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TRY IT SANDER AND SONS’ EUCALYPTI EXTRACT is unrivalled for coughs, colds, catarrh, bronchitis, headache, when taken internally—B drops in a tablespoon of cold water. Sores, ulcers, wounds, inflamed skin, heal quickly by applying the pure SANDERS’ EXTRACT and rubbing a little vaseline over it when tender. For catarrh and hay-fever apply as ointment to nostrils—l teaspoonful of SANDERS ’ EXTRACT to loz vaseline—which forms also the best healing ointment. All authorities commend SANDERS EXTRACT. It received Gold Medal and highest awards at Exhibition of Dunedin and Amsterdam, and was proved best at the Supreme Court of Victoria. The extreme care in its manufacture guarantees purity, and safety when used. Try it and you will derive tie benefit.

When the Minister of Transport (the Hon. R. Semple) decided that sharppointed radiator mascots must be removed from motor-cars in the interest of public safety, motorists with a decorative turn of mind were probably grieved, but at least one has managed to comply with the regulations without dispensing with his mascot. This motorist drives a truck and his vehicle was seen on the street in Wellington with a pair of running shoes neatly tied to the top of the radiator. “In 12 months he will be as rare as the moa, ” said the Hon. R. Semple (Minister for Transport), referring to the intoxicated driver. “He has got to go—not for six months, when he is caught, but for the term of his natural life. He can get drunk if he wants to, so long as he goes to be dor crawls up a gas-pipe, but he is not going to kill people on the road. My own view is jthat the fellow intoxicated in charge of a motor-car is a bigger menace than the man with a revolver or a razor. In the last seven years that type of man has killed 275 innocent New Zealand people—because some individual in the shape of a man poisoned himself with booze and murdered them. We are not going to allow it to go on.” Forcing a passage through the iron roof of a two-storey building a party of dectectives under Detective-Sergeant McHugh battered their way into premises occupied by Chinese at 55 Grey’s Avenue shortly before midnight recently (states the New Zealand Herald). Then Chinese were found congregated in an upstairs room, and an exhaustice search of the building was carried out. An extension ladder was placed against the top parapet bv Constable F. Quinn and Detectives Brady, Gillum, and H. Wilson climbed to the roof, and with axes and crowbars tore their way through the heavily-rein-forced iron. Meanwhile. Detective-Ser-geant McHugh had taken up a position in Yelderton Terrace to bar egress from the back of the building. Clambering down a rope through a hole which they made in the roof, the police found in a room about 12ft by 15ft a number of plank beds thinly covered with matting and each possessing a wooden head rest. In the centre a coal brazier burned fiercelv. Everv window and door of the house was closely battened down. The windows were screened with blue blinds. Woods’ Great Peppermint Cure For Influenza Colds.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/KAIST19370617.2.15.1

Bibliographic details

Kaikoura Star, Volume LVII, Issue 48, 17 June 1937, Page 3

Word Count
525

Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Kaikoura Star, Volume LVII, Issue 48, 17 June 1937, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Kaikoura Star, Volume LVII, Issue 48, 17 June 1937, Page 3