Pat: "I hear ye had words with Casey?" Mick: "Wo had ro words." Pat: ''Thru nothing passed between ye?" Mick: "Nothing but one brick." —John received two birthday presents in which lie was particularly interested—a diary and a peashooter. He wrote in the diary faithfully every day, and the peashooter he fired off on all occasions. One day his mother found the following torso record in the diary:—"Mundy cold and sloppy. Toosdy cold and sloppy. Wensdy cold and sloppy: shot grandmother." § >'i .Mi^.'.'.-i: .-. knows how liable the skin is to suffer from disfiguring blotches and eruptions; and how liable it is, also, to get cut and hurt in all conditions of life—al home, at work and at play. There isn't a woman in the home, or a man in the street, but mm j *%#! swm .;* . I 1 i. -4 m ZAM-BUK BALM to-day or tomorrow. It may be to check a sudden onslaught of skin disease, heralded by an itching rash or inflamed swelling; perhaps to soothe and heal a nasty cut on burn, to remove an unsightly pimple or sore, to strengthen a sprained joint, or to "rub out" a pain. For all these things there's nothing like "*UB li , N ..-■
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Bibliographic details
Otago Witness, Issue 3280, 24 January 1917, Page 68
Word Count
202Page 68 Advertisements Column 1 Otago Witness, Issue 3280, 24 January 1917, Page 68
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