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AMERICAN CO; HOP BITTERS ARE THE PUREST AND BEST BITTERS EVER MADE.

They are compounded from Hops, Malt, Buchu, Mandrake, and Dandelion —the oldest, best, and most valuable medicines in the world, and contain all the best and most curative properties of all other remedies, being the greatest Blood Purifier, .Liver Regulator, and Life and Health Restoring Agent on earth. No disease or ill'health can long exist where they are used, so varied and perfect are their operations. They give new life and vigor to the aged and infirm. To all whose employments cause irregularity of the bowels or urinary organs, or who require an Appetizer,' Tonic and Mild Stijjdant, American Co.'s Hop Bitters tug invaluably being highly curative, tonic and stimulaing, without intoxicating.. No matter what your feelings or oms are, what the disease or ailment is, use Hop Bitters. Don't wait until you are sick, but if you only bad or miserable, use ■ Hop Bitters at once, It; may save your life. Hundreds have been saved by so doing., £SOO will be paid for a case they will not cure or holp. Remember, American Hop Bitters is no vile, drugged drunken nostrum, but the Purest and Best Medicine ever made, Try the Bitters to-day, Get at Chemists or Druggists. Beware of imitations. Genuine has Dr Soule's name blown m bottle.

Do not suiter or let your friends suffer, but use and urge them "to use American Hop Bitters.

English manufacturers are suspected of supplying small-arms and ammunition to the Russians, If they are of the. same bad quality as those served out to our own troops in the Soudan, there ought to be no reason to make a fuss. The well-known provision firm of Moir and Son, Aberdeen, emplto ladies as travellers, It is needless tofiy that the difficulty is to keep them wiffi the firm, as matrimonially inclined men pick them up as scon as they are fairly started on the "Road," jK A correspondent jvrites to th'e Sydnoy Herald"ln San Francisco hotels may bo kopb open all night and every day of the week, and I have to admit that I saw less drunkenness in that city than in any part of America. This proves to my mind that unnecessary restriction does not tend to make people sober." The lines of Paris journalists seem to be cast in pleasant , places. Few of them earn less than £IOOO a year for a weekly article of two columns, such, for instance, as Jules Claretie's La Vie a Paris, or Francisque Saracey's Chronique Theatrale in Le Temps. The former receives £I4OO per annum for about four hours work a week, besides the large amount ho derives from purely literary and dramatic compositions. Albert Wolff draws a similar salary from FigafO, the proprietors of which gave him SOO on one occasion for a single days work, He entered the Palais d'Jnduatrie, disguised as a workman, and carrying a pictAe, strolled deliberately through the HMding, and was enabled to give a full account of the Salon twenty-four hours in advance of all the other journals. No doubt jterhad previously visited the studios ff the principal artists in Paris, and had got a mass of notes prepared in advance, Second-rate writers on the Press do not earn more than £4OO to £6OO per annum, and reporters are very inadequately remunerated, their pay ranging from £IOO to £l4O per annum; and it is no wonder, therefore, that a good many of them are venal,: and supplement their legitimate earnings by taking tips for puffe. Several years ago a machinist in a railroad shop at Wellsville in Ohio invented a nut-look, for which, at the time, there was a great demand. It was an excellent device. Ho had no confidence in corporations, and refused to sellhis patent to one of the leading companies for £IO,OOO cash. He .has the patent yet, and ; will now cheerfully 'take three dolllara for it. .'V • NATUM IS 081 nST WIDEN f<£she utilize ' tionof eelsiiMi'iaaits-products, cult by skilfu : hitidi,' eaft:|w rSsdiiy applied to 'iwtfeiW m-' The thai, grows by tht w&yHdfe, hatli'a vittw that, inWgently coin-. PjflhwdM, aay bfrtwwd to profitaWaecount,' i w m WW prinsio properties .of th»' wjebrat»d- J?pipar-bwry, but it rem&injd tc on# original to «xtract, and cobk poimd its ffiarwllcus eisenees, as, to gensr&U that «qu»lly_]f'ondrbus.-reitowtive, faogw UDOIPHO wcm's-v Somiua AboX&I SOHKUM - ■ " •-. --

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WDT18850728.2.12.4

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume VII, Issue 2053, 28 July 1885, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
727

Page 2 Advertisements Column 4 Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume VII, Issue 2053, 28 July 1885, Page 2

Page 2 Advertisements Column 4 Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume VII, Issue 2053, 28 July 1885, Page 2

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