COLD WEATHER SKIN TROUBLE CHAPS., CRACKED HANDS, AND CHILBLAINS SOOTHED AND HEALED BY ZAM-BUK. Chapped 'hands, chilblains, and. sore arms and facts should be promptly treated with. Zam-Buk. That disagreeable roughness and redness of the skin is often quickly followed by cracking and’bleeding, and there is grave danger of blood-poison or other infectious disease. Being so natural and refined, Zam-Buk, unlike mere ointments and “creams,” penetrates beneath the outer surface, purifies the flesh, and helps to grow new healthy skin in a wonderful way. Letting Zam-Buk soak all night into the tissues allays smarting pain and quickly .heals all soreness. Mrs M. Emsley, of corner of Clifton and Phyllis streets, Maylands, Adelaide, says: —" Last winter the extreme cold caused my skin to crack and become awfully £ore. When I put my hands in water they would bleed and be very painful. “ I applied Zam-Buk on retiring at night, and put a pair of gloves on, and by continuous treatment the raw sores and cracks quickly healed, and my skin was made quite soft and pliable.” Mrs P. C. Peebles, Perth-Fremantle road, Cotteeloe, W.A., says;—“l was a martyr to chilblains right on from early childhood. In the winter months I hardly knew where to put myself for the painful itching and burning. “'The chilblains were splendidly eased the 'first time I applied Zam-Buk. The itching pain all seemed to be soothed away, and as I persevered with Zam-Buk every one of the sore places was thoroughly healed.” Zam-Buk‘s success as a healer and skincure is due to its absolute purity and its scientific composition. In Zam-Buk there is no lard or animal fat whatever such as destroy the value of ordinary ointments, but only the purest extracts. Of all chemists and stores at Is 6d or 3s fid (for large family size pot).—[Advt.] A case of alleged “ dummy ism ” was inquired into by the Hawke’s Bay I .and Board at Dannevirke yesterday. 'The section under notice was situated at Norsewood, and was held by Mrs Emma Jane Anderson. When the section was put up for ballot the verbal arrangement was allegedly made by Messrs Anderson Bros. (4) and their wives that all should go in, and the successful applicant should hold the section in partnership with the others. This the drawer declined to do, maintaining that she knew nothing about an at rangement until after the ballot. She .admitted, however, signing, some months after the ballot, a declaration that ehe had no interest in the section, but simply held it in her name for her husband and his brothers. This course had been forced upon her by the pressure cf the members of the Anderson family. In order to gain peace she signed. When signing she considered she was the legitimate holder of the section. The board decided that the charge of “ durumyism ” was not sustained. In the Sheffield cutlery workshops the daily output is not leas than SQJ3QO him,' ** .
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Evening Star, Issue 15538, 7 July 1914, Page 3
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489Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Evening Star, Issue 15538, 7 July 1914, Page 3
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