TN THE BARBER’S CHAIR. When the writer of Baxter’s Lung Preserver advertisements was in the barber’s the other day having a hair cut he noticed that the barber stopped occasionally to take a swig out of a bottle. “What have you got there. Hector?” he asked. “Oh,” he said, “this is what I am taking for my cold. Wonderful stuff. I suffer a bit fi’om ] bronchitis, and I find that “Baxter’s” is the only thing that clears my bronchial tubes.” There is positively nothing like Baxter’s Lung Preserver for warding off a threatened attack of cough, cold, or influenza. It soothes sore throats and chests in remarkably quick time, heals the inflamed passages, and cuts the phlegm, thereby easing the breathing. For convalescents, “Baxter’s” is an invaluable tonie, repairing waste tissue and strengthening the system against relapse. | A generons-sized bottle posts f?s Gd from any chemist or store; or, better still, get the family size at 4s 6d. — Advt. Sing me the songs my mother sang to me, Tell me the tales she told me at her knee; Old friends are best, oh, love them while ye may, The air is sweetest at the close of day; “Old friends are best?”—Aye! what words could be truer Than that old friend, Woods’ Peppermint Cure. —26
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Bibliographic details
Hawera Star, Volume XLVIII, 21 August 1924, Page 3
Word Count
214Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 Hawera Star, Volume XLVIII, 21 August 1924, Page 3
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