Business Notices AUTUMN AND WINTEK, 1886. ARRIVAL OF NEW GOODS EX S.S. COPTIC WE have now opened up Shipments of our New Seasons TWEEDS, WORSTED COATINGS, OVERCOATINGS & CLOTHS. The Latest and moat fashionable designs have been selected. Our Horne buyer writes: “These Goods are of exceptionable value, owing to the low price of wool’* and our patrons may rely upon getting the benefit of the j e bargain?. TWEED SUITS from £3 10s. Patterns and system for self measurement sent on application. JONES AND ASHDOWN, THE EAGLE TAILORING ESTABLISHMENT 12 I . \MH T D is' QUA Y P. HAYMAN &CO. WHOLESALE JEWELLERS, AND O 386 -A- C 3 CS O MERCHANTS, L A m-bJt o'n • Q tj at, Wellington. 669 REMEMBER THIS IF YOU AUK SICK. IE you are sick, Hop Bitters will surely aid Nature in making you well again when all else fails. If you are comparatively well, but feel the need of a grand tonic and stimulant, never rest easy till you are mad© a new being by the use of American Go’s Hop Bittebs. If you are costive or dyspeptic, or are suffering from any of the numerous diseases of stomach or bowels, it is your own fault if you remain ill, for Am. Co.’s Hop Bittebs are a sovereign remedy in all such complaints. If you are wasting away with any form of Kidney Disease, atop tempting Death this moment, and turn for a cure to American Co.’s Hop Bittebs. If you are sick with that terrible sickness, Nervousness, you will find a 4t Balm in Gilead ” in the use of American Co.’s Hop Bitters. If you are a frequenter, or a resident of a miasmatic district, barricade your system against the scouxge of malarial, epidemic, bilious, and intermittent fevers.by the use of American Co.’s Hop Bittebs. If you have rough, pimply, or sallow skin, bad breath, pains and aches, and feel miserable generally, American Hop Bittebs will give you fair skin, rich blood, the sweetest breath, health and comfort. In short, they cure all diseases of the stomach, bowels, blood, liver, nerves, kidneys, &c., and £SOO will be paid for a case they will not cure or help, or for anything impure or Injurious found in them. That poor, bedridden, invalid wife, sister, mother or daughter, can be made the picture of health by a few bottles of American Hop Bitters, costing but a trifle. Will you let them suffer? Cleanse, Purify and Enrich the Blood with AMERICAN HOP BITTERS, And you will have no sickness or suffering or doctors’ bills to pay, 03*366 if the name of Dr Soule is blown in every bottle, if not it is counterfeit. 2 NOW COMMENCED -j^-EW IN THE yrlE'A LAND A M AIL NEW NOVEL, ENTITLED THE TREASURE OF THORBURNS, BT JpKEDERICK JJOYLE, Author of “A Good Hater,” “On tne Border Land,” &c.; Contributor to Blackwood, Temple Bar, Gentleman’s Magazine, &c., and War Correspondent. We have much pleasure in announcing that a NEW and EXCELLENT STORY has been commenced in the columns of the New Zealand Mail by the above gifted and charming writer. By the sterling merit of his work Mr BOYLE has won hia way to eminence in varied fields of Literature. As War Correspondent, and traveller in climes on the borderland between civilisation and savagery, he has by personal observation obtained a large and varied knowledge of the world, and his graphic pen has enabled him to place before the public thrilling adventures and marvellous experiences in a style that has made hip work immensely popular. But Mr Boyle’s talents are of a versatile character, and as a writer of Light Literature he has fairly won a good place among the foremost Novelists of the day. In proof of the high estimation in which it is held, we may quote the late Charles Reade’s opinion of Mr Boyle’s Literary Work, In the preface to “ A Simpleton,” Mr Reade says : “ My principal obligation on this head is to Mr Boyle’s admirable letters, reprinted # in a delightful volume. Mr Boyle has a painter’s eye and a writer’s pen, and, if the African scenes in * A Simpleton * please my readers, I hope they will go to the fountain head, where they will find many more.” The Plot of the new Story is well conceived and admirably worked out. The secret of the Story, the hidden and much sought Treasure of Thorburns, is well kept to the end, There is plenty of movement in the Story, for while the central scene is laid in an English village, there is the customary touch of life' on the borderland of civilisation and savagery, for which Mr Boyle is so famous. leading characters in the Story are thoroughly interesting persons, and their conduct is delineated with the realism of life itself, There is plenty of sensation in it, but withal the Story is throughout a thoroughly good one, readable by the entire Family Circle. We, have, indeed, the fullest confidence that the Story now commenced will enhance Mr Boyle’s already brilliant reputation, and afford the liveliest satisfaction to our present Readers —an i also to those whom we hope will subscribe to the Mail, in the columns of which, for years past, the works of the pleading novelists of the day have found earliest expression. SS CRITICISMS ON NOVELS AND OTHER WORKS by Mb BOYLE. bis charming volume.’ —Court Journal, is a very entertaining volume.’ —Queen, !r Boyle’s talents are well known.* — be novel is exceedingly clever,’—Daily > Frederick Boyle can tell a good story, irld. . ... here is much pathos in the entire picture, iphic. _ bis very amusing book. - Times (from a iv of two-and-a-half columns long), ae of cleverest and most attractive stones tly published.’—Daily Telegraph, i would be difficult to mention a_ better l of stories than are contained in this il book.’—Echo. n unusually good story of love and adven- “ The Gohlen Prime ” should be widely I—Morning 1 —Morning Post. full and brilliant picture of life. As ive a thing of the kind as we have ever in fiction.’—Pall Mall Gazette, e writes with the ease of a trained stray- . The legends are woven with the skill practised hand. : The adventures read as as if they had actually happened.’—St. is’ Gazette. , Orders for the New Zealand Mail may be sent to any of our Town or Country agents, and to the Times and Mail Office, Lambton Quay, Wellington,
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Times, Volume XLVI, Issue 7778, 10 May 1886, Page 4
Word Count
1,070Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 New Zealand Times, Volume XLVI, Issue 7778, 10 May 1886, Page 4
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