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THE PHARMACY ACT.

TO TUE EDITOR." ■■- Sir,"Your* if is a great peacemaker." If the chemists have no desire to prevent persons not having the magic M.P.S. (by exam.) after their names from selling a box of rhubarb pills—and Mr. Haslett . assures me they have not— they eather desire to promote than otherwise th 5 free sale of simple ' and useful - medicines, oven at a less price than chemists (disinterested men !) • sometimes charge— Mr. Haslett implies that they do—then must I apologise for metaphorically tearing up the Pharmacy on hearsay evidence of its provisions. Then, " Contrary to the weather all is serene." I shall refrain from taking a pot shot at Mr. Haslett when he pays & summer visit to my " back block," and he probably will not try to administer a- surreptitious hypodermic injection of some powerful sedative should 1 walk down Queen-street, and confine his professional action to " exhibiting" the grain of common sense, which he doubtless thinks he has injected into my bucolic cranium. am, etc., Country Settler.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH18940803.2.10.2

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume XXXI, Issue 9580, 3 August 1894, Page 3

Word Count
169

THE PHARMACY ACT. New Zealand Herald, Volume XXXI, Issue 9580, 3 August 1894, Page 3

THE PHARMACY ACT. New Zealand Herald, Volume XXXI, Issue 9580, 3 August 1894, Page 3