SJJL. rc Cl ssSr* hold ot the children. Some children catch cold readily and each successive cold, if not checked at once, is likely to weaken the lungs more and more. It is when the lungs are $> weakened that youngsters are more easily subject .to bronchitis and consumption. At _ the first sign of trouble, give,the children r They take it readily of their own accord because of the quick relief it affoids. Croup and whooping cough both yield to the curative and soothing influence of Bennington’s. A Nelson lady writes: — , . , “1 have great pleasure in recommendino* your Irish Moss and can remember it being used by our family for twentyfive years or more. 1 also find' it invaluable for croup, which some of my children have been subject to. | can say it never j fails to give relief. > advise all mothers to use it. carrageen ; Mrs. Walter Broad. Buy it at your chemist’s or at the store. Call for it by name ami see that you yet it >rp ua " lions are sometimes offered refuse them. 111 CARRAGEEN IRISH MOSj
NOTICE TO TRESPASSERS. OTICE is hereby given by the undersigned owners of property on Salisbury and Rcaconsficld Roads, that all persons trespassing on their lands with dogs or guns will be prosecuted, and dogs shot. D. FISCHER. J. BUCK.P. J. PETERSEN. C. HODGE. W. SWAN. J, 0, P.ONIFACE. G. M. HAMILTON. V. SCHUMACHER. C. MAY HEAD. G. SCHUMACHER.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/STEP19160525.2.34.4
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXX, Issue 43, 25 May 1916, Page 8
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238Page 8 Advertisements Column 4 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXX, Issue 43, 25 May 1916, Page 8
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