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corns Made him lame/ Tima and timo again we receive letters .from grateful users of Eadox telling how, after prolonged suffering, they have tried j IRadoz Bath Salts and proved our state-, J ment that Badox so tackle 9 corns that ,rou can actually remove them, roots and "all. Here is a letter' recently received. Itiet'it tell its own story:— ' "1 am on my feet a good deal, and 'was walking lame from corns and hard itcin. I have derived such benefit from yotvr Sadox Bath Salts that I really must tell 'you that they have completely removed the corns and hard shin, and I am now walking sound and in comfort." —F.P.L. Radox gets down to the business end of a. corn, which is the root. The oxygen liberated by Badox enters the pores, carrying- softening salts right to the base of the corn. The corn then begins to dissolve, and so loosens that it may be drawn out painlessly. RADOX ■ BATH SALTS m Of all chemists and stores —Jib. packet, a/3; lib. packet, 4/-. Stocked by Pairbairn, "Wright and Co., and by all wholesalers. I : Manufactured by E. Griffiths Hughes Ltd., Manchester. (Established 1756.) Juniper Berries used In £'■ the Manufacture, of n w '■■ J.D.K.Z. Gin. G a «. must seem strange to anyone who stops ti to think about it th»t, in these days of o Empire buying, there should still be a t; large demand for a Gin that comes from ' c Holland when so many excellent British *' Gins are available. When one adds to v this the facts that the Dutch article costs more, is not used in most cocktails, and is not at first taste very attractive to <irink, it is obvious that there must be in g , J.D.K.Z. Gin some unique properties that distinguish it from all other Spirits. Yes, J.D.K.Z. IS different, and the object of this article is to describe how it is made. -^ and the uses for which it is so uniquely o suited. :i ri UNIQUE MEDICINAL VALUE J the remarkable medicinal qualities of fi J.D.K.Z. Gin are due to the?materials of ~ which it is composed and the way in s1 which it is made. The basis is what is c: called in Holland, Montwyn, a Spirit dis- f t tilled In pot stills at a low strength which g retains all the beneficial qualities of the * blended grain. This is then twice again distilled with the actual berries of the e< Italian Juniper — forming the -Spiritus Juniperi of the medical text book, and a a diuretic of considerable value and safety, ii ii CARE IN PREPARATION B The best x hollands, like the finest of *. brandies, is made, or should be made, chiefly in pot stills, which, while they produce the finest of spirits, permit the ■ curative ethers and higher alcohols to ( remain, in the liquid. When one knows that in the case of the best hollands, such t as J.D.K.Z., the liquid passes not less ti than three times through the pot stills, one can begin to get some slight idea of % the care that is taken in its preparation, si b The production of J.D.K.Z. is in the care I of specialists, the same family having given to it their unremitting attention for t! some 250 years, during which time they o have constantly studied and improved the V article which bears their name. It is not a surprising, therefore, that the New Zea- P land public repay their devotiorv by | putting their trust in them, and so acknowledge that J.D.K.Z. has no rivals, t , no peers, and fills a place that nothing n else can take. a ' FOR PEOPLE AROUND 40 S .-.-•■- a J.D.K.Z. Gin is particularly valuable to men and women of middle-age, because of B its stimulating effect on the kidneys, c J.D.K.Z. cleanses the blood stream, banishes rheumatism, promotes general good j health, and checks any tendency towards c corpulence. In Flasks, Pints and economical Quart * Bottles. jHeart i n^rotti*o^/ Label! \

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19331020.2.36.1

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXVI, Issue 96, 20 October 1933, Page 4

Word Count
667

Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Evening Post, Volume CXVI, Issue 96, 20 October 1933, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Evening Post, Volume CXVI, Issue 96, 20 October 1933, Page 4