranaki Central Press, Volume IV, Issue 297, 30 November 1936, Page 3

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