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■"■■■»■■ iiija I MO in a Packet mm Bamboo fic&&m I I fgg j%M& Tob&®£& I 1 %-G% too %-QZ pAZtf&tS VUT/f\ I ' 1 - €SffAßoTre PAPERS* I "I have worked on the Barrier off and on for several years, and >g||ii||||^* had to lose a good many shifts i|||||l|l§^ through ill health. I couH neither I ||| ea t nor sleep well. In fact, work of Jj an y n^ was ou^ of the question f jjfw l^^^ s^^^ v^t) / until I struck a good thing in Ayer'a J Uk A, i^ rff Sarsaparilla. I had only taken one ' ///Hit -<^P^ Iff bottle when I felt a lot better. In //IB k^^ySK a11 ' l have b * en seven lM)ttles and (||l|l now am Q ll^ 6 we^* always tell any • Jdfl S^^^ '^^feS^ one *^ a * ee^ s °^ co^ or to take Ayer'a SarsapariUa and it will put them in. «^^^^^ffi^^»i^ working order." iT I Broken Hill, N. S. W. Imperfectly digested food breeds poisons and impurities whicix are quickly absorbed into the blood. AVER'S SarsapaHHa will strengthen the stomach and make the digestive juices more active. As a remedy for dyspepsia and indigestion we cannot recommend it * too strongly. , x As now made, it contains no aScohol. Be sure that you get Ayer's SarSaparilla, not some other kind put up in imitation of it. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Maas., U. S. A, A STARTING LESSON. ALL SHOULD BENEFIT.

Tho Caso of Mr. J. KOLLI3. (BY A SrECIAL EEPOKTBR.) If we cannot hope to know everything, we oan, at least, take care to learn all that our opportunities afibul, and he will be a wise man who possesses himself of every item of information that comes within his grasp. Not only Trill he benefit from the point of view of his profit or of his pleasure, but such information as he succeeds in gaining will increase his intelligent interest in all the varied life which goes on around him, swid of which Jie is a part. A valuable addition to the reader's store of knowledge will be made in connection with the following story, which was told to cur reporter by Mr. John Hollis, of Herald-street, Borainpore, Wellington, who remarked < — "Some time ago I w»3 unfortunate in indingthat my health was on the downward frade, aud as it continued in that direction 't was not very long before my condition oegan to cause me some anxiety." "Had anything unusual happened to .nterfere with your health ? " asked the nrriter. "Well, you see, I had been worried a good deal about that time, and I think there 13 nothing like mental distress for bringing j me's health down to the lowest pitch. The Sret signs I had that I waa getting iuto a low state was a feeling of intense languidiets and an utter disinclination to bother ijiyself. about anything. After passively mbmitting to my loss of energy one day I would make up my mind to do bettor the icxt, but whon the following day arrived I «vas no more able to do a hard day's work Shan I was previously. It seemed as though I ill the vitality had been sapped cut of my i lysfcem, and the move I tried to «xerfc myielE che more feeble my efforts became." " Were you taking medicine of any Jeacription, Mr. Hellis ? " " That was the only course open to mo, for [ was too greatly debilitated to run any risk ihrough neglecting myself. Yes ! I took medicine right eiiough. How many bottles [ cannot say just bow, but I tried all sorts. Such a variety of labels as I had in my ■louse you never eatf ; but I can say with Truth that they never did me a pennyworth )f good. It was just equivalent to putting ny hand into my pocket and throwing so •nuch money to the winds. Indeed, it was aven worse than that, as my sufferings were continually on the increase, and I was wast,ng so much valuable time as well by taking ihose worthless nostrums. J then thought !t would be better to see a doctor, and was m my way one morning when it occurred jo me that I was rather late, and do you know I always look upon that fact — in the 'ight of subsequent experience — as a very iucky one for me, because I had not gone cnuch^ farther when a new idea struck me." " Yes," eaid the journalist, " may I know what it was ? " "Oh! I have no reason to keep it from you. In fact, lam only too pleased to iet yourself and all the world know what it was, because it afterwards had such a wonderful bearing upon my future existence. The thought that struck me was to get same Clements Tonic, and the reason that idea flashed across my mind waa because I suddenly recollected how much good Clements Tonic had clone somebody I know very well. It was not what had been told to me that I was going on, for I had observed the splendid work of Clements Tonic with my own eyes, and when I remembered this I hardly wasted a moment before I had some Clements Tonic in my possession, and I am sure that in the twenty years that I have lived in Wellington I have never met a medicine to approach it for the ailments that I was enduring." " What did they consist of chiefly ? " "■> " In addition to what I have already told you, I must not forget to state that I w»a in an exceedingly nervous condition, for the lent thing agitated me, and my mind waa

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19090508.2.141.2

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume LXXVII, Issue 108, 8 May 1909, Page 13

Word Count
943

Page 13 Advertisements Column 2 Evening Post, Volume LXXVII, Issue 108, 8 May 1909, Page 13

Page 13 Advertisements Column 2 Evening Post, Volume LXXVII, Issue 108, 8 May 1909, Page 13