Q0 B C AND CO. ’ S TELEGIIAPH LINE i OF IRO YA L MA 1L C 0 A C TIE S j Leave's Espaue’s Hotel, Haweva, i for New Plymouth, on |TUES I) A Y AN D SA T UIID AY- | _ MORNINGS, ; Passing- through Oco, Opunake, Okato, ; Uakura, and Omata. { The Coach leaves Ncav Plymouth for I Hawera on Mondays and Fridays. | HONE PHI AM A, Proprietor. | " NOTICE. j TEE “TALEISTG FISH,” I _ ' : (From Duppa ami Collins’, of Oxfordstreet, Loudon), BEGS to inform the inhabitants of , Patea, Hawera, Wairoa, and j surrounding districts, that he lias comj mcnccd business as i Coach and House Painter, Writer, I Gilder, Grainer, and General I Decorator, I And hopes, hy fair prices and good : workmanship, to merit a share of public | support. ! Buggies, &c., Painted in the London Style. ESTIMATES GIVEN. (Opposite the Bank of New Zealand, Carlyle.) ■jjjj R S. EVA N S. MIDWIFE AND NURSE, II A W E 11 A. Mrs. EVANS lias had long experience i in the Manchester Royal Hospital. I Fees Moderate. HOLLOWAY’S HILLS. I Bad Legs, Bad Breasts, Wounds, and Ulcerations of all kinds. I IVTO family'or person should bo without lAa these Pills. Their long-tried efficacy 1 in correcting disorders of the liver and slomadh, stimulating the bowels, and j purifying the blood, lias secured for them I an imperishable fame througout the world. | A few doses produce comfort, a short cunj timiance effects a complete cure. Invalids j may look towards this rectifying and j revivifying medicine with a certainty of | obtaining relief. Bronchitis, Diphtheria, Golds, Cough Sore Throats, and Shortness of Breath. Is only known when the blood is pure, its circulation perfect, and the nerves in good order. The only safe and certain method of expelling all impuritks is to take Holloway’s Pills, which have the power of cleansing the Mood from all noxious matters, expelling all humours which taint or impoverish it, and thereby purify and invigorate and give general tune to the system. Young or old, robust or delicate, may alike experience their beneficial effects. Myriads affirm that these Pills possess a marvellous power in securing these great secrets of health by purifying ami regnlatingthe fluids, and strengthening the solids. For Glandular Swellings, Stiff Joints, and Diseases of the Skin. The functional irregularities peculiar to the weaker sex are invariably corrected without pain or inconvenience by the use of Holloway's Pills. They are the safest and surest medicine for all diseases incidental to females of all ages, and most precious at the turn of life, or when entering into womanhood. Gout and Rhumatism. In general debility, mental depression, ami nervous irritability, there is no medicine which operates so like a charm as these famous Pills. They soothe and strengthen the nerves and system generally, give tone to the stomach, elevate the spirits, and in fact render the patient sensible of a total and most delightful revolution in his whole system. Thousands of persons have testified, that hy their use alone, they hare been restored to health after all other means have proved unsuccessful. Piles, Fistulas* and Excoriations. Indigestion and torpidity of the liver is the bane of thousands, who pass each day with accumulated sufferings, all of which may be avoided by taking these Pills according to the accompanying directions. The strengthen and invigorate every organ subservient to digestion, and effect a cure without debilitating or exhausting - the system ; on the contrary, they support and conserve the vital principle by a complete nurification of the blood. In Disorders of the Kidneys, Stone, and Gravel. This purifying and regulating medicine should be had recourse to during cold, changeable and wet weather. It is the best cure for hoarseness, sore throats, diphtheria, pleurisy, and asthma ; and an 4 infallible remedy for congestion, bronchitis, and inflammation, indeed as a family medicine, they are invaluable for subduing such ailments of young and old of both
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Bibliographic details
Patea Mail, Volume 1, Issue 38, 21 August 1875, Page 4
Word Count
651Page 4 Advertisements Column 6 Patea Mail, Volume 1, Issue 38, 21 August 1875, Page 4
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