Medical. /~VN_ EXPERIENCE OF MANY. Having experienced a great dial of • " Trouble l" from indigeition, so much so that 1 came nearly losing my Lite ! My trouble always came after eating any food— i However light, i And digestible. For two or three hours at a time I had to go through the moit - Exeruoiatlng pains, " And the only way I ever got" " Relief 1" , '. , . Was by throwing up all my stomach contained I ! ! No one oan conceive the pains that I had to go through until "Atiaitr ~ , • . I was taken! "So that for three weeks I lay in bed and Could eat nothing! ! ! . , , My sufferings were «o that I called two doctors to give me some>hing that would stop the pain. . Their efforts were no good to me. At last 1 heard a good deal '•About your Hop Bitten t And determined to try them." Got x bottle—in four hours I took the contents of One 1 ! t Next day I was out of bod, and have not seen a "Sick" H our, from the same cause, sine*. I have recommended it to hundreds of others. You have no such " Advocate as I am." Gkorob Kkkdall, Allston, Boston, Mass. DOWNRIGHT CRUELTY. To permit yourself and family to " Huff.r!" . . With siokness when it can be prevented and cured to easily With Hop Bitters II! PRO9ECTJTE THE SWINDLERS !! If when you call for American Hop Bitters (see green twig of Hops on the white label and Dr. Soule'e name blown in the bottle), the vendor hands out anything but American Hop Bitters, refuse It, and shun that vendor as you would a viper ; and if he has taken your money for anything else, indict htm for the fraud and sue him for damages for the swindle, and wo will pay you liberally for the conviction. i
Ten thousand trees planted at Waerengi, by the unemployed. The Government are to be highly commended for tbeir thought!ulness ai to the future welfare of the colony. It is a serious reflection that at the present rate at which our forests are disappearing, those monarch trees will be gone in a few years, and with them a grand source of wealth and industry ; but tlthough a generation will pass away before the plantations m»y be of much valne, still it is a step in the right direction. The Government? of France, Germany, and Italy have had the subject under consideration and are assiduously endeavouring to replace that which has been so ruthlessly destroyed. How charming is the effect of trees in our streets. What would the Boulevards of Paris be without them 7 They »ro the Frenchman's pride and delight. Beneath their shade he smokes his cigarette in peace and happiness, fanned by the gentle breeze and screened from the heat of the day. Happily we have in Auckland some lovely spots where Nature is to be seen in all her beauty. For Instance, standing opposite Sydenham House, and looking up Grey-street, tbe long avenue ot young trees deckea in their luxuriant foliage is oharminig indeed, and on the richt the large and magnificent display of tweeds in e/«ry variety of shades aad colour at Meisn A. WoollamaandCo.'s window completes the picture. Suits ent in tbe very latest styles Irora 50s. Open from eight a.m. to eighi p.m. to welcome our kind patrons. Vanity Fair Oigsrettea have many ad* mini*.
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Herald, Volume XXIII, Issue 7791, 10 November 1886, Page 3
Word Count
565Page 3 Advertisements Column 4 New Zealand Herald, Volume XXIII, Issue 7791, 10 November 1886, Page 3
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