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Bi' AWFUL HUMOR Vuiole EL./ Covered and Head So Bad She Could Not Comb Hair~ Si^»- Affected— Neighbor Beggeii r* Her to Use Cuticura — • It Cooled the Itching Flesh and BROUGHT REST, SLEEP AND A PERFECT CURE "Words cannot express the awful skin disease Isuffered wit a. My whole body was covered with it. My head broke out so that I could not comb my hair> For A- month or more I suffered with a terrible sore throat. When I should lie down afc night my eyes would stick together and I would have to bathe them before opening them each morning. I scarcely could see for my eyes had failed me from the effect of tho skin disease. I tried three doctors, but they gave me no relief and then I tried all kinds of things that I thought would do me good but I could find nothing. I was a perfect prisoner with the awful humor. "' One of my neighbors begged me to try the Cuticura Remedies, and I made up my. mind to try them but not thinking that I would ever be cured. I would take a hot bath with Cuticura Soap and then apply the Cuticura Ointment. £ I found relief in a few day* and in a month you could scarcely see a spot on my face. I felt like a new" person. When I first began to use the Cuticura Remedies they cooled the itching flesh and brought me real good sleep and rest at night. I had suffered fulljttwo years with the skin disease but now I am a well woman and in good health. I beg every ekin sufferer to use the Cuticura Remedies. I cannot praise Cuticura enough because I thought that I would never get well again. Mrs. Cordelia C. Pitts, Newborn, Georgia, U. S. A., Nov. 24 aad Dec. 21, 1908." Reference: R. Towns & Co., Sydney. Keeping the Hair To prevent dry, thin and falling hair, remove dandruff, allay itching and irritation and promote the growth and beauty of the hair, frequent shampoos with Cuticura Soap and occasional dressings with Cuticura are usually effective when all other methods fail. Special and full directions accompany each j package of Cuticura. Q- \ Eep«ts: .London. 27, Cbmrterbouse Sq.: Australia, 11. Towns * Co.. Sydney; U. S. A.. Potter Drug k. Cbem. Corp- Sale Props., Boeton. av-Pon tree, 32-ptce book on torturing shin diseases. WRONG ! ! WHEN A MAN SAYS " GEORGE DAVIES MAKES CHEAP SUITS," HE IS WRONG! "Cheap," says the dictionary, "means common —of little worth." My suits are decidedly different to that. I started my Cash Tailoring System to afford relief to men who were victimised by credit tailors to the extent of pounds pn their tailoring bills. I knew if I received cash for every suit I made I could work on a profit that would "put the shutters' up" at more than half lhe y tailoring establishments. That is why the opposition is mad — that is why they announce vaguely in their advertisements Ithat "there are a lot of cheap suits about." But that cap doesn't fit me. I have let daylight into the credit tailoring system, and it is doomed. And with its death, the George Davies System of Cash Tailoring has risen phoenix-like as a boon and a blessing to every man who will avail himself of the benefits of paying cash. Bring me the last suit that your tailor made for you at five aiid six guineas and I guarantee to not only give you a better fit, a smarter cut for £2 less for cash, but in addition to give you materials and patterns that will fairly surprise you with their quality and newness. I don't beat about the bush — j I guarantee it. If you are not satisfied, every penny you have paid is refunded. -That's clear enough — and to clinch it, I give you that guarantee over my own signature. Now — what about that "cheap suit 11 argument? Come and see the values I offer and be convinced for yourself. 55/-. 63/-, 75/Are my prices for genuine tailormade suits. GEORGE DAVIES THE MODERN TAILOR, 56 WILLIS STREET, '(Between "Evening Post" and Grand Hotel) WELLINGTON. 4 A CUP OF TEA— It It alway* pleasant and tavteoratlnt. It brighten* tb« out!*ok. But— A Cup of the Tea — There Is refreshment, iadeed ! It will transform leaden maotfs t» (-•Men. it will laitify delicfit «nder the dullest RECORD TEA 8 ■IS THE TEA t

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19100328.2.35.1

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume LXXIX, Issue 72, 28 March 1910, Page 4

Word Count
745

Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Evening Post, Volume LXXIX, Issue 72, 28 March 1910, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Evening Post, Volume LXXIX, Issue 72, 28 March 1910, Page 4