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CATARRH- CAUSES HEAD NOISES AND DEAFNESS. GREAT ■■ EUROPEAN ' REMEDY OPENS UP CLOGGED NOSTRILS AND RELIEVES CATARRHAL DEAFNESS. Few people realise what a, serious disease catarrh really is. If neglected; the damage it does is often irreparable. Deafness, lung troubles, and head noises that drive the sufferer nearly frantic are frequently due to this insidious disease, whilst neglect of catarrh often makes its victim into a worn-out, run-down catarrhal wreck. What is catarrh to-day may soon be something far more serious. It is more than a trifling ailment—more than, a disgusting disease. It's a dangerous one. Unchecked, it frequently destroys smell, taste, ana hearing, and slowly but surely undermines the general health. If you Have catarrh in any form, go to your chemist and get an. ounce of Parmint (Double Strength). . Take this home and aad to it i pint of hot water ana Jib "of ordinary crystal sugar. Take a tablespoonfuT four times a day. Parmint is the great concentrate- for catarrh that is now being so extensively used here in Australasia, where it is giving satisfaction even under our own trying climatic conditions. Catarrh being a disease of the blood, the only possible way to cure.it is by treating the blood itself. Drive the catarrhal poisons from the system by treating the blood, and the disease itself must vanish. Parmint has proved successful in so many cases because it acts directly upon the blood and mucous membrane. To be able to breathe freely, to hear plainly, smell, taste, and arise in the morning refreshed and strong, and with the head and throat free from phlegm, are conditions that make life worth living. For your own sake give Parmint a trial—ana with your whole system crying for relief ,ypu shonld start the Jreatment now.—A'dyt,

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19310708.2.136.1

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXII, Issue 7, 8 July 1931, Page 15

Word Count
294

Page 15 Advertisements Column 1 Evening Post, Volume CXII, Issue 7, 8 July 1931, Page 15

Page 15 Advertisements Column 1 Evening Post, Volume CXII, Issue 7, 8 July 1931, Page 15