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AMERICAN CO.' HOP BITTERS ARE-THE PUREST AND BEST BITTERS EVER MADE.. They are' compounded .from jßlops, Malt, Buchu, Mandrake, and Dandelion —tho oldest, best,-and most'valuable medicines in the world,- and contain all tho best and most curative properties of all othor remedies, being the greatest I!? 0 ! ?" rinor . Livor. Regulator, and earth. No disease or ill health can long exist where they are usedj: so 1 .vvaried and; perfect are their operations. ■.-£ ; They give new life and vigor io tho aged and infirm. •. To all whqao employ, ments cause irregularity M%i bowels or urinan? organs, or who require an Appefcizer, Toaio and Mild Stimulant, Ameri. can Co,'s Hop Bitters "are'invjiluable>' being highly curative, tonic ariq '' ' ting, without intoxicating. .. ; : So matter what your Feelings or By ems mo,- what the disease or-ailmbni use Hop Bitters. Don't wait- until J& are sick, but if you only fed bad or raisor&blo, use Hop Bittors at'onco. It may save your life. Hundreds'have been saved by so doing. £SOO will'be paid for a case they will not cure or help. Remember, American Hop Bitters ia 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'a name blown in bottle. Do not sutler or let your friends -suffer, but use and urge them to use American Hop Bittern

The late Countess of Orkney, who died at an advanced age, wag deaf arid dumb, and was married in 1753 by signs. She resided with her husband; at his Boat, Rostellan, near Cork. Shortly after the. birth of her first child, the nuMjww the which the infant lay asleep, evidently full of some d«ep design. The Countess, having first assured herself that her babe wasfast asleep, took'from under her shawl a large stone, which ]iad purposely been concealed there, and, to the utter horror of the nurse, who largely shared the popular notion that all dumb persons are possessed of peculiar cunning and maligl iiity, raised it up, as if to enable her -3 dash it down with greater force. Before 1 the nume could interpose, to prevent what sko believed would be cortain -death to the sleeping and unconscious child, the dretdful stone was flung, not *ab the cnadle, however; but upon the ground, »nd fall with great violence. The noise awakened the, child. The. Countess iyag overjoyed, and,, iii the fullness'of a mother's heart, she fell upon her knees, to eaprets hor thankfulness that her bolovtjil infant possessed a blessing denied to herself—the sense of hearing. This lady often gave Bimilar indications of Jwperior intelligence, 'though .vire can bfllleve that few of them, equalled the present in interest. Ham iswßP I-" I never," wrote a young lady to i fridnd, ''go to church or .. ion or lecture trf« about," It wis f/fein case of nervous lethargy, producewjTy want of action of the liver and digestive organs. She p$ peuuadod to try AmoricanCo'l Hop Bitten, and now she writes':'""Howl intelligent and bright are sermons and lecture* now, and how glorious the world ?e live in fi I D r Soulo's Hop Bittejs are indetdt blessing to me," Notiee'-' There is nothing known better' Calculated to invigorate the constitution-than Wolm'b .Sohkapps, ~.,." '"

WAIRARAP A EAST -COUNTY. TENDERS for repairs to promotive works at the Soufchera. approach to the Waingawa bridge will belreceived at-thiß office! where plans and speoificaSSSm"!? e Men ' until N "°ON on MONDAY, the 26th insfc. F.G.MOORE, „ . , „ County Clerk, County Oounoil j ■.'." MMtetton, April 22nd, 188JL' ,

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WDT18860422.2.12.5

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume VIII, Issue 2277, 22 April 1886, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
587

Page 2 Advertisements Column 5 Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume VIII, Issue 2277, 22 April 1886, Page 2

Page 2 Advertisements Column 5 Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume VIII, Issue 2277, 22 April 1886, Page 2

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