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Wairarapa Star, May 3, 1802.

Concentrated sunshine is acknowledged to be Nature's great remedy for all the ills that human flesh is heii 1 to. In no part of the world is the remedy, in rays pure and serene, more freely lavished than in New Zealand. The sunshine, paying on v clear and sa'ubrious ; tmospliPie, has left its impression ou the fauna and flora of the colony. The extinct nioa, the wondrons coal deposits, proclaim the natural wealth of old New Zealand. The muscular, Maori and the splendid forests survive. From these forests Mother Mary Aubert has compounded several important remedies, and we recommend the announcements elsewhere to the perusal, not simply of sick, but of those in health. "A stitch in time saves nine " applies to the healing art more than to less important matters. Mother Mary Aubert's New Zealand Remedies are preventive as well as curative. When the first symptoms of sickness appear their power, in cutting short the attack by rousing dormant organs and functions to activity, is said, to be remarkable. Insidious ailments resemble the bu r glar, but these remedies promptly applied give the alarm and make him decamp. There is no quackery about them, they are not foreign compounds of which people know nothing and which may be pernicious, but they are the pure products of Now Zealand sunshine distilled through the vegetable kingdom. Better ttian al, their character has been proved, for they have been well tested, and the beßt proof of their merits is that their sale is rapidly mci easing.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH18920818.2.24.2

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Manawatu Herald, 18 August 1892, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
259

Wairarapa Star, May 3, 1802. Manawatu Herald, 18 August 1892, Page 4

Wairarapa Star, May 3, 1802. Manawatu Herald, 18 August 1892, Page 4

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