WUtl JlJaiYI <l% r i -.. Seldom a day passes without an accident in the household. • The mother cooking and preparing meals meets with cuts, scrapes and scratches ; ironing brings its burns, and cleaning its knocks and bruises. T^he children seem to be always "in the wars," as they are for ever bruising and scraping'their little limbs and faces. That's why no household can afford to bo without Zam-Buk, as a box of this healer comprises a compact, reliable little surgery for a hundred emergencies. Timely dressing of the ,; ' cuts, burns and scratches, with this wonderful antiseptic means that all liability to infection by disease germs is " riipptid in the bud." Zam-Buk soothes and relieves smarting pain and itching—it keeps away festering and poisoned sores, and assures natural healing with clear/healthy skin. Buy a box of Zam-Buk to day and keep it handy. 116 and 5/6 all chemists and stores, "A SURGERY IN A 2-INCH BOX/*
fHOIJIW3«™SAUCE AI U." Excellent with every dish— n \ fl I Meat or Cheese or Fowl or Fish." t l\
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19261102.2.185.4
Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXII, Issue 107, 2 November 1926, Page 14
Word Count
174Page 14 Advertisements Column 4 Evening Post, Volume CXII, Issue 107, 2 November 1926, Page 14
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