Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

A HUSBAND’S SUSPICION

AND A WIFE’S INGENUITY. They were dining at a well-known hotel. After the .meal the wife produced from her handbag a small pieoe of paper, in which she had wrapped some white powder. She mixed it with water, and surreptitiously drank it off. Her husband’s curiosity—if. not suspicion—was \ instantly aroused. "What’s that stuff?’’ he asked. She smiled ai superior smile., "Only Anti-Aoido for my indigestion, Mr Curiosity." The moral of the story—the incident actually occurred —is that the wife, who is a martyr to indigestion, finds AntiAoido so indispensable that she devised the above simple expedient for 'taking a dose when dining out. She knew she would not enjoy her dinner without An-ti-Acido afterwards. Hundreds—nay, thousands—of indigestion sufferers suoh as this lady have found that Anti-Aeldo enables them to eat and enjoy hearty, wholesome meals without pain or discomfort. 2s 6d, chemists and stores.—Adyt,

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/NZTIM19250724.2.83

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Times, Volume LII, Issue 12198, 24 July 1925, Page 7

Word Count
147

A HUSBAND’S SUSPICION New Zealand Times, Volume LII, Issue 12198, 24 July 1925, Page 7

A HUSBAND’S SUSPICION New Zealand Times, Volume LII, Issue 12198, 24 July 1925, Page 7