A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY.
S KIX-HEALING—PAST AND PRESENT. Two thousand years ago tho usual' way of healing was to anoint the body with some oil or halm made from tho extracts of certain valuable herbs and roots. In modern times, however, there lias been a gradual departure from the laws and ideas of nature, and to-day wo find tin- majority of salves and ointments composed not of pure' vegetable extracts, but of coarser and loss effective ingredients in the shape of rancid animal fats and mineral jioi--sons. Such latter preparations are cither too coarse to got absorbed into tho skin, with the result that they utterly fail to heal and dispel disease' as they profess to he able to do; on' their mineral ingredients have a positively harmful effect. It was for long’ the conviction of an eminent dhomiah that, inasmuch as the instinct to rub comes from Nature, then Nature herself probably had secreted away somewhere the precise article to nib with. He therefore set to work with a How to finding this substance, and turned all inquiries in the direction of the herbs and shrubs in Nature’s own storehouse ■ —the forest raid bush, fra- removed from tho borders of civilisation. At length, after a weary search, certain rare plants were found from which! could bo extracted .iuioes possessing tho astonishing povfer of creating new, healthy skin! When applied to a cub or sore, inflammation and disease would bo at once taken out and new sound! tissue .grown completely over the affected place. To this unique extract wore added other juices and balsams of high medicinal merit; tho whole waa refined and concentrated so as to increase the potency of each clement, and “Zani-Buk,” tho great healer, came into existence. Zam-Buk contains exactly those sub-' stances which Nature has intended for the use of man ever since she. boqueathed to him the instinct to rub a place that hurts. Ifc dispels pain, allays inflammation, arrests festering, drives disease out, and produces new healthy skin, in Nature’s own. way. It is, therefore, entirely different from, as well as superior to, any ordinary, preparation. Housewives and mothers particularly value Zam-Buk for its purity, reliability and wide range of usefulness. As an application for Cuts, Bruises, Bums, Scalds, Abnlsions, Sprains, Poisoned or Festering Soros, Rites, Eczema, Psoriasis, Ulcers, Bad Legs, Diseased Ankles, Sore Backs, ’ Scurvy, Dandruff, Scalp Irritation, Shingles, Barber’s Rash, Abscesses, Boils, Pimples, Ringworm, Running Sores, Chapped Hands, Cold Sores, Chafed Skin, Stiffness, Sore Aching Feet, and for all injuries to, or diseases of. the skin, it is unequalled. Rubbed well in, Zam-Buk is invaluable for Sore Threat and Chest, Colds, Chills, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Tie, Sciatica, etc. ' All Chemists sell Zam-Buk in Ono-and-Six-penny and Three-and-Sixpenny ‘ large size (containing nearly four times the quantity), or it will be posted free from the Zam-Buk Company, 39. Pitt street, Sydney. It is Die World’s greatest skin-healer, provided for our use by Nature herself, and no homo etna aJbail to be without it
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZTIM19050407.2.6
Bibliographic details
New Zealand Times, Volume LXXVII, Issue 5557, 7 April 1905, Page 2
Word Count
497A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY. New Zealand Times, Volume LXXVII, Issue 5557, 7 April 1905, Page 2
Using This Item
Stuff Ltd is the copyright owner for the New Zealand Times. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 3.0 New Zealand licence. This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Stuff Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.