WANTED-A sharp respectable boy to milk 2 Cows, and make him* self generally useful about house and stnbl'is. Comfortable home (at Groy town). Apply office of this paper, WANTED TO SELL.-Tweiity good health; ferrets; price 10/- each; A. Coy, Masterton. NOTO.-that tho Poverty r t nay eni'mc're' Co-operative Association, havo liye-Gmss Seed for sale, Apply to our Wairarapa agents.—Tho Wairarapa Farmers Co-operative Association, Limited, illasterton. : SIYEHSTON .Outfitter and kj • General Dealer, has removed to new premises in Queen Street, Masterton, lately occupied by It. (i. Williams and has had the shop littcd up in the most improved style, and is now prepared to serve his old friends and the public with the best goods for the New Year. WANTED.-Two General Servants fo.' country. Waiting engage* mont—Married Couplo (wifo good cook j man handy and generally useful), ftung Girl who wants situation as Servant in Masterton. Fued Wright's REGISTRY OFFICE, Hall Street, Masterton, WANTED TO SELL-.-ByH. Jones! Wood Carter, Upper Plain Road, second-class Firewood, good summer n oud, lis per cord, 4ft. lengths. Orders may bo left with Mr J. Wickcnß, Queer,* Btrrot, Mastorton, A CCOMMODATION for Boardera XX and Travellers j also board only; at Mrs (J. Young's Holly House, Dixon stroet, Masterton, Torms modorate. WANTED KNOWN-that J. M, Bruntou, Tailor, hasromoved to his private house in Opoki Road, Lans. downe. Orders ma\ also bo loft with Messrs Hood and Johnston, Confection* "'astertou. WANTED-The public to know that they can obtain puro lollies, made on the premises, at tho Caledonian Confectionery Works, Queoiwtreec, Masterton."; WANTED it Known, that I am now Removed to my now premises in Victoria-street, Wellington, off Cubastreet, and adjoininjr. the Grey Valley Coal Company's yards, and, as usual, I am prepared to Build or Repair any kind of Vehicles on the shortest notice and on the most liberal terms to suit customer) My prices aro tho lowest when tho work. manahip is taken into account. Ladies Phnitons a speciality. Jn stock— Buggies, Phtctons, Waggonettes, Dop Cartß, and Spring carte, cheap. 11. Bohan, Wellington Coach Factory, WANTED KNOWN- TAILORING! " TAILORING I James Webb, Mastertou's Greatest Tailor, is still to bo found at his old stand, NEXT THEATRE ROYAL. My old customers kno,v this fact, Now ones aro iuvitcd to come and try and they will bo <lf lighted, No fancy prices charged, but a saving ot l! 0- on every suit toall who patronise me, as I have tho largest stock of tweeds, coatings, serges, linings, trimmings, etc, and the largest staff of skilled and competent tradesmen in the Wairarapa, I also buy well which enables mo to quote prices for cash cheaper than wry other tailoring establishment in- the District. Como and give mo a trial early to avoid being disappointed in the great rush for Good Seasonable Suits, Everyone wanted to inspect my stock, No cliargo for admission, Attention and Civility given tc all.—Faithfully'yours to command.-JAM£S WEBB, tho Cheap Cash Tailor, Queen-Street Masterton, WANTED KNOWN - That wo supply the trade with lar«e or small quantities of tho best lollies a Wellington prices. Caledonian Confco tionory works, Queen-streot, Masterton jl W. COTiRELL & Co,, General JL' • Carriorsand Forwarding Agents, Wellington,—Cußtomhouse work of all kinds promptly and carefully attended to, Wo riot only cloar goods, but land them at customers' doors. Good storago accommodation, Furniture carefully removed,
LATE Shipment of French Do Laiucs Splendid Designs, for the prescn month. Te Aro House, Wellington. F BENCH Do Laines, best clesij veil for the season, prices unusunny low. To Aro House, Wellington. pIIENCH De Laines, best all woo X 1 quality and exquisite French desigus. To Aro House, Wellington. FRENCH Do Laines, Cream grounds with Heliotrope, Blue and Grey, IOJd yard. Te Aro House, Wellington. TTUIENGH De Laiucs, other designs an JL' prices, 1/-, 1/3 and 1/0 per yard, ad To Aro Houso, Wellington. WENCH De Laiucs, send for patterns I which will bo forwarded POST FHEE from Te Aro House, Wellmcton, "HOW SHALL Wk DECIDE THIS QUESTION?" Now, which is Ik worse—to have no appetite for your dinner, or to hove no dinner for gour appetite? There