Medical. KEATING'S POV. SEX. KEATING'S PGW BESS,. ** KEATING'S PO'WBKI-. KEATING'S POWBEK. K_UAT_NG'S POWXSESI. ____ATING'S POWDER. „„„_, FLEAS, Kl__t<S4 MOTHS. 1 Bl___T____3 U? LIES EA_.-_Ii_3SS TO ANIMALS. KAKMLESS TO ANIMALS. f iiyG-a, FLEAS, MOTHS, i BEETLES.. But is unrivalled in destroying FLEAS BUGS COCKROACHES. BEETLES, MOTHS IN PURS. MOSQUITOES, and 3 very other specic3 of insect. Tho PUBLIC are CAUTIONED that packages of the sen'uine Powder hear the autograph of THOMAS KEATING. Bold in tins only. KEATING'S WORM TABLETS. Kli-ATJCNG'S V/01-M KEATING'S "WOi-ftS TABLET'S, A PrjttlSLY VEGETABLE SWEETMEAT, both ill appcamncc and taste, furnishing a most agreeable method oi: administering the only certain, rei.cdy for IN't'ESPINAL or THREAD' WORMS. It is a perfectly safe and mild preparation, and is especially adapted for Children, Sold in tins by all Drusrprist?. Proprietor, THOMAS KEATING, London. KARANA. WHEN the digestive organs are out of order a good reliable Tonic is required to bring them back to their normal state. - A number of persons upset the stomach \y neglecting to take their meals at regular stated intervals, and others again eat to excess at some particular meal—and from these causes the machinery gets out of order and does not run smoothly. Late suppers, also, are one of the causes of upsetting the digestive organs. How often does a man, too, in meeting an old acquaintance have a merry evening and suffer terribly from the effects the next day. Sister Mary Joseph Aubert, in her researches amongst the plants of New Zealand, ha-_ discovered tliere is a very valuable remedy for these complaints in our own vegetation, and, after experimenting for a number of years, has now brought forward the medicine called KARAT. A. Dr. Lakochette, a Chemist of the First Class of the Faculty of Paris, to whom samples were sent, says: "It is an excellent bitter Tonic, and I consider it even superior to the preparation of Cinchona in all affections of tho stomach. It has given us, prepared as you sent it, the most satisfactory results." The Reverend Sister says she has used it for many years extensively and successfully with sufferers of .every age and constitution, and she noticed that in a. few cases it did not agree at iirst, but by diminishing the dose good results followed. She remarked astonishingly good results on old people, who had ruined their constitutions by the abuse of intoxicating drink and who were debilitated and suffering alter having turned over a new leaf. Kawana, March, ISBS. - ; Dear Madam, —I respectfully thank you for what you havedone for me. .You have saved my life. Your medicine (KARANA) is invaluable. I wish I could make yon a return f</r your lindnes.. I ■ ■•; F. Pestal. j • PARAMO. ; jj T3ARAMO is one of the new medicine.. I -"- specially prepared by Sister Makv Joseph Aubert from vegetation in New Zealand. All those suffering from Liver Complaint should give this preparation a fair trial, and we are certain that benefit will soon be found. The Liver is one of the organs in the human structure which gives most trouble, having, as it has to do, to get through a large amount of work in 24 hours. Headache and dizziness in the head can generally be traced to a Liver which has been upset, l and it is a well-known fact that no human being can appear in a good temper when the Liver is out of order. Mental Depression, Prostration, Jaundice, Indigestion, Heartburn, Pains in ths Stomach, under the Shoulders, or Ribs usually can be traced to the same cause, and how thankful mankind should be that a sure remedy is now made public. PARAMO only wants a fair trial, and no person will then be without it. It is a good medicine, and if it fails it will be hardly possible that any other can cure. If you sutler from any of the above com- » plaints, please give PARAMO a trial. It cannot harm you, and may bs of great benefit. ..- Springfield, May, ISB4. Dear Sister,--Your PARAMO has cured me, and I have to thauk you very much for it. Pat. Quirk. - Dear Sister.-j-I called at Karongota to see Jimmy, whom I expected to see dying. What has not been my surprise when I heard that he was at the plough. Your medicine has cured him in a week. E. Reigner, S M. ' Orvington, August, 1888. Dear Sister, —I have at last found your direction. lam improving greatly, and I think that a bottle more of your medicine will cure me comrjletely. Will you please let me have it. ' E. Moore. '' MARUPA. people are liable at any time to suffer from Colds in me Head, Sore Throat, Bad Coughs, &c. and which, if not attended to in time, lead on to worse complications, such as Asthma, Lung ' Disease, Consumption, and General Bronchial Afiections. Sister Mar* Joseph Aubert has, during her thirty years' experiments, found that there is a wonderful remedy for the above in the vegetation of New Zealand, and in the preparation of MARUPA, which is a combination ot many plants, we are given a medicine which has already proved most efficacious to ihoie suffering irom these complaints who have used it, and which only now needs to bacomfe generally known, and it will be found to do all that is said of it. Seventy-mile Bush, June, 1887. Dear Sister,—l am perfectly cured, the cough is gorje, and I can work as well as ever,' A. Jenkins. .' Tongohio, May, 18S2. ( ; Dear Madam, —You promised to cure me in three months, but you have done it in one. Not only can I speak without any fatigue, but 1 can sing and shout out as loud as anybody, The cough has quite left me. . j T. Bennett. ' Owhiti, May, 1880. Dear Sister;"—l feel quite well again. The blood has stopped and the cough is insignificant. I feel another being altogether. I have a little medicine left, which I keep carefully. A. Andrews. Hampden, Nov., iSSg. v.. Dear Sister,—Will you let me have a little more medicine. It is the only one I have found to do me any good. J. O'Brien, THEY not only imitate Wolfe's SOHN-.FPS. but copy theadvertisementa. WHEN purchasing Schnapps spacify Wolfb'3; there are frauds about.
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Bibliographic details
Auckland Star, Volume XXII, Issue 247, 17 October 1891, Page 6
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1,037Page 6 Advertisements Column 5 Auckland Star, Volume XXII, Issue 247, 17 October 1891, Page 6
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