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Medical. rAEAMO AND THE MEDICOS. WHAT THE PSBBS SAYS: TYPOQB&PHXOAD TBSMKONT. ir The jsditoss foe once agsbb< ("New Zealand Time?,” May 14th. 153".) THE “British Medical Journal" ie vary sugry ■with lord Onslow. The particular cause of the journal's wrath is that oar late Governor 1-.sg absolutely dared to testify to the value oi rsro wlicp whose composition is not detailed in the srir.(ih Fharinacoytels. The wrath is expressed ns follows :— *• We see with regret Lord Onslow shamelessly puffing quack secret remedies by an advertised letter—as scandalous an abuse of political position and as discreditable a folly as has besnfor a long time brought under notice.” Poor Lord Onslow I Ihe dyspeptic diatribe above quoted owes its existence, no doubt, to the fact that lord Onslow, having found virtue in soma of the Maori herbal remedies prepared by Mother i nbert, aotn. allyhcd the oou'aga to say so in print. Why tha “British Medical Journal" should deiia avoh fas tiwony a high oCaace, and, judging by the strength of the language it uses, an almost criminal rniede . totinoar, 1 totally foil to see, save that the average medical mind is fanatically opposed to any medical Innovation which does not proceed from recognised Kd-tapsd sources. ; 'Twaß ever thus with the medicos. Alraoot ~ every new advance sands in , medical science has beau bitterly attacked as “queokefy” when it • appciiedj every nswthiulrcr denounced as a mad* • . man or worse; and every formula not hali.m&rked by the “Lancet” and "British Medical Journal” . as a dangerous innovation. Personally, while not having the pleasure of a personal acquaintance with either Mother Aubert or Mr Kemptborne, I '■ can sympathise with them and Lord Onslow in . seeing the Maori Bemedies denounced ns “quack secret remedies,” Only one of those flame “ quack ‘ remedies "do I know, and that “ Karans to wit," ' which as a “real good thing" for a man with a liver I would cordially recommend to the editor of .the “8.M.J." He appears to need it sadly,‘for the common and domestic end “recognised” podophyllum has evidently been of no service to him, otherwise he would never have penned so spiteful a paragraph. As, however, the “Maori ‘Remedies " quack and secret ” though they be —are reported to be selling like the proverbial . “‘hot cakes,” neither Mother Aubart nor Mr Kempthorna is likely to worry about tha wrath of the "British Medics! Journal.” As for Lord Onslow, .hs is at Home and can fight his own j . , battle.—“Scrutator” in the “ Hew Zealand Mail,* (“ Wairarapa Star,” SrdMay, 1892.) Concentrated sunshine is acknowledged to be Nature's great remedy for all the ills that human -flashis hair to. In no part of the world is the remedy, in rayg pure and serene, more freely lavished than in New Zealand. The sunshine, playing on a clear, salubrious atmosphere, has left its impression on tha fauna and flora of the ■■ Colony. The extinct mok, the wondrous coal deposits, proolaiat the natural wealth of old New Zealand. The muscular Maori and the splendid . forests survive. From these forests Mother Mary Aubert has compounded several important remedies, and wa recommend the announcements ' . slMWfaere to the perusal not simply of the siok but of those in health. “ A stitch in time savosi nine” applies to healing art more than to lesfi Important matters. Mother Mary Aubert’s Kan] , Zealand Semedtea are preventive aa well as cura- . live. When the first symptoms of sickness appear their power in cutting short tha attack by ■ rousing dormant organs and functions to activity la said to be remarkable. Insidious ailments resemble the burglar, but these remedies promptly. applied give tha alarm and make him decamp. There is no quackery about them, they are not { foreign compounds of which people know nothing, end which may be pernicious, but they ace tho jpnre products of New Zealand sunshine distilled . through the vegetable kingdom. Better than all, their character has been proved, for they have been wall tested, and the beat proof of their merits is that their sale la rapidly increasing.

