WHOOPING COUGH. There is perhaps no other complaint so common and yet so distressing among children than "Whooping Cough". The acking cough accompanied in the advanced stages by choking and stru<M{ n » for breath,loss of appetite, etc. very soon weaken and upset the whole system. It is always wise to prevent the disease if possible by keeping the child's badroom well disinfected with some good disinfectant and also keep a bottle of GORDON'S PECTEOL COUG CURE, ready on hand to give you? child a dose immediately there is any sign of a coueh T V GORDON, Chemist Masterton. ' * A WORD TO TRAVELLERS. The excitement incidental to travelling and change of water and food often brings on diarrhoea, colic and pain in the stomach and fortius reason no one should leave home without a bottle of Chamberlains 1 Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Re-nedv It can always be depended upon *j etfect a qmck cure. It cannoi be procured when on board train or steamer, and that is when it is most likely to be needed, and for this reason should always be^ptocured-before demists and
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Wairarapa Age, Volume XXXII, Issue 9713, 8 February 1910, Page 5
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183Page 5 Advertisements Column 7 Wairarapa Age, Volume XXXII, Issue 9713, 8 February 1910, Page 5
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