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Catarrh Dangerous

OFi'EN MAKES VICTIMS WORN-OUT, RUN-DOWN WRECKS. To bo able to breathe freely, bear dearly, smell, taste, and a,rise in the morning refreshed and strong with bead arid throat clear and free from phlegm, are conditions that make life worth while. No victim of catarrh can enjoy life as they should. The effects of this ravaging, disgusting disease are too plainly fell, and yet few people realise what a serious disease catarrh really is. It is more than a trilling ailment, more than a passing discomfort; catarrh is a dangerous condition. It may lead to many distressing complications, such as clogged nostrils, a constant, disagreeable taste in the mouth, loss of hearing, dull headaches, or perhaps consumption. Left to itself, catarrh slowly and surely undermines the general health. Being a disease of the blood, it should be treated through the blood to secure results. Sprays, inhalers, and ointments can never permanently help catarrh.

Below is printed an old-fashioned treatment that can be made up in your own homo for a trifling cost, and which lias been used with good results in cases of catarrh. Go to any chemist’s and get an ounce of Parmint. Take it homo and put it into a syrup made of a quarter of a pint of hot water and a quarter of a pound of crystal sugar. Take a tablespoonful four times a day. This preparation has proved successful in many cases because it acts upon the blood and mucous membrane, andtends to correct the trouble in the proper' way. If the blood can be made pure your catarrh should speedily vanish. Anyone who has catarrh in any form should give this simple preparation a trial.—[Copyright.]

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19320929.2.36

Bibliographic details

Evening Star, Issue 21220, 29 September 1932, Page 6

Word Count
282

Catarrh Dangerous Evening Star, Issue 21220, 29 September 1932, Page 6

Catarrh Dangerous Evening Star, Issue 21220, 29 September 1932, Page 6