NEWS AND NOTES
FROM PARKINSON AND CO., Chemists and Photographic Dealers. GREYMOUTH. “Specific” is not an elega'nt word. It sounds like a puncture Or a cat-fight. But it says exactly what we mean. So we continue to use it in preference to a more musical word that doesn’t, Such as “Balm” Or “Dividend.” Webster describes Specific as a remedy for a particular disease: In other words, Parknsion’s Influenza Specific will not cure indigestion, But its action on Influenza is really quite remarkable. Especially in the initial stages of attack Parkinson’s Influenza Specific is primarily a first aid requisite, and a bottle should be in everyone’s medicine chest between the Aspirin Tablets and the Boracic Lint.-s-A.D.
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Greymouth Evening Star, 30 January 1923, Page 5
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115NEWS AND NOTES Greymouth Evening Star, 30 January 1923, Page 5
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