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A SQUARE PUZZLE Prizes Paid in Full. Encouraged by the enormous demand for our picture postcards, we have devised this simple method of advertising with the object of making our name more widely known and to introduce our new Catalogue, we offer you a grand opportunity to display your Ingenuity. and receive the generous reward of a Silver Watch (Ladies or Gents) or any articles picked from our catalogue to the value of ,£r, tor a little study. We expect by this competition of brains to make such an impresMon on your mind that you will ' be compelled to talk about us to your an d tell them about the extraordinary value of the goods we offer for sale. The testimony of a well satisfied customer is the best and most effective advertisement that can be secured. By this plan, therefore, we horctogreatl v in. icasc the number of our customers without adding to our expenses by awarding as prizes many thousand pounds worth of Watches which would otherwise be spent in advertising and printing. this is what you are to do, Here is a square puzzle, and everyone who solves It will receive the Solid Sil\er Watch or other prizes without any other conditions whatever. The diagram shows nine squares, with the figure 5 occupying the centre square. The puzzle Is to place a number on each of the eight empty squares, so that they shall,add up to 15 in a straight line In as many ways as possible; no two squares may contain the same figure. Our decision is to be final In every Instance. PRIZES WILL BE PROMPTLY SENT. tZ dtatance v 25 may live away from Sydney makes no difference whatever to us, as all have an equal opSrtunitvfor winning. Studv. therefore, and exchange light bramwork for solid cash.P l w th vour solution of this puzzle send postal note for ?/- for which we wdl send you six dozen of the most artistic penny picture postcards you have ever seen. Everybody wants picture postcards and if of the most aru l f the 71 cards for your own use, you have plenty of friends or acquaintances w°h U o d w„' bVdc"ighted to P av you a penny for each one you wish lo dispose of.dhus you get double the value send with an excellent chance of winning a Solid Silver Watch. vour answer at once, together with postal note tor 35., and a stamped addressed envelope, so that we n«y Inform you If >mu hav e won your prize. In writing, state whether Mr., Mrs, or Miss, and address g yourletlers very plainly to . . _ ~,j ►ELLISDON & CO., Angel Place, Pitt St., Sydney, N.S.W. j

WE HAVE A BRANCH MONUMENTAL WORKS AT GLADSTONE ROAD, GISBORNE. AN UP-TO-DATE STOCK KEPT IN ALL KINDS OE MEMORIALS. FRANK HARRIS & CO.. LTD. SCULPTOR AND MASONS. ROBERT CARY, Managor.

