TELEGRAPHIC NEWS.
The ship Waimate, Captain Caneae, arrived at JPort Chalmers yesterday, after asplendid pHssageof 78days from London, and 74 from land to land. She brings 2000 tons of cargo, and four saloon passengers. The passage has been an uneventful one, marked by fair weather. At the Supreme Court, Dunedin, yesterday, P. Austin and Charles Johnston were sentenced 1o nine months each for breaking and entering. The Dunedin City Tramway Company's report shows a traffic decrease equal to £406. They declare a 3 per coat dividend by a reduction of expenditure and carry forward £49. A boy nnmed Brierley, of Newmarket (Auckland), who, when playing with a horse, got his skull fractured, is in a precarious condition, Thomas Kelly, of Wade (Auckland), has been committed for trial on a charge of aiding and abetting personation on the part of Harry Brady, at the late Waitemata election. Brady was previously committed. At the annual meeting of the Gear Meat Preserving and Freezing Company the balance-sheet showed a profit on the year's operations of £12,545. A dhidend and bonus of 12J per cent was declared. His Excellency the Governor teturned to Wellington last Tuesday night from Auckland. It is understood that the Governor will leave for Dunedin at the end of the week, and will reside there for a couple of months. At the Supreme Court, Wellington,. on Thursday, Davis was sentenced to one year's imprisonment for stabbing. William Pilkington, for the manslaughter of AgDes Petersen on the 3rd November, by riding over her at Carterton, was sentenced to three months with hard labor. A child named Larnplongb, aged five, was crushed to death at Addison's, near Westport, by a wheel of a dray passing over her. Close upon 40 applications have been { received for a block of 3000 acres in the C«tlins district, open under the homestead system. Moat of the applications are from married men. , The Land Board have agreed to grant Mr W. McLeaD, of Wellington, a pro« visional license over 200 acres of marble | quarrying at Casswell Sound at £1 per i acre for 3 years, and afterwards a lease i for 21 yiars. ' The steamer Omapere and the Dunedin Harbor Board's big dredger collided when in the harbor channel between the quarantine islands on Vvednesday. The ' Onnpere received considerable damage to her bows, the port bow beiDg pierced ' through in ooe place while there are deep J indentations in other placet. The ( Omapere put back to Port Chalmers. The dredge was more seriously damaged, , and she was brought to anchor under | Obßervatton Point where she gradually i sank. The dredge was on her way to sea i with a full load of spoil. The dredge 1 now lies on the bank, but as the weather I is fine it is expected the will be got off, j A gale of wind, however, would probably lead to her buck being broken, as the ' place she is resting on is only a bank of | sand. , A youne man named Thomas Newton, j aged 22, a painter, was drowned on 1 Wednesday while bathing in the sea at < Ocean beach. His parents live at Akaroa. ] He was a splendid swimmer. < At Christchurch on Wednesday Michael < Dobeck was found guilty of horse stealing I and sentence was deferred ; William Hall 1 Zouch, convicted of forgery, was sen* ' tenced to two years' imprisonment ; Daniel Grace, charged with shooting with intent, was acquitted. On Thursday, Michael Dobeck, for horse stealing, waß sentenced ! to 12 months' under the Probation Act, . and to pay £lO towards the expenses of the prosecution; Patrick O'Donnel, for false pretences, to three years' penal servitude. It is rumored in Wellington that Sir George Whitraore is bringing a libel j action against Horsburg, publisher of Paddy Murphy s Annual, for a squib on the Oamaru Volunteer Review, , His Honor the Chief Justice at Welling, ton on Wednesday granted a warrant foi the arrest of W. R. Waters, an absconding bankrupt, on the npplic»*.ion of the ' Official Assignee in bankruptcy. I A meeting of the Central Board of J Health was held at Wellington on Wed- ( nasday afternoon to consider what steps i should be takken to prevent the introduction of smallpox into New Zealand from \ the Australian colonies. The members present were the Colonial Secretary (president), Dr Hector, Mr G. S. Cooper, and Captain Johnston. It was decided 1 that the same course should now be taken as during the smallpox scare in 1884, viz., that the Union Company's steamers submit all passengers and crews to strict medical examination at the Australian I ports of departure ; that all the mterr colonial steamers should carry an experienced surgeon ; that the Government should arrange for the medical examination of all arrivals from Australia at the port of arrival, and at all ports of call in New Zealand ; that in ca»e of failure on the part of steamers to comply with the required conditions, or on the appearance of smallpox in New Zealund strict quarantine be enforced, The volcanic mud deposits are proving highly beneficial to the soil on the shoreß of Lake Rotorua. The potato crops this year are expected to be the heaviest known there. A motion has been proposed in the Auckland City Council advocating the preparing of a petition to Government against the use of totalisators. It is stated that driving the piles for the foundation of Firth s mill, on the ie» claimed land near the railway station, Auckland, is causing the reolamatipn, wall and buttresses |o give way. The twenty?firat asnual session of the Orange Grand Lodge was held Inst Thurs« day night in the Protestant Hall, Nawton (Auckland). The Rev. A. G. Brooka wa« reelected ' 3,M. Next grand lodge meeting is fixed for April, at W an garei. A Gisboroe lawyer named Brassey has been cited to appear before the Supreme Court, Wellington, to answer a charge of retaining £l5O belonging to the County Council till criminal proceeding? were-fean for }ts recovery. Blnenbbon badges are to be distributed nrnong the £(orth Island natives to whom Matthew Burnett administered the pledge. i The badge is a'blue ribbon bearing a gp,ld shield, in the centre of whiph is the rahre-. ; sensation of a d'o,ve bearing an olive , branch,. 1 Waters, the defaulter, was nrreated at • Dunedin.
