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Tbe aborning season for native and imported game opened on tbe Ist instant. Shooters (says fche Wellington " Post ") might well bear in mind a fVw remarks made by Mr R. C. Bruce at a meeting of the Acclimatisation Society: — "I do hope that we mill ner6r descend t > tho level of che so-called sportsmen in the Old Oodqtry, who point with the greatest pride, inbued with the tpriit of * laughter, to the great number cf birds fallen to their guos on t'ue firsL day of the season. That is not sport in the true sense of tbe word as I understand it. . . Methods like these would only tend to estrange public feel* ing and sympathy from ouc efforts." (Hear hoar.) For Bronchial Cough, take Woods' Great Peppermint Cure is 6d and 2s 6d everywhere. No Opium in Chamberlain's Cough Remedy.— Many cough cures contain opium. The effect of this drug is to diminish secretion of. the mucus, and the relief afforded is only temporary. As soon as the effect of the opium passes off, the malady returns in a more severe form The system is also weakened and reniered more susceptible to cold. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy does not contain opium in any form. It iffords relief ancLleaves the system in a healthy condition. 'It always cures and cures quickly. R. Snodgrass $ Sans, Hardy-atreet sell it.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NEM19030505.2.21.7

Bibliographic details

Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XXXVII, Issue 93, 5 May 1903, Page 4

Word Count
225

Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XXXVII, Issue 93, 5 May 1903, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XXXVII, Issue 93, 5 May 1903, Page 4