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HOUSEHOLD ECONOMY. GOOD COUGH MIXTURE RECIPE. 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 These will give you a pint, or about eight eighteenpenny bottles of warming, soothing, stimulating, curing cough and cold medicine. It takes hold of a cough or cold, comforts sore throats, removes phlegm, and reduces feverishness in a way that means business from the first dose. 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. It has a good tonic effect; helps the appetite ; 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/-, from G. W. Hean, Chemist, Wanganui. Wherever you buy be sure you get Hean’s Esseuce, as no other will d 0.,, ■ 21

A DYSPEPTIC’S UFE SAVED. Severs Pain and Sickness for Many Years Cured by a Simple Antacid. Neighbors said He was a Dying Man. Chronic indigestion and sickness after food and severe pains were all Illicitly cured by a very simple remedy in the case of Mr 11. Savigan, 11, Gloucester Street, Barnardtown, Newjort, Mon. In a letter referring to her husband’s illness, Mrs Savigan writes;—“Ho did not know what it was to eat a meal without it coming ia<'k,” which appears to have boon n.* condition for a considerable time, mtil his wife, while reading a ladies’ oaper, saw ordinary hisurated magnesia recommended for indigestion, uul obtained a small quantity so that her husband might try it. A few loses gave Mr Savigan great relief, ihd before he had finished the lirst supply the trouble was practically cured. To use Mrs Savigan’s own words: “He can eat his food and is looking splendid, and can do his work; in fact, all the people about here look at him, for they nil said lie was a lying man.” The quantity of Insulated magnesia that cured Mr Savigan was half-a-teaspoonfn? in a wine-glas l af water after meals, and we strong!, advise any of our readers who aulfrv from indigestion to try it. Be careful to get the hisurated form spelt b-i-s-u-r-a-t-e-d, as other chemical nroductions similarly named do not have the same beneficial effect, x

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/STEP19140408.2.56.3

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 91, 8 April 1914, Page 8

Word count
Tapeke kupu
438

Page 8 Advertisements Column 3 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 91, 8 April 1914, Page 8

Page 8 Advertisements Column 3 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 91, 8 April 1914, Page 8

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