Harbour light theatre—To-night. Constance Talmadge in "Venus'of Venice." Pauline Frederick in "The Glory of ■ Clemintinn." Gazette. Comedy. Tomorrow;' "SORRELL AND* SON," from the Novel by Warwick Deeping. Comedy. Newsreel. PRICES: Matinee, Usual Prices; Evenings, Circle 2s, Stalls Is 6d. Reserves at King nnd Cousins. W' C. CLEAR'S and CO., LYTTELTON, • SHIPPING AGENTS. GRAIN AND PRODUCE GRADERS. AGENTS LYTTELTON FERRY LAUNCHES. RING TELEPHONE 21935. 03852
REAL HELP FOR CATARRH SUFFERERS. ♦ 1£ you are afflicted with Catarrh you know only too well the danger and humiliation that this disease brings. You have longed for relief—you have wanted to be free from hawking, spitting, the foul breath, the annoying discharge and the dropping of mucus in the throat. Von have thought sometimes that it was more than a trifling ailment—more than a disgusting disease, that perhaps it was a dangerous one—and you were right. Even though catarrh works away from the lungs it frequently causes catarrhal deafness and head noises that drive the sufferer nearly frantic. It dulls the mind, clogs the nostrils, and slowly but surely undermines the general health. If you have catarrh—don't neglect it. Don't let it make you into a wornout run-down catarrhal wreck. Parmint, the great European treatment for catarrah, should bring you real lasting benefit for your trouble. Don't think that because sprays, inhalers, or salves have failed, that there is no help for you. Catarrh is a disease of the blood, and the only possible way to releive it is by treating the blood itself. Drive the catarrhal poisons from the system and the disease itself must vanish. Parmint acting directly upon the blood and the mucus membrane has brought real help to sufferers in all parts of the world—even under our own trying climatic conditions it has proved successful, and is now eagerly sought for by catarrh sufferers in every State in tho Commonwealth. If you have catarrh in any form you ought to give Parmint a trial. It should bring you a complete relief from your trouble and give you a wider margin of health than you have thought it possible to obtain. —29
At the county court at Edmonton, Middlesex, recently, a witness stated that her husband's Army pension was 17s lid. Judge Crawford remarked: "I cannot understand why the Government fixed on such odd amounts. Why should it not be 17s 6d or 18s? T suppose it gives employment to another 200 clerks at the War Office to make the calculations."
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Bibliographic details
Press, Volume LXIV, Issue 19317, 23 May 1928, Page 14
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409Page 14 Advertisements Column 3 Press, Volume LXIV, Issue 19317, 23 May 1928, Page 14
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