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REMEMBER THIS.

If you are costive or dyspeptic, or aro suffering from any other of the numerous diseases of tlio stomach or bowels, it is "f® fault if you remain ill, for Hop Bittors is a sovereign remedy in all such complaints. If you have a rough, pimply, or sallow nkin, bad breath, pains and aches, and feel mißerablo gonevally, Hop- Bitters will givo you a fair skin, rich blood, and sweetest breath, health, and comfort, _ That poor, bedridden, invalid wife, sister, mother, or daughter, can be made tho picture of health, by a few bottles of Hop Bitters, costing but a triflo. Will you let thorn suffer;. In short they curb'all diseases of . the Stomach, Bowels, Blood, Liver, Nerves, Kidneys, Bright's Disease. £SOO will bo paid for a case they will not cure or help. Druggists and Chemists keep it. ■. ■VH"'-' If you aro sick with that terrible sick-, nosa nervoUßiicss, yoir 'will find a " Balm tf Gilead" in the use of Hop Bitters, ■ ■ i., If you aro wasting away in,.any form of Kidney disease, stop 1 tempting, death the;. moment, and turn for a euro to Hop Bitters, ' • Nor a Bevkhaok.-" They are hot a bsverage, but a medicine, with curative properties of the/Highest' degree, contain-; uig no poisonous drugs.. Tiiey do not tear down an n 1 i;cadj' : debilitated • system, tg|ij)ub build it up. One bottle contains real hop strength than a barrel/of , ordinary beer;'' Physicians prescribo'them/, "-Rochalra UAA.jEuning Erpmi, on AraoricanHoj) i t tjurss. :< ; . ..Tho newspaper business is a good, deal like that of mining ; as much has probably been lost in it- as- has been 'made. . Yet there is no enterprise into which men. sill inoro heedlessly rush. The wrecks: : : sre strewn, along every shore. Almo.it ' »very man thinks ho. knows how a newspaper should/be jrihnuge'dj- to , the editor is everywhere ready f<r him, \ without moiicy aiul without price..? Thj Ideal—the porfect newspaper is tho one ' that discusses all current topics with fairness and ability—that publishes-all the - ECKfI from all quarters'.of the world—that' *very man or woman ivho reads at all can And in it what Ivo or. sho wants- to road—that is adapted to the parlor just as well U to tho counting-room—in short, it should mirror the events and thoughts of the day, so tliat tho reader c.ould see thorn : *ll and yet let tho shadow fall on the horrible. Toward that ideal the press is : •lowly struggling, and if tho leaden, in ■ society will give.it proper encouragement thoy ■ can hasten that progress beyond ■ Ajk®' r ex P cc^a tion3.—Chicago Inter-Ocean. ■;

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WDT18860222.2.12

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume VIII, Issue 2226, 22 February 1886, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
428

REMEMBER THIS. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume VIII, Issue 2226, 22 February 1886, Page 3

REMEMBER THIS. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume VIII, Issue 2226, 22 February 1886, Page 3

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