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READ IT ALL. it may s:avie yioiur life. HOP BITTERS -■■■'■' ■■■' n\ .'; ABB .- :• . .'..;.. ' The Purest and Best Medicine ever made. THET ABE COMPOUNDED FROM HOPS BUCHU, MANDRAKE, AND r . DANDELION, "The Oldest, B(ot, most EeEOwned, and Valuable Medicine in the World, " and in addition contains all the best and most effective curative properties of all • other bitters, being the greatest Liver Begulbtor, BLOOD ,PURIFIER, and life and health restoring agent on earth." (they give new life and vigoe to the aged and infirm. "To Clergymen, Lawyers, Literary Men, Laborets, 'Ladies and all those whose tcdentary employments cause irregu'arities of the Blood, Stomach, Bowel?, or Kidneys, or who require an Appetizer, Tonic, »nd mild Stimulant, these Bilters »re invaluable, being highly curative, tonic and stimulating, without intoxicating." ••No matter what your feelings or Sjmptotts are, or what the disease or '' ailment is, use Hop Bitter-. Don't wait until jour are sick, but if you only feel ' bad or miserable, use the Bitters at once. It may save your life. Hundreds have been saved by bo doing, at a trifling cost. ABK YOUR DRUGGIST ob PHYSICIAN. "Do not Buffer yourself or let your . friends suffer, but use and urge them to use Hop Bitters." 11 Remember, Hop Btters is no vile, " druieed, drunken nostrum, but the ourest and best Medicine ever made, and ■.yoQ person or family should be without VoP BITTERS MANUFACTURING C&fifettioiixne; Australia, Rochester, H.Y., lU.S.A., Toronto, London, Antwerp, Paris.

The Sheffield Telegraph says:—On the eve of the burglary season, a few words from the lips of an eminent judge will/giro comfortable assurance to law-abiding householders, who are uncertain how far they mßj go in defending life and property from the .thief that walkefch by night. The question was raised by an improbable ttory in Blackwood's Magazine of a gentleman being sentenced to seven years penal servitude for shooting two burglars whom he found in his bedroom. In contradiction of this is repeated an opinion expressed by the late Mr Justice Willes, in reply to the inquiry, "What ought I to do if I saw a burglar in my drawingroom in the act of packing up the clock ?' Replied the judge—>" Speaking as a man of wide experience, and an English judge, I gi»e you this as my deliberate opinion of what it is not only your right, but I am inclined to think also your duty, to do. Take a double barrelled gun, load both barrels to the muzzle, aim carefully^ at some vital orgau, and shoot him dead. Iv Germany a mau dare not cut down the trees on bis own land without consent of tbe proper authorities, so zealous is the trOTtruujeot iv pree&v?iug tbe formats.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THS18850123.2.24.1

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Thames Star, Volume XVI, Issue 5002, 23 January 1885, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
448

Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Thames Star, Volume XVI, Issue 5002, 23 January 1885, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Thames Star, Volume XVI, Issue 5002, 23 January 1885, Page 3

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