P. H. RAE-HOWARD & Co. STOCK, LAND, ESTATE, INSURANCE & COMMISSION AGENTS For Sale, Francis St., building sites in of 33ft frontage with a depth of loofc. for £2O-, easy terms. 64 acres, only 4 miles from town by good metal road, new 3-roomed house, 6 bail cuswhed, stables and loft, trap shed, piggeries, etc, devided into 5 paddocks Price £2O per acre This is a first-ci uJiitle farm, and is only one mile from the creamery. 478 acres freehold, 200 acres Maori lease, 80 acres terrace land, remainder swamp land, 150 acres good flax with scattering of flax over balance, 20 acres planted with young flax, 4-roomed house, ‘ woolshed, whares, trapshed, etc., and flaxmill, only two miles from railway. Price, including mill, £‘85000; easy terms. A good building site in Cook-St., with a frontage of 40ft. £3 per foot. Sections in Main-St.. any size to suit buyers ai £l3 per foot. acres in Baker-St., with 4-roomed house for £IBO. 10 acres in Avenue Road. £3OO. 13 Acres, Avenue Road, with sixroomed house, garden and orchard £420. 12 acres in Avenue Road. £375’ 187^-acres in Union-St. /780. 10 acres at Himatangi for £SO. 5 acres in Norbiton Road, with a 61 roomed house, outhouses, and a | large garden and orchard, £550. 26 acres in Howan-St., a lease with* I right to purchase in 3 years. A - roomed house, cow bails and outhouses. Goodwill, £350. 160 acres at Moutoa, all fenced with good wire fence. A good new 5roomed house, cowbails and outhouses. £25 per acre, FOR SALE—Horse, trap,.and harness. | £3O, cheap. ' ■■'a : j Piano for sale, in good order.£2o. We have also dairy ancLsheep farms id every - distVidt for sale or lease, also good Wellington properties in exchange for good farms. 3 sections in Whitaker-St., very , cheap. 35 acres in Moutoa Road. £25 per' acre. £ acre section in Coley-St., with & 4-roomed cotttage and scullery. £3OO, £ acre in Robinson-St. £80: £ Acre, Thynne-street. £l5O. 2 sections in Thynne-St. £75 each. i acre.. Norbiton. -Road, 5-roomed house, scullery and outhouse; garden ,and orchard. £3OO, easy terms. ■ - i;} acres in Union-street. £l3O. A bargain. " ' . £ acre with a new 5-roomed house, scullery and wash-house. £350. A small section in Avenue Road, with a frontage of 44ft., and a depth of 165 ft. £65. HOW WOMEN SUFFER. TORTURING HEADACHES, GNAWING STOMACH PAINS, AND FINAL COLLAPSE MARK THE CRITICAL AGE. BRISBANE WOMAN’S SENSATIONAL CURE BY MOTHER SEGiEL’S SYRUP. That women have more than their share of suffering in this world, we all know, and the greater credit is due to them that they bear it so patiently. But much of this suffering might be avoided. A woman’s greatest safeguard against ill-health (and a man’s, too, for that matter) is a sound, vigorous digestion. So long as you can eat and digest your food your system must be fully nourished and able to resist disease ; but when you cannot digest, your blood becomes impure, and the various organs of your body grow feeble and dull of action. After that anything may happen Thus it was that Mrs. Annie Reath’s heath broke down so completely ; all her life she had suffered from headache, hut when her digestion failed, the real trouble came. Writing from Bon Yiew, 10, Turbot Street, North Quay, Brisbane, Queensland, on the 27th of November, 1906, she says : “ For years —from my early girlhood, in fact I was a great sufferer from most severe headaches, and though I took a lot of different medicines scarcely a week passed that I did not suffer dreadfully. Often I could do nothing for days together, because of the pain. I continued to suffer in this way right on into womanhood, when about eight years ago, 011 reaching what is always a critical age for a woman, ray health completely collapsed. EVERY BREATH WAS A STAB. “ I lost all appetite, endured tortures from indigestion, and became so lowspirited and depressed that I could hardly attend to my household duties. There was a constant pain at my stomach and every breath I drew was like a knife going through me. I felt swollen and bloated, and the pains in the lower part of my body seemed to be tearing me to pieces. The doctor who attended me seemed helpless, so we called another. He, too, failed, and all the while I was enduring tortures. At last a neighbour induced. me to try Mother Seigel’s Syrup, and thankful I am that I consented. The first bottle brought relief; all the pain and inflammation ceased, the distressing bodily swelling subsided, and soon I was up and about again. ■ I took four bottles altogether, and now I am quite cured. Even the headaches, which I never expected to get rid of, are completely gone, and I am as well as anybody could wish to be.” It is thus that Mother Seigel’s proves its worth. For thirty-six years it has beenrelieving human suffering in all parts of the-world, and it is known as the supreme cure for indigestion, billioustaess, constipation, wind, headache, dizziness, and peculiarly the woman’s friend.
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH19070618.2.27.8
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Manawatu Herald, Volume XXIX, Issue 3768, 18 June 1907, Page 3
Word count
Tapeke kupu
841Page 3 Advertisements Column 8 Manawatu Herald, Volume XXIX, Issue 3768, 18 June 1907, Page 3
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
Stuff Ltd is the copyright owner for the Manawatu Herald. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). 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.