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NOW PUBLISHED. ONE HUNDRED YEARS AGO. TEN MONTHS IN NEW ZEALAND CBUISE'S OBSERVATIONS Oi NATIVE LIFE. XAOKT LIFE AND SUPEKSTITIONS. BARBAROUS CUSTOMS. PREVALENCE OF CANNIBALISM. THE BOYD MASSACRE. EARLY TIMBER CUTTING. MAORI FORTIFICATIONS AND FEASTS. DISCOVERY OF WAITEMATA HARBOUR. WAR DANCES AND EXPEDITIONS. EARLY EUROPEAN SETTLEMENT'S. WHALERS AXD WHALING. ESCAPED CONVICTS. REV. SAMUEL MARSDEN AND PIONEER MISSIONS. PRICE, 6/6 i POSTAGE, 6d. BRETT PRINTING AND PUBLISHING CO. ,&ND ALL BOOKSELLERS.

Headache aiid Stains Nenritis Neuralgia & Indigestion Cared by Dr. Cassell's Tablets Mrs. William?, Alwyn Cottage, Whitby, -<*'^rfiHJ S feV near Chester, England, says:—"After an ... ■ iWBH^^ attack of pleurisy about three years ago, ~, I was left very -weak, and I cannot dcs- "' crih-e how nervous and restl-ess I felt. Jr &t?~ ' — -Z&lSijsSm Ny Sometime? 1 could not keep .still for f \ nerves, and, worse- than all, I .could / aSEsSsE **§§8| \ not sleep at nijlite. This, of course / " '3tw \ made mc weaker than ever. I had lifcJe f WJ&M \ desire for food, and when I did eat pain / ■BjMT' -J \ was cure to follow in my back and over I \&UKT \ 'the kidaeys. 1 suffered also with flatu- I '■ I lence and a nasty sick feeling, and the 1 N. I headaches I endured were awful. They \ •" * / ■were like neuralgia. In my left arm, V y s. / too, there was a dull gnawing pain, V >"' I which became sharp if I raised my arm \ JL • I / suddenly, and was followed by a burning ytieSlb-- ' * *<&^r sen6atio'h. I believe it was aeuritis. The - : V: ■" ' '' «wSB^ indigestion had become so bad by this X. am -tMjr^^^^^^^r time that I ivas told my stomach was J /VlfS. Infill 13 f77 S I ulcerated. l™«.^^"«J '■' I had medical advice, and kept tryi one thing and another, but -without any benefit, till at last I got Dr. Cassell's Xablete. Then Telief came. I hesan to Bleep at night, and the pain and indigestion lessened. I grew stronger daily, till in quite a short time I felt as well as before my illn€S3." |/go m , at bedtime and i/3» a •*/• Tha u niver , al Borne Re me dy tOT note how well (the «;. ejle Ntrvous Broiklown BJ«p!«insM Waitinj Ind C you being the more Htm Fiilurt Aiiainia Palitalion will v, n . ,h. AiffftiSiS , - *2&Mto KMV ro «i. v«SiEmu,fi,n JSJ , irietuh All ChemigU Noerasthinia !nJi|ntion Ntrvontmu and vigonr for Dγ oS«Mf >k £|>c,:! *"» »»!»«W« '« "orjinz Kottttn and Buring EQUALLY" Tablets S «il CriUeal Ptfloft o« Lift. KOiTABLB I I". CasoalV. Co.. Ltd.. Manchester. Eng. 1 FOR CHILDREN. Who ever dreamed that cleaning windows would be so easy! Simply a thin, watery lather of Bon Ami—a white i film forms —a wipe with a dry, soft cioth or tissue paper —and the dirt and dried Bon Ami vanish together, like frost in the sunshine. See! Crystal-clear —not a streak nor a smear! Why— the window is actually inoisihle! -in n n What else can clean windows y -#^1

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19211123.2.126.1

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume LII, Issue 279, 23 November 1921, Page 12

Word Count
488

Page 12 Advertisements Column 1 Auckland Star, Volume LII, Issue 279, 23 November 1921, Page 12

Page 12 Advertisements Column 1 Auckland Star, Volume LII, Issue 279, 23 November 1921, Page 12