~IX !•)** when baby does not get on well. Often the teething period is a particularly trying time for the mother. Baby becomes feverish, restless and suffers pain from swollen gums, sleeplessness, constipation, diarrhoea or skin troubles. Often, too, baby becomes subject to coughs, colds or even bronchitis. Still more often, appetite fails and the poor child becomes thin, miserable and weak. <3iL A course of Scott's f Emulsion saves all & this. It gives the ■ child strength to cany over this trying period, whilst its valuable lime salts aid the j easy formation of si,rong, white teeth. IMITATED BUT NEYER EQUALLED.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/STEP19150709.2.49.4
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXVII, Issue 59, 9 July 1915, Page 7
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100Page 7 Advertisements Column 4 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXVII, Issue 59, 9 July 1915, Page 7
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