/Q Jt is §ood> \s\ %) ! /flUJyt * s o sure and quick ' KS remedy for many I Jl tdings. S&owel disorders, | lk\ Stomaed troubles, f(< // ailments of tde Kidneys & ([ and I «/ •■■" j i §e(jnapp§ t \ Jt fjelps in eases of § Aj\ UlQeumatism. I || Jt chars tde 5B)oo:l~ \ \\ tfjrougfj tde Kidneys. >S\\ Wont aceepl any TVj\\ substitute. You xv.is* r. \(yj get tde qen;:in>:, jpr
Bcbonic Plague.—Owing to the spread of the plague, thousands of native servants and labourers are leaving Durban It is exppcted that the Zululand drifts will be eloped. Forty-two oases of plague, twentyseven of which have been fatal, have occurred atDa.ban. A youth named Murray, em- & V.v oy *: eT Ba,OOD at F'emantle, bas developed the plague Teachers Whi ßK y._ A very old friends of the residents of the Peninsula ia shortly payina a visit with a view of giving the people a treat by inducing some of the hotel iT» cr t t .°P nro I J , "eand vend some of the celebrated Teacher's Whiskey It is said that for mellowness purity of flavour, and lif> gj.ntf properties, this well known old spirit has established an unequalled reputation in the Home markets. Read It in His Newspaper — George NjhfMib a well known German citizen of New Lebanon, 0., U. S- A., is a constant rodder nf the Dayton Volkszeitung. Ho know* that tbis paper aims to advertise only the best in its columnß, and when he saw Chamberlain's Pain Balm advertised therein for lame back, he did not hesitate" in buying a bottle of it for his wife, who for eight weeks had suffered with the moßt terrible pains in her back and could get no relief. He says :—" After using the Pain Balm for a few days my wife said to m°, 'I feel though born anew,' and before' using the entire contents of the bottle the unbearable pains had entirely vanished and she could take up her household duties. He is. very thankful and hepes that all suffering likewise will hear of her wonderful recovery Th« valunble liniment is for sale by J. 8 Dodds, Chemist, Akaroa. Frkjhtfui. Railway Accident—The Baltimore' Ohio express, while travelling at the rate of 65 miles an hour, oollided with a local train at Gdkceland, New Jersey. One hundred passengers in the latter were killed or injured. ".The wreckage ignited, and the in ijority of the injured were incinerated. Many who were pinned by the debris begged to be killed.
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Bibliographic details
Akaroa Mail and Banks Peninsula Advertiser, Volume LIII, Issue 2746, 3 February 1903, Page 4
Word Count
410Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Akaroa Mail and Banks Peninsula Advertiser, Volume LIII, Issue 2746, 3 February 1903, Page 4
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