BLOOD HUMOURS Skin Humours, Scalp Humours, Hair Humours, Wfieffier Simple Scrofulous or - Hereditary Speedily Cured by Guticura Soap, Ointment and Pills. Complete Treatment tor Ail Kinds of Humours. In the treatment of torturing, disfiguring, Itching, scaly, crusted, pimply, blotchy and scrofulous humours of the skin, scalp and blood, with loss of hair, Cutlcara Soap, Ointment and Pills havi been wonderfully successful. Even the most obstinate of constitutional humours, such as bad blood, scrofula, in* herlted and contagious humours, with loss of hair, glandular swellings, ulcerous patches in the throat and mouth, sore eyes, copper-coloured blotches, as well as boils, carbuncles, scurvy, sties, ulcers and sores arising from an impure or Impoverished condition of the Wood, yield to the Cuticura Treatment, When all other remedies fail. . And greater still, if possible, is the wonderful record of cures of torturing, disfiguring humours among infants and children. The suffering which Cuticura Remedies have alleviated among the young, and the comfort they have afforded worn-out and worried parents, have led to their adoption In countless homes as priceless curatives for the skin and blood. Infantile and birth bemours, milk crust, scalled head, eczema, rashes and every form of itching, scaly, pimply skin and scalp humours, with loss of hair, of infancy and childhood, are speedily, permanently and economically cured when all other remedies suitable for children, and even the best physicians, fail. Cotieum Resolvent, Hqnid and In the form of Chocolate Coated Pills, Coticora Ointment and Cuticura Sonp nre •old throughout tlie world. DepoU: London, Zf Charternonie Bq.; nria, S Itac de la Paix; AtiatraH*, H. Towns h Co.. Svdn«yi BosVm. Otambu* Are. Totter Drug & -Send lor'"The Great Humour C'iro." Md Rosebery on "The Land o' Cakes." Lord Rosebwy was the principal [leaker at the last St. Andrew's 'ay festival oi the Ko.vnl Scottish orporation, and in the course of is address said lie owed it to the istinguished strangers present that ,'ening to give a brief explanation who they were and -why they id met together at dinner. They L're ii rude, hardy nation, coming mil a barren and nigged country, ho had fouml their natural limits o small for their expansive I'llpaty. Ji was their custom, exiled as ey were from the, home of their rth and traditions, to celebrate o great national festivals in the year. One was dedicated to St. Andrew—the saint whom they shared with Ihe greal Kmpire of ltussia, and whose body reposed j n the Cathedral of Salemo. The other celebration was dedicated to one whom- the most enthusiastic admirer could hardly characterise as a saint. lie was, perhaps, the antithesis. of a saint, in that he was the ,
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Taranaki Daily News, Volume XLVII, Issue 7725, 30 January 1905, Page 4
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442Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Taranaki Daily News, Volume XLVII, Issue 7725, 30 January 1905, Page 4
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