— ■'■■■ % ■ Mother Mary Joseph AUBUET, . THE NEW ZEALAND ViBG-ETATIST. HErt EEMEDIES ARE THE VEEY BEST. INFLUENZA, It will have heen noticed by all readers of the newspapers during the past, few days that the epidemic, commcnly known as Influenza, is raging with direful effects in Sydney, Adelaide, and Melbourne, and that many deaths have already occurred. There can therefore be no doubt that we shall have this scourge amongst ourselves within a very short time, and as all persons in every station of |life are" liahle to he attacked, it would be wise on the part of everyone to take all necessary precautions in preventing themselves catching this most troublesome complaint. The authorities in England aud on the Continent some time since issued instructions that preventative remedies were to be given daily to the military and to the police, and itwas reported that this had very good effect. Now we all know that prevention is better than onre, and to this end the proprietor of MOTHER MARY JOSEPH AUBERT'S REMEDIES has every confidence in recommending the publio to try « MARUPA." It is a vegetable remedy, and from past experience has proved itself invaluable in giving relief to those suffering from severe headaches, harshness in the Bronchial Tube, running at the nose, pains in the bacfc and loins, aud the other particular forms in which INFLUENZA attacks the system of different persons. The publio is asked to give it a fair trial, and from the evidence of Arohbishop Redwood we are sure every one ought to have faith in the wonderful power whioh these valuable vegetable medicines have in counteracting the various attaoks made in the human system. Mother lary Joseph Aubert's REMEDIES St. Mary's Cathedral, Wellington, August 2, 1890, REV MOTHER MARY JOSEPH AUBERT, of Jerusalem, Wanganui River, having applied for permission to dispose of the right of putting up her medicines for sale to Messrs Keicpthorne, Peosseb & Co., I hereby willingly grant such permission in the hope tliat such vegetable medicines may become more publicly known, and assist the good cause in which the Rev. Mother works. Prom many facts that have come under my own notice, I can testify to the beneficial effects of these several medicines upon the persons who have used them. (Signed) FRANCIS REDWOOD, Archbishop of Wellington. INFLUENZA TRY < MARUPA.' This is "the" Remedy that gives instant relief, and if taken in time saves great expense. READ WHAT "THE NEW ZEALAND TABLET " SAYS : «' The religious orders continue to maintain their reputation as benefactors of Society in temporal as well as in spiritual m,atter3. A new proof of this is furnished in the remedies which have heen discovered by the SSistet Mary Joseph Aubert of the Order of Notre Dame (Us Missions. The good Sister, whose life has been devoted to the instruction of the Maoris, while she has laboured successfully at improving their minds and enlightening their spirits, has not boen neglectful of their bodies. The result is the rtscovery of a series of medicines manufactuie.l from native trees and plants and which have been proved undeniably to he of almost marvel! ru< efficacy. It is to the credit of the I'atho ie Church in the colony that one of its missionary Sisters h»s ''is inguished h-rself in this way, probably conferring on the world" a be efit little, if anything, inferior <othat conferred, for example, by the Jesnit Fathers wb a discovered the curative properties of the Peruvian bark. Not only suffering humanity, but science itse'f owes a debt to this lady, who has made it acquainted with properties of natural products, hitherto unsuspected, and has eiu-iched the pharmacopoeia. We have, further, in the matter au instance of how religious devotion is calculated to quicken the faculties and to develop the best qualities of buruau nature, i-ister Mary Joseph ;s to be warmly commended for her discoveries, and, indeed, the community generally may he congratulated on them."
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH18920119.2.22.5
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Manawatu Herald, Volume III, Issue III, 19 January 1892, Page 4
Word count
Tapeke kupu
652Page 4 Advertisements Column 5 Manawatu Herald, Volume III, Issue III, 19 January 1892, Page 4
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
No known copyright (New Zealand)
To the best of the National Library of New Zealand’s knowledge, under New Zealand law, there is no copyright in this item in New Zealand.
You can copy this item, share it, and post it on a blog or website. It can be modified, remixed and built upon. It can be used commercially. If reproducing this item, it is helpful to include the source.
For further information please refer to the Copyright guide.