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Since Captain Cook Landed! —What New Zealand * has done in 82 years A"---.--. ' ' • ! CAPTAIN COOK first lan'dea on ffiae ihore* in 1769. New Zealand was officially declared a British Colony in 1840. tWhat has this nation done in the 82 years since that date? /^UR people have:— Fought, made peace *>Ith t mid made fast friends of the Maori race. Explored and settled €»tty comet of this mountainous and bush-covered *■ country, v Cleared off forest and cultivated thirty thousand square miles of land. Mined £89,000,000 worth of told. Constructed sixty-four thousand^ miles of roads. Built Railways everywhere— 3,ooo miles of them. v I Erected 51,000 mUes of telegraph and telephone lines. Built up trade with other countries totalling over \OO millions per annum. Introduced legislation that has heen copied by the great nations. Taken an active part in the South African War. ~ Sent. 100,000 men overseas in the great European War — and set the name of New Zealand blazing high on the roll of heroism and military achievement. q" { Crown from a tiny Colony to a great Dominion—Worthy of reprezenia- ■* ' - tion on the League of Nations, a. Is this a we\ak-willed nation ... \ ? Is this a weak-willed people, as the Prohibitionists would have us believe? Were ths men and women who wrested this country from the grip of wild nature and made of it a smiling land of plenty-—were they weak-willed? Are their descendants who made Nev/ Zealand's name glorious in the War "weak-willed"? Are we who carry on the work of peace on farm and station, in mine, factory, shop, office, and home—are we "weak-willed*' ? NO!! The nation that has achieved these things has proved itself a strong nation. Its people v are individually self-reliant and self-controlled—requiring no official curb upon their appe- —"*^ h - *ites ancl pleasures. Let us keep New Zealand Free! '/ \Wm3s" y°te Continuance I \tl߀£^ y* A. \ A s:o . Issued hy the Natiimt Ctuneit 0/tht LUtntti TMU 0/Ktu Ziatandi. aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiM^

The Greatest Domestte r.emedy of the Centutf Soldier's Severe Nervous Collapse Shock and Nerve Breakdown Caused hy Hard Service. Cured by Dr. Cassell's Tablets. CM iTßfc_ Mr" G- O'Knigbt'McDonald, 81, Cumberland- , street, Bridgton, Glasgow, Scotland, says: *" 1 ,WH^* was invalided home from^ Italy in July, 1919, , EsM - in a state of acute nervous breakdown. Those ' ' /W& H\ w^° know anything of the terrors associated /Ef n| \ wiUl the dread complaint of neurasthenia will / r^m 4%Sm> JSBSI \ aware that I had little to hope for from / if* fr^l \ ordinary treatment. After my return to this /• \\™ i j ' \ country I went to a nursing home, and there, f vi t*~i& I \ for some weeks» every care was lavished upon / 1 -™ I 1 mt' °ufc to no «ffect- Further treatment in { 1 *"??T I I otiler establishments was just' as devoid of I 1 "am I result» and eventually I returned home a I A. \r "i JJW I S?" 0118 wreck, still a victim of neurasthenia. \ ifll^^^^PW / zr£ ? my wife bought me a box of Dr. Cassell's \ >^^^V *^f^ / Tablets, and the very first box gave me hope. n * noticed an immediate improvement in my THH^^l^^^V condition. In a short time the baleful disease \f____W w*B banished completely, and lam now sound a^ well. Ever since that time I have been doing my usual work, and I am ready to ) MCu. uwigm _wuonan. \ answer inquiries about my case for I owe a debt of gratitude to Dr. Cassell's Tablets." Dr. Cassell's MWaSuSo MclDl6tS Uwisehitimt. 1/9 & 4/- •"■ mmm^m^^ MtK* Do not bßCo|n# (J** 8 **/• Bil* *** Oniveraal Some Remedy for MUrasthWlic. • eonomuS? WW—-****—" *«•«»»«««*«•» Wasting Tafcft AM CWUta Konro **■■» Anmmt* Palpitation n . «. "„, and Stores. AA Mwritit KMnoy Troofcle Vital Exhaustion UTm c *S«eirs for Dr. Casscirs Neurasthenia Imffgestion Nervousness Toilets. Tablet*. Specially valuable for Nursing Mothers and during »■ I tht Critical Periods of Life. ' Dr. CaeeeU'e TcMtU are manufactured under the supervision el Ahilled <*«»*•*. tn the mott perfectly equipped laboratory of Us kind in the *mj3ash2 Tho ¥•*«, b^m* <*~ L td., Manufacturing Chemi**,, Mancihoi^, l g,^ •

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HNS19221028.2.67.4

Bibliographic details

Hawera & Normanby Star, Volume XLII, Issue XLII, 28 October 1922, Page 10

Word Count
663

Page 10 Advertisements Column 4 Hawera & Normanby Star, Volume XLII, Issue XLII, 28 October 1922, Page 10

Page 10 Advertisements Column 4 Hawera & Normanby Star, Volume XLII, Issue XLII, 28 October 1922, Page 10

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