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Holloway's Pills, —Nothing better.—-These Invaluable Pills exert a greater and more beneficial influence over nervous disorders than any other medicine. Their mode of action is thoroughly consonant with reason —they completely purify the blood, relieve both head and stomach of all faulty functions, and expel all oppressive accumulations from the bowels. With the blood purified, and all poisons purged from the system, regularity must prevail throughout the body. Aches and pains must cease; healthful energy must supplant weariness, and the shaky nerves must regain their wholesome tone. A course of these Pills eradicates low spirits, nervous excitability, hysterics, neuralgic twitches, and other derangements dependent on nervous maladies, which every considerate person may thus certainly and safely ■remove. 1899 The Patea correspondent of the Wanganui Chronicle, writing on the 13th inst. says that a man named Do re, who had been left in the bush after the disastrous engagement at Te Ruaruru, had come into camp at Waihi that morning, very much exhausted, having been without food all tbe time he was in the bush. He had feigned death when the natives came up to him, showing sufficient nerve not to call out when they twisted his broken arm. He states that while he was hiding in the bnsh he heard the natives dragging two wounded men into the pah—-one he recognized by his voice to be Corporal Bussell, of the Taranaki Volunteers; he heard him say, ' Why don't you kill me at once, you wretches.' The other was calling out in broken Maori, and he could j not understand what he said. When, as he supposes, they had reached the pah, there was a great shouting and yelling, and soon after he saw a great deal of smoke, as if large fires were being made, and then he heard the most dreadful screams. There is too much reason to fear that these poor men were roasted. The population of Victoria on the 3tith of Juno last, is stated to have been - $20,1*48.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NEM18680919.2.6

Bibliographic details

Nelson Evening Mail, Volume III, Issue 223, 19 September 1868, Page 2

Word Count
332

Untitled Nelson Evening Mail, Volume III, Issue 223, 19 September 1868, Page 2

Untitled Nelson Evening Mail, Volume III, Issue 223, 19 September 1868, Page 2

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