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BUSINESS NOTICES. HENRY J. WALTER, Hotel Agent, " Valuator, &c. Cash advances obtained. Occidental Bottle Department, Manse street. 8a I AND TRANSFER ACT, 1870. C H. STREET, ( Licensed Land Broker. ROBERT GILLIES, Licensed Surveyor. MONEY TO LEND ON FREEHOLD SECURITY. Offices: Corner of Princes and Dowling streets. "LAND TRANSFER ACT, 1870." CONNELL AND MOODIE, LICENSED LAND BROKERS AND lm SURVEYORS. THE Undersigned are Purchasers of WHEAT, OATS, AND BARLEY. NEILL and Co., 22m Bond street. mHE UNDERSIGNED are PURCHASERS of GOOD OATS and WHEAT. W. & G. TURNBULL & CO. 13th December 1871. 14d YARROW AND HEDLEY'S SMALL STEAMERS & STEAM LAUNCHES, Built of Wood, Iron, or Steel. 23 feet long, seats for 8 persons, complete, from £145 30 feet long, seats for 14 persons, complete, from £195 37 feet long, seats for 20 persons, complete, from £245 43 feet long, seats for 30 persons, complete, from £300 50 feet long, seats for 60 persons, complete, from £050 &c. &c. &c. Steamers up to 45 feet in length can be transported on a ship's deck complete, and ready for immediate use on arrival. The above may be used for cosveving passengers, carrying cargo, or as tugs. The total working expenses of a steamer 43 feet long, amount to 15s a day in England; the consumption of fuel being about Ocwt., and a man and a boy the crew required. Paddle and Screw Steamers specially designed for river navigation, having a very shallow draught of, water. Machinery Supplied for Boats Built Abroad. YARROW and HEDLEY, Engineers and Builders, Isle of Dogs, Poplar, London Prospectuses may be obtained at the office of this journal. ROSSE AND BLACKWELL'S CELEBRATED OILMEN'S STORES, All Warranted of Superior Quality. Pickles, Sauces, Syrups, Jams in tins and jars. Orange marmalade, Tart Fruits, Dessert Fruits, " Ponsons," Lisbon Apricots and Peaches, Mustard, Vinegar, Fruits in Brandy and Noyeau, Potted Meats, and Fish, Fresh' Salmon, Oysters, and Herrings, Kippered Salmon and Herrings, Herrings a, la Sardine, Pickled Salmon, Yarmouth Bloaters, Blackwall Whitebait, Fresh and Findon Haddocks, Pure Salad Oil, Soups in pint and quart tins, Preserved Meats in tins, Peas, Carrots, Beans, and other vegetables, Preserved Hams and Cheese, Preserved Bacon, Oxford 1 and Cambridge Sausages, Bologna Sausages, Yorkshire Game Pates, Yorkshire Pork PaWs, Tongues, Game, Poultry, Plum Puddings, Lea and Perrins i Worcester Sauce. Fresh supplies of the above and numerous other table delicacies may always be had from most Storkeepers. I CAUTION. Jars and bottles shoidd invariably be destroyed when ; empty, to prevent tlie fraud of re-filling them with \ native productions. Goods should always be examined upon delivery, to detect any attempt at substitution of articles of inferior brands. Every Cork is branded with Crosse and Blackwell's name. CROSSH AND BLACKWELL, Purveyors to the Queen, SOHO SQUARE, LONDON. At the Paris Exhibition of 1867, Three Prize Medals were awarded to Crosse and Blackwell, for the marked superiority of their productions. THE STEAM ENGINE TRIALS of the ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND, Oxford 1870. The FIRST PRIZES of this show were again awarded to CLAYTON AND SHUTTLEWORTH, viz :— First prize for Horizontal Fixed Engine of 10 h.p. ; First Prize for Steam Engine with Boiler combined. At the previous Trials of Steam Engines at Bury, 18G7, Clayton and Shuttleworth took ALL THE FIRST PRIZES FOR ENGINES:' also a Prize of £15 for Thrashing Machines, and the Society's Silver Medal. Clayton and Shuttleworth have received First Prizes at all Trials pf ■ the Royal Agricultural Society . of England at whicli they have competed since 1849. N.B. All the principal Makers of Portable Engines, &c, compete for this Society's prizes, being the only trials in Great Britain conducted by competent and ' impartial Engineers, and where the capability and value of each Engine are thoroughly tested by practic cal experiments. C. and S. therefore do not com- " pete at any other Shows. PORTABLE ENGINES, from 4 to 25-horse power, THRASHING MACHINES. Single, Double, and Treble Blast, with Patent Rolled Steel Beater Plates, and all other recent improvements. Grinding Mills, Saw Benches, Straw Elevators, &c. CLAYTON and SHUTTLEWORTH, Stamp End Works, Lincoln ; 78, Lombard street, London ; and Tarleton street, Liverpool. Catalogues on application, or free by post. ' -' MEDICAL. "VTERVOUS DEBILITY—A Gentle- ', TLrk man, after years of suffering, has discovered a simple means of self-cure. He will be happy to forward the particulars to any sufferer on receipt of a Directed Envelope and Postage in New Zealand Stamps. Address—Mr Horace Bromley, Post Office, Melbourne. 