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EPIDEMIC DISEASE. “ NIP IT IN ' THE BUD.” «it’s catching”—this is what people say whe» a malady spreads among them as fire spreads In dry grass ; th^. phrase states a fact withoul • explanation, which is a pity, because if one* you understand why “ it’s catching,’ you can prevent it catching instead of having to chre it—cure is often impossible, and is expensive. h<ow you ca% understand the flame running through grass, but you can only, see *P reld °} disease by its results, because disease Is spread by living germs or seeds, too small to see, and so light that air can carry and distribute them; the only way to prevent Disease Germs “.catching” is to kill them. To kill an Invisible foe may seem difficult ; but in this ease it is easv and cheap, for you can kill Disease Germs by meeting them at every pomt: with something in hourly use and immediately fatal to them. Science has given us this in Lifebuoy Royal Disinfectant Soap, and its germ-killmg ■power in hospitals .and .sanitation has stamped ft as a world-tested Life Saver. But it is the protection of health in your own home that is your particular care,'and it Is there that Lifebuoy Soap will block the Disease Germ or “nip it.in the bud before it does harm. When you have used Lifebuoy Soap in bath and bedroom, It in house cleaning and flushing sinks and drains, ■ its disinfecting power will have rendered Germlife almost impossible ; almost, but not quite} to do the work more ' thoroughly, you must ase Lifebuoy Soap in the laundry. Lifebuoy Soap in the laundry catches th« germ in the right place to nip it in the bud, namely- in your clothes and house linen. All week the clothes have gathered the mevit-. able germs from the air, street, the office S and the train, the laundry P roVlde * the place for their wholesale execution, and Lifebuoy Soap carries it out rde " t J css M Lifebuoy Soap will pile y our wash-basket with fragrant, snowy linen, absolutelygermfree and practically germ-proof. Use L* buoy! Soap'in the laundry,, and the Diseasa ! Germs; instead of catching will be caught nipped in the bud ” before they do harm,.

; THE FAMOUS OR. WAWLESS’fi COWtc The Batlor.ai System Cures to stay .Cured, JSo External Application). y : • Marshall's Pharmacy, Dunedin, Sole Agents.. Are You Off Color? , iv'i; : , ' ;>;■. ( >' v To the man ; who* isworth his ' salt” there is nothing more dis- y tressfcag!- than; to feel languid and " off colour. ”■ Life is too strenuous and competition too keen to have j>sny of 'these “ off oplour !? days. - j . Good health is essential: to sue- ; cess. The brain must be clear and alert—the body energetic and responsive. The hey to good 'health is a sound stomach; , j. Do you enjoy your .meals., and .digest them', or' are you a sufferer from indigestion and -constipation with their attendant evils? Get into the health line now—keep your place in the business firing lino, amongst the men who DO things: " - Dr Crossland’s " Noxol ” has helped thousands of men to buc- ; cess by curing stomach disorders, and giving them physical ! and mental fitness. • • Nosol is a. concentrated remedy compounded of fruit and vegetable juices only, which aids Nature to remove the poisonous effects of accumulated waste secretions, and restores the stomach to perfect health and tho bowels to regular habits. Noxol ” is sold by all Storekeepers and Chemists at 2/- 1 Christchurch Representatives: Taifc, Eagrie and Co., Ltd., Bedford Row.

NEW ZEALAND COMPANY R£G“ iane Sunless Prescriptions in Ml mounts and all folrnie'ot' l/tnlos. • , ‘r. - R. S. .LOMSOAtEj Optomoirj*t. Fellow ©s;<&«. ' * • N ' 'Speotao'e Makew’.Company. London. 143 Wpjtestar .?traet, ChPietchurch, Apppm.tnxcnts •.’by Teleptoue, - -

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/LT19160819.2.29.4

Bibliographic details

Lyttelton Times, Volume CXVII, Issue 17251, 19 August 1916, Page 7

Word Count
612

Page 7 Advertisements Column 4 Lyttelton Times, Volume CXVII, Issue 17251, 19 August 1916, Page 7

Page 7 Advertisements Column 4 Lyttelton Times, Volume CXVII, Issue 17251, 19 August 1916, Page 7