Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

NEWS IN BRIEF

We wish to advise clients that only bottles bearing our special price label can be accepted. No others will be taken, a s we are overstocked. J. Wrigley Chemist.* Sixty-three acres of land at Matamata has been sold for £BO an acre. Congoleum, squares and by the yard.—Good selection at Phillips Furniture house, Strand.* A Pole, still living at the age of 132, claims to be the only survivor of Napoleon’s armies. Special neuralgia mixture Sufferers will find this mixtue particularly good. Price 2s 6d bottle. J. Wrigley, Chemist.

A line of this season’s Wairarapa lambs was sold at 18s 6d per head.

The best way to relieve headache is to have a bottle of our Special Headache Mixture and take a dose when required. Price 2s 6d bottle. J- Wrigley, Chemist. At the Waipawa Magistrate’s Court a settler was fined £25 for failing to destroy rabbits. When buying bread be sure to get the most wholesome. Try F. H. Hammond.*

Leeds proposes to use its tramways to transport coal straight from the collieries to the large works in the city.

A half ton truck in perfect order must be sold by F, N Christian and Co. Enquire at once re price and terms. * A Washington cable says President Harding has signed a Bill preventing profiteering in land.

tor Uronohial Cougha take Woods Great Peppermint A Sydney message says the total wheat area sown this season is 3, 868,000 acres over last year.

SANDER AND SON’S PURfe VOLATILE EUCALYPTI EXTRACT.

Her Excellency Lady Jellicoe left last week on a visit to, Australia. For Influenza, take Woods Great Peppermint Cure.

According to a Washington cable President Harding has signed the Borah Bill, authorising the appointment of a commission to investigate the coal industry. SANDER AND SON’S PURE VOLATILE EUCALYPTI EXTRACT. The donkey is the longest lived amongst our domestic animals. Woods Great Peppermint \uro For Coughs ami Golds, iiev\r fails Ely Cathedral ( England ) has the only Gothic dome in existence. Twenty years experience with ShaiTand’s “Moa” Brand Egg Preservative lias proved it to bo absolutely reliable. The eggs are kept fresh and sweet- without the slightest smell or disagreeable taste. Packed in small tins, also | gal.. I gal., and 4 gal. ti"' 1 A man cannot be accused legally of libclli'tTg his wife You should preserve your oggs in Sharland's “Moa” Brand Egg Preservative. Twenty years’ experience has proved it to he reliable. It is economical., it costs 3-8 d to Id dozen eggs according to size package you buy. Sold in small tins sufficient for 14 dozen eggs, also in 1, 4 gallon tins. One gallon suf-fer-r.f h r 180 dozen eggs. 3 There are about forty varieties of oster willows known to botanists. GIVE CHID REN PULMONAS. At the first sign of a child’s cough get a box of Puhnonas. A child's delicate lungs are very easily injured -through constant coughing but Pulmonas will bring almost immediate relief. As the Pastilles are sucked they give off medicinal vapours which penetrate the air passages and by their tonic action heal the inflamed membranes. Pulmonas are pleasant to the taste and are much, easier to give to children than unpalatable liquids. One at bedtime ensures freedom from night coughing. Keep a box in the house j always. From chemists 1/6 and 2/6 ! or post i'rfd on receipt of price from j STALEY BROS., 61 Queen Street, Auckland.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/BOPT19220925.2.23

Bibliographic details

Bay of Plenty Times, Volume LI, Issue 8098, 25 September 1922, Page 3

Word Count
569

NEWS IN BRIEF Bay of Plenty Times, Volume LI, Issue 8098, 25 September 1922, Page 3

NEWS IN BRIEF Bay of Plenty Times, Volume LI, Issue 8098, 25 September 1922, Page 3