Building Materials. ON SALE AT THE WELLINGTON STEAM DOOR & SASH FACTORY, Red pine d.x>fs, all sizes Kauri do do Baltic pine do do Glass doors Window sashes, all sizes Timber — Baltic deal Kauri pine Cedar Flooring Lining, &c., &c. Mouldings, Architraves, Skirtings all sizes, or made to any pattern. Hearth stones Drain pipes Portland cement and plaster of Paris Doors and sashes mads to any size on the shortest notice. N.B. —Country orders punctually attended to GREENFIELD & STEWART. ON SALE AT THE CITY STEAM SASH & DOOR FACTORY— Kauri and totara sashes, all sizes Kauri, red pine, and totara doors Architraves, mouldings, skirtings Cornice mouldings, all sizes Flooring, lining and rusticated boarding Greenhouse lights Sashes and doors, made to any size on the shortest notice. Country orders punctually attended to. WADDELL, M’LEOD, & WEIR, Reclaimed Laud. ■( \N SALE BY THE UNDERSIGNED—u 10,000 lurch rails 2.000 heart of birch posts. JOHN ROBINSON, Upper Hutt. IGth June. Wines and SpiritsXT o -T ICE. IN Messrs PASCOE & CO, Browers, Wellington, :vre AGENTS for the following : Sfconne’s superlative tonic wine Do most agreeable tonic wine Do quinine champagne Do von’ll-do tonic wine Do Dr Moii v o f s sarsaparilla O L F ID S A R 0 M A TIC SCHNAPPS SCHIEDAM Registered under “Trade Marks” Act, 30 Vic, No 9. —The Purest Stimulant in the World. The extraordinary sale, wide-spread popularity, and wonderful results of Wolfe’s Schnapps prove indisputably that the introduction of a perfectly pure beverage is appreciated by the Australian public. ' The medical profession being the most competent in science, and responsible in society, of all others, to form a correct judgment of the medicinal and salutary properties of an article of this kind, would not give their unsolicited testimonials in special commendation of Wolfe’s Aromatic Schiedam Schnapps, were it a preparation of doubtful or even ordinary quality, nor unless they had proved its superior excellence and value in their own practice or experience. As a substitute for every other alcoholic restorative, not excepting the very best French Brandy now in use, none of which can compare with it in purity or renovating power, the proprietor has boundless professional testimony of its superiority, and therefore strongly recommends it as a substitute for such liquors in domestic and private use. As a means of preventing the disagreeable and often dangerous efforts produced upon the stomach and bowels by a change of water, or in the use of water containing an infusion of decayed vegetable matter, which so often produces that obstinate form of fever and ague which so frightfully undermines the constitution. Wolfe’s Axiomatic Schiedam Schnapps will be found absolutely infallible, while in cases of dropsy, gravel, obstructions of the kidneys, diseases i f the bladder, dyspepsia, flatulency of age and of infancy, and general debility, it is recommended most emphatically by the most distinguished members of the mediThe following reliable testimonials have # been offered by the Australian Press in recommendation of Wolfe’s Aromatic Schiedam Schnapps : “Sydney Morning Herald.”—“ln these days when alcoholic liquors are so largely consumed, and consumers are so much in doubt whether their systems are not being gradually impaired by adulteration, it is well that one at least of the popular beverages of the period is reliable as pure— that is Wolfe’s Aromatic Schiedam Schnapps. It is something to be assured by physicians and other of the scientific cognoscenti that we have in this article a genuine extract, which, taken in moderate quantity, and under ordinarily healthy conditions of body, affords a beneficial stimulus to the animal functions ; and, if taken in excess, leaves but a minimum of the inevitable evils of abuse. “ Town and Country Journal”—“ Wc have in these Schnapps a total absence of fusil oil, which, combined with the great purity of all ingredients whence :t is extracted, accounts for the unusually healthful and invigorating qualities which have already rendered this latest addition to the alcoholic list so justly celebrated.” “Brisbane Courier.” —The genuine article can be recognised by its mild and pleasant flavor, and its creating none of those disagreeable