Break New Ground I Grow Crops 1 by deep ploughing with The hard, compact sub- |H2 soil is a store of nourish-.. sF r Sir £ i c "s ft M $ ■:» OSIVE pS will loosen that hardpan —release the imprisoned food—conserve moisturedrain the surface >and charge the soil with fertilising Potash. A few pounds of Eraptite will break and fertilise the ground wonderfully. Eruptit'o is as safe to handle as a spado. For full particulars got n free Booklet from— |j THE EiIUPTITE SAFETYj] EXPLOSIVE S&, LTD. 1 30 Hunter St., Wellington | W-h.--.c- :r ■■:
A COUGH MIXTUItE RECIPE WORTH HAVING, BIG MONEY.SAVEB 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 eighteenpence for a bottle of family cough remedy you really pay fourteenpence more than you now need to. That's a fact thousands of thrifty people are proving every day. You can prove it straight away by trying this Mean'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 Mean'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 price of one. In other words, an eighteenpcnny 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 conghs. 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 Mean'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. Mean's Essence is sold by chemists and stores, or post free on receipt.of price, 2/-, from G. W. Hean, Chcrais*t Wanganui. * Wherever you buy, be sure you get Mean's, as no other will do. 17 nm ksesi w%m raiFi rafr.r'-'-¥k'*i' Em&tfflK&l'H ?.-. v .y ~t f I hnvo on EMULSION, "~- ftiey like it because it is not disagreeable in taste. Parents with sickiy children would certainly be welladvised to jive their little ones a course of Lane's Emulsion. We have piles cf appreciative letters from grateful mothers and fathers telling of the good achieved by Lane's Emulsion, it make* boys and girls bonny, strong and able. It is the best of all remedies for Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bronchitis, and all Throat and Lung and Wasting Diseases. That's why doctors so freely recommend it. Get a bottle to-day. All eiores and chemists hnv: it tt 2,6 and 4/6. Beware of substitutes. Sole Manufacturer: E. G. LANE, Chemist. Oamaru. N.Z. 10 Ipl As Safe for Children \ as for Adults ! 5 When the delicate tissues of < s your child's throat arc af ected \ —when the tender lungs of [ infancy are threatened!—bet- ! ter act quickly. | Bonnington's \ Carrageen <■, Irish Moss ; Is the safe and certain remedy for children ! contains a© < opium, the dose is small, th« ; relief quick, th« cure lasting. Beit by test for half a century. Here's one case: Hospital Ro«d, New Plynumta. J "[ wish to testify t» the curative power of your medicine, Ben- '';; ninjtoa'i Irish Mots. We have a family s>r six young children, and as we sre living in « wet district, they i —e often troubled | , ith colds. We tried ,**• several preparations j I flpffi in the past, but found . ,U, CU Mn e none equal to Bon- IRISH MOb nington's Irish Moss. : i''"''i : ":;ii!.v'v,i'.'.''.'..V-' Fred Hendry, fj ( | Take a bottle home | f" '.V'.^."!!'.". ; with you to-night I B';v:::^;^^v : ! Insist on fc":':"".-"'.•*"■.'..: '/ Bonrinpton's,. § ■ /, 77 g ».-i-.:'/.".'...'."'.'-'".V.
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXIX, Issue 8, 30 April 1914, Page 8
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674Page 8 Advertisements Column 2 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXIX, Issue 8, 30 April 1914, Page 8
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