WB SHOU [) BLOT OUr DIBBABB IN I+r KABLY SfAGBS. The (liiMie commences with a alight derangement of|the stoniaoh, but, if negleoted, it in time involves the whole frame, embracing the kidneys, liver, pancreas, and in fact the entire glandular system ; and the afflicted drags out a miserable existence until death gives relief from suffering. The disease is of ten mistaken for other complaints ; but if the reader will ask himself the following question! he will be able to determine whether he himself is one of the affioted : Have I distress, pain, or difficulty in breathing after eating ? Is there a dull, heavy feeling, attended by drowsir en ? Have tbe eyes a ' yellow tinge f '■ Does a thick, sticky muoous gather about the gums and teeth in the mornings, accompanied by a disagreeable taste ? Is the tongue coated P Is there pain in the sides and baok P Is there a fullness about the right side, as if the liver were enlarging P Is there costiveneii P Is there vertigo or dizziness when rising suddenly from a horizontal position? Ate the secretions from the kidneys highly ooloured, | with a deposit after itanding P Does food ' ferment soon after eating, accompanied by flatulence or belching of gas from the itomaoh P Is there frequent palpitation of the heart? These various symptoms may not be present at one time, but they torment the sufferer in turn as the dreadful disease progresses. If the case be one of long standing, there will be a dry, haoking cough, attended after a time by expectoration. In very advanoed tages he ikin aisumes a i dirty brownish appsranoe, and tbe hands I and feet are covered by a oold'stioky perspiration. As the liver and kidneys become more and more diceased, rheumatio sins appear : and tue.ueual treatment proves sntirely unaviling against the latter agonising luorder. The origin of this malady iS indigestion or dyspepsia, and a small quantity jf the proper medicine will remove the disease if taken in iti inoipienoy. It is most important that the disease should be promptly ind properly treated in its first stages, when i little medicine will effeot a cure, and even when it has obtained a strong hold the correct renuedy should be perservreed in until every rest ge of the disease is eradicated, until the tppetite has returned, and the digestive • ngani restored to a healthy eondition. The rarest and most effectual remedy for thi complaint is " Seigel's Curative Syrup," a vegetable preparation sold by ale ihemiats and medicine vendors throughout the world, and by the proprietors, A. Je White, Limited, London, 8.0. This syrup itrikes at the very foundation of the disease, ind drives it, root and branch, out of the lystem. Ask your chemists for Beigel' dnrative Syrup, ■»■ 11 East-street Mills, Cambridge-heath, "London, B. 0., July 24th, 1882. " Sir,—lt gives me great pleasure to be ible to add my testimony in favor of your rateable Sprup as a curatire agent. I had raftered for some length of time from a levere form of indigestion, and the long train of distressing symptoms following that lisease. I had tried all possible means to let relief, by seeking the best medioal idvioe. I had swallowed sufficient of their ituff to float a man-of-war, io to speak, but til to no avail. A friend of mine, coming >n the toene in tbe midst of my infferings, nought with him a bottle of your Seigel iyrup | he advised me to try it, stating he !elt confident it would benefit me. Being veary of trying so many drugs, I conlemned it before trial, thinking it could not rotsibly do me any good, but ultimately le ermined to take the Syrup. After doing io for a short time it worked such a change n me that I oontinued taking if for nearly wo months, and I then felt thoroughly inred, for I have discontinued its use for ive weeks, and feel in the best of health, and ;an partake of any kind of food with ease and lomfort. lam therefore thankful to you hat, through the instrumentality of your valuable medioine, I am restored to the state »f health I now enjoy.—Yours truly, "W. S.FOBITEB. "To Mr A J. White." Those who are in the " Asthma Furnace " hould lose no time in obtaining relief by he use of " The Bosingweed Tar Mixture i" tut do not use the medioine unless you will ollow all the directions " to the letter." Poor Asthma sufferers, who are strangers o "tired Nature's sweet restorer, balmy leep," should make use of "The Bosingweed 'ar Mixture." Quiet refreshing sleep will ollow its use.
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Temuka Leader, Issue 1537, 8 January 1887, Page 3
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1,820TELEGRAPHIC NEWS. Temuka Leader, Issue 1537, 8 January 1887, Page 3
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