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THE SUCCESS OF LABOR.

At the present time great changes are coining about in the social status of mankind. A man is not now-a-days considered a gud because his father was a clever usurer or merchant. It is becoming a recognised fact that all men are equal—as men—and have each the right to enjoy life's blessings to an equal degree. In the past it has always been the aim of the rich to grind down the poor, and as the latter had but one alternative —starvation, they were compelled to be thankful for what they could get. But now education is opening men's eyes to the fact that mankind could enjoy much more pleasure and comfort if such large shares of the worlds weatlh were not annexed by the few. The day of a great industrial revolution is at hand and a bright and better future is in store for us both socially and financially, and whilst paying attention to these great interests it is also essential to take particular care of our physical well-being. An allseeing providence has so constituted the human frame that the brain is immediately informed of any organic derangement; a simple headache is a sign that the liver is deranged, or that the nervous system" is weakened, which, if neglected, continues to decline; the nervous tissues waste away aud completely collapse, and a fatal termination frequently results. Miss F. "White, Auckland, writes : —I am thankful that Clements Tonic has been brought under my notice, and that it lias been°the means of restoring me to robust health. 1 never remember a day's sickness till I was about fifteen years of age; then I somehow commenced to lose my appetite ; my head ached, I was nervous, weak, pale, and languid. My parents were concerned about me, and consulted medical men one after another, who treated me for kidney disease and general debility. I only received very temporary benefit from the use of their remedies, and all the time I was getting weaker and weaker. One of my friends in Sydney, knowing how ill I was, sent me a couple of bottles of Clements Tonic. I had no belief in it, but thought it could do no harm. And as a drowning man ca tches at a straw, 1 was prepared to adopt a"" v means towards a recovery, and I am glad that I did get Clements Tonic. I took sixteen large botles, which is a pretty long course, but til? 1 ' doQS not matter. I would willingly have sixty, for it has cured me, and I am now quite well, and as strong as ever I was in my life, aud you are at liberty to publish the fact.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TEML18930513.2.18

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Temuka Leader, Issue 2502, 13 May 1893, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
453

THE SUCCESS OF LABOR. Temuka Leader, Issue 2502, 13 May 1893, Page 4

THE SUCCESS OF LABOR. Temuka Leader, Issue 2502, 13 May 1893, Page 4

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