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For Influenza take Woods Great Peppermint 3ure. Never fails, Is 6d ft 2s 6d. Croup is most prevalent during the dry, oold weather of the early winter months. Parents of young children should be prepared for it. All that is needed is a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. Many mothers are never withontit in their homes, and it has never disappointed them.—Sold at C. Henty's Cash Store. , TOOTHACHE. There is nothing so good for tootbaohe as Chamberlain's Pain Balm. When the gums and face are rubbed freely with this liniment the pain soon disappears. When the tooth is deoayed saturate a pieoe of cotton wool with Chamberlain's Pain Balm, place it in the cavity of the tooth and immediate relief will result. Being an antiseptic, this preparation will cleanse the tooth and thus in a measure arrest decay. It will in no way injure the tooth.—Obtainable at 0. Henty's Cash Store.

Gracious Testimony Th» C*»» of Mm A. OHITTV. (»T A BMOIAI. BIMBSBB.) la the exeroise of true friendship it very largely to be found happineu, and there it ao doubt that plenty of opportunities present themselrea to thee* who take the trouble to embrace them. 'Such Braoious Mte m thie, in which lire. Annie bitty, of Feiooa-atreet, Parnell, Auokland, aooorded an interflow to our reporter, muat ■he aaya » "I think I ean do • little toward! mitigating the evils that moat women are sur|?4n^ffl^lYV>ff'!^>i.%^l»^*'u. moot of my aex are rabjeot to." "Wheredid you find it outt" queried the writer. "la Parnell, where X hare bees tiring for the past ten yean, and X urn only terry that I did not know about It whea I waa in Chriatehuroh or Inrercargill yeara ago, for I waa then Buffering moat dreadfully from neuralgia, and never oould X get any relief from it, although I used to wrap my head in flannel*, and bathe my faoe with hot water, besides even going to the length of poultioing the parte affected." " Would it not have been better to have tried some medicine ? " " Why, bleu you 1 there waa nothing X didn't try—every thing that a ohemiat keep*, pretty well, end in this suburb, and in other parte of New Zealand, I visited doctor* a* well, yet no aubatantial relief ever eame from their medicines, end by the time X heard of Clements Tonic—that was the remedy which waa worth the whole lot put together—l was well nigh out of my mind with the pitiless torture* that racked my mmtimiitmMtimigm* better have my teeth taken out, and I re* gret to say that I followed their adyice by having some of them extracted, but still my pains existed—right from my gums and along my cheeks up to the top of my, head ; and the days and nights I passed were awful. No sleep, no anything excepting the nagging pains that made me weary of life; and!was often bo weak that I waa quite unable to work." " Were you taking proper nourishment?" " The little I had was 1 the most suitable for me, very light and easy to take, for you must remember that my jaws were so stiff I could hardly move them; but I was always in greater agony after swallowing it—in the stomach and chest particularly; and when I did a little walking the aches over my loins were very severe. Something went wrong with my shoulders, too, as there was always a dull pain in evidence, and if I tried to busy myself in the least I got so giddy that if I had not sat down at once I am sure I would have had many a nasty fall. But I think that was more on aoconnt of weakness than anything else, for, really, I was almost helpless; and the taste I had was bad enough to make even a strong person sick. Ah 1 well, I have seen many in the same plight since, and the one recommendation they have reoeived from me has been to take Clements Tonic, for that was the only medicine to do me good." '' Permanently or temporarily ?" " Well, I am speaking of a great length of time back, and after the course of Clements Tonio I took, my digestion has been as sound as possible, so I can safely tell you that my cure was permanent in that respect, and so far as neuralgia was concerned, I could not have been more fortunate, aa Clements Tonio gave me perfect freedom from pain in a space of time that astonished everybody who know how I had suffered, and what medicines I had taken in vain. Never shall I forget the sense of thankfulness I experience * I when my agonies had all subsided; but Clements Tonio did not stop there. It'wen <to my nervous system and so strengthens, it that the fears and tremblings I had endured bo long were done with—for you must know that I had been very nervous—and I slept as soundly as a child. My appetite soon returned, and by-and-bye I was receiving congratulations from those who had seen me looking so haggard and worn «ut, on making a recovery so complete." " You were entitled to them-, too." " Rather 1 and I hope many more will meet with the same success, and as a help towards them, you can publish my story in them, yoi you like. STATUTORY DECLARATION. I, Aims OHinr, of Falcon-street, Parnell, Auoklead, la the Colony of New Zealand, do solemnly and sincerely declare that I have carefully read the annexed document, consisting of two folios, and ooßStoutlvoly numbered from one to two, and that It contains and ie a true and faithful account of my lllaeaa and our* by Clements Tonio ; and also contales my full permission to publish in any way my statements—which I give voluntarily, without receiving any payment; and I make this solemn declaration conscientiously believing the same to be true, and by virtue of the provieiene of an Act of the •eneral Assembly el New Zealand, intituled "The Junkies of Pssee Aet, Mix." Declared at Parnell. tale twentieth drty «t June, JOHW MeOJtBR, J.P.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/OPUNT19100624.2.26.1

Bibliographic details

Opunake Times, Volume XXX, Issue 1648, 24 June 1910, Page 4

Word Count
1,019

Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Opunake Times, Volume XXX, Issue 1648, 24 June 1910, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Opunake Times, Volume XXX, Issue 1648, 24 June 1910, Page 4