C^4i^ COFFEE <L CHICORY ESSENCE COMFORT MoJ^Sft^J iL^lr Af^m*" , V /ISL Howitcheers and refreshes... how 2SBSSUS3RJS& %#HeddNoues'Deafness? Quickly made wjlh boiling water S^"^**' * ▼•» sp^ In /r r"%Vcharl« d'eh e etL £s*?* All round performance \--Tf£f&\ . ~ wins Tests ■..-.' ■ * ■ ... S Plume's all-round performance will win out in any motoring test. Prove it in your own car. Split-second'Starting—Swiftest Acceleration— Maximum Speed—Maximum Power—Maximum, Mileage. One tankfull will demonstrate Plume's all-round mup at the VACUUM Pump sets the Standard R-«H.«i-.w«^ for aH4ound performance
AXE AXE KIA KAHA. "We will fight on." For Maori and pakeha.alike, there aro colds to conquer, 'flu, to fight, and coughs to combat. Now is the time to be careful. -Be prepared with Baxter's Lung Preserver. "Baxter's" has 70 years of distinguished service to its credit. You can absolutely rely on "Baxter's" to promptly deal with every kind of cold. 4s 6d, 2s 6d, and Is 6d at all chemists and stores.—Advt. WAIRARAPA RACING CLUB. AUTUMN MEETING, SATURDAY AND MONDAY,* APRIL 15 and 17, 1933. "DOMINATIONS for'all events close on -^ TUESDAY NEXT, March 2S, 1033. at 8 p.m. For programme, see "New Zenland" Referee." •' '■ • ; N. C. G. SHEPHERD, Secretary. NOTE.—Telephone 26. Exchange continuous. Featherston Telegraph Office closes at 5 p.m. .' ' " ■
PERMANENT part of Great Britain's industrial and fi- in the stimulation of New Zealand trade! just as itdoes in Approximately 15,000 tons of coal for the Goodyear nancial structure. Night after night, day after day, the England's trade, England's prosperity f»clory »re purchased annually from English mines and ■wheels of Goodyear industry turn continuously, machin- thousands of pounds sterling are spent each year with cry throbbing, presses rolling, shuttles flashing, moulds 1,500 men and women are employed in the Goodyear- English railroads and common carriers for the transfilling—three eight-hour shifts of English labour, each Wolverhampton organisation and there are 10,000 portation of Goodyear products for home and over-twenty-four hours being necessary to meet the insistent Goodyear dealers in Great Britain employing 2o'oOO seas markets. demands for Goodyear products. other workers. Thousands of families are dependent par- Thus Goodyear purchases, large and small, Goodyear In a period when most businesses are depressed, English lially °r entire*y9 directly or indirectly, upon Goodyear. payrolls and Goodyear sales, extend their related benefits Goodyear workers forge ahead with more empioyment, All of the SuDertwist r«wl -ta^n n **A'-i* fU~ v t i into all sections and phases of British life. And thus does more wages, more prosperity. Hence, they purchase more madeNvres fa^S 1 A IST Pf ? Goodyear play its part in stabilising employment, Empire ofthe o ec e ssitiesandluxuriesoflife,con ytLutemoreof A^lZ^S^Z^^ K^ot^^^^
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19330324.2.31.1
Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXV, Issue 70, 24 March 1933, Page 4
Word Count
427Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Evening Post, Volume CXV, Issue 70, 24 March 1933, Page 4
Using This Item
Stuff Ltd is the copyright owner for the Evening Post. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 3.0 New Zealand licence. This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Stuff Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.