(** Weekly Herald,” April 30th, 1892.) i A Southern paper says:—"What with Muupe, Sanaa, Fartmo, Natanata and cold weather typhoid fever has been driven from the city of Wellington, and the place ie now as healthy as any town in Kew Zealand. No email share of the credit is one to the Bev Mother Mary Joseph Aubart for the production of her unrivalled remedies." And aa far as we are personally oon.earned wa must say that, when any one of our etna is affected, no matter from what cause, even alcoholic poisoning-, we pour into him a bottle ol Marupa, when restoration to a normal condition lltti pUca at once. ("Beetton Guardian," April 14th, 1892.) We would ask cur readers to give their attention to the change in the advertisement of Mother Maty Joseph Aubert’s medicines, which will be found on our fourth page to-day. These medicines are fast gaining in public esteem, and the excellent testimonials received, including one from Bishop Grimes, as to their curative properties, and which are pnblished, should be an ample guarantee of their efficacy. The public should •arefully peruse the advertisement, (“Auckland Star," May 7th, 1892.) MOTHER AUBERT’S REMEDIES. In these days of patent medicines, it requires that certificate! of excellence should be signed by the names of parsons cf standing in the com. ,inanity. The herbal remedies put nj> by the Iter, : Mother Mary Joseph Aubert, of Jerusalem, Warn ganuiltiver, have already been highly spoken cf, | and elsewhere will be seen an ad vortiaamant, which publishes in full the testimony of such eminc-iu parsonages aa Lord Onslow, Bishop Grimes, ot Christchurch; Bishop Eedwood, of Wellington; and, passing from the pulpit to the stage, Tku Walter Bentley. The latter acknowledges the wonderful result to his voice from using •• Marupa, 'Another preparation designated “Hanna" is said -to be equal to combating most of the ilia of life, and restores a broken down consitnlion. It is a vegetable tonic, pleasant to take, and by no me -nji hurtful in its action, These valuable medicim » are now being put up by Messrs Kempthorne Grosser and Co, (•• Evening Post," 29th April. 1892.) The local industry now known as- "The Mother Vary Joseph Aubert Bemedies" is about to be introduced Into the colonies ofj Australis, ,- Kempthorne. who now holds the pcopriotsj y rights, leaves to-morrow for Sydney, and intern-« advertising there on oven a larger scale thin 1:« has done in New Zealand. He fee’s warrants*' i c doing so by the great success he has had her > As soon as the business in New South Wales is uc; properly going, Victoria will be entered upon, ml each of the othsr colonies in succesoiou. This will keep the Eev Mother very busy preparing the medicines, all, of which will bo shipped away in bulk aa received from her, and bottled and packed in the same way as is done hero. Wo wish 3£: Kempthorne every success, and wo are sure hi a teliihg “ads." —"Tho Wealth ol Now Zealand," and “The Church, the State and the Stags,"—will codn,become household words in the Australia*, and bo of great benefit in bringing-the medical resources of. this Colony well before oar neighbours, (“New Zealand Times," April 30th, 1892.) “MrOrlando Kempthorne leaves here by tin •Waistipu to-day for Sydney with the intention <.i starting a campaign in New South Wales with th> ‘Mother Mery Joseph Aubert Bemedies. He informs r.s that it is astonishing what an amount of business ie now done in these goods in this Colony, 'and as ha intends to bring xhe same energy to bear in the sister Colony in introducing them there, a large trade is bound to spring up. Judicious ud, vertising will always cause a demand for a good article, and, being well aware cf this. Mr Kemp, theme, daring the last eight months, has been one otths largest advertisers in Now Zealand, .‘.nd we understand his advertisements appear in fortyseven papers daily.. The introduction >-■£ these ,remedies has given employment to n luiya mumber of hands, end has cansod the circ.-.k.Tion of a largo amount of money. They should readily con.mand.tbcaisalvoa to the Australians, able to ?«e for themselves the large aruout/evidence proving their vahie os-antidotes vo ills that .. ■

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Bibliographic details

Lyttelton Times, Volume LXXVII, Issue 9760, 24 June 1892, Page 2

Word Count
1,369

Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 Lyttelton Times, Volume LXXVII, Issue 9760, 24 June 1892, Page 2

Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 Lyttelton Times, Volume LXXVII, Issue 9760, 24 June 1892, Page 2