"GETTING INTO HOT WATER." "Baxter's Again." T n l'iX h >ere on. earth h'™c you been Jack?" questioned an .irate wife the other evening when her husband arrived usual. I've had the dinner all ready tlu S last half-hour." "Well atari Dana. • I felt a cold coming on me this afternoon, and I thought it just as well to go to the chemist's ai a pur chase a bottle of 'Baxter's.' On :th2t account I just missed a tram, ana had to wait about fifteen minutes for the "'uncW 6- ; "°h .' Wc»'" sai/theUe under those circumstances I'll f or YT° U aY Very wise to**°"-' Baxter's Lung Preserver/ is a splenand BS ard A T™r™4ient cSghs ™ j A aose in time may save you a dangerous illness. "Baxter's" H ; an i;iaeal Preparation for influenza, ment fl T^ 1 &**'*& bronchial a^ ,S prop" t£\ P°?SeSSei? wontlc^ A gerierous-sizea bottle is obtainable from any chemist or storr for half-a-crown, or procure the more economical family size at 4s 6a. There is also the useful bachelor size at eighteenpenee. —Aclvt.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CVII, Issue 128, 4 June 1929, Page 13
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177Page 13 Advertisements Column 1 Evening Post, Volume CVII, Issue 128, 4 June 1929, Page 13
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