Holloway's Pills. — Changes of temperature and w ather frequently upset persons who are most careful of their health, and particularly in their diet. These corrective, purifying, and gentle aperient Pills are the best remedy for all defective action of the digestive organs. They augment the appetite, strength n the stomach, correct biliousness, and carry off all that is noxious from the system. Holloway'B Pills are composed of rare balsams, unmixed with baser matter, and on that account are peculiarly well adapted for the young, delicate, and aged. As this peerless medicine has gained fame in the past, so will it preserve it in the future by its renovating and invigorating qualities, and the impossibility of its doing harm. It is feared that the Sultan of Turkevis going mad. The Rev. Mr Rishworth, of the OamaruJ Wesleyan Church, informs the ' North Otagjr Times ' that he has received an anonymous communication from some Army sympathiser in which he is reminded of the fate of Haman: The communication is a very ,-stupid thing, evidently . the production of some very illiterate person. Mr Rishworth has been preaching strongly against the Salvationists, charging them with fanaticism, foolery, and chicanery. : The breach of promise case, Mann v, Mervyn, which was to have come on at the present civil sittings of the Dunedin Supreme Court, has been withdrawn. Parah Jane Flett, wife of a blacksmith at the Nightcaps, has been arrested on a charge nf manslaughter aribing out of alleged' malpractice as a midwife. The deceased: was Jane Mildenhall, wife of a laborer at Wrej 's Bush. No doctor attended her, but Dr Young, of Riverton. who was sent for found the woman dying. He did not see the child, and was of opinion that deceased's death was caused by improper treatment, which might, however, have been used with the best intentions. Evidence adduced at the inquest went to show that the accused had stated that she had a diploma. In examination she admitted that, thinking all hope of the doctor's coming was at an end, she used means to relieve the deceased which she would not have otherwise taken. Wanted. ' WA N T E D— Situation as MARRIED .PLOUGHMAN. Apply ALEX. BELL, P. 0., Gore. WANTED a person to SEW for a week Apply Ensign Office. e298 WANTED 500 fanners and families to inspect the Stock of Boots at , the Gore Boot Manufactory. ; ANTED KNOWN.— Bowtell's Watertights and Balmorals, as made to measure for 21s cash, defy competition. WANTED KNOWN. — Best Value for money in Children's Boots, next Colonial Bank, Gore. i WANTED KNOWN.— Our Handf-made Watertights arc warranted to, wear twelve months. ' < : ■ '. WANTED KNOWN. —Repairs neatly executed — for cash unly. New Elastics put in. > : ANTED~~KN.OWN— That all ; goods are of first-class quality and will be sold at the Smallest Possible Profit for Cash. WANTED K OWN.— lnspection! of the above invited at C. W. BOWTELL'S, next Colonialßank, Gore, and Lumsden'. GOftE BRAPEEY 1 HOUSE. QPECIAL LlNE— Just to hand— LADIES' UNDEE-CLOTHING of all kinds at lower than ENGLISH PRICES. ' ; g3»S E E WIND 6Wm j AT . , T, L, PILLER'S. ' ■Agent South British Insurance Company.^
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Bibliographic details
Mataura Ensign, Volume 6, Issue 343, 28 March 1884, Page 3
Word Count
519Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Mataura Ensign, Volume 6, Issue 343, 28 March 1884, Page 3
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