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Medical PARAMO ' MEDMJOiT" TYPOGRAPHICAL TESTIMONY, THE EDITORS FOR ONCE AGREE. ' New Zealand Times,' May 14th. 1892. 'British Medical Journal' is i. very angry with Lord Onslow. The particular cattse of the journal's wrath is that our late Governor has absolutely dared to testify to the value of remedies whose composition is not detailed in the British Pharmacopeia. The wrath is < xpressed as follows :— ' We see with regret Lord Onslow shamelessly puffing quack secret remedies by an advertised letter—as scandalous an abuse of political position and as discreditable a folly as has been for a long time brought under notice.' Poor Lord Onslow ! The dyspeptic diatribe above quoted owes its existence, no doubt, to the fact that Lord Onslow haying found virtue in some of the Maori herbal remedies prepared by Mother Aubert, actually had the courageto say so in print. Why tbe ' British Medical Journal' should deem such testimony a high offence, and, judging by the strength of the language it uses, an almost criminal misdemeanour, 1 totally fail to see, save that the average medical mind is fanatically opposed to any medical innovation which does not proceed from recognised red-taped sources. 'Twas ever thus with the medicos, Almost every new advance made m medical science has been bitterly attacked as ' quackery ' when it appeared ; every new thinker denounced as a madman or worse ; and every formula not hall marked by the ' Lancet' and ' British Medical Journal' as ad.iugerous innovation. Personally, while not having the pleasure of a personal acquaintance with either Mother Aubert or Mr Kempthome, I can sympathise with them and Lord Onslow in seeing the, Maori Remedies denounced as ' qmek secret remedies.' Only one of thoso same * quack remedies ' do I know, and that ' Karan.i to wit,' which as a ' nal good thinir' for a man with a liver, I would cordially recommend to the editor of the ' B.M.J.' He appears to need it sadly, for the common and domestic and ' recognised ' podophyllum has evidently been of no service ro him, otherwise he would never have penned so spiteful a paragraph. As, however, the ' Maori Remedies ' —' quack and secret' though they be—are reported to be selling like the proverbial 'hot cakes,' neither Mother Aubert nor Mr Kempthorne is likely to worry about the wrath of the ' British Medical Journal.' As for Lord Onslow, he is at Home and can fight his own battle.—' Scrutator in the New Zealand Mail.' (' Wairarapa Star,' 3rd May, 1892.) Concentrated sunshineis acknowledged to bs. Nature's great remedy for all the ills that human flesh is heir to. In no part of the world is the remedy, in rays ; uve and serene, more freely lavished than in New Zealand. The sunshine, playing on a clear salubrious atmosphere has left its impression on the fauua and flora of the colony. The extinct moa, the wondrous 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 wa rccommenii the announcements elsewhere to th< v perusal not simply of the sick but of those in health. ' A stitch in time saves nine,' applies to healing art more than to loss 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 rousiag dormant orgaus aud functions to activity is said to be remarkable. Insidious ailments resemble the burglar ; but those 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, aud which may be pernicious, but they are the pure products ot New Zealand sunshine distilled through the vegetable kingdom. Better thau all, their character has been proved, for they have been well tested, an 1 the best proof of their merits is that their sale is rapidly increasing. (' Weekly Herald,' April 30,1892,) A southern paper says :—' What with Mnrupn, Kavana, Paramo, Natanata and cold weather, typhoid fever has bean driven from the City of Wellington, and the place is now as healthy as any town in New Zealand. No small share of the credit is due to the Roy. Mother Mary Joseph Aubert for tho production of her unrivalled remedies.' And as far as we are personally concerned we must say that, when any one of our stall is affected, no matter from what causo, even alcoholic poisoning, we pour into him a bottla of Marupa, when restoration to a norinai condition tak«s place at once.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AMBPA18920729.2.2.6

Bibliographic details

Akaroa Mail and Banks Peninsula Advertiser, Volume XXII, Issue 1674, 29 July 1892, Page 1

Word Count
765

Page 1 Advertisements Column 6 Akaroa Mail and Banks Peninsula Advertiser, Volume XXII, Issue 1674, 29 July 1892, Page 1

Page 1 Advertisements Column 6 Akaroa Mail and Banks Peninsula Advertiser, Volume XXII, Issue 1674, 29 July 1892, Page 1

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