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A COUGH MIXTURE RECIPE • ' WORTH HAVING; BIG MONEY-SAVER By a Qualified Chemist. If fourteenpence were lying on the footpath -what -would you do—-leave it there or put it in your pocket ? - Every time ;you pay eighteenp'ence for a bottle of family cough remedy you really pay fourteenpence more than you now need to. That’s If fact thousands of thrifty people are proving every day." You can prove it straight away by trying this Hean’s Essence recipe. Into a jug put four tablespoonfuls of sugar, three of treacle'! two of vinegar, and a large breakfastcupful of warm water. Stir till dissolved, pour into a big bottle, add one bottle of Hean’s Essence, and shake all together. This gives you a pint of the finest family cough remedy you can possibly buy. It means about eight eighteenpenny bottles for the p’rice of one. In other words, an eighteenpenny bottle costs you less . than fourpence—a tremendous and worth-while moneysaving, you will admit. The mixture thus made in your own home is good for grandparents and grandchildren—and all the ages in between. Give from a few drops to a spoonful, according to age. It is a splendid remedy for new coughs or old coughs. It quickly relieves the coughs of asthma, bronchitis, influenza, croup, and even whooping-cough. Use it as a gargle for sore throats, and relief is instant. It lasts a long time and never spoils; This Hean’s Essence recipe is so easy to make, is so good, and saves such a lot of money that it is now quite popular in thousands of New Zealand and Australian homes. Hean’s Essence is sold by chemists and stores, or post free on receipt of price, 2 /-, from G. W. Hean, Chemist Wanganui. Wherever you buy, be sure you get Hean’s, as iro other will do. 17

)ur cold will disappear quietly, and IS surely if you gg take tS» <L fk M>: g I lg| I ', Sb'7% SK ' fTi «*s m%% %.£ w m $ 'n,' s generations j-gj ha ve proved it the. best.and«ilest fongh medicine. A half « century record of merit should mean a good dead W2 lo you. Hof use imitations tg and substitutes. Insist, on p Bennington's Irish Moss. ~ nnanßQit? % ' FHT<®. <l ..MBS;': S>' im (Wji The Song “ You cannot, bfi the Strawberry by flic Jabs! on the fin I ** Bui the name of m' MGATE On your Packet is an absolute guarantee that the contents are the best Teas the world produces at the different prices. Direct from the plantation to the public, “Nelson, MoateV' Teas contain all the qualities claimed by imitators, and are superior in every respect. B* S m to ntotw goto Dm. OUR 3/. TEA IS PAS EXCELLENCE. g| mamma mamma caesasa estates nraffiiraesara«i«i EStQEeSSmssBSMi gsiiisi

! An Essential Aid To Big Crops of Best Quality 12! BILSTON BASIC PHOSPHATE Hi die r in Phosphate of Lime—more finely ground and possessing greater solubility than any other Basic Slag, the Bilston Brand is by far the most efficient. that a progressive farmer can employ. Makes heavy soils loose and friable-gives body to light, sandy soils—counteracts sourness — revitalises worn-out fields—sustains fertility —increases the productiveness of land. Bilston Basic Phosphate costs a trifle more than inferior slaVs— it PROVES CHEAPER IN THE SOIL. "storekeepers amb ,svi any si e D^LERS-:=====' [ a . Wholesale ouly ; I fl. S. PATERSON & GO., LTD, | WELLINGTON Sola Importers. )2-HMN£B :

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/RAMA19140310.2.49.3

Bibliographic details

Rangitikei Advocate and Manawatu Argus, Volume XXXIX, Issue 10896, 10 March 1914, Page 7

Word Count
562

Page 7 Advertisements Column 3 Rangitikei Advocate and Manawatu Argus, Volume XXXIX, Issue 10896, 10 March 1914, Page 7

Page 7 Advertisements Column 3 Rangitikei Advocate and Manawatu Argus, Volume XXXIX, Issue 10896, 10 March 1914, Page 7