(VOH’S 100$ ILLUSTRATED CATALOG UK & BUYER’S GUIDE, int o immediate touch with the World's greatest Lace Centre*. SEND YOUR AGDRESS f^ C c„._ Bhovrs you iu.it bow to buy direct at factory prices. Saves you pounds and gives you the best, DIRECT FROM THE LOOMS. LACES, LACE CURTAINS, LINENS, HOSIERY, LADIES & GENT’S CLOTHING. Popular Parcel 523/6 Postage Free ■ Ecru if desired. Sent separately as f allows—--1 pair superb Drawing-room Curtains, 4 yds. long, 3 yds.wide, post free S 9 2 pairs handsome Dining-room Curtains, 3$ yds. long, 60 Ins.wide, post frea *I‘"1 Q 2 pairs choice Curtains, 3 yds. long, 43 Ins. wide, post free 6 3 The 5 pairs if sent in one Lot, 23/6, post free, jg-f 0 Q, well packed in oil cloth, direct to your address in New Zealand. Customers throughout the Empire testify to the value and reliability. Sender our Great Gntatp£Uß. : Tells you aJl_ about LACE CURTAIN 3. MUSLINS, FURNISHING DRAPERIES, HOUSEHOLD LINENS, HOSIERY,. DRESS MATERIALS, BOOTS and SILOES, etc. *You will bo astonished*, i.fc. our prices and'delighted* with this haudsomo book. We put the best materials and into our goods. Our 49 yaars reputation is your guarantee. Prize Jledals, Toronto 1892, Chicago 1893. Estbd. 1857, Price Lists may be obtained from the office of this Paper ; apply at once•AML. PEACH & SONS, The Looms, Box 636 NOTTINGHAM, ENGLAND.. CURABL •" <& There are, which are incurable, but these are fortunately rare. Of people, many-o'' or hand, two groups of disorders which afflict a large number whom seem to consifer whom, seem to consider wuvi* tuwo « ~* Sboi * year after year when their cases would readily yield to treatment if the disorder ware attacked. The two groups referred to aro uric and ' dirorders, and they comprise the foliowing common complaints TJ»io. Bojaiyv. Rheumatism Gout " Neuralgia Lumbago Sciatica Gravel and Stone Bladder Troubles Indigestion Biliousness Jaundice Sick Headache Aneemia General Debility Blood Disorders Now all these disorders originate from the same cause-namely, the inability of Um kidneys and liver to properly perform their function of eliminating from the wntom the urinary and biliary poisons which produce the disease. The Kidneys of the average person filter and extract from the blood about Slue* pints of urino^every day. In this quantity of urine should be dissolved about «Tounoe of urea, ten to twelve grains in weight of uric acid, and other,Xfkidnevs mineral matter varying from a third of an ounce to nearly an ounce. If the kidneys -orkine freelvand healthily, all this solid matter leaves the body dissolved m the min* • buUf, through weakness or disease, the kidneys are unable to do their duty loroperly, ft quantity of these urinary substances remains in the blood and flows the veins, contaminating the whole system. Then wo suher some form of urio poisoning such as Rheumatism, Gout, Lumbago, Bacgacno, Solution, Persistent Headache, Neuralgia, Gravel, Stone, «nd Bladder Troubles. A simple test to make, as to whether the kidneys 'St* healthy is to place some urino, passed the first thing in morning, in a covered glass, and let it stand until next morning. If it is then clouay, shows a sediment like brick-dust, is of an unnatural colour, or has particles floating apou. in it, 'the kidneys are weak or diseased, and steps must immediately be taken to restore their vigour, or Bright’s Disease, Diabetes, or some of the many manifestations of nrio poisoning will result. _ - ** § The Liver is an automatic chemical laboratory. In the liver various substances are actually made from the blood. Two or three pounds of bile are Ihus made by the liver every day. The liver takes sugar from the blood, converts U into another form, and stores it up so as to be able to again supply it to the blood as the latter may require enrichment. The livor changes uric acid, which is Insoluble, into urea, which is completely soluble, and the liver also deals with the Mood corpuscles which have lived their life and are useful no longer. When the liver is inactive or diseased we suffer from some form of biliary poisoning siaeb as Indigestion, Biliousness, Anaemia, Jaundice, Sick Headache, General Debility, and Blood Disopdeps--80 intimate is the relation between tho work done by the kidneys and that done by the liver, that where there is any failure on tho part of the kidneys, tho liver becomes affected in sympathy, and vies versa. It was the realisation of the Importance of this close union of the labour of those vital organs which resulted in the discovery of the medicine now known throughout the world as Warner Certain medical men, knowing what a boon it would be to humanity if some medicine eould be found whioh would act specifically on both the kidneys and liver, devoted themselves to an exhaustive search for such a medium, and their devotion was eventually rewarded by their success in compounding a medicine which possesses the '.required quality in the fullest degree. Warner’s Safe Cure exhibits a marvellous iheoliog action ■in all cases of functional or chronic disease of tho kidneys and fflvar ; and restoring them, as it is able to do, to health and activity, it, of necessity, jours* all complaints due to the retention in the system of urinary and biliary poisons. A'Wigorous action of the kidneys and liver naturally eliminates tho poisons, and •roubles duo to the presence of the poisons cease. Cures effected bj>Warner’s 3—L On are permanent simply because they are natural. •

o' - 111 a s p 3

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GIST19070416.2.24.1

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Gisborne Times, Volume XXV, Issue 2055, 16 April 1907, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,389

Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Gisborne Times, Volume XXV, Issue 2055, 16 April 1907, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Gisborne Times, Volume XXV, Issue 2055, 16 April 1907, Page 4

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