Public Notices NOTICE. MR THOMAS PERKINS, of Dee street, Accountant, is authorised to receive outstanding accounts on my behalf, aud his receipt shall be sufficient discharge for same. JOHN HAMILTON. Harris villa, May sth, 1869. D. MACEOEIE, PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT AND COLLECTOR, DEE STEEET. Books Audited, and Balance Sheets Prepared PEIVATE BOAEDING HOUSE. BOARD, AND LODGING- may be obtained . on reasonable terms, at the house formerly I known as the Exchange Hotel, corner of Don and Kelvin streets. Terms on application to MRS DORAN. WX^y /*/ w\ /PI Cattle Metlicines TO FAEMEES AND OTHEES. By Special Appointment to Her Majesty the Queen, and His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales. DAY, SON, & HEWITT, Animal and Agricultural Chemists, 22 Dorset-street, Bakerstreet, London, Inventors and Sole Proprietors of the GASEOUS FLUID, or BLACK MIX. TURE. — The noted remedy for scour and debility in horses, cattle, calves, and sheep, and for the fret, colic, or gripes in horses. Price, Is 9d per bottle j 20a per dozen in a wood case. Will keep good twenty years. Plain directions iven. Extracts from the English public press, showing the notoriety of the Gaseous Fluid : j "We have found the colic drinks (Gaseous Fluid) prepared by Day, Son, and Hewitt, of London, act as an invaluable remedy, and would strongly recommend all who keep horses not to be without a supply." — ' Mark Lane Express,' Dec. 11, 1565. "Day, Son, and Hewitt's Gaseous Fluid is sufficient for all the ills that calfhood is liable to. At least we have reckoned that out of 150 calves in six years we have only lost one. Of 26 reared in the present year, we cannot record a single case of death from scouring, or any other ailment, and have used nothing besides the Gaseous Fluid. — T. Bo wick, author of ' Prize Essay on Rearing of Calves.' " "In answer to an ' Old Subscriber,' respecting the scouring of young calves, I should recommend him not to let his calves have more than three quarts of milk per day for the first four days, and not more than four quarts until they are a month old. I wean from 30 to 40 every year, and never lose one from scouring. If they show the least symptoms of scouring, I always give Day, Son, and Hewitt's Gaseous Fluid, which is a certain cure if taken in time." —A Subscriber of 20 Years.—' Bell's Weekly Messenger,' May 20, 1861. "If scouring continues, notwithstanding these precautions, a little medeeine should be given in flour or starch gruel, or much condition will soon be lost, and for this purpose I have iound Day, Son, and Hewitt's Gaseous Fluid the best corrective I have tried. lam not fond of giving medeeine to any animals, and much prefer leaving nature to correct simple ailments herself, by stopping ail food and giving the stomach rest, or helping her by change of diet and additional care. Nor have I any purpose to serve by recommending the medical preparations of this firm, but I have derived so much advantage the last two years from the contents of the Medeeine Chest they supply, that I can recommend it strongly as a most valuable auxiliary to stockkeepers of all kinds, but especially to shepherds. With the medecines they give plain directions for use, which any man may understand and which I think will place him in a good position to deal satisfactorily with most of the diseases to which sheep are liable — Extract from lecture on ' Summer Grazing of Sheep,' delivered before the Over Agricultural Society by Mr Thomas Rigby, April, 1866. '' We would particularly recommend all owners of stock to keep a medicine chest, from Messrs Day, Son, and Hewitt, of Dorset- street, Portmansquare, London, W., who are veterinary medicine manufactures and vendors and supply most excellent remedies for scour, gripes, and other diseases. Haying used these medicines for some years with success, we do not hesitate to say, if the instructions ure carried out, they will be found most effective. — ' Sporting Gazette ' on Agriculture and the Farm, 13th January, 1866. Manufactured by DAT, SON, AND HEWITT, 22 Dorset-street, Baker-street, London. *^* Sold wholesale and for export by the proprietors, Day, Son, and Hewitt ; Messrs Barclay and Sons, Farringdon- street, London ; F. Newbery atid Sons, St. Paul's Churchyard, London j and all Patent Medicine Houses. "* Local Agents for Australia and New Zealand can betreated with, Holloway's Ointtveent ajtd Pills. — Old Wounds, Sores, and Ulcers. — Daily experienc confirms the fact which has triumphed overe opposition for twenty- seven years — viz.: that no means are known equal to Holloway's remedies for curing bad legs, sores, wounds, diseases of the skin, erysipelas, abscess, burns, scalds, and in truth, ail cases where the 6kin is broken. To cure these infirmities quickly is of primary importance, or the compulsory confinement indoors weakens the general health. The ready means of cure are found in Holloway's Ointment and Pills, which heal the sores and expel their cause. In ■ the very worst cases the Ointment has succeeded in effecting a perfect cure alter every other means had failed of giving any relief. Desperate cases best display its virtues.
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Southland Times, Issue 1186, 2 July 1869, Page 4
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854Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Southland Times, Issue 1186, 2 July 1869, Page 4
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