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NoticesBY SPECIAL APPOINTMENT. SIR ANDREW CLARK, L.L.D., F.R.S., F.R.C.P. (PHYSICIAN IN ORDINARY TO THE QUEEN, 1881.) LECTURE ON TEA To the Students of the London Hospital. (Extract from the Pall Mall Budget.) "Tea to be useful, should be first of all black China Tea. The Indian Tea which is being cultivated has become so powerful in its effects upon the nervous system that a cup of it taken early in the morning, as many people do, so disorders the nervous system, that those who take it actually get into a state of tea intoxication, and it produces a form of nerve disturbance which is most painful to witness." Although we are the largest dealers in Indian and Ceylon Teas in the Colonies, we have always Strongly advised the public to drink our Blended Teas in preference to Indian or Ceylon alone. Wβ maintain they are too sickly for 90 per cent, of the tea drinking public; and in England, where such large quantities are shipped, over 80 per cent are used for Blending with China Teas, which are undoubtedly as Pure as Tndian and Ceylon, and far more refreshing when properly Blended. Many inexperienced firms push Indian and Ceylon on the public because it is beyond them to produce a regular, true blend, and the profit is larger, for cheap common Indians give out a strong, coarse liquor, without any quality, and make people, for a time, fancy they are getting a bargain, till they find out, to their cost, that SIR A. CLARK is right. The leading medical men in England are condemning the use of Indian and Ceylon Tea alone, and the above extract from Sir A. Clark's Lecture must convince all that a taste for Indians, which has to be acquired by force at first, is a serious and dangerous thing. We are publishing the above extract for the benefit of those that have not seen it, and to support what we have always maintained. This is against our own interests, for the profit on these Teas is equal, if not more, than that on other kinds. NELSON, MOATE& CO., INDIAN, CHINA AND CEYLON TEA IMPORTERS, Christchurch, Auckland, Dunedin, Wellington, Hobart & Launceston

TJENEY T)UTTLB, Property, Estate, and Commission Agent, 0 H A U P 0, HAS FOE SALE SOME OP THE MOST DESIRABLE PROPERTIES IN THE WAIKATO. Correspondence Solicited. Postal and Telegraph Address: Ohaupo. Auckland Agents : Messrs Newman and Bottle, Queenstreet. Also, Agent for the Sale of Messrs W. S. Laurie and Co.'s MANURES and SEEDS. Samples of which are on hand. "vr o w pu blishedl BOND'S WAIKATO ALMANAC, 1892. 264 pages, with inap of district (ISin. x 22in.) Price One Shilling. Postage to any address, 2id. Press and Other Opinions ■■ "A highly-creditable production."— Observer "Reflects great credit upon its publisher, who has striven to make it of so useful a character to farmers and the inhabitants of Waikato generally, that we feel sure it will find a place in nearly every household. , '—Waikato Times. "Just the thing required in Waikato, and every settler should buy a copy."— G. W. Russell. " The most useful almanac I have ever had."— J. McNicoL. May be obtained from the principal storekeepers throughout Waikato, Te Aroha, aud Rotorua Districts, or from the publisher (J. 8. Bond, Cambridge), who will forward a copy to any address on receipt of Is 3d in stamps or postal notes. J. S. BOND, PRINTER, PUBLISHER AND STATIONER, CAMBRIDGE, WAIKATO. rpHE UNDERSIGNED is A BUYER OF BUTTER, CHEESE, FUNGUS, HONEY, AND ALL KINDS OF FARM PRODUCE Further particulars on application. A. J. ENTRICAN, General Importer and Commission Agent, CUSTOMS-STREET, AUCKLAND. 1%/T R S TRAFFORD, Fashionable Dressmaker, CORNER OF COOK & VINCENT Sts. Auckland. Mrs T., late Head Dressmaker of Milne and Choyce, having had many years' experience in above capacity, can guarantee PERFECT FIT, STYLE AND FINISH. Your patronage is respectfully solicited, " PHOTOGRAPHIC. W. p A R K, Dealer in Photographic Requisites, Cameras, Lenses, &c , Wellesley-street East, Anckland (Four doors below the Free Library).

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WT18920218.2.31.6

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Waikato Times, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 3057, 18 February 1892, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
667

Page 4 Advertisements Column 6 Waikato Times, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 3057, 18 February 1892, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 6 Waikato Times, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 3057, 18 February 1892, Page 4

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