The pallor that whitens the skin and give it a ghostly shade, is directly traceable to some organic cause. The blood that courses in the papilla! under the cuticle should naturally mantle the skin with its crimson glow, and just as this ruddy tint is an evidence of >;ood health, so is its absence incontestable proof of some derangement of the system, possibly au ajnemic state of the body. What is wanted in rill such cases is what is known in technical language as a rubefacient, and while L'dolpho Wolfe's Schiedam Aromatic Schnapps does not claim to be this, strictly, it works similar results.
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Herald, Volume XXV, Issue 9096, 3 July 1888, Page 6
Word Count
104Page 6 Advertisements Column 2 New Zealand Herald, Volume XXV, Issue 9096, 3 July 1888, Page 6
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