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HOUSEHOLD ECONOMY.

GOOD COUGH MIXTURE RECIPE, j By a Qualified Chemist. A splendid medicine that is good for coughs, influenza, colds, and sore throats can now be made quite easily at home. | There is no boiling, or bother, or fuss of ! any kind. Get one bottle of Hean's ' Essence from your chemist and mix with ■ sugar,,.treacle and' water, as. per simple directions.; These will give you a pint, :or about eight eighteenpenny bottles of ■ warming, soothing, stimulating, curi»« ; cough and cold medicine. ;It takes hold of a cough or cold, com- '■ forts sore throats, removes phlegm and i reduces feverishness in a way that means ; business from the first dose; i You can feel this mixture do you good all the way down. For influenza, ; asthma :> croup, whooping and other | coughs, it proves a boon wherever used. llt has a good tonic effect; helps the apI petite; and is very slightly laxative. | Making this mixture at home brings the cost of an. eighteenpenny bottle "down to less than fourpence. Hean's Essence is sold by most chemists and stores, or post free direct on, receipt of.price, 2/-, fromG. W. Hean,1 * Chemist, Wanganui. Wherever you buy be sure you get Hean's Essence, as mo other will do. 21

stations. . These were, of course, 1 chasable at.any dealer's, but it was < curious that'Gould should have them.'l in his possession. . ; -\ Packets found on his wife when she j was arrested were addressed to Brus- i sels, and, went on counsel, they con-? ; tamed copies of official charts of Ber- \ ! gen and Spit-head, which were really j |of no great importance, and draw- \ ings also of the engines and engine- \ room arrangements of British battle- j ships, which were important, and would be useful to an enemy. 1 A search of Gould's present lodgings ) at Wandsworth, London, had revealed \ numerous documents of the utmost i importance, including questions of a | technical and confidential nature re- | gardmg Great Britain's naval de- J fences. These had evidently been ■ drawn up by experts, and Gould's in>structions were, apparently, to obtain answers. The hearing was again adjourned, ! r* ItOul{l 'being allowed out on bail. [At a previous hearing it was stated ] by the detectives by whom the accused ! were arrested that the female prison- ; er was entering the Continental express at Charing Cross station, just before the departure of tthe train for Dover. They took-her into custody, and upon searching her effects found three large envelopes underneath a rug- As the woman was stepping out of the cab in which she had been driven to the police station, she warn seen to throw some pieces of paper on to the pavement. The fragments were picked up, and after they had been pieced together the name of Petersen could be deciphered. The envelopes contained documents relating to the navy, with some correspondence of an incriminating character. The woman, when charged, said: "I don't understand the use of the papers; I have done nothing. I had. no idea of the contents of the packages. I was going to take them to.Ostend, and then to Brussels. I tore up the addrc?-." The male .-prisoner^, in answer ;« the, charge, said: "I'm the guilty party; the woman aoesn't kno~ what she went for."! . .

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MEX19140323.2.7

Bibliographic details

Marlborough Express, Volume XLVIII, Issue 69, 23 March 1914, Page 2

Word Count
539

HOUSEHOLD ECONOMY. Marlborough Express, Volume XLVIII, Issue 69, 23 March 1914, Page 2

HOUSEHOLD ECONOMY. Marlborough Express, Volume XLVIII, Issue 69, 23 March 1914, Page 2

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