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FORTY WORMS FROM A TWO-YEAR-OLD CHILD. FROM TEN TO FOURTEEN INCHES LONK. The general ill-health of many children is due to the presence of worms, and parents should keep a sharp eye on their children if there is a suspicion of their presence. The wonderful effectiveness of Comstock’s “Dead Shot’’ Worm Pellets is strikingly illustrated in the statement of Mrs Jonikait, of Tairua. New Zealand, whose little, girl got rid of forty worms of largo size. Mrs Jonikait’s letter is as follows “I am still giving Comstock’s 'Dead Shot’ Worm Pellets to my little girl and boy, and they are both improving in health since taking these Pellets. The little girl is just two years old, and since taking your medicine she has passed forty worms. They haw been all very large (from ten to fourteen inches long). 1 hope by still using your Worm Pellets that she will soon be rid of theta all. One day last week, after taking one dose of the Pellets, she passed nine worms. • X mean to keep on using Comstock's ‘Dead' Shot’ Worm Pellets till the children are cured of the worms, for I think they are dreadful things for children to have. You have my permission to publish this letter.” Parents need have no fear in administering . this remedy to their children according td i: directions, for it is purely vegetable. For sale by all chemists, price 2s 9d per packet, or will bo sent post paid on receipt of price by The W. H. Comstock Co., Ltd., Parish street, Wellington.

Hobby: “I think I like you better than any of the other fellows that come to see sister,” Percy: ‘‘l’m pleased to hear it, Hobby; Why do you like me the best?” Hobby:' “Because Sis always lets me stay and hear what you say.” Mr * Lloyd George’s method of preparing his speeches does not differ very materially from that which he pursued in the earliest days of • h',6 Parliamentary career. It was then ins habit to make very full notes of the speech he was to deliver in the House or on the platform, but he did not use these notes when it came to the actual delivery of the speech; they were then discarded, and a few lines f.cnWed on some scraps of paper, perhaps on the back of an envelope, were enough to serve him. Nowadays, when he has planned fully the general scheme and the main heads of an important speech, he dictates it to a typist. Then he reads through the typewritten com and alters or amplifies it. Finally, lie condenses it into a short note, consisting only of the clearest “head hi ca." for use on the platform or in the House of Commons, as the case may be, ■ and in the end, it has '• cn observed, he delivers his speech in almost exactly the form of uis first complete draft.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZTIM19140314.2.94.5

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Times, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 8681, 14 March 1914, Page 7

Word Count
485

Page 7 Advertisements Column 5 New Zealand Times, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 8681, 14 March 1914, Page 7

Page 7 Advertisements Column 5 New Zealand Times, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 8681, 14 March 1914, Page 7

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