aro lots of people on tho one sido tho other of this question. When "good digestion waits on appetite and health on both," that is the ideal attitudo of a person towards his meals. But most of us aro not blessed in that way j wo either liavo 100 much food without an appetite, or a vigorous appetite 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 hnvn an appetito without a dinner, because, short of llie starvation line, a hungry man is a healthy man ; whereas a man who ought to cat and doesn't feel like eating, stands in need of' alterations and repairs," To illustrate. We recently received communication in which the writer says, "I was ofraid to eat," Did lie fancy his food was poisoned, or did his nature rebel against the nourishment lived on '! If tho latter, why ? Let him clear the mystery himself. He says, hi iho yeav 18S01 changed my work from railway boiler 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 their flavour j the palate, to put it in thot way, appeared to liuvc nothing to soy to them, Onu tuing was like another, nml none was good. My tongue was coated and furred, with a dark line down the middle und yellow fur round it, My breath was offensivo and my appetito poor, with pains through tho chest and shoulders, which were always right befoio I had eaten anything, Then I was greatly troubled with wind. It would gather so, it ielt liko ut ball in my throat, and act as though it would choke me." Wo cannot wonder that under these circumstances our friend failed to do justice to his meals. He adds that there was what he calls" a pricking sensation" at his heart, as though it were touched with somo sharp instrument, Then, again, at times he was attacked with spasms, tlio agony of which was so severe that tho sweat rolled off lr'm. "I dreaded,"ho says, "tho thought of eating, and many bm/j meal ham I made, flrlwatairaidlocut. "After a time I got into a low, weak, norvous condition, and felt miserable, as if something was going to happen, and this cavsed me to lose a good deal of sleep." What he means by the fear of " something going to happen" is, of course, the Joa: of somo calamity, such as the los 3 of his position, his own death, or the death o somebody dear to iiim. This was due as ho intiinotcs, to tho impoverished state of Ins blood (the life bearer), Ins unstrung nerves, and to thq brain enfeeblod by lack of nourishment, The night of this form of illness is always full of ghosts and goblins, tlio creatures of a restless and ungoverned imagination. "With great difficulty," he says, "I stuck to my work, for'l had a wife and family depending on me. So I struggled on, but what I sulfercd for over two years is past my powers of description, lam sure no one has suffered so much as I have one." In the latter statement he is umloubtedy wrong. One's own pain is one's own, and !b always harder to bear than is one's not lion ot "his neighbour's pain, Th ro is a countless multitude who Were all tip, while » going through the tame wretched expori enc.\ only we don't happen to come in louca | with them. Well.the writer lina'ly mentions lint the medical trea'ment had left him where it found him he chanced to read in a book cr..i 1 case exactly like his own having beencureo i by Mother Seigel's Syrup, "My wife," he says, " got mo a bottle at Mr Laugslnfi' I in VYoodlcsford, and after using its content ■ the ailment left me ond has never returned sines that fortunate day. I should liko tho whole world to know what it did forme. I have Ikoii employed by tho Midland Railway Company for eleven years. i , (Signed) " Geoboe Hunt, " Car Bottom Hoad, ■" Apperley Bridge, noar Leer's," We publish this by Mr Hunt's desiio, in order that part of the world' at least may.. no.W how. Uißnkful ho ie.and forwhnt rea, :; .
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WDT18930116.2.15.8
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Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XV, Issue 4320, 16 January 1893, Page 3
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1,415Page 3 Advertisements Column 8 Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XV, Issue 4320, 16 January 1893, Page 3
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