Thank you for correcting the text in this article. Your corrections improve Papers Past searches for everyone. See the latest corrections.

This article contains searchable text which was automatically generated and may contain errors. Join the community and correct any errors you spot to help us improve Papers Past.

Article image
Article image

PUBLIC NOTICES. I*l , IT—THERE » irnMakes and Styles in LADIES MANTLES and JACKETS, but if you wish a really Stylish, Up-to-date Garment at a Moderate Price, suited exactly to your figure and purse, BUY HERBERT, HAYNES, AND CO.’S FASHIONABLE MANTLES. YOU SUFFER FROM HEAT ? „ Then wear always during the summer HERBERT. HAYNES, AND CO.’S Fashionable and Artistic BLOUSES, . SHIRTS, GARIBALDIS, Etc. , MAKES A DIFFERENCE! No matter what you are buying. Same with Ladies’ Mantles and Jackets. Some “ look the same,” but are not. HERBERT, HAYNES, AND CO.’S MANTLES AND JACKETS Are always Fashionable and First Value. LADIES, GET READY For the warm weather, and equip yourselves with some of those NEW SHIRTS AND BLOUSES Now Showing at HERBERT. HAYNES, AND CO.’S. IF YOU WANT THE REST, Buy from the BEST FIRM IN THE COLONY. Many ladies of many minds Wear many Mantles of many kinds. But nearly all wear HERBERT, HAYNES, AND CO.’S Fashionable MANTLES AND JACKETS. WHICH WOULD YOU PREFER? A Fashionable, Artistic, Well - out • MANTLE, or an ugly, ill-fitting garment made by some inexperienced band for a low price ? A Perfect Fit will cost you no more money, and will give you every satisfaction. HERBERT, HAYNES, AND CO.’S MANTLE SALOON Is CLOSED on SATURDAYS at 1 o’clock; OPEN ALL DAY on WEDNESDAYS, From 9 a.m. till 6 p.m. A FEW INCHES OF PLAIN ENGLISH. VTOWADAYS men are doing all sorts of J3I wonders by means of electricity, both in nechanics and in chemistry. I se.o'by the tapers that they expect to bo able to produce eal diamonds by it. Perhaps ;’thpy_ may; narvels never cease. But we will wait till they 10 before we crow over that job. Up to this ime, anyway, everything that is both valuable nd useful is the fruit of .hard work. Even iamonds are mostly got out of rooky mines. Lnd, within reasonable limits, it is good for us 0 have to work. Ten shillings honestly earned 1 better for a man than twenty in the shape of legacy. The best condition of things for any country rould be when fair wages could bo earned traight along, without loss or deduction for ny reason. But in the present aspect of uman affairs this is impossible. Whose fault i is we cannot now discuss. One source of loss, however, is plain enough, nd some remedy for it ought to be found. In Ingland and Wales every working man averages en days of illness per year, making the total ass of wages from this cause about £16,000,000 year. We are talking of the aveiage, you ee. But inasmuch as all working men are not 11 every year, this average does not fairly show be suffering and loss of those who are ill. In ny given yeat many will lose no time at all, rhilo others may lose individually from ten lays to six months each. No charity, no avings, no income from clubs, etc, can make ip for this, even in money alone, to say nothing I the pain and the misery. Alluding to ah' experience of his in 1888 Mr leorge Lagdon says: “ I had to give up my pork.” How this came to pass he tells us inf a etter dated from his home in White House oad, Stebbing, near Dunmow, August 24,1892. le had no inherited disease or weakness, so far a ho know, and was always strong and well up o April of that year—lßßß. Then his strength nd energy began to leave him. He felt tired, lot as from work, but as from power gone out f him through some bodily failure. He sat lown to his meals, but not with his old eagertess and relish. There was a nasty copper-like aste in his mouth, his teeth and ■ tongue were overed with slime, and his throat clogged with a :ind of thick phlegm, difficult to “hawk up” ,nd eject. . . He also speaks of a nagging pam m the tomaoh, flatulency, and much palpitation of he heart as having been among his symptoms. Is the aifment—whatever it was—progressed ie began to have a hacking cough, which, he ays, seemed as if it must shako him to pieces. Ie could scarcely sleep on account of it. One if the most alarming features of his illness, lowevor, were the night sweats, for tho reason hat they showed the existence of a source of veakness which must soon, unless arrested, end n total prostration. In fact, he was obliged to ;ivc up his work altogether. To him—as to ny once active man—this was like being buried One doctor whom Mr Lagdon consulted said ie was consumptive, and it did indeed look that vay. “For twelve weeks.” he says, “I went m like this, getting weaker and weaker, and laving reason to believe that it would end in. Ny taking the one journey from which no raveller returns. ... “It was now July—summer time, when life o the healthy is so pleasant and full of hope. It this time my sister-in-law got from Mr Linells, Stebbing, a medicine that I had not tried iet. After having used one bottle I felt better, md when I had used the second I'was cured, ind have not lost an hour’s work since. The reader will notice that between the date if his taking this medicine and the date of his etter there is an interval of four years, we nay, therefore, infer that his cure was real and lermanent. The medicine, by the way, was ilother Soigel’s Curative Syrup. It is not likely ie will forget its name nor what it did for him. lis disease was indigestion and dyspepsia, the leadly enemy of every laboring man or woman inder the sun, no matter what they work, at or vork with-hands, brains, or both. . Is it necessary to.draw a “moral —sohool>ook style—from these facts ? N°» “ s°F* IVe have talked plain English, and that is OAL AND HAVE YOUR FOOD COOKED PROPERLY IN ELOOK’S “ORION” RANGE. S ! 10,000 in use in New Zealand. RNS LIGNITE, TRUE COAL, or WOOD. NO BRICKWORK : REQUIRED.' ■ ' ies Given for all kinds of If eating Apparatus and General Castings. id by all Ironmongers. Application atalogues oi) H. E. SHAOKLOOK, ' SOUTH END FOUNDRY, Duwtpni. IEA DEALERS.—For Tea Wrappers, or made Packets, lined or uriltaed, pounds half-pound sizes, try the EvflNlNO STAB Printing Department

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD18951023.2.7.4

Bibliographic details

Evening Star, Issue 9833, 23 October 1895, Page 1

Word Count
1,056

Page 1 Advertisements Column 4 Evening Star, Issue 9833, 23 October 1895, Page 1

Page 1 Advertisements Column 4 Evening Star, Issue 9833, 23 October 1895, Page 1

Help

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert