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EXCEPTIONAL OFFER WEfflffl kM <X You Must See These! %\DttMlllsMlMiA /r> Sfcm ' l'^ Exceptional Offer—pair **/ V mlMiifll ■! MlUWfc ' £^11. \\ flu\ 13 A A./ ,500 Pieces PRINTED AllT. SILK HAPPY COATS—Shades arc _ -- «i«*Bf^ (' ~Ji^ WUM t daintji-,and-.smart. "Washable reatcrials,- Usua-tly-IS/C-.-r^y/j-..-.:---•- ■■- ,>-—-*' :■■-■■—--..;- , :rv -.£.-:.-..-^^^HKSfMhy -■ ■■•■■••-—•-,v- : .--" ——«- V.aw! iH%nKi^#k Exceptional Offer I/O P^W3HHS ' 2+ Pieces Ciiincsc Hand Embroidered and Drawn work CANTON • ,- . "•r" /il VJ^^^\^B^^ CREPE PETTICOATS-Usually 45/- OQ/- 'Vl.^l^^^lecp forcoughing- . La nc's-is-'withom an cquMfor $W* S«^»A Exceptional Offer **•// and nnally 1 collapsed and was , v t r t I TTvH^"*** v 36 Pieces Chinese Hand Embroidered and Drawinvork CANTON ordered to bed. - But to-day I cougns corns astnma cuarrn, 1/■k. WE CORDIALLY INVITE YOU TO VISIT OUR STORE. . powta.fSf'Em^ion" '"6 '"is famous because it's good." jjj=j 1^ U^^^, 1 SS -»—\ "W"* I~* V* <""* ' ' '",-■'■ « ■'■■'■■-- ■ ' Manufactured by The I \ /»- /Drop a little yjf § Ljf Lj L{ LJI E^^ 3/6 ah.<] 4/6 at- all ■HMMmMnanM Lane Mc->ic:ne Cc I L^ ' /Fro'ol Iccon nycorn Instantly! \T| |'jH *^ I J \_ fi \_j» t . Chemists and Stores. Hte *C»T^HL ' ' fl^#^L/ J-td-> Oamaru N2 L-^HCC /" tOP hurting and. oon the "ikrcSii pwni.^iJL*ijEij%<r'' JD^ -^ <u;hen a proud German Cruiser was defeated by mineral starvation In eight months at sea the. German raider Kronprinz Wilbelm sank fourteen British _ . . : and French merchant ships. Not a man of her crew was wounded. The shells of Kwnpr'mzWUhelm'^ Allied warships had not touched her. When like a bolt from the blue, came disaster! Adventures. [: The crew became stricken with a mysterious malady. A Booklet to be published in *: ) . week's time tells the full story of , : Their limbs began to swell, paralysis overtook them. vegetables,' fruit which we cat, and they .did not have. t j ie fc ron p r i nz WUhelm's advent ■'.'"' : Fifty of the men could not stand on their feet. They With us, however,.the condition of mineral starvation does tures. The booklet "Preventable ': were dropping at the rate of two a day. Aprilllth, 1915, ; progress; suffciently- to interfere with the growth of the ' Tragedies of Food *" is yours fo^ having been at sea 255 days;the Kronprinz Wilhelm^ made young,, and to rob the body of the adult of the natural as k; n& j ree% R ea( £ j n i t t ] ie ■' a dash for a neutral port, where internment faced her. defence against disease. It imposes a tremendous handicap ~ experiences' of the crew, the state- . .'■ One hundred and ten of her crew of;'five hundred' were -upon motherhood. It leads to constipation and bad teeth. ments of the ship's surgeon; learn prostrated. The others were on the verge of breakdown.■'; It predisposes to pneumonia, tuberculosis, appendicitis, the marvellous results of a'whole mi v • iit-u 1 j'L- aii j:j: measles, meningitis, cancer. It does not pile up all its woes .',(,..,. ■ ~~j ~a r, *t-U\* ' ju,. ' ;-■'' The Kronprinz Wilhelm, unconquered by. Allied war? . , ' a I . „ v. r , , wheat and vegetable, diet in, i- i ji •■■■■• v j \i j l r j r j: J in a heap as was done on the German cruiser. It spreads -#--.«■;«« o mmnUtt- nm. ships, had been miserably defeated by food. Food, and , ■ ■ ~ , , , . r .effecting, a complete, cure. . v ,V , , ■■r-i j rut : them thinly over a larger area and provokes many pre- ~ _ ~ -~ .. . food alone, was the cause or her downrall! ~ ~, ° r r ■ • "Preventable Tragedies of. • ' ventable ills. . „. , ~ ,- r From each of the fourteen ships she sank, the Kron- . , , ~ , , , , Food also tells the true story of *rin? TTi/Ae/m had taken as. much coal as tier [bunkers When nature made the whole wheat grain she packed the Madeira-Mamore railway would carry, as much food' as her larders would hold. mto lt every vltal Ilfe clement the body needs for health tragedy, the startling experiment She could not onfall the food of the doomed ships, so and strength When man decided to improve on nature of the twelve convicts of Missis- ' the crew picked the foods they preferred, and sent the an, d make wnite flour he 'taiovtd those life elements. sippi Gaol, the experiences of. test to the bottom. The principal foods the crew chose T™ W f