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ACCOUNTANT'S WORRIES ENDED.

The many friends of Mr C. J. Watkins, accountant and auditor of Stratford, will be pleased to hear that the disabilities under which he labored for twenty years have now been removed. When speaking of the matter, Mr Watkins remarked : “Before taking np accountancy I was a storekeeper, but when engaged in this trade I found myself severely handicapped by acute pains and muscular contraction of tho limbs, due to sciatica and rheumatism; indeed for months together I was crippled. I lost rny appetite, and even my nights’ rest, and gradually wasted away, for my ailments continued notwithstanding everything I tried.” “ But you are free from these troubles now, are vou not?” was asked. " Yes, I was just going to say that everything failed until I tried Dr Williams’s pink pills. One boxful benefited me, and as I continued taking them the pains and aches caused by sciatica and rheumatism subsided, ray muscles grew pliable, and I was able to use my limbs properly. Later on I.became perfectly cured, and even in the coldest weather I have not had the slightest twinge of pain or return of my old troubles.” In Mr Watkins’s case vitiated blood produced pain in the joints and nerves, which were irritated by the cold weather. Dr Williams’s pink pills purify the blood and tone up the nerves; thus they strike at the root of most diseases and remove the causes, then the symptoms subside. They cure neuralgia, lumbago, amends, debility, nervous exhaustion, dysentