REPORTERS OF KATUIiE. '"Nature will he reported, " __,>•» f-lmetl'son. "All things are engaged. in -writing their history. The planet, /*he pebble, goes attended by its shadow; tho rolling rock leaves its' snratchc- on^the mountain; the river its channef in^ the soil ; the* animal its bones in the stratum, the fern and leaf its modest epitaph in ■the coal. The falling drop makes its sculpture in the sand or the stone. Not a foot steps into the snow or along the ground but .prints, in characters more or less lasting, a map on its march. Every act of, the man inscribes it-self in tbe memor- '.--. ies of its fellows and in hisownman- ; . ners and fa.cc. The air is full of sounds, the sky ot tokens, the ground A, is all memoranda and signature, and -."v -every object covered over with hints which speak to the intelligent." And -the strongest hint which appeals . to the intelligence of man is that of using nature's remedy when sickness combs his 'way. And the remedy — Nature's remedy — mado from herbs and botani<&>.ubstances, is to be found in Impey's May Apple. 2s Gd everywhere.
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Bibliographic details
Bush Advocate, Volume XXI, Issue 300, 23 June 1909, Page 5
Word Count
187Page 5 Advertisements Column 1 Bush Advocate, Volume XXI, Issue 300, 23 June 1909, Page 5
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