Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

?V f-i > R#/ A_ wings you care ike mod about ~LUX women discuss dainty clothes, the name of LUX is mentioned. To keep their lovely things from ruin, women find that they themselves simply must do the laundering of the things they care about. They use LUX because—harmless to anything pure water alone will not injure—LUX is trustworthy with delicate fabrics. LUX is unique, and quite indispensable to the woman who values her fine things. The new large packet is convenient and! economical, and iits economy lies not only in the small amount necessary, but even moreso in the way it preserves expensive fabrics. VV • 1 - ■ ■ " LEVER BROTHERS (N.S.I LIMITED. (fw sr ■'/: f 7 m. fKil'S yj t;> ;; !>; i'! .'J . if*?;' ■ •' •i.H ; i • MtiittoifiVi mi hinriw it the six feel so garden spite of may have been any one of magic salts which made him well he had to run down the path and jump the gate —in his 60 years. But it was most likely the combined influence of the six salts in his morning dose of Kruschen. Each salt interacts on each of the other five in a wonderful way, thereby increasing tenfold the power for good of them all. The six salts in Kruschen are precisely those Salts which your body needs for buoyant good health, but which modern conditions overwork, lack of exercise, errors of diet — prevent you from extracting from your food. It's the daily dose that does it! This proprietors of Kruocben Salts guarantee its absolute purity. By a system of rigorous analysis each ingredient it thoroughly standardised and tested, thus attaining a standard of purity far exceeding that demanded by the British Pharmacopoeia. %i n n n n n n II WHAT KRUSCHEN IS: Not one Salt only—but six! SODIUM SULPHATE. A very valuable medicinal 8a It. An aperient and a diuretic. Purlflea the blood and prevents the absorption of toxins. SODIUM CHLORIDE. Both a medicine and a food. Improves digestion and maintains the alkalinity of the blood serum. Antiseptic and prevents fermentation. MAGNESIUM SULPHATE One of the most valuable Items Iw medicine. A bitter tonic and improves appetite. Useful in all gouty conditions. Excellent remedy for Dropsy and Gravel. POTASSIUM lODIDE. Affects favourably every organ and tissue in the body. A tonic and fortifies the body and brain. So important to health Is Potassium lodide that many Governments put It lilt drinking water, in table salt, In lodlwti chocolate for school children and so forth POTASSIUM CHLORIDE Of great benefit ki cases of high Mood pressure. Valuable for Gout and Rheumatism. Diuretic and maintains th« alkalinity of the blood serum. POTABSIUM SULPHATE. Blmilar saline action to Sodium Sulphate, also of considerable benefit In dissolving Uric Acid. ABK YOUR DOCTOR. prevent constipation Manufactured by E. GRIFFITHS HUGHES Ltd., Manchester, England (Estab. 1766). Obtainable from all wholesalers and storekeepers throughout New Zealand. |

:: K SilfinUlltt A 111 & 7 should there be tired business men? ■ V<^ fc ' : vv-i. . i " V , T . . • The spectre of sleepless nights can be speedily banished. GOOD, sound sleep! One of the A note of warning here is essential, greatest boons of life, a healing Narcotic drugs or sleep-inducing mediforgetfulness, an escape from the toils and trials of day, a sweet respite from the cares and worries and vexation of household and business affairs ! Tragic indeed is it to lie awake while the tardyfooted hours of night lag past —yet this need not be. Sleepless nights may be banished by restoring the basis of health. The close alliance between sleep and health is vividly demonstrated by insomnia. If only health could be regained, sleep would return and, per contra, if only sleep could be regained, health would return. It is a vicious circle, a whirlpool drawing its victim in and in to disaster. A potent cause of tragedy. The onset of Insomnia is usually sly and slow>, its malign effect is progressive and, in its advanced stage, —■ it is one of the most potent One medial au causes of tragedy. Usually it " Insomnia prel first shows itself merely as a a Skater or les , i , causation of aln tendency to sleeplessness, and among its common tragedies of life causes are mental strain, the prolonged w business wo.ry, over-work, suspense, or any other of the emotional or nervous stresses inseparable from modern life. The longer it is neglected the more difficult it becomes to combat, and, for this reason early attention is imperative. One medial authority states : " Insomnia preludes or enters to a greater or less extent into the causation of almost every form of mental alienation. Many of the tragedies of life are due solely to the prolonged want of sleep." A note of warning here is essential. Narcotic drugs or sleep-inducing medicines should never be taken for Insomnia, except under medical advice, because they are likely, to aggravate the trouble by introducing dangerous drug-taking habits. The Mode of Treatment. The first essential is to restore the physical equilibrium and the basis of health. The blood-stream, which is often impoverished by the causes enumerated above, must be fortified in certain essential constituents. The nerves, similarly depleted, must likewise be re-nourished and strengthened. Fortunately, this presents no serious difficulty to medical science, and it is to this fact that Clements' Tonic owes its unfailing efficacy in such cases. It is made to a strict medical formula. It supplies vital elements. Its function is to nourish and, because of this, it must lority states: — never be CQnfused with ies or enters to mere stimulants or drugs. extent into the Clements Tonic is a comS 'm7JJ3L bined nerve-and-blood re due solely to food, free from alcohol or it of sleep." opiates. It is designed to and is, therefore, a sure remedy in all cases of Insomnia or of that sleeplessness which So often heralds the approach of this tragic malady. Clements Tonic opens the portals* of sleep, because it opens the gateway to health. fz Gives Radiant :: P

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19280130.2.7.1

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume LXV, Issue 19857, 30 January 1928, Page 4

Word Count
993

Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealand Herald, Volume LXV, Issue 19857, 30 January 1928, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealand Herald, Volume LXV, Issue 19857, 30 January 1928, Page 4