BEWARE OF A COUGH. PEPS STOP BRONCHITIS AND WINTER CHEST TROUBLES. This is a dangers. . month. Coughs and colds come on ..ifch alarming suddenness, and there is usually a tendency to treat them lightly. That is a big mistake, and only leads to worse trouble later on in the form of bronchitis and chronic chest weakness. Therefore, novor neglect the first sign, of a cold. Always carry a box of Peps, and immediately you feel a tickling in the throat and want to cough, or start shivering on getting indoors, put a. Peps tablet in your mouth and let it gradually melt away. The medicinal fumes given off by the dissolving Peps will mingle with the air you breathe, and . reach every nook and corner of the ' breathing tubes and lungs, where the danger lies. That's the way to check a j cold. • Peps reach the lungs direct. It is nest door to useless swallowing liquid mixtures and ordinary lozenges into the Bfcomach. There is no direct passage between the stomach and the bronchial tubes and lungs. Ordinary medicine only touches the lungs indirectly. When a Peps tablet is in the mouth, every breath taken strengthens your defence against throat and chest trouble. If you are a bronchial sufferer,' Peps melt away those stubborn, thick, plugs of phlegm that choke the breathing tubes and ca-use those painful coughing bouts night and morning. There is no other throat and chest medicine that has the unique features possessed by Peps. This novel remedy is unique in composition, unique in the way it acts, and unique for its uniformly successful results. It has the endorsement of nurses and doctors, and brings a long-needed blessing to the home. The housewife, the children, the business man, and workers in a thousand industries, find a true friend in Peps, which hold coughs and colds at bay, prevent influenza, and keap the lungs and chest clear of dust. In every house a box of Peps should be kept always handy. Is 6d and 3s per box at' nil chemists.—Advt. " GOOD MORNING ! HOW DO YOU FEET, NOW?" "Oh, splendid, thanks! That Tussicnra is wonderful stuff for curing a cold. Last night I felt awful—throbbing in the head, breathing- difficult, shivers all over. Now. I'm fit as a fiddle, and not a trace of a cold about me. Yes! Tussicii|;a is'llie best. cnra for coughs and colds that' I have ever tried." Bottles Is (3d and 2s 6d.—Advt. Great Caesar's Ghost ! Poor wasted frame, That, once full vigour did possess, Can't bo n, man in else but name, His cough has brought him such distress The undertaker smiles to think Next winter's cold he'll not endure; Oh ! ne'er fay die, but take a drink 01 w, E. Woods' Great Peppermint Care.,—Advt,
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Evening Post, Volume XCIV, Issue 40, 16 August 1917, Page 4
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462Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Evening Post, Volume XCIV, Issue 40, 16 August 1917, Page 4
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