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WOOL. SALES. THE NEW ZEALAND LOAN AND MEftOANTILE AGENOY COMPANY (Limiim), will hold their TIIIUD WOOL SAM OF THE SEASON ' atthoir ■; ; ; : > WAREHOUSES, FEATHERSTON Si. WELLINGTON, Oil FRIDAY, 10th FEBRUARY, Liberal Cash Advances (freo of commission) on all parcels sent in (or ealo hero or for shipment to London, Woolpacka, Cornsacks, Seeds, Fencing Wire ond oil descriptions of Station and Farm Requiaitics supplied at lowest cur- , rent rates. WALTER G. FOSTERJ Manager. F. 0. LEWIS, Travelling Agent, Maslerton. Railway Boarding House, , Hall Street, Masterton. ' tue best is table jn the district. Board and lodging £1 per week, paid in advance. ALL MEALS, ONE SHILLING BEDS, ONE SHILLING Smoking and Beading Rooms, PriwU Sitting Boom for Mies, GOOD STAELING. PADDOCKS PIANO FOR HIRE. This Really Magnificent Instrument can ba hired for theatrical performances, operas, concerts, and dance;, at a more reasonable rate than any other piano for biro in Masterton. Call and test the tone befot'o hiring elsewhere. FRED. WRIGHT. MescriM £14§0,000 OHffiNIX ASSURANCE Company JC of London. Established 1782, losses paid, £18.000,000. R. M. Simpson, general manaper for New Zealand. District manager—H. H, Welters. FORJSALE. SECTIONS 93 and 100, Maßterton, ,J as sub-divided into convenient b-'ilding allotments, with frontages tc Church Street and Bannister Street. ' Full patticulaia of thenbovo lands can bo obtained from Wm.G. BEARD, Foi the Executors of thp late Emma Joans. MASTERTON MASONIC LODGE, N019,N.Z,0. THE regular raorthly meeting of the above Lodge will be hold to-night, "WEDNESDAY, 11th January, 1893, at 8 p.m. in tho Lodge Room, Bannister Street, , Business, Raising, Election of Officers and General. By Command of W.M. W. SELLAR, Secretary. & $ \ EKETAHUNA KOAd'bOABD. ROAD FORMATION. mENDERS will close at the Road 1 Board OlHoe, Eketahuna, at 7 p.m. on SATURDAY, January 14th, 1893, for : 80 Chains Formation, Parkyille. 33 Chains Formation, Parkyille, Plans and specilicalions may be seen at Mil JONES' Store and tho Road Board Office, Eketahuna. The lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. W. BAYLISS, Clerk. Eketahuna, 6th January, 1893. '•HOW SHALL Wt DECIDE THIS QUESTION ?" Now, which is Ik worst-to have no appetite for your dinner, or to toe no dinner for your appetite?

Thero arc lots of people on the one sido _ the other of this question. When "good digestion waits on appetite and health on "both," th at is tho ideal attitude of a person towards his meals. But most of us aro not blessed in that way; we either have too much food without an appetite, or a vigorous appetito without enough to satisfy it, Different folk will answer this question differently, yet the common sense of it is that, within reasonable limits, it is better to have an appetito without a dinner, because, short of the starvation line, a hungry man is a healthy man; whereas a man who ought to eat and doesn't feel like eating, stands in need of' alterations and repairs." To illustrate, Wo recently received a communication in which the writer says, "I was afraid to eat," Did ho fancy his food was poisoned, or did his nature rebel against the nourishment lived on ? If tho latter, why? Let him dear tho mystery himself. He says, in tho year 18891 changed my work from railway borlo'r to signalman, I had been signalman twelve months, and then all at once, so to speak, I did not feel myself, My mouth tasted bad, so that ordinary articles of diet seemed to loose thoir flavour j the palate, to put it in that way, appeared to have nothing to say to them, One thing was like another, and none was good, My tongue was coated and furred, with a dark lino down tho middle and yellow fur round it, Jfy breath was offensive and my appetite poor, with pains through tho ohest and ehonldors, which were always right boforo I had eiten anything, Then I was greatly troubled with wind; It would gather so, it felt like a ball in my throat, and act as though it would choke me." We cannot wonder .that under these oiroumstances our friend failed to do justice to his meals, Ho atttla that thoro was what he calls" a pricking sensation " at his heart, as though it were touched with some sharp instrument. Then, again, at times lie was attacked with spasms, tho agony of -which was so aovero that tho sweat rolled off him. " I dreaded," he says," tho thought of eating, mi many a semly meat-have I made, or lvms afraid to ml, "After a time I got into a low, weak, nervous condition, and felt miserable, as if something was going to happen, and this caused me to lose a good doal of sleep," What ho means by tho fear of "something going to happen" iB, of course, the fear of some calamity, such as the loss of his position, his own death, or tho death o somebody dear to him. This was duo as he intimates, to the impoverished state of his blood (tho life bearer), his unstrung nerves and to the brain enfeebled by lack of nourishment, Tho night of this form of illness is always full of ghosts and goblins, the creatures of a restless and ungoverned imagination, "With great difficulty," ho says, "I stuck to my work, for I had a wife and furmly depending on me, So I Btrucgled on, but what I suffered for over two years is past my powers of description. lam sure no one has suffered so much as I have dono" In the latter statement ho is undoubted? wrong, One's own poin is ono's own, and is always harder to bear than is ono's no lion of lus neighbour's pain. There is a countless multitude who were all the while going through the same wretched experience, only we don't happen to oome in touch with them. Well,t .he writer finally mentions that a medical reatinenfc had left him wherebo found him he ohanbed to read in a book one case exactly like his own having been cure by Mother Seigel's Syrup, «My wife," he says, "got me a bottle at Mr liangstaffs in Woodlesford, and after using its contents the ailment left ine and has nevor returned since that fortunate day. I should like the whole world to know what it did for me I have been employed by the Midland Mway Company for eleven years. (Signed) "GkobobHcht, '' "Carßbtto'mßoad,' '„; ,", A PP el % Bridge; neArieWs."--wopublish'thisty'Mr Hunt's desiro, in order that part of tho world at'least may p ow how thankjul he is'jttd lot what ro»

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WDT18930111.2.15.4

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XV, Issue 4316, 11 January 1893, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,087

Page 3 Advertisements Column 4 Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XV, Issue 4316, 11 January 1893, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 4 Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XV, Issue 4316, 11 January 1893, Page 3

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