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ffiDJIiJT Girl's Head a Mass of Humour-Grew Thin and Weak — Despaired of Ever Curing Her— Baby was Even Worse with Running Eczema— No Signs of Eruption Left Now. MOTHER TELLS HOW CUTICURA CURED BOTH "My lifcGe girl's bead started -with a lot of pimples and thea they began to jg^^ fill with matter and gKS discharge. As f^*s fast as ona- broke 3w^X. ' there was a lofe 4*ilfrT(BS\ **£&*. more came out unff Wl.)i?*»-ff m nerhead was a : /// il I kytjjs ijgi complete mass of Jaf\>i \ \ Xri^^Q running sores. For *felLc lL , 1 isS&t*iJ|nJ days she would not ! j Mk« H i ff^n ns - ®k® began to f i Srv^LOiP // ii 11 get tf" 11 anc * weak Bilr^H#§sib% I S ave . U P JBbTT*^-^^ n § nope of. ever getA: II lnTliCr~T — [C5-ting ter. head well -»S»4I i rCTwr^ again until I saw i (PL Mi/? ® ' about tha Cuticur* -' Remedies. But vj^ ¦ Cuticura • Biade it gaito well again (it was" bad tor about ax months). Her hair is getting lovely «nd thick now. "Cuticura eurtd toy baby's face at fee same time. His dear little nose and efrin were raw with this same complaint and used to run and bleed awfully. When I have carried him down from his sleep his pillow would b* covered with blood. One day Bay neighbour carried him down and she screamed to see him covered, with blood whera the places had been running. But now he is entirely free from anything and is such a lovely fat boy- His nose was nearly eaten away with it. I was told by people in the ¦village that it was the running eczema. I tried endless ointments but none did it any good tnl I received the Cuticura and I am glad to say that it has cured 'both of them. Mrs. L. Brown, Manor Cottages, Stanwicfc, nr. Wellingborough, NortiSmaptonshire, Eng., Nov. 12, 1909." Boference: E. Towns & Ca, Sydney. Cutlcnra to. the most economical treatment known for thi Bkln. tcalP- hair and bands, ot intantn. efeUdreH and adults. A tablet of Cntlcurs Soap and • box ol Cuticnr* Ointment are often sufficient to eon. Bold t&roughout tie world. Depots rLoadon. 27, Caarterhouse Bq.: Paris. 10, Rue de la Chancsee ff AstiQ*. Australia, a. Tottbs * Co.. Sydney: V. 8. A - Potter Drag k Chem. Oorp- fiols Prow., Boston jKS-P«st-Ire». 32-paio Cutlcma boot, containing lavalaable adrloe ob the Treatment ot Skin Troubles.

That's my position. I do a huge trade and I'm going to increase it. On such a magnificent basis of honourable trading, tailoring of consummate excellence and astounding value have I built my business that competition has no terrors for me. like Caesar, I eigh for other worlds to conquer. Unlike Caesar, 1^ do rfbt sigh in vain, great as my trade is, it can and "mil be greater. I consider that I have lifted the whole art of tailoring to a higher level. My methods and my standard of work mark the advent of a new era in tailoring. I consider myself a missionary of fair dealing — an apostle of conscientious work. First of all — years ago, the old f ashioEed, bad system of "Credit" maintained almost .supreme in the tailoring worlds — old fashioned, dear, indifferent tailors made clothes that horrified my finer artistic instincts, and I felt myself in the presence of a gre^rt need. The need of good tailoring. That need I set out to fulfil — no easy j task — my ambition begot enemies^ — the 1 old fashioned extortionate credit men j were soon up in arms, and by threats, bombast, etc., endeavoured to thwart my movement towards a system of tailoring of high, value and fair cost for cashBeing essentially a fighter, I willingly their challenge — but the struggle was not of long duration — backed as ! I was by sound honest trade methods and high efficiency — friends soon came any way of doing things, and victory was assuredSome of the customers — men that paid cash for better clothes than were ob- j iainaHe elsewhere at credit tailors' of j those days, I am still proud to see on my list of clients TO-DAY — in a great company of well dressed satisfied men. I want YOU to join that company — it includes in its ranks almost every really well-dressed, smartly-groomed man in ti'ft Dominion. These men dress better than you. And— lT COSTS THEM LESS. foil could dress like that — if you put yourself in my hands, in the same inexpensive way. If you will come into my establishment • (it involves NO OBLIGATION) and let me show you some of the ex?uisite materials f am just making up or Summer, you will be enraptured. "When you hear the price you will hardly believe that I am telling you the truth. Yet my staff is all highly paid and of the first order — my materials all from the premier mills of the world — how is %¦>. THIS is how it is— l PAY CASH. And all I ask is that you PAYCASH. Then I can save you FORTY SHILLINGS clear on a better suit than you .jan get elsewhere at all. But — come and see. iss, 635, 755, for Genuine Tailor-made , Suits to Order. irFflHiTrr* II A V IrS LIMITED. "The Modern Tailor," 56, Willis-street, (Between Evening Post and Grand Hotel), WELLINGTON. 15

HpHERE'S really no need to continue coughing. What you do need is Lane's Emulsion. 5Z fT CHI NG, chafing, face blotches, hsat rwsh, pimples sunburn, cracks, cHapß, &r aay 3kin irritation qu*eS# carP fey LANE'S mSgOLlWpr' Queen ol Skin Tofiics. i/-(«t

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19110128.2.132.1

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume LXXXI, Issue 23, 28 January 1911, Page 14

Word Count
925

Page 14 Advertisements Column 1 Evening Post, Volume LXXXI, Issue 23, 28 January 1911, Page 14

Page 14 Advertisements Column 1 Evening Post, Volume LXXXI, Issue 23, 28 January 1911, Page 14