Thank you for correcting the text in this article. Your corrections improve Papers Past searches for everyone. See the latest corrections.

This article contains searchable text which was automatically generated and may contain errors. Join the community and correct any errors you spot to help us improve Papers Past.

Article image
Article image

J7\ ELT ON, GEIMWAI.E. AND CO WHOLESALE DKUGGISTS. Drysalters and Druggists Sundryrnei. "Wellington, Melbourne, and London. Have made arrangements, through their London fi by which they will be able to execute Indents upon the most favorable terms, (■ur English shipments having arrived, c-'ar stoi will now be found comprehensive and complete, ai comprises— Photographic chemicals, lenses, and sundries Ash's artificial teeth, tooth instruments, and den mic, sulphur, Milestone, soft soap, salad oils, ciixary, hemp, and r ilia, lime-juice, flavoring essonccs, confectionery, etc., etc., etc. TZ" 11 U S E'S I NS«CTI (J 1U i! ~ "an Insect Destroying Powder. ,— „„ts at Is., and in tins ai Is. 6U, 55., 10a. 155., and 20s. each. This Powder 8 unrivalled in destroying fleas, bugs, mts, flies, cockroaches, beetles, gnats, mosquitoes, noths in furs, and every other species of insects in all B LOOK'S FOOD FOR INFANTS AND INVALIDS. Prepared upon Baron Liebig's principle ; approved and recommended by the raostemineutof the JledicU Profession. Surpasses nil other substitutes for the natural focrt of infants, and effectually promotes nutrition am' health. " A child deprived of its mother's milk can only by fed properly when the food given is equivalent in power to that of woman's milk. "BARON LIEBIG." ine great success of this food is a convincing prool that it perfectly fulfils its object. MEDICAL CERTIFICATES. "After a careful trial of Mrs. Bloor's Farinaceous Food for Infants and Invalids, I feel no little pleasure in recommending it as the best substitute I have mel with for the natural food of infants, from its beinp highly nutritious, easy of digestion, and not irritating the alimentary canal. In myopinion its more general use would tend greatly to diminish the excessive mor"JOHN SINGLETON, M.D, Medical Mission Dispens "Wellington-street, Colii'ngwood." "Having tried Mrs. Bloor's food for Infants and Invalids. T am iiiKtifir>rl in snvino- n-«f t „,x~<.iA — .-. „- e in all cases where infants are deprivi ,1 food, and invalids suffering from dj i, com Dined with feeble digestive powers. "GODFREY HOIVITT, M.D., "191, Collins-street, Melbourne." FELTON, GRIMWADE, and CO., Lambton-quay. Wellingtoi )R. BU CHAN'S SARSAP ARIL LA. Medical experience has long since provod that SARSAPARILLA is a most valuable remedial agent "heumatism, Gout, Scurvy. Sen rgaments, and Cutaneous Diseasi DR. BTJCHAN'S SARSAPARILLA operates as a mild but efficacious alterative and tonic —imparting tone to the stomach and vigor to the system debilitated by disease, p"-™'-" *'•- •-'-—-■ and thus affording protection l _ changes of season, climate, and life. 1 ALL'S BALSAM FOR THE I stands alone as a remedy for Coughs, v-™.-, Asthma, and all diseases of the throat and lungs. It will cuke where other remedies alleviate, and alleviate where others fail entirely. Try one bottle of it on a bad cough. There is nothing so good and certain. People of good constitutions do not act with prudence in allowing the assaults of slight disease without the help of science. The best constitution will be broken gown by taking cold repeatedly, when prompt use of Hall's Balsalm would preserve its vigor unimpaired. ÜBL I O NOTICE. This is to certify that I, JAMES C. AYER, of Jell, Mass., am the Inventor and Manufacturer of AYER'S CHERRY PECTORAL AYER'S CATHARTIC PILLS AYER'S COMPOUND EXTRACT OF SARSAPARILLA AYER'S HAIR VIGOR AYER'S AGTTI3 CURE, That each and every one of th remedies forwarded by ' land, is especially manu.»^i,^ icl , iw4 , A Melbourne, Australia, in a peculiar manner, to adapt it to these markets, and and the voyage. That t liarly prepared, and different from any other com pounded by me, (Signed) JAMES C. AYER. Sworn to before a Notary Public and attested by CAUTION r. HAYMAN & CO. DR. J. C. AYHR'S CELEBRATED MEKICINES. Notifies the public by a duly attested certificate That all the GENUINE PREPARATIONS For the AUSTRALIAN COLONIES AND NEW ZEALAND Are expressly and peculiarly prepared, DIFFERENT TO ALL OTHERS ENGRAVED ON THE WRAPPER! GENERAL AGENT AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND. Purchasers of Ay ted to carefully lasing, and to reje kbove described. i Medicines are respectfnlly solipect the Wrappers before pur"as spurious all that are not as WHOLESALE AGENTS FOR NEW ZEALAND NUINE PREPARATIONS. FELTON, GRIMWADE, AND CO. T7~ RUSE'S FLUID MAGNESIA, The Jurors, of the Intercolonial Exhibition of 1566 and ISG7 awarded the ONLY PRIZE MEDAL for Fluid Magnosia to Mr. KRUSE. Accompanying their report is the result of Mr. J. Cosmo Nowberry's analysis, by which it appears tiiat one fluid ouuco of Kuuse's Jl.ig.msh contains llfty per cent, of Cavbonato of Magnesia in excess of any other Magnesia exhibited. KRUSE'S FLUID MAGNESIA, is of twenty years, has been approved and „.„„„., by the loading members of the medical profession. Its almost universal use affords sutlicient lUmillim in which it is held by the epared of uniform ten grains of pure ts it is particularly beneficial as sing sedative and aperient in all cases of on er acidity of the stomach (particularly during pregnancy). Febrile complaints, Infantile Disorders, or Sea-sickness. Lcid Eructations, and Indigestion. Sold by all Chemists and Druggists throughout th Colony. FELTON, GRIMWADE. and CO., " ' ""■-' - lo Agents. i-quay, Wellington. iMS' AUSTRALIAN YEAST POWDER. uia •Rnirinir Powder is packed In half-pound canisd for the climate of New Zealand. ilosome bread without yeast; also biscuits, cakes, and all kinds of pastry without eggs, and with less than half the usual quantity of butter, t Powder will doubtless speedily dng powders from the New Zealand kets, and socure for itself that high popularity it haß attained thrcrughont Australia, whore it is to bo found in overy well-regulated household.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZTIM18771013.2.26.10.2

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

New Zealand Times, Volume XXXII, Issue 5167, 13 October 1877, Page 2 (Supplement)

Word count
Tapeke kupu
915

Page 2 Advertisements Column 2 New Zealand Times, Volume XXXII, Issue 5167, 13 October 1877, Page 2 (Supplement)

Page 2 Advertisements Column 2 New Zealand Times, Volume XXXII, Issue 5167, 13 October 1877, Page 2 (Supplement)

Help

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert