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Business Notices Make Your Hair Grow With warm shampoos of Cuticura Soap and light dressings of Cuticura, purest of emollient skin cures. This treatment at once stops falling hair, removes crusts, scales, and dandruff, soothes irritated, itching surfaces, stimu* lates the hair follicles, supplies the roots with energy and nourishment, and makes the hair grow when all else fails. - BJ^* Cutioora. Soap is not only the most effective of skin purifiers and beautiflers bu6 the purest and sweetest of toilet, bath, <»nd baby soaps. opijmhes tries' j&xx, i fili|§| Has stood the test of more than a ffilEl quarter of a century. >-^ — ■■" .-^ , fagM Manufactory— WOßCESTEß, ENGLAND. ftgents for flew ZeaIand— FLETCHER, HUMPHREYS & Co., CHRISTCHURCH.

on the FEEDING OF THEBR S^FANTS, I Extract from the "Housewife Annual," 1896-7. % « | -•HERE is not, perhaps, a more important question for a mother who is unable to nurse her infant * I than the selection of a suitable food as a substitute for that designed by Nature. Sometimes starchy 3 JL foods are given to young infants which they are unable to digest, and as a consequence, instead » of thriving, they remain thin and puny ; and there are cases where fatal effects have followed such tt injudicious feeding. How important, then, for mothers in selecting a food to make sure that it is one upon which # reliance may be placed I J tf Judging from repute, as well as from many excellent medical and private testimonials, the infants 1 food prepared % by Messrs. Josiah R. Neave & Co., of Fordingbridge, may conscientiously be recommended. © £ " A mistake may be made in classing this food with ordinary starchy foods, the use of which for young 9 infants is to be deprecated. In a report of Dr. A. Stutzer, the well-knpwn analytical chemist of Bonn, who is \ a director of the Chemical Laboratory of Rhenish Prussia, it is stated that the microscopic examination of » Neave's Food, well cooked with milk, showed that no regular cellular structure of the vegetable constituents' fi origin could be recognised, and that the starch contained in the uncooked food was made fully digestible by I cooking ; and as regards the proportion of flesh-forming albuminoids and the bone-forming salts, there exists j a perfect uniformity between Neave's Food and mothers' milk. ** A further important testimony to the value C of this food, as relating to the matter in question, has been given in the Medical Magazine, edited by Dr. George 3 T. Wilson, M.A., which states that the starch is so split up that after cooking no evidence of its presence can j be detected by the Microscope ; thus doing away in this particular instance with the objection that foods con- % taining starch are not digested by very young children ; and the fact that numerous children have been M brought up from birth upon this food, with the best results, is the strongest proof of the correctness of what j| is stated. The Lancet, the Medical Journal, and other well-known medical magazines have spoken in praise of j Neave's Food, also many eminent doctors in this country, as well as in Germany and America." C NE AYE'S FOOD has for some time been used in THE RUSSIAN IMPERIAL FAMILY. BEST AU® CHEAPEST. sqlb> m i-lb. patent air-tbght tins. |

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/OW18991228.2.179.1

Bibliographic details

Otago Witness, Issue 2391, 28 December 1899, Page 57

Word Count
542

Page 57 Advertisements Column 1 Otago Witness, Issue 2391, 28 December 1899, Page 57

Page 57 Advertisements Column 1 Otago Witness, Issue 2391, 28 December 1899, Page 57

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