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Honey.—Some of the company at tea with a Danbury family spoke of the excellence of tbe honey, whereupon the head of the house, who stands in reputed dread of his wife, feelingly said " Honey is the most delicious of delicacies. It is the nectar of beautiful flowers, sipped from the brilliant petals by the nevertiring bee, and moulded into a glory that would tempt the god of ~" " Ephraim," enunciated his wife, with a stern solemnity, "have you been drinking again? " Ephraim groaned. See for Yotjbself.—Podder was attacked with an ailment for which his doctor prescribed calomel. After he had taken it for some time, the doctor asked him one day if the medicine had in any manner affected his teeth "I don't know," faintlj whispered Podder," butyou can see ; they are in the top drawer of the bureau. Mrs Podder will hand them to you."

Easily -Explained.—A Manchester fh'in which takes all its employees for a day's trip to the seaside during the summer, decided last year to visit Blackpool. It is the general custom of the workers to have a dip in the sea before beginning the usual amusements. " Eh, mon, bow-dirty ye are ! " said one hale Lancashire lad to his fellow - bather. "Missed the trip last year," was the laconic rejoinder. Social Tribulation. —To no one is this hot weather so severe as the bashful young .^man who wears paper collars. These oppressive evenings are just the ones he is invited out to parties, and the look of horror on his face as he feels his collar dissolving into pulp, and crumbling down his neck, cannot very well be counterfeited. —Danbury News,

. " Were you drunk ?" asked a lawyer of a witness. "Well," was thereply, "I had been drinking so much I couldn't tell whether I was sober or not."

Large Bvo., p.p. 724. Cloth, Bs., post free; or in half morocco, 10s 6d, rjiHE HOMOEOPATHIC DOMESTIC X PHYSICIAN, By Drs. Pome and Epps. Eevised, with important addi'ipns, an I many . now remedies, by Washington Errs, L.E.C.P., M.E.C.S., Assistant Physician to the London Homoeo- . pathic Hospital. TABLE OF CONTENTS: — General Diseases—Casual Diseases—Cutaneous Diseases —Fevers—Affections of the Mind—the Head —the Eyes—the Ears; —the Nose —the Face, Lips, and Jaws—the Toeth, Gums, and Mouth—the Windpipe and Chest —the Stomach and Bowels—the Urinary and Genital Organs—Disease of Women—Treatment of Children —Anatomy and Physiology —Hygiene and Hydropathy—Materia Medica —Domestic Surgery—Medical and Surgical Appliances —Dislocations and Luxations — Fractures—Glossary—Index. A Chest of Medicines (book enclosed) £3 10a. or £5 55.; or with glass stopper to all the Tinctures, £i 4^ or £6 6s. JAMBS IPPSs and Co., Homesopatbic Chemists, 48, Threadneedle Street, and 170, Piccadilly, London. 1025

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THS18751118.2.26.1

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Thames Star, Volume VII, Issue 2145, 18 November 1875, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
442

Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Thames Star, Volume VII, Issue 2145, 18 November 1875, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Thames Star, Volume VII, Issue 2145, 18 November 1875, Page 4

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