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DO YOU SUFFER! ARE YOU AFFLICTED WITB INDIGESTION,, BACKACHE, TIRED AOHING LIMBS, LIVER COMPLAINT, LASSITUDE, OR Any complaints arising from an impoverished narvoup systehi 1 If so CLEMENTS TONIC IS A QUICK, PROMPT AND SURE CURE, ITDOEB NOT MERELY ALLAY -THE SIMPTOMS, BUT EFFECTS APERMAMENT AND POSITIVELY LASTING CURE. ASR Mrs D M'Lonke, Wakefield, N.Z,, who writes oil Mayllth, 1803 :-It eivea mo tho greatest of pleasure to testify to the good eifectß of your wonderful Clements Tonio. My complaint was indigestion accompanied by heartburn and windy spasms, which were my painful, leaving me very weak, unfitting mo for attending to my household duties, I got ono of your pamphlota from onr storekeeper, read its contents, and of people who had been cured by taking Clements Tonic, hope sprang up in my breast and I determined to give it atrial. I got some of it and its offeot has proved really wonderful, I also give it to my children when anything is the matter with them, in fact I keep it as a family medicine, When any of our children complain 1 at once consult you book, which just states their caso, two or three doses puts them all riqht. I recommend it to all my friends,—l remain, yours truly, D.M'Loako, W»kofield, N.Z,,

A PRETTY CONCEIT. a

The enormous sales of tho Waterbury have led firms who do not care for a steady \ turnover at a legitimate profit to explore the purlieus of the Continent for cheap inferior " tiokera"—we do net call them watches- ■, with whioh to "run tho Watcrbury." These l possess one vhtue only—that of showing the dealer a return of somo ISO per cent, on his £ outlay. That they should keep time is a matter of no moment, so long as they resemble the Waterbury in outward appear- i ance, style of casing, etc., with sufficient closeness to deceive a careless or unwary . purchaser, Firms doing this often say to us "What do we care; we can make five billings a watch, moro ou them then wo can on yours; and as to keeping time, well, our troubles about that." Buyers requiring " reliable watches can trust the Watcrbury, and tho publio requiring the coneot timo should see that they get it. Tho gents'or "] ladies' Waterbury, gold filled or in sterling J silver, arc handsome, inexpensive, and c durable; whilst tie nickel varieties are so n well known that they require no „ further recommendation, It is a pretty c conceit tor here and there a stray trader to , think his imports of the" Nebuchadnezzar," tho" Millenium," the" Gonbung," or seme 8 other specially titled monstrosity, has any " effoot on the Waterbury market, whilst for v every watch ha nervously orders over oi.e hundred Waterburys ore always afloat for New Zealand, The real strength of tho Watcrbury lies in its absolute reliability, in other words its absolute refusal to keep any- '- thing but the correct time, We sometimes Bee" tickers "—wo still bar them any other title —offered for sale which are really won.deiful combinations, They not only exhibit the whole of tho celestial bodies on . their faces, but keep time, or.profess to, tell v you tho state of tbe money market, tho o amount of any particular member's indebted- i ncss at Bellamy's, and tho name of the nest c Bank to reconstruct in Australia] Tho Waterbury does not do this, It simply keeps correct time and roes on doing so. ■ 1

Lady Majorle Gordon, daughter of lin the world. Sbauolweh'yeara of \Wte Willk Widk, a monthly magaI zlno for children.

MSITAGHOSTTWSm?] : Mrs H. H. Jennings lives at No, 211, Main Street, Bridgeport, and Miss Minnie Parrot ' boards vfith hoi, Tho bouse is, an old one, but in good order. One night early in , December (1891) the women locked all tho , doors and went to tho theatre, leaving not . a soul in tho house. They leit the gas burning, howover, in the front parlour. At j ' about halt-past eleven they returned, • and ' entered the house laughing and talking. , But as they went into the parlour the merry humour died out of them in a second. ' . Bight in the middle of the room stood a 1 ' dark man of gigantic stature Tho upper < i part of his face was concealed by a mask, I , his eyes gleaming through the eye-holes in it, His shirt-sleeves were rolled up, and in I one hand he carried a long, old-fashioned pistol. The women fled screaming from 1 the room, and when Mr Jennings came in i i five minutes later he found no one in the parlour and all the doors and windows . securely looked. What was it tho women saw? 1 1 " During a recent period of ill health," i writes an American friend, "I bad slept badly for several succesive nights, On tho , fourth of these nights about two o'clock, I was suddenly aroused from a doze • by what > sumed lik the calling of mi/' name ; and at I the foot of tho bed stood the image of my , mother jußt as she looked five years before, as ehe was leaving home to go on a journey on which she was killed in a railway disas- ' tor, I screamed and fainted. I was ! foolish enough to tell of it, and the local old women gossips said It was a summons | and I would never get well. Yes I did, and am in perfect health now. I believe that " vision came of my weak nerves, for I've i never seen it since, and it's more than three 9 years ago now." No doubt It wastho nerves. Why.thete's ' no ond to the tricks the nerves will play off ' on you when your system is out of condition, ■ 1 In March, 1890, it was, that Mrs Jane Fos- , ter, of Darracoit Road, Mesdown, Hants, wroto ns as follows ;-"I:m so dreamily nmmtii could not bear anyone in the room " with mo, yct-I did not wiah'them far away > in case I should call out for help. Ibis was ', in Jnne 1889, I slept wry badly, and in B tho morning felt little the better for having i gono to bed.' There was often a severe pain in my head and over my eyes, and I was i sick moat of the lime. My akin Was dry and yellow, and the stomach anirbowels felt X

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WDT18940106.2.13.1

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XV, Issue 4614, 6 January 1894, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,060

Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XV, Issue 4614, 6 January 1894, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XV, Issue 4614, 6 January 1894, Page 3

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