' AFTERMATH OF GASTEIC 'FLIT. I An Englishman's* Experience. The representative of a big English Drug House was visiting the Dominion recently, and during the course of his trip through New Zealand he contracted a very bad attack of gastric 'ilu. He was in a pretty bad condition until a friend recommended hiiii to try Baxtor^'s Lung Preserver. lie got v halii-a-crown bottle immediately, and, to use his own-words: "The medicine worked wonders." He was up and about the next day attending to . his business. This fino old family'cough and cold medicine has been on the New Zealand market for over sixty years. It is the favourite remedy, and there is nothing like it for shifting a cough or cold. It is a rich, red, warming, soothing compound . that does good from the first .apse. It ,relieves sore throats in a marvellous way. Besides being a unique .specific for coughs and colds, "Baxter's" possesses tonic properties that help to build up the system against future attacks. . Do as the English traveller did, and get a^haif-a-erown bottle straight away. Bconbinical people buy the large family size at 4s 6d, while bachelors can be supplied with the eighteenpenny bottle. —Aclvt. Woods' Great Peppermint Cure. For .Coughs and Colds,.never 'fails.—Adyt.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CVII, Issue 51, 4 March 1929, Page 17
Word Count
206
Page 17 Advertisements Column 2
Evening Post, Volume CVII, Issue 51, 4 March 1929, Page 17
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