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Business Notices * J. A. Barber & Co., CUSTOMS, SHIPPING AND COMMISSION AGENTS, Fokt btbxbt, Auckland. AGBNTS FOE BUTTON'S FOREIGN &XFRBBB. PACKAGES received and orwsrded to all parts of the world. Goods of al. description bought end sold on oommisiion ■ '1888

. DONALD McGREGCm (Lato of the Auckland Hotel), OAS very great pleasure in announcing to his friends and the public that he has taken that well-known, favorite, and eon* veniently situated Hostelry, The Waitejnata Hotel, which ho has, at considerable expense, entirely renovated and furnished, making the house second to none for comfort and convenience,* in the colonies, and whero,br civility and attention, be hopes to tdiaira a fair chare of publio patronage. A?iri'<Diane BESTAUBANT has been added totho Hotel, where gentlemen who lunch in tbr city will find every delicacy of the seaooii, and attention paid to their comfort. Hot, Cold, end Shower Baths, and every convenience for travellers and famines, have been added to the Hotel. v\ ines, Spirits, and Seers, &c, &c, only of (he best brands kept. Charges moderate. Note the address: d. McGregor, waitemata hotel Corner of Queen and Custom-house streets, Auckland, 746 GKRATEFUL—COMFOBTIffG E pps>.s~O°.°:9A3BEAKFAST. By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of well-selected cooa, Mr Epps has provided .our 'breakfast tobies with a delicately flavoured beverage which may gave us, many heavy doctors' bills. It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up uztil strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there is a w«ak point. ; We may escape many a fatal shaft hy keeping ourselves well fortified with pure blood and a properly nourished frame?'—See article in the Civil Service Qatftte. • Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold in i-lb. Packets hy Grocers, labelled thus — JAMES EPPS AND CO., HOMOEOPATHIC CHEMISTS, LONDON, ENGLAND.

Medical Diseased Nature oftentimes breaks forth in ■trange eruptions."—Act iii, Scene 1. TO THE PUBLIC. SOME patients suffering from nervous affections are afraid from sheer bashfuloess and modesty to| PEBSONAIXY consult a , medical man—other patients have not the self-possession and coolnesß when in the consulting room, |to accurately describe their symptoms —their habits of life, and the nature of the disease they suffer from. Let suoh persons (he or she) sit quietly down in the privacy of their own apartments, and with calm minds^ describe clearly each symptom of their eaee, a clear statement thus written, and kid before me is, far preferable in KKBVous diseases to a personal consultation. Where, however, a disease is of a peculiar and exceptional character, a personal consultation may become neosssary; but my success in correspondence is so great, that of the thousands upon thousands whom I hare treated by letter, during the last 82 years, not a single mistake Las ever occurred, not a case has ever been made public—in fact the very simplicity of my system of correspondence prevents publicity. At the same time medicines are sent to my patients in such a form as to defy detection. How many thousands have I not brought joytoP' ..... .;:..-.-. ; , ./ -...,.. • How many bave been enabled to enter into the marriage state through consulting me P How many after marriage have privately consulted me and been blessed and their married lives made fruitful and happy. How many wasted ruined youths of both ■exes bave also been restored to health, and thanked their manhood, for having consulted me by letter. How many questions arise where the family physician ia unable to unravel the caee and where often the patient lingers on, not during to tell his family medical adviser the nature of His complaint, until consumption wasting, or mental diseases, eet in and the sufferer gets beyond the curiable stage, and is left a hopeless wreck. A letter written in the privacy of the room and dropped in the poßt box roaches me quietly ; the answer is returned uS quietly and unostentatiously, and the patient, without stepping from his chamber, except to post his letter, is by return of poet put in full possession of the nature of hie case. His hopes are rrised his doubts removed, and he ie comparatively a new man; in fact, in many cases, a new being altogether. The only addition to the ordinary written letter is the age occupation, habits and symptoms, nothing more. Tbo usual consultation fee of £1 (one pound) must be enclosed, otherwise no answer will ba returned. There are thousands of cases in daily life where a consultation with one at a distance will remove by a single letter a great fear, a great care, and it often solves what appears as an impenetrable mystery. A!any a sad heart has been made joyful on receipt of an explanatory letter from me. To those who are about to marry, I would say consult me before doing so, and thus prevent many after troubles, and remove many unnecessary fears and prejudices; to those, more especially, who have suffered in early years from disease, or who, have yielded to their passions. To these I say, at onoe, consult with me, do not tarry, delays are dangerous, and as an expert, my time may not be always at your service, you can, by ismply enclosing one pound, have the benefit of my experience in the same manner as if I lived in your town, {and with the additional advantage of thorough privacy.—Yours, truly, LOUIS L. SMITH Address— DR L. L. SMITH. 182 COLLIN3 STREET EAST Melbourne. 00N8ULTATION;FEE BY LETTER, £1 Fee for personal Consultation, £1 1. The latter ia inclusive of Medipine. Medicines forwarded, well-packed, to all the Colonies, India and Europe. 188, COET.IKB STBKBI TCJIBT, MKTiBOTTBHB pOASTWISK CUSTOMS SSTBSM&, \J (forms) Qf HALM »* \b» Srraprf $U CMtH

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THS18851116.2.20.5

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Thames Star, Volume XVII, Issue 5251, 16 November 1885, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
977

Page 4 Advertisements Column 5 Thames Star, Volume XVII, Issue 5251, 16 November 1885, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 5 Thames Star, Volume XVII, Issue 5251, 16 November 1885, Page 4

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