Hotels. B "WYNNE'S HAMILTON HOTEL OfTERS FIRST - CLASS ACCOMMODATION TO TRAVELLERS & VISITORS. SAMPLE ROOM. For Commercial Travellers a spacious Sample Room, 2Gft. x 14ft., has been provided and fitted up so as to afford unusual facilities for the display of goods. rpilK /COTTAGE ! IHE V7OTTAGE! Which is quite separate from the Hotel, affords to Families or Invalids all the comforts of a private house. SARAH GWYNNE, Proprietress. Cream of Scotch Whisky. BREADALBANE. To be had of .ill Storekeepers, Hotelkeepers, Grocers, and Wine Merchants. Agents DAVIDSON, IRVINE AND CO., Napier and Wellington. WAIPA TIMBER MILL. FAWKES & FOXALL, WHATAWAHTA, HAVING ERECTED A SAW-MILL at their Bush On Whatawhata-Hainilton Road, Are prepared to Supply. Sawn and Dressed Timber ! Ornamental Battens! Mouldings ! P.T. &G. Flooring& Matched Lining Of KAHIKATEA or RIMU At Lowest Rates per Road, Railway or River. Tost aud telegraph uddress—Whatawhata.
BONEFLOUR & DUST. T}URE BONEFLOUR may be now •*■ obtained at our Mill, Ngaruawahia. Orders addressed there will receive immediate attention. W. S. LAURIE &. CO. 21st February, ISS7. N.B. —Bones bought in auy quantity. TE AROHA HOT SPRINGS. AS a SUMMER RETREAT not one anion? the SANATORIA of New Zealand is so rapidly becoming famous as TE AROHA. The celebrity of its HOT SPRINGS is extending throughout the length and breadth of the Colony, and the WONDERFUL CURES. effected by. the Waters in cases of RHEUMATISM, GOUT, LUMHAGO, LIVER, AND KIDNEY COMPLAINTS, INDIGESTION, and Kindred Ailments, are gratefully testified to in the Visitors' Book by Hundreds of Persons who by their use have been testored to Health and all its enjoyments. The place is par excellence the Sanatorium of the People. The CLIMATE in its HEALTH-GIVING PROPERTIES is unsurpassed; theCOST6F LIVING is exceedingly MODERATE ; and the locality is easy of access by river, rail, or road, from Auckland and the Thames. Iα addition to these advantages there are for the Robust abundant means of enjoyment in Boating, Riding, and Driving, while tor those in delicate health the neatly laid out Domain forms a most pleasant resort. The following analysis of the Waters by Mr T- A. Pond, Colonial Analyst, and the accompanying extracts from his report thereon to the Domain Board, will be read with interest. The Samples were taken from the Springs, as numbered, the temperatures of which ranged from 105degs. to 31Bdegs. Fahr:— u« *£ «.a |M Analysis. q 3 a a -*■% *AK ** -C% Sulphate of Lime 2,989 2.228 .089 Sulphate ot magnesia 378 .336 602 Sulphate of potash 10.203 9 800 10.794 Sulphate of soda 27.54G 25.050 25.433 Chloride of sodium 73.514 72.072 77.74S Bi-carbonatc of soda 723.737 C 98.513 652.123 Carbonate of ammonia 3.550 .112 .9SO Carbonate of iron -012 .063 .042 Carbonate of lithia (heavy (heavy (heavy traces) traces) traces) Phosphate of soda 2 003 2.203 1.006 Phosphate of alumina .143 .023 .470 Silica 5,568 5.773 8.773 Sulphuretted hydrogen traces traces traces Totalsolid matter 857.52& 522.184 811,702 Results expressed in grains per gallon. These AVaters are all feebly alkaline and strongly charged 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 these Springs to be very similar in composition. These Miner;;! Waters are exceedingly interesting, anil will prove of great value medicinally. They closely resemble some of the European Mineral Springs =o iustly celebrated, more especially those of Vichy, Ems, and Fachingen. Their Curative Value will be greatest in Rheumatic and Arthritic Diseases, Calculus, Affections ot the Kidneys, and Dyspepsia. Yeu may rest assured that all you can do for your Springs in the shape of improving the facilities for their use, is entirely justified by the character of the water. [A CARD.] G ARNOLD WARD, • Architect, &c, SPRING-STREET, TAURANGA, Visits the Waikato district. Terms on :
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Waikato Times, Volume XXXIII, Issue 2692, 12 October 1889, Page 1
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629Page 1 Advertisements Column 3 Waikato Times, Volume XXXIII, Issue 2692, 12 October 1889, Page 1
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