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The Minister of Mines, speaking at Hay, in New South Wales, recently, said that owing to the terrible drought last season* the number of sheep in that Colony this year was 0jdy.31,517,984, showinga decrease'of 5,81(1,465. Altogether the loss in stock in the one year, including loss in weight and quantity of clip, reached £4,242,791, 'which ‘had prejudicially affected the whole Colony. >■< , . . -mv . You Can Be H.U’pv if you will stop all your doctoring yourself iihd families with expensive doctors or cure-alls that do' only'harm, and use Nature’s simple remedies for all your ailments, you will} all be well and happy and save great expense. The greatest remedy for this, the great, wise, and good will tell you, is Hop Bitters. ' See. >•' At the departure of the N. S. Wales continent for the Soudan the other day, 2000 Volunteers formed a guard of honor, and the proceedings were Witnessed by fully 200,000 spectators. It "was the most enthusiastic and exciting scene ever beheld in the Colonies. Ilollow'ty's Pills are the medicine most in repute for curing the multifarious maladies which beset mankind when dry, sultry weather suddenly gives place to chilly drenching days. In fact, these Pills offer relief even if they fail of proving an absolute remedy in all the'distui bances of digestion, circulation, and nervous tone which occasionally oppress a vast portion of the population. Under the genial, purifying, and strengthening powers exerted by this excellent medicine the tongue becomes clean, the appetite improves, digestion 1 is quickened, and assimilation is rendered perfect. These Pills possess the highly estimable property of cleansing the entire mass of blood ; which in its renovated condition, carries purity, strength, and vigor to every tissue of the body. A Beautiful Painting. —Mr (4. G. Green, of Woodbury, New Jersey, U. S. A., is presenting to druggists and others in this country some very fine pictures in oil of his magnificent house and grounds and laboratory at that place. Mr Green is the proprietor of Boschee’s German Syrup" and Green’s August Flower, two very valuable medicines, which are meeting with great favor, the first as a remedy for Pulmonary complaints, ami the latter for Dyspepsia and disorders of the Liver, These preparations have attained an immense sale solely .on their superior merits, and are sold by all druggists throughout the world. ; The price is the same for each, 3s 6d per bottle, or sample bottles for fid. The sample bottles enable sufferers to prove their value at a trilling cost. Tho Ba*L and are never imitated or counterfeited. This is especially true of a family medicine, and it is positive proof tint tlio remedy imitated is of the highest value. As soon as it had been tested and proved by the whole world that Hop Hitlers was the purest, host, and most, valuable family medicine on earth, many imitations sprung up and began to steal the notices in which the press and the people of the country had expressed the merits of H. U., and in every way trying to induce suffering invalids to use their stuff instead,' expecting to make money on the credit and good name of H, H. .Many others started nostrums put up in similar style to 11. 15., with variously devised names in which the word “Hop” or “Hops” were used in a way to induce people to believe they were the same as Hop Bitters. All such pretended remedies or cures, no matter what their style or name is, and especially those with the word "Hop” or “Hops” in their name or in any way connected with them or their name, are imitations or counterfeits. Beware of them. Touch none of them. Use nothing but genuine American Hop Bitters, with a bunch or cluster of green Hops on the white label, and Dr Soule’s name blown in the glass. Trust nothing else. Druggists and Chemists are warned against dealing in imitations or counterfeits.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CROMARG18850324.2.24.2

Bibliographic details

Cromwell Argus, Volume XVII, Issue 832, 24 March 1885, Page 3

Word Count
654

Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 Cromwell Argus, Volume XVII, Issue 832, 24 March 1885, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 Cromwell Argus, Volume XVII, Issue 832, 24 March 1885, Page 3

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