results that are apt to follow even the moderate imbibition of ordinary gin, evidently owing to the absence of fusil oil or noxious ingredients. It can be depended upon as pure, whilst other spirits procurable are generally adulterated. It may not possess all the virtues claimed for it, but certainly it is an alcoholic stilliulant better suited to this climate than any other in use. The Resident Physician of the Sydney Infirmary savs “ I have no hesitation in stating that I consider your Schnapps a most excellent stimulant and diuretic.” Government Analytical Chemist, Melbourne, says:— “ As a sample of Hollands gin I do not think it can be surpassed. It may be recommended for use in hospital and private practice, as a good aromatic stimu- • lant.” Packed in cases of one dozen quarts and two dozen pints. On sale by all wine and spirit merchants, hotel and storekeepers throughout the colony. Caution. —An injunction against the sale of a counterfeited article has recently been granted in the Supreme Court of New South Wales, under a penalty of .£30,090 ; and wo are instructed, with a view to protect the public, to-prosecute anyone offering for sale any imitation of the genuine brand. To avoid imposition we would suggest to the public the advantage of purchasing unopened bottles, packed in the original yellow wrappers with our name printed thereon in red letters. M. Moss and Co, Sydney, sole wholesale agents for Wolfe’s Aromatic Schiedam Schnapps. Sub-agents— Joseph Nathan and Co, Wellington. Publications. V 7 EW BOOKS, JUST RECEIVED and ON SALE IN BY THE UNDERSIGNED Taine’s History of English Literature, 2 vols, Tvlor’s Primitive Culture, 2 vols., new edition The Naturalist on the River Amazon, by U. W. Bates, Sid edition, with maps and illustrations Six Weeks in the Saddle, a Painter’s Journal in Iceland, by E, S. Walton In Strange Company, being the experiences of a Roving Correspondent; by James Greenwood, the Amateur Casual ” A History of Booksellers, the old and the new; by Henry Curwen, with portraits and illustrations The Friendship of Books, and other Lectures, by the Rev. F. D. Maurice The Coming Race, by the late Lord Lytton Russell’s Diary during the Xjast Great War The Statesman’s Year Book for 1574, by Fred, luartm Business, by a Merchant t A Critical Examination of the Gospel History Literature and Dogma, by Mathew Arnold Alv K-vlulu Prince, King, and Slave, a story from .. * ' Central Africa; by H. N. Stanley ' Brewer’s Dictionary Phrase and 1- able, new ana^rcvised edition . s' The Christian Year, quarto, presentation edition Farjcou’s Christmas Stories, in 1 vol.. viz.—j>!,ado o Grass, ” “ G olden Grain, ” and ‘ ‘ Bread/ana Cliccsc and Kisses” ( Wright’s History of Caricature and grotesque ra Literature and Art . . A Historv of Clubs and Club Life, by Jo mi limbs Wonders’of the Yellowstone Regions In the Rocky Mountains, by James Richardson Sahara and Lapland. Travels in the African Desert and the Polar World ; translated the French by Mrs. Cashel Hocy .... New Japan, the Land of the Rising S un, its annals during the past twenty years, recording the remarkable progress of the Japane.se in Western Civilization; by SamuelMossman, with maps Bceton’s Law Book, a practical compendium of the general principle? of English Jurisprudence Creasy’s History of the English Constitution Boileau’s Traverse Tables, new edition Threading My Way, twenty-seven ycUra of Autobiography; by Robert Dale Owen The Story of Goethe’s Life, by G. IT. Lewes The Pursuivant of Arms, or Heraldry, founded on facts, by J. R. Blanchd . The Artist of Collingwood, by Baron.na Camas From Patmos to Paradise, or Light on the 1 ast, the Present, and the Future; by Dr. »Cnmming Life of the Rev. William Anderson, L.L.D., Glasgow International Scientific Series, vols. i to S Nature Series, vols. 1,2, and 3 Science Primers, edited by Professors Huxley, Roscoe, and Balfour Stewart, vols. 2 to 5 LYON & BLAIR, (Successors to William Lyon.)
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Times, Volume XXIX, Issue 4137, 24 June 1874, Page 4
Word Count
1,320Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 New Zealand Times, Volume XXIX, Issue 4137, 24 June 1874, Page 4
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