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lEAN'S GOOD HOME REMEDIES. ]] Quite a lot of 1^ . "Heau'B Good flMtoi Home Remedies " t^SOfik are now used in $PW\ Feilding homes, and W& I indeed, wherever _ J the Feilding Btah v< *Tw£ reaches. Not only 1 y\ do Feilding, and ad- jpj I jAJ pi jacent country resi- Dt " ■*!* £ I dents come to the j^ f ft counter at Hean's m [—-*/ /J*~\ Pharmacy daily for 1 I'r-A. this, that, or the M _ / r-4 other of the prepa- |* I a rations prepared x. JL IT and packed here, / but not a single day goes by but that Ji »ny where from one to a dozen orders ire received by mail. J Remembering that seventeen months back "Hean's Good Homo Remedies" were not known m Feilding, and that to-day such artides as Hean's Black Berry Bal- L sam for Coughs and Colds, 2s 6d and Is 6d. , -, Hean's Corn Cure, Is, for soft corns oi 1 old corns. B Hean's Babicof— the really * wonderful cough mixture for babies and little children, Is 6d. Hean's Teething Powders, Is; . help baby through the teething J period. . Hean's Worm Powders, Is; for worms in children and adults. Hean's Eggsham Hair Tome, 2b . 6d; for thin and falling hair. Hean's Butternut Pills, Is 6d; for general family use. Hean's Tooth-Ease; Is; for toothache. Hean's Foot-Ease, Is 6d; for tender, sore, perspiring feet. Hean's 4.0. Ointment, Is 6d; for cuts, cracks, chaps and chilblains. ' Hean's Headache Nuts, Is; for splitting headaches. Hean's Catarrh. Snuff, Is 6d; I quickly cures cold in the head. Hean's Nursery Hair Lotion, lsj_for school children's hair. I Hean's Neuralees for Neuralgia, 2s. Hean's Milk of Magnesia, Is J 6d — much better than the ordinary Fluid Magnesia. Hean's Taleic Powder, Is; baby's best dusting powder and a number of others are in actually every day demand, there must be solid truth in the statement, "If it's Hean's it's Good." The list at present contains 37 separate articles put up under the general term "Hean's Good Home Remedies." Each and all are prepared labelled, and wrapped at Hean's Pharmacy here in Feilding. Each formula was first of recognised and proven worth — or it would not have been used ; the ingredients used are in every case absolutely the best that money can buy ; full instructions accompany each article, and each is sold witji a guarantee that it shall give satisfaction, or the purchaser's money promptly refunded. Here please let me say plainly and earnestly that none of "Hean'e Good Home Remedies" are intended to supplant yoi.r physician, whose services should be obtained whenever required, but to replace those articles of unknown origin and value which are constantly urged upon the public without real evidence of their worth. It is true that there are other makers of good remedies; it is likewise true that there are none better than "Hean's." THAT MAN IS WISE WHO ATTENDS TO HIS EYES. A wise man may sometimes be foolish with his money, but he is always careful of his health". The eyes, like any other part of the body will tire, ache, pain, and refuse to work properly. These troublesome symptoms are really requests for help. The old idea that men and women can go ahead year after year straining and working the eyes more than nature intended, without giving the slightest help by mechanical means is fast giving way to wiser thoughts. The # eyes are wor,th having; clear and painless vision is one of our most < valuable possessions ; to give aid to vision that is not clear and painless is simply plain duty, and wise care. Better tar to pay a dozen times the price for helpful aid in the form of accurately fitted lenses, than otherwise spend the money and miss the nelp, comfort, and health such lenses give. Bring your eyes along; let me test them carefully, and I will tell you frankly whether or not spectacles will help you. The cost will oe as low as you can get right glasses and right service for. Putting off till to-morrow the glasses you need to-day is certainly not eye-wiseness. G. W. HEAN, Chemist-Optician, Manchester-street - Feilding. ■ggMaHpgHSfiEsßSl^^^ * a^B * n£B pjaaMagß3Bß||EajeH|^r. m " VwflH' ~ A Driikk to U grateful for. . . I J J It it the beverage lor all times and all weather*, for men and womea, the healthy or the ailing iimi ■■,11— mi ' ] I TO THE RESIDENTS OF FEILDING 1 AND DISTRICT. j 1 IN response to the enquiry for ioed drinks, I have installed a Purity < Soda fountain, made by Stiles and ] Co., Limited, of London, and am now j in a position to dispense ioed fruit j beverages in great variety, and of the ] utmost purity. ICE CREAM SODA A SPECIALTY. E. WHITEHEAD, ' BAKER AND CONFECTIONER. J Fergus Son-street - - - • Feilding j . a Blunden and Co. MANCHESTER-STREET. I^ASH WOOD AND COAL YARD. All orders promptly attended to.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/FS19090316.2.45.7

Bibliographic details

Feilding Star, Volume III, Issue 829, 16 March 1909, Page 4

Word Count
812

Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Feilding Star, Volume III, Issue 829, 16 March 1909, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Feilding Star, Volume III, Issue 829, 16 March 1909, Page 4