why die crew of;the Kronprinz Wilhelm came near Kane and McMillan at the Pole 'for eight months were white flour, fresh meat, and potatoes. t0 d, eath on a diet of ite four and other foods lacking -cases where a diet of refined They did not know that these foods are deficient in in tlle P rcclous morals and vitamins. That is why the demineralised foods has brought ;. . minerals and vitamins, the vital food, elements without doctors ' to, curc «V German sailors, put them on a diet in its train disease, tragedy and which we cannot live. The raided ships'supplies of whole of whole wheat and fresh vegetables. death. It will show you what we ~ wheat which could have saved them were sent to the Similarly whole wheat such as Granose and Swectwects can learn from these human exbottom. Whole wheat, such as Granose and Sweetweets, can save us f rom the: evils o f constipation , bad teeth, H""*' 77<TllZr \ contains every one of the vital life elements missing from nervous disorders, heart trouble and much other prevent- enmraiimg man . . their refined demineralised diet. Lack of these vital food a bl e iH-health and disease which refined foods impose upon The booklet comes tOJ OU \ T cc' . . elements found in whole wheat was the cause of their dis- us-and our children. You. owe •it to yourself and to aster. When this cause was diagnosed, whole wheat with its your children to secure a copy, wealth of^minerals and[vitamins, was prescribed to cure Wlierc q^ We . Get . 100 pcf cent> Who j e and read it thoughtfully It^wili , them—and it did! Whole wheat succeeded where mcdi- r have a great influence on your cincs and drugs had been powerless to resist the advance Wheat? . . . future health and happiness,* of death. . . , . . . Send the coupon and reserve youf ■- There is only one source of 100 pet cent, whole wheat ; copy noW ; there is not the least' Mineral Starvation the Cause of IH-health\ n -that is wheat as nature mtended it> should be eaten, nch , ob l igation . . - , in all the vital elements for health, strength and resistance ~ , The human body is made up of some sixteen minerals to diseased That source is the whole wheat .cereal, such as ■ • ~~*~ - nnnviPT rnnPOT^f and four vitamins. Without them man cannot live. The Granose and Sweetweets. Made from flaked whole grains X ■■~■;- j,-• l v i , i . , r r j j r j , T f i r » ■•! ~.*.. , : T/- Sanitarium Health Food Co., Chtistchurdu body derives them irom iood, and food alone. If they of wheat, with not one precious element removed, (jranosc ■ . . ■ . , . , , , f ■~ f r ■- . ■ ■■- ~,' , „ . -ii i ■ r J p'casc reserve for me a copy or the fre« have been removed from much of our food we sulfer ill- and Sweetweets contain in abundance the minerals and booklet, "Preventable Tragedies of Food," health. If they have been totally removed We die. The vitamins necessary- to health. ~ i - giving the recorded facts of the food t, . iir./i i r i i "- i- 1 1- ' tragedies and abuses mentioned above. hronpnnzWilhclm crew on a refined, deminerahsed diet, They t He'foundation of the perfect, natural-diet \** ™,^?'?g2'''£tgwere on the road to death. Only their dash to land, and . iir ■ l l i S a.- v about a week some—immediately on pub. ~,, „ , ~. r- i i l' j r f nature intended for us when she planned this marvellous lication. a skilfully planned diet or whole wheat and fresh vece- ■, ,-, ' • > i j t? •t r v. j l "■■•'■ earth. Commence with them to-day. Banish from your , tables saved them. : ; . ■. diet the foods, too much of which brought disaster to the Name -- -- We in our daily life develop the same condition of Kronprinz Wilhelm, and set forth, with your children, upon Address - mineral starvation as the German sailors, but that con- the road to new health, strength, and vitality, new freedom m ) dition is less severe in proportion to the amount of. milk, from civilised ills and ailments. ;.; ~ »,;

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19310326.2.164.2

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXI, Issue 72, 26 March 1931, Page 19

Word Count
1,342

Page 19 Advertisements Column 2 Evening Post, Volume CXI, Issue 72, 26 March 1931, Page 19

Page 19 Advertisements Column 2 Evening Post, Volume CXI, Issue 72, 26 March 1931, Page 19

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