A HUSBAND'S SUSPICION*
♦— — . AND A WIFE'S mGENTJTTY. They were dining at a well-known hotel. After the meal the wife produced from her handbag a small piece of paper, in which she had wrapped 6cme white powder. She mixed it with water, and eurreptitioußly drank it off. Her husband'b curiosity— if not suspicion—was instantly aroused. "What's that stuff?" he asked. She smiled a superior smile. '"Only Anti-Acido 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 Anti-Acido so indispensable that she devised the afbove simple expedient for taking a dose when dining out. _ She knew she would not enjoy her dinner without Anti-Acido afterwards. Hundreds—nay, thousands—of indigestion sufferers finch as this lady have found that Anti-Acido enables them to eat and enjoy hearty, wholesome meals without pain or discomfort. 2s 6d, chemiste and stores. 2
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19250908.2.100.2
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Press, Volume LXI, Issue 18481, 8 September 1925, Page 11
Word count
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149Page 11 Advertisements Column 2 Press, Volume LXI, Issue 18481, 8 September 1925, Page 11
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