WILL YOU BE WISE ? OR FOOLHARDY ?
SUCH SYMPTOMS AS HEADACHE, BACKACHE, SLEEPINESS, INDIGEBTION, &c, INDICATE A DISORDERED LIVER. OLEMBNTS' TONIC IS A PROMPT AND POSITIVE CURE. CLEMENTS' TONIC DOES NOT TREAT SYMPTOMS, IT REMOVES THE CAUSE. FOR PROOF READ THIB :— Mr. M. T. Harris, Mountain View Hotel, Mount Morgan, Queensland, writes on July 18th, 1896:—I must thank you for your Clements' Tonic, as in my case it has worked wonders. I was employed in the cblorination works here, and inhaling the poisonous gases arising from the vats caused me to be so ill that I discontinued working. In faot, I was rendered incapable of working. For months I was ill. Seeing one of your advertisements in a Rockhampton paper, I resolved to give Clements' Tonic a trial. I did so, and am happy to say that the effeot was all that could be desired, for lam now enjoying good health. My friends are surprised at the change, and I am often asked what caused it. My answer is always Clements' Tonic. lam well known here, and you are at liberty to publish this letter if you wish. —Yours respectfully, M. T. Harris, Mountain View Hotel, Mount Morgan, Qucenslaud.
Apropos of "swelling," says a writer in Figaro, I hear that the German Emperor is putting on flesh so rapidly that he is seriously thinking of undergoing one of the numerous "euros" for corpulency. His Majesty's obesity is due to 'over-indulgence in the pleasures of the table, and insufficient exercise, for although William has the reputation of being an extraordinarily energetic monarch he takes in reality very little physical exercise. His skin has a most unhealthy appearance, and he is showing every sign of having recently developed a liver. The Kaiser is by no "means a constitutionally strong man, and he suffers from a number of minor ills of whioh the general public knows nothing, so that it is not surprising that his family and courtiers should regard his increasing bulk with feelings of anxiety.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume LIII, Issue 1, 2 January 1897, Page 2
Word Count
333WILL YOU BE WISE ? OR FOOLHARDY ? Evening Post, Volume LIII, Issue 1, 2 January 1897, Page 2
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