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Hard Work and Easy Work

Thehe was a time very lately when Mr. Donato Arno'di found it hard to keep up with his work. Not that there to mow to be done than usual, but be didn t fed at all. «« was dull. He had no edge. If he could have afforded it he wou'd have knocked off altogether. But there 1 * where it is. Those of us who must work when we are sharp, must keep on working when we are dull. Necessity obliges. Expenses keep on, and so iw must ke^n on. , . .. Dear, dear, what a thing it would ba if we were always right up to the mark-eat ing, sleeping, and working with a rehsh. We might not bave money to burn even

then, but we should have some to saveWell let s hear Mr Arno'di. "At Easter, 1893," he says, "I began to feel as if a clould had come over me. I was weak, low, and tried. My tongue was thickly coated, and my mouth kept filling with a thick, tough phlegm. I could eat fairly wel , yet my food Bepmed to do me no good. After eating I had a feeling of heaviness at the chest and pain at the side. " I lost a deal of slepp, and night after nighc I lay broad awake for hours. I kept up wit : i my work, but I was so weak that I was scarcely fit f<t it This state of things naturally worried me and I consulted a doctor. He gave me medicinis that relieved me for a time, and then I went bad a? ever. " Seeing this, I saw another doctot who said my strmach, and perhaps other organs, were in a very bad way. I took his medicines, but they did not help me as I hoj :ed ■hey would. On the contrary I g t worse md worse. " Ac this lime cold, clammy sweats began •o break out over me, and as I walked my footsteps were uncertain. Sometimes my legs gave way under me, as if they were too weak to bear the weight of my body. " Not to trouble you wi h details, it may be enough to say that I was in this miserable condition month after month. In fact, I came to think I never should be any better. " Then I bethought me of a medicine I had heard highly spoken of — Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup. I said to myself, I will try it. lam thankful I did. After taking only two bottles all the pain was gone, and shortly I was well and strong as ever Since then I have had good health and worked without (rouble. When I feel I need it, I take a dose of the Syrup, and it keeps me right. " I am a surgical instrument maker, and think my illness was due to the quicksi ver that I worked amongst acting upon me when in a low state of health. At at events, I feel no ill effects now from the mercury I use in my business (Signed) Donato Arnoldi, 39, Spencer Street, Clerke^well, London, May Ist, 1894. No doubt lead, arsenic, mercury, and other poisons do often produce iujurions effects on those who habitually handle them; but the symptoms in Mr Arnoldi's case go to show that his ailment was indigestion and dyspepsia. This abominable disease generates plenty of poisons of its own, and has no need of help from outside j death-dealers, He wasn't able to eat much , nor to digest what he did eat, and his j nerves got weak and shaken because they ' were not fed. That accounts for his wake- ' fu'ness and for his uncertain footsteps. Take the ashes out of your furnace, ' c ear the draught , and light a fresh fire, ' and things are buzzing and humming : . directly. And that's what Mother Seigel's ' Syi up does for the human body, when it sets the digestive system in proper opera- < tion. ' ' J " MAKING BOTH ENDS MEET," is mther a difficult task in life with many but the expense of good cooking is reduced to a minimum by using the SUN BAKING POWDER, purer and cheaper than most oihnrs. Give it a trial. YOU CAN'T Have a cake and eat it too, but you can iiave your meat and keep it in the warmest of weather by using " Salraline," tho great j ;ood preservative. _ I The famous Victory Sewing Machine is • •he latest and most perfect of Sewing Ma- ! jhines. It is adapted for household and ; york-room nse, and is capable of perform- ; ing the most artistic fancy-work. The .irices vary from six guineas, and any of tho machines can be purchased oa tho , asiest of time payments from the New ; Zealand Clothing Factory, the local agency. ' A STEAM WHISTLE i Need rot run full blast all the lime to let j /on know that it is heard, and it is not accessary that we should be always adver- ; tising by noisy statements to buy ' ■ Salsa- ! : ine," the great food preservative, for once •ried always used, as it is tbe only reliable food preservative sold.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH18981108.2.22

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Manawatu Herald, 8 November 1898, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
857

Hard Work and Easy Work Manawatu Herald, 8 November 1898, Page 3

Hard Work and Easy Work Manawatu Herald, 8 November 1898, Page 3

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