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Th«GftM*7Mr. A. 8. FAHBtf, (ar a sovsMW unmn.) When at certain seasons we see reviews oi the year—mere d«ll oatalogues of what are called publio areata dead and gone even for such life as there aver wae in them—ws contrast suoh little budgets with that real review of the year which is unknowable, save that every individual may.review hit own infinitesimal part of it, and if he considers it expedient to make known hie affairs to the world a reporter"* services are called into requisition, as was done in connection with Mr. John Edward Fahey, of No. 3ft Grange-street, Dnnedin, who aaid t—"About eighteen months agony health was in a shockingly bad state, and had been for a good while before that. I was suffering from an obstinate derangement of the inter nal organs, and matters nad arrived at such an unwelcome stage that I could not get my food to digest. The misery I experienced through that troable was greater than I can find words to describe. The work I was doing was not by any means light, And by the time I got home at night I was fairly done, the feelings of exhaustion being ao intense that I oottld have almost dropped with fatigue." vary soundly when la thai MStdttion f '\suggeated the scribe. " Well, that was on* thing I really could do, for exhausted nature could not hold out against any dasire I might have had to keep awake. Yes, I oonld sleep right was that it did not refresh me in any way, lor when I awoke in the mornings I felt dead tired, and for the first part of the day I could feel sensations like aches running through my limbs. One o! the worst features of my sickness was the despondency which seized me. I looked upon life a* an insupportable burden, at if there was nothing but desolation all round. There was not one pleasant thought in my mind to build my. telf up with, and after meals 1 felt particularly drowsy and uncomfortable." " What forms of discomfort did you have, Mr. Fahey!" "I had a terribly heavy feeling in my between the shoulders. Often I had giddy owns which made me quite useless for awhile, and my sight seemed togetbesmeared' in some way or other. Black specks appeared at times before my eyeo, which felt ■ngs, and I had an awfully bitter taste besides, and a coating ov«r my tongue When I walked or stooped I found that the aches across my loins got more seveie than what they usually were, and the least exertion or excitement oaussd my nerves to shake terribly, for my nervous system was very much weakened. My appetite was getting poorer and poorer every day, bu» whether I ate muoh or little it made no difference to the sense of fulness in the stomach whtah followed my meals, and it was quite evident that every particle of food fermented. Some days I could hardly hold mv head up for the excruciating aches thai afflicted me, and I was just about as weak and miserable aa a man oottld bo when I hit upon a medicine that changed my lif« entirely." " What mediolas was tfenfc!" "It was Clements Tonic, and * grsiwl medicine it was, too. It was all ft matter *J luck, and came about In this way. One evening I was reading ft Clements Tonic testimonial to ray wife, and when I got to the end of it I said: * What do you say if I give it a trial T' An affirmative answer was given, so I bought some Clements and by she time I had finished with that remedy I was twice the man I had been. My health was mads so perfect by Clements Tonic that I think no house should be without it. It began by soothing my nerves, and after several days' treatment the weary sensations were not present when I got in in the mornings, neither was the vile taste, nor the coating on my tongue. Really, \ was spellbound with amassment to find that my appetite had come back already, and by. and-bye the flatulence was done with ; so wersrthe depressing headaches, giddiness, and & v pains about my onset and shoulders. It seen>ed like a happy &eam, bat it was better than that. It was a positive fact tha* Clements Tonio had ourtd me, and now you can publish thee* words of twtji in any form yon please." statqtort aaoußAnox. I, Johh Ebwisb F*BIT, of Ke. 89 Grange-street, Dunedln, In the Colony o( He» Zealand, do solemnly and sincerely deolare that I have carefully read tin annexed dooument, consisting 0» two (olios, and consecutively numbered (rem oes to two, an* that, it contains and I* a true and faithful account o( my illness and ours by Qlensßts Tonte; and also oontains my full penalssSoa te pabUshJut any war my statements—which I gtoe voluntarily, without receiving any payment( and I make this solemn declaration consoleotionily believing the same to w true, and by virtue o( ths previsions of an Act of »• General Assembly o( Nsw Zsataod, latitats* "She Justices of Peace Aot, 1881" Dtolartd at Dunedln, this sixteenth day of March, mc thousand nine hundred and thws, before me, WILLIAM DICKSON, J.P.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AHCOG19060131.2.12.5

Bibliographic details

Alexandra Herald and Central Otago Gazette, Issue 506, 31 January 1906, Page 3

Word Count
1,003

Page 3 Advertisements Column 5 Alexandra Herald and Central Otago Gazette, Issue 506, 31 January 1906, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 5 Alexandra Herald and Central Otago Gazette, Issue 506, 31 January 1906, Page 3