280 DR. D E JONG H'S (Knight of the Order of Leopold of Belgium) ,f LIGHT-BROWN COD LIVER OIL, s Unequalled for [. PURITY, PALATABLENESS, AND EFFICACY h Prescribed by the most eminent Medical Men as i, The safest, speediest, and most effectual remedy for s Consumption, Disease of the Chest, and Debility, i, " I have every reason to be satisfied with the benei- ficial and salutary effects of Dr De Jongh's Cod Liver i, Oil."—Sir Joseph Olliffe, M.D., Physician to the -, British Embassy at Paris. s "So impressed am I with the superiority of Dr De i Jongh's Light-Brown Cod Liver Oil, that I invariably s prescribe it in preference to any other."—Dr Lawrence, Physician to H.R.H. the Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. " Dr De Jongh's Light-Brown Cod Liver Oil has the rare excellence of being well borne and assimilated by stomachs which reject the ordinary oils."—Dr Edgar Sheppard, Physician to the Colney Lunatic Asylum. Sold only in capsuled Imperial half-pints, pints, and - quarts, by all Chemists, Druggists, and Storekeepers.. Sole Consignees, ANSAR, HARFORD, & CO., 77, STRAND, LONDON. j' A PARADOX. ' TO SUFFERERS. NERVOUSNESS: ITS NATURE -DI AND CURE. WHAT IS NERVOUSNESS ? Various answers might be given to tliis question, according to the constitution and knowledge of the individual. Strong healthy persons, whether medically educated or not, generally regard nervousness as - more or less an "imaginary complaint"; it is sometimes only believed to be real when the patient is found to be dyiue or dead. The best answer to tho question, probably, is this —nervousness is an unnatural condition of the nervsus system. Sometimes this unnatural state is accompanied with considerable i_ bodily weakness, loss of flesh and loss of strength ; but '" in most cases there is in the earliest stages of the dis- & order no outward sign of weakness. Tlie sufferers are 5" found in both sexes; they often have the bloom of >- health upon the cheek ; they are surrounded by kind friends, yet existence to them has no charms, for they feel that they cannot enjoy it. Without intending it, they annoy other people about the merest trifles ; if they encounter some person unexpectedly they feel g confused, afraid, and alarmed; the heart beats viot- lently, the hand shakes when writing, and the whole i. frame at times experiences a complete tremulousness. r. The intellect also is sometimes clouded, the memory .. fails, the judgment becomes indistinct, the will capria cious and undecided, the taste vitiated, the imaginae tion broods upon unpleasant topics, the spirits are o either very low or very excited, the'ordinary duties of c life become burdensome, society is shunned, and business neglected. A Strange Spectacle.—lt is certainly strange, but i not the less true, that perfectly sane "persons in the prime of life, with firm step and healthy countenance, may occasionally be met with, who, in spite of posessing all the advantages of education, religion, ample means, and kind friends, nevertheless are victims of the nervousness above described ; unhappy themselves, they render other people unhappy. Why is this ? What cause has operated to change the cheer- \ ful, active, obliging, unsuspecting, and uncomplaining '. youth into the unhappy, drowsy, listless, suspicious, and gloomy misanthrope ? Many causes, or one cause ,f only, may operate to produce this sad state ? tho cause may be oithcr mental or physical, or both combined. n Attempts to cure nervousness by means of ordinary tonics have so frequently proved fruitless, that tlie leading physicians now for the most part recommend hygienic means, such as exercise in the open air, regular habits, sea bathing, the cold bath, friction; change of air and scene, as in travelling. If all these fail, as they often do, what is to be done ? The answer.will be found by carefully perusing the following work. Ninth Edition, Post Free Is 4d. '. NERVOUS DEBILITY: ITS CAUSE AND CURE, With plain directions for perfect restoration to health, i- Applications for a copy of the above worit must bo accompanied by tho amount in New Zealand or other stamps, also, a properly directed envelope. Address—. CHARLES SENNET, Agent. ' Brooklyn House, Flagstaff Gardens, Melbourne, i

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ODT18720420.2.25.6

Bibliographic details

Otago Daily Times, Issue 3184, 20 April 1872, Page 4

Word Count
1,415

Page 4 Advertisements Column 6 Otago Daily Times, Issue 3184, 20 April 1872, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 6 Otago Daily Times, Issue 3184, 20 April 1872, Page 4

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