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PILES. PILES.

WITHOUT OPERATION. . Mr J. Craig, of Miramar, want* all sufferers from Piles,to know how he wo* cured after 15 years of intense suffermg:— 1 had boon a martyr to piles for the past 15 years and was so bad that often 1 used to scream out -with the agony they caused. I was laid up for weeks at a time, and oould neither walk nor sleep I tried dozens of so-called pile cur4', but without the slightest benefit. Even to attempt to bathe the piles wa a agony I consulted many doctors, and they all told me 1 must have an operation I had decided to do so when I met a friend who told me of your Zann Double Absorption Treatment. I tried it as a final resort, and the result of the first application was truly wonderful. In one week the difference was most marked, for I. was able to touch aud bathe them without the least pain. Since then the piles have disappeared, aud I feel quite sure I am cured. 1 can sleep now and eat my meal with enjoyment. I “hall tell all sufferers, 1„ meet of your wonderful cure. Don’t delay, write us to-day enclosing P.N. for 10s Bd. and we.will forward you in plain wrapper a course of our Zann Double Absorption Treatment. Explain your case. All correspondence Confidential. OUR GUARANTEE. If. after a fair trial, you are not satisfied with the Zann Double Absorption Treatment, return the empty packet, and vour money will be refunded immediate, ly. Agencies throughout the world. Note Address:— THE ZANN PROPRIETARY, Box 3dßm. G.P.0.. Wellington. • PILES CURED

A lady reminiscently recalls that when she attended her first drawingroom she was surprised to see Queen Victoria's guests pushing and shoving one another in the ante-room, while one lady, who had been scratched by tho bracelet of another, gave vent to “a perfect torrent of swear words/' and, turning on the woman who had offended her, "clawed her hair, and finally bit her in the face. The some author says of Lord Kitchener, whom she knew first about thirty years ago:—"Even .in those early days I felt he was a' lonely soul, not in tho body, but iii the spirit. In later years this "impression increased. . . . He held all at arm’s length. . . ■ His.passion, for work was one of the most interesting traits in his charooter; he was never happy unless .studying something to assuage his thirst for knowledge. Mr Justice Darling has a unique interest in. trying the Siddons picture case, recently determined in his court. Sarah Siddons. before her marriage, was a servant in the emplov of Lady Mary Great* head, from whom the late Lady Darling was descended. As Sit Jonu Simon mentioned, so great was Sarah’s dignity that it is said that Lady Mary would rise to greet her servant on her entering a room. Sir Charles Wakefield gave XIOO bo l-oikeetone as a thank uncling lor «*• cap.- Uoni death in the recent raidOua of Sir Charles’s' predecessors u* oiiice, while in the Arabian desert, «aw« face to fact with a lion 01 parts. Down oa his knees went the woruiy knight in fervent prayer. The lion cl--or did not—aud retreated .sup^cness. • x.;- iil« U--K* • - gave -£2OO to the Church of Si. Kathe-r-ue Cree, Leadenhall street, where the lion sermon is still preached on each anniversary of the escape, October 16th. Nearly all ' public men in America get a democratic title thrust upon them with their greatness, but we fancy few have had so many bestowed upon them as the late Mr Choate. America’s "greatest after-dinner speaker," “New York’s first citizen.” "the wittiest of ambassadors.” are but a few of- the epitomised biographies by which he was known to hii admirers.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZTIM19170811.2.68.2

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Times, Volume XLII, Issue 9736, 11 August 1917, Page 8

Word Count
627

Page 8 Advertisements Column 2 New Zealand Times, Volume XLII, Issue 9736, 11 August 1917, Page 8

Page 8 Advertisements Column 2 New Zealand Times, Volume XLII, Issue 9736, 11 August 1917, Page 8

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