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Notices. DUNBLANE AUCTION MART, QUEEN STREET, AUCKLAND, (Opposite T. & S. Morriu's). TIIOS. M. JACKSON, AUCTIONEER, HOUSE AND LAND AGENT. Houses to t et OU3ES TO JUET AND If? OR CJALE. £OR OALE. GOODS BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION. MONEY TO LEND AT A MODERATE INTEREST. LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON CONSIGNMENTS. Sales undertaken in Town or Country on Low Rates. Tkompt Account Sales. ALL SALES will be CATALOGUED T. M. JACKSON Has much pleasure in announcing to his friends and the Public of Auckland generally, that he will open on Monday August Ist, 18S7, those large and commodious premises in Queen-street (opposite T. and S. Morrin and Co., Ltd.), as an Auction Mart, and hopes by strict attention to business to merit a share of the Public patronage.

Regular Sales of Furniture, Pro duce, etc., on Tuesdays and Fridays in each week. To Consignors of Produce, special advantages can be offered, as the Mart is fitted with a perfectly dry and rat proof cellar, capable of holding several thousand sacks of grain or potatoes. To Pjcori/E leaving Auckland or wanting to sell their Furniture, liberal teems can be given. The Stork has the most central position, the largest accommodation, and best light of any mart in Auckland, comprising two good flats, which will be devoted exclusively to Furniture. TE AROHA HOT SPRINGS. AS a SUMMER RETREAT not one anion? the SANAI ORIA of New Zealand is so rapidly becoming famous as TE AROHA. The celebrity of its HOT SPRINGS j is extending throughout the length and breadth of the Colony, and the WONDERFUL CURES. cflect-id by the Waters in eases ol RHEUMATISM, GOUT, LUMBAGO, LIVEK, AND KIDNEY COMPLAINTS, INDIGESTION. and Kindr.vl Ailments, are gratefully testified to in the Visitors' Hook by Hundreds of Persons who bv their use have been icstored to Health and nil'its enjoyments. The place is far exccltcuce. the Sanatorium of the People. The CLIMATE in its HEALTH-GIVING I'KOPERTIE.S is unsurpassed; the COST OF LIVING is exceedingly MODERATE ; and the locality is t?asy of access by p.ivkk, rail, or road, from Auckland and the Thames. In addition to these advantages there arc for the Robust abundant means oi' enjojment in Boating, Riding, and Driving, while lor tliosc in delicatc health the neatly laid out Domain forms a moat pleasant resort. The following analysis of the Wafrs by Mr T- A. ]'OKI), Colonial Analyst, and the accompanying extracts from his report thereon to the Domain Hoard, will be read with interest. The Samples were taken from the Springs, as numbered, the temperatures of which ranged from lOodegs. to IOdeKS. Fahr _ I T* ji ei .a ,g'jj> Anai.VSIS. | o a , c *■ "c'H : _ Sulphate of Lime 2,939 Sulphate oi magnesia 378 .336 602 Sulphate of potash 10.293 0 800 10.701 Sulphate of soda 27.510 23 0. r >(i 25 43S Chloride of sodium 73.f>14 72 072 77 748 Hi-carbonate of scda 723.7 a" ; G95.513 G52.123 Carbonate of ammonia 3 r>f>6 ! .112 .9SO Carbonate of iron .012 ,OG3 .042 Carbonate oflithia (heavy j (heavy (heavy traces) < traces) traces) Phosphate of soda 2 003 2.203 1006 Phosphate of alumina .143 .023 .476 Silica 8,568 8.773 8.778 Sulphuretted hydro- | gen traccs traces traces ; Total solid matter J57.829 522,184 811,702 Results expressed in grains per gallon. These Waters are all feebly alkaline and strongly chargcd with carbonic acid gas, which is constantly escaping from the Springs in large quantities. The Lithia,'a valuable constituent of these Waters, is present in an appreciable quantity. The Analyses show Springs to be very similar in composition. These Mineral Waters are exceedingly interesting, and will prove of great value medicinally. # They closely resemble some of the European Mineral Springs so justly celebrated, more especially those of Vichy, kins, and Fachingen. Their Curative Value will be greatest in Rheumatic and Arthritic 3/iseases, Calculus, Affections of the Kidneys, and Dyspepsia. You may rest assuied that all you can do for your Springs in the shape of Improving the facilities for their use, is entirely ustilied by the character of the water.

T) E A R S O N ' S 1 CARBOLIC SAND SOAP (I'rotkcteb by Letters Patent), Manufactured at Hamilton, Waikafco Support Local Industry. Cleanliness is health, and health is wealth. This Soap, for all kinds of scrubbing purposes, cannot be excelled : it leaves boards as white as snow. It destroys all insect life. As an antiseptic and disinfectant, it is reeommended by the leading medical men of the district. All who have tried it continue to use it. Many testimonials have been received, of which th". following is a specimen. Try one bar ;it will speak for itself. To be had at all storekeepers : l'ric.i 4d per bar. Wholesale from E. J. PEARSON, Hamilton East, Waikato. Waikato District Hospital, Hamilton, N.Z., 12th Nov., ISS7I have much pleasure in certifying to the value and powerful properties of Mr Pearson's Carbolie Sand Soap. It is extensively used iu the wards and olHces of the Waikato District Hospital. The carbolic aeid contained in it acts as a perfcct disinfectant, the sand answers the purposes of a good cleansing agent, and the whole substances are blended together into firm cakes of a vety convenient size and shape. For all domestic purposes I can strongly recommend Mr Pearson's Carbolic Sand Soap, as being a most effective and economical article, and in houses where enteric or other fevers exist it will be found especially useful. Gi.o. ><■ Kexny, M.8., &c., Surgeon Waikato Dist. Hospital, HA RR Y EL LIS ON, Tobacconist asd Tciu; Commission- Acm-.nt. Queen-street, Market Entrance, aud Hobson-street, AUCKLAND. Commissions executed on all forthcoming events straight out and double. Telegrams and letters promptly attended to,

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WT18880605.2.43.2

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Waikato Times, Volume XXX, Issue 2481, 5 June 1888, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
939

Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Waikato Times, Volume XXX, Issue 2481, 5 June 1888, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Waikato Times, Volume XXX, Issue 2481, 5 June 1888, Page 4

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