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The Late Mr Tollemache.—The Australian Worker remarks :—Tollemache, an absentee New Zealand stationholder, is just dead. He was always very wealthy and always very mean. The Government has received from his estates £35,000 as legacy duty. He was the owner of many stations, and in the early days tramped from one to the other on foot to save horseflesh. He was so miserly he wouldn't employ a washerwoman. It was a common sight for travellers to see him washing his shirt or socks (without soap) in a roadside creek. He also managed to rake up enough old clothes from the deserted hut after shearing to last him all the year round. He is now, j)crhaps, in kingdom come, tooting on a harp.

The best medicine known is Sander & Sons' Eucalypti Extract. Test its eminent powerful effects in coughs, colds, influenza ; the relief is instantaneous. In serious cases, and accidents of all kinds, be they wounds, burns, scalding 1 , bruises, sprains, it is the safest remedy—no swelling —no inflammation. Like surprising effects produced in croup, diphtheria, bronchitis, inflammation of lungs, swelling, Sec, diarrhoea, dysentery, diseases of the kidneys and urinary organs. In use at hospital and medical clinics all over the globe ; patron ised by His Majesty the King of Italy; crowned with medals and diplomas at International Exhibition, Amsterdam. Trust in this approved article and reject all others. The Fruits of Labor. What the workers —and especially the poor and the weary and the fallen among them, have a right to expect from the ministers of all religions, the one thing that will make any impression on their hearts and imaginations, is, remarks Truth, that the clergyman shall definitely and finally take up the cause of the masses against privilege, monopoly, tyranny—the unjust division of the fruits of labor. Every Christian minister, by the mere fact of his being a Christian minister, ought to be an agitator, a demagogue in the true sense of the term, a leader and even an inciter of the people against all wrongs. It is in the cottages, in the parks, in the slums, even in the dens of vice, that he ought to find his place, not in the house of the broad-acred lord or the comfortable suburban residence of the well-to-do merchant. In every struggle for the increase of the people's rights, liberties, and enrichment, the minister of every creed ought to be counted on with certainty to be on the popular side. If no other leader can be found to begin a labor struggle, he ought to come forward. But, until he has put the loaves and fishes along with Satan behind him, the parson will be found where he mostly is at present, barracking for the holy trinity of &.s.d. Holloway's Pills. Nervous Irritability.—No part of the human machine requires more constant supervision than the nervous system—for upon it our health — and even life depends. These Pills strengthen the nerves and are the safest general purifiers of the blood. Nausea, headache, giddiness, numbness, and mental apathy yield to them. They relieve in a summary manner those distressing dispeptic symptoms, stomachic pains, fulness at the pit of the stomach, abdominal distension, and regulate alike capricious appetites and confined bowels —the commonly accompanying signs of defective or diminished nerve tone. Holloway's Pills are particularly recommended to persons of studious and sedentary habits, who gradually fall into a nervous and irritable state, unless some such restorative be occasionally taken.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TEML18930420.2.16

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Temuka Leader, Issue 2492, 20 April 1893, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
575

Untitled Temuka Leader, Issue 2492, 20 April 1893, Page 3

Untitled Temuka Leader, Issue 2492, 20 April 1893, Page 3

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