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NO PAIN.

There is one form of relief from pain that is always permissible. "Don't let the patient suffer," says the doctor, "for pain retards recovery." The nurse gives Bayer Aspirin, knowing it can do no harm, only good. The patient takes it gladly, because it means immediate relief. Men and women use Bayer Aspirin tablets freely to spare themselves needless pain. Do you let Bayer Aspirin help you in all the ways it might? To end a headache. Break up a cold. Soothe a sore throat. Ease the misery from neuralgia or neuritis. Relieve the worst case of rheumatism, sciatica, lumbago. Quiet a grumbling tooth, or any other nagging pain. And Bayer Aspirin is the standby of many women at times when they would suffer severely without its aid! Be sure you take only Bayer Aspirin, because the genuine does not affect the heart, derange the digestion or form a habit. All Chemists sell genuine Bayer Aspirin in boxes of 12 tablets, also bottles of 24 and 100 tablets—the Bayer Cross trade mark appears on every tablet. Bayer Aspirin costs no more than the uncertain imitations and loudly-adver-tised substitutes which physicians would not think of prescribing. Say Bayer, and insist! _3 A 39-years-old unemployed married miner of a little English colliery village has built for himself a one manual organ from tea chests and wooden advertising matter. The instrument is fitted with a sound chamber and ordinary thread bobbins for stops. The builder is Mr L. Bradley, of Cross Rows. Already Mr Bradley has given one recital on his organ, which has a beautiful mellow tone. It took three months to build, and cost only a few shillings.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19330411.2.16.3

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume LXIX, Issue 20828, 11 April 1933, Page 5

Word Count
279

Page 5 Advertisements Column 3 Press, Volume LXIX, Issue 20828, 11 April 1933, Page 5

Page 5 Advertisements Column 3 Press, Volume LXIX, Issue 20828, 11 April 1933, Page 5