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AFTER THE MOVIES A*DOSE OP BAXTER'S. An occasional evening at the Movies is very enjoyable. It helps one to forget, for a brief spell, the little worries and vexations of the day. There's a danger attached to this form of amusement, however: the danger of catching a chill when emerging from the warm theatre into the cold night air. A good plan is to take a dose of Baxter's Lung Preserves as soon as you get home. It's astonishing with what rapidity Baxter's gets to work—it takes hold of a cold in a manner which means business. It loosens and raises the phlegm, soothes and heals the inflamed bronchial passages, and acts upon the system as a tonic in an effective manner. Baxter's Lung Preserver is the schoolchildren's favourite cough remedy—they like it. • . Get a large 2s bottle to-day from your chemist or store. —Advt. PUBLIC SPEAKERS NEED NAZOL. Clergymen, singers, and public speakers appreciate Nazol. It is most comforting in allaying irritation in the throat and giving strength to the voice. Keeps the air passages clear. Indispensable, also, to chronic cough sufferers. Relieves congestion in chost, strengthens lungs. 60 doses Is 6d.—Advt. The pulsation of the nation, On a crowded railway station, If you're scoking animation, «y/ill supply your want, be sure. If you wish to cure bronchitis, Soro throat, cough, or tonsilitis, Or th.it bane of life, gastritis, Purchase Woods' Great Peppermint Cure—Advt.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19180816.2.29.2

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume XCVI, Issue 41, 16 August 1918, Page 3

Word Count
235

Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 Evening Post, Volume XCVI, Issue 41, 16 August 1918, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 Evening Post, Volume XCVI, Issue 41, 16 August 1918, Page 3