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■?k — £NEW-YORK«-decision pr SCLOOM EQuAwCO + NEVER 6.ACCLLED p^ 1

TH£ PUREST. THE BEST. THE MOST DELICIOUS. "As sunshlno follows shadow, So laughter follows tears: And little faces smile again When Aulsebrook's Milk Chocolate appoars." Mado from the Finest Chocolate, scientifically blended with Milk containing all its Cream. In Id, 3d, and 6d Packets. g2jS= Much Larger Pockets than the Imported Article.

£. .... lat the Store n&r Tin I Dried Milk. Dried Milk is the pure milk in the form of a powder, packed in air-tight tins. It is always sweet, and one tin with the addition of hot and cold water makes one gallon of high grade milk. JOSEPH NATHAN £ CO., Ud, WelHneten, N.Z., PROPRIETORS. 3

»™—i»«i i ■■■■mil h— , m i ■~'" i i'T'-'"«"*" 1 ■ ||1 -Tr*Tr—*"'"-'~ "~~— Tr~~mTiw^M > A MODERN^MIRACLE. TUB LAMB WALK. OVBR 12 MONTHS IN BED. DOCTORS SAID AMPUTATION OR DEATH. Remarkable Cate of Miss Ellen Urwin, o&uaas profound aanmtlon. Miss Urwin, 21 years of age, resident at 56, Hopper Street, Wellington, relates her wonderful story:-" About the 16th ofjuly, 1902, 1 was taken ill with RHEUMATIC FF.VKR. This had been preceded for three months by general we»kness, inability to work or take my food. ,__ analanmana(aßnaragß>lDßl K At tbe cud of four weeks, Dr.— I who w»s attendme me for the fever, _. 8 otdcred my removal to the Hospital. /f?^N^ B ne swe " ln 8 of m y Hmbs was causing _^^rn\ l!l R leat anxiety, cspecully my leg, where a /Ss^". r\ -*«k^-a. Bl lifge abcess had formed at tho kneo. l\ fir/vt til // ' entered the Wellington Hospital >t\ \\ || f pK m SI // on tMe sot ' l Auguit, and thu Doctors \\ \\ //Wil a Jj operated the day following, which was V> V \l// \\/ B // lucceeded by two mote operations Yv \Y/ \\ m' // ' btsAre Chris«nias. vft W a\ a Si bnve at this time was swollen a x» \v BH fl^H m SI tremcndnus sue, and quito haid large n MM. S m quantities of matter came from tho 1& >\U L^ajjal m open wounds. My leg seemed without « » ft-oling, and frem the knee down, wai \tt PT\-* egt: b^ & stiff and hard, and Und to be moved 1 %^M v Ingf ab you would move a \od ot wood. ■TV IjMh ' nc Wednesday before 'Xmas d»y, a » \ f IB most tboreugh examination was mado ». Iff by the D«c(ors, and my pronto wore Wv 1 m infoimed that it was absolutely necesyr sary to AMPUTATK THE LEG. the . Jjf bone was diseased, and would not heal. ) n *M Or. came to my bedside, and «s 'etL-ar kindly as possible tola me their decision, J^— f7 smtinc that it was the only thing to save Iff I my life, and that the operation would D, need to take place as quickly as possible. (I Mb Dr. also spent somo time trying to I w, persuade mo to agree. I 1 remained in the Hospital for some j I \. '> mu > all<l besitating whether to havo Iff \ I TO, the If g off or not. ml — 7 XBk n Cood Friday, I was convejed ffl j flfc home in tho ambulance. I was \ery Ml Ivh W, wrak, and cnnld not move on my pillow Bl J *». Wk without dssisrasce. The leg was so Sa ffiwlhi v swollen, that the kue* was n»t nJSjjßw* dlsaapnahl*. and bard as a board. On ISasier Sunaay, at tho request of my 1 mother, Mr. Aston, of the Plantekoa w .,, Ml . h , «_„. ■»_«_ Company called to see me, and I comWhat Mleht Hovo Boon. menced tho Plantekoa treatment that day. Three discouraging weeks went by, when thtre was a slight change for the better. It would weary you to jivo detail of the progress, from the bed to the fireside, then a hobble round the lixble, a peilod on crutches, from that to a walking stick, to my present condition — beine able to WALK an>whore witbovit assistance. I shall never forget Sunday. ' October Qth, 1003, the first day I went any distance vrith the ermebrs, and nttonded the Wcsleyau Sunday School Anniversary, In '1 aranaki Street. Tho astonishment of my friends was intense, as very few expected to sco me out again, Tho best evidence of my health will be conveyed by the fact that 1 was ono of the axcursionists to Picton on New Year's Day by tho The roughness of the tup was fully described in tbe papers, while ninety per cent, of tho Casscngers were sick I was not aflected, and although I got knocked about, uiised and drenched to the skin, suffered no ill effect. Plantekoa has saved- my leg and possibly my life We have toe testimony of ciowds of people, who bless the happy d»y they heard some friend temark "TAKE PIiANTBKOfI." Have you a friend who is ill? Don human act and "Pass it on," the magic words-" Take Plantckoa." From Chemists, Storekeepers and Plantekoa Proprietary, Wellington. _

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19050302.2.14.6

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume LXIX, Issue 51, 2 March 1905, Page 2

Word Count
817

Page 2 Advertisements Column 6 Evening Post, Volume LXIX, Issue 51, 2 March 1905, Page 2

Page 2 Advertisements Column 6 Evening Post, Volume LXIX, Issue 51, 2 March 1905, Page 2

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