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MEDICAL PROSPERITY. A CORRESPONDENT with an eye to business asks for information' thus; you tell me why you have succeeded so well in your herbal business '? ’ My answer is : ■By living under my income, keeping the best of g00d.3, and selling them at ai" onable price. Notwithstanding tin- . bove three rules, my thanks are due to my friends and the public for the support given me.’ I now wish to bring before them the following medicines, which experience lias proved to be nil that j.s said 1 of them : J —The Botanic Cough Syrup, of which severity bottles are beine sold Weekly," iri giving immense satisfaction. ,Tlie Dandelion Pills are now commanding such a sale jthat they require n 6 "advertising. The following advice is true concerning them : If yon are ill and need a pill Ton safely can rety on, Don’t use those old imported ones— Try Neil’s new Dandelion. COMPOSITION POWDERS. Now that the winter is on us, it cannot jbe out of place r remind parents and’all of the importance of’having n friend at hand that will ward off and cure colds. Such a friend is the Composition Powder. It is made from the finest powdered Bayberry bark, pinus' I '-ca,nadensis,’ ’ poplar, ginger, cayenne, cloves, n liquorice, : cinnamon, and wild cherry. - It equalises the circulation,' and is a stimulant vastly superior to any spirituous liquors. SOOTHING SYRUP, OR MOTHER’S - ■ ■ friend - i :t ‘ i'. I The necessity has long been seen of having a simple' vegetable remedy without having to resort to infants’preservative, anodyne, cordials,’ royal mixture, etc, the principal ingredients of which ar powerful poisons acting’ on the nervou system. This soothing syrup is purely vegetable, containing -no narcotic nor poisonous drugs. It removes acidity of the stomach; griping pains in. the bowels, expels wind, changes the col or of the motion from- green and slimy to its natural color, and thereby ’removing 'the Causes of all the little ailments—-1.8 per '.bottle. •• ’ 1 *t. ’. . BALM OF GILEAD. CONSUMPTION, i. ’• AND COUGH SYE-UP 1 A most effectual remedy for coughs, difficulty of breathing, asthma arid oppres Sion of the chest. ’By promoting a free expectoration, it speedily affords relief in all affections of the lungs. It may be taken with the greatest satety, being composed of herbs alone, 1 and needs only a trial to prove its excellence— 2s 6d per bottle. ' ■ VEGETABLE PILLS Dandelion, Antibillious, Aperient, Wind, Liver, Nervine, Golden Puls ot Health. Herbal Cough Pills, and Headache Pills, made and covered by the most approved machinery driven by hydraulic pow er ;— thousands made every wee K- . boxes Is each. J. NEIL, Medical Botanist, 96 George street, Dunedin. . , J -i I FOR BREAKFAST 0 H, 0 C 0 L A T - M E N I E R Annual Consumption Exceeds 18,000,00011)!? ■ i! SOLD EVERYWHERE 1878. —Paris Exhibition, Highest Prize Awarded, Grand Diploma of Honor PARIS, LONDON, AND NEW YORK THE pERP ETO A L PRESS Sp°cially constructed for COMPRESSING LOOSE MATERIAL, Such as Hay, Straw, Rags,’ etc. One Ton of Hay can be packed within One Ton'Measurement of 40 Cubic Feet ißelt Perpetual Press. Worked by Horse ! or steam power Will Bale from Fifteen to Thirty Tons in ' Ten Hours Descriptive Circulars with full particurg, on application to JOHN H LADD. & CO., O UPen Victoria street. London, E C.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TEML18820318.2.13.1

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Temuka Leader, Issue 929, 18 March 1882, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
552

Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Temuka Leader, Issue 929, 18 March 1882, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Temuka Leader, Issue 929, 18 March 1882, Page 4

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