Article image
Article image

At Yous. Service By gfyxm® HflßßliFiik!® A sg-Hfl IS/L]E R I \ y== 11 Sa g® i i 1 ®WSBsb i 3 \ iigg =| M ft i 11 Improvements in our daily life follow one another so swiftly that we tend to accept them as a matter of course. We note advances in the colour, finish and texture of our dress materials or the fabrics which go to furnish our houses. We even use without surprise entirely new types of textiles and other materials. We read with only a passing wonder of the strides being made in the prevention and cure of disease among men and animals, and for our protection, in the detection of crime. We have ceased to be astonished at the developments which make our daily round and common task, in kitchen, work-room and garden, simpler or more enjoyable. We accept without comment the progressive advance in quality oi such entertainments as the cinema and radio. Even in a world at war we seldom pause to inquire how it is that we are still able to enjoy efficient substitutes for the articles which are temporarily no longer obtainable. Or how it comes about that the evils of undernourishment and the scourge of epidemic disease have been kept so firmly in control. We shall do better to remind ourselves occasionally that none of these things come of their own accord. In each one of them we shall, if we trouble to inquire, find the hand of the research chemist and of the chemical industry—and not least of the British chemical industry. The record of history shows that British chemists have always been in the van of invention and discovery. It is not the least of Britain’s justifications for the regard of other nations that even stretched on the rack of war though she is, her sons and daughters, fleets and armies scattered all over the globe, her chemists have stood to their task. Today, as in peacetime, British laboratories and chemical factories arc working with undiminished resource and energy to see that the benefits of science arc increasingly applied in our daily life, H !C3I No. 2 °f I ' JC Services of an Industry” series inserted by IMPERIAL CHEMICAL INDUSTRIES (N.Z.) LTD. WStk r sss-J Willi® > '- ’ I lii w , ''., ? z ' ' , wS ' Ip, W liS / '' IfS s' ll ■t I Hk Wl wl M, W •‘ > iLj*®: : A - < V * '7! Ai-A ** > A if '"f X- 5 z 5 -u « '’■ dif 'fi ■ ’ . ' 110 l - nS3»SSI i f A - > y* f " X S *V~A, 7 -y ? j I|'i > I | .fi h ' . iDimMA W It’s good policy to look for trouble before it . , z * looks for you. That’s what the fighting boys in tropical jungles have proven with PROTEX soap. That safe antiseptic contained in PROTEIC is on constant guard against all sorts of infection and it’s the reason why they need plenty of • PROTEX. For the time 'WW being, will you go easy listen-in to the protex radio on vour PRO! EX at PROGRAMME on your ZB Station home SO the boys won’t every Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday go short. Thursday afternoon at 2.15. c DID YOU PROTEX YOURSELF THIS MORNING? COLGATE-PALMOLIVE LIMITED. PETONE. PR2.4 EXTRA WHEAT GERM Yes, aU the beet ®f the wheat a inelndintr the wheat germ plw EXTRA wheat germ. Yount and old like the flavour of vitalising vitarain-plus VI-MAX. Matle fxwa gelccted, wiieata hy Bu H. & SON. LTD, HoorfMMiao Avsu. Oi’cSt. EAiatoamefeil® ffleetri©: amd Parts l€n an y standard, part for Electrical W rflliwl ul *P meni f or your car is required it S * s g°°d to remember that > caa supply all parts. ’x Our stocks are most complete and any ® part not in stock can be supplied at short notice. ’ Friecs as-a aks>@ys I- H. McGLASHAN PREMIER MOTOR GARAGE ’PHONE 843 Asent for Vests Batteries,

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GEST19440720.2.44.1

Bibliographic details

Greymouth Evening Star, 20 July 1944, Page 7

Word Count
637

Page 7 Advertisements Column 1 Greymouth Evening Star, 20 July 1944, Page 7

Page 7 Advertisements Column 1 Greymouth Evening Star, 20 July 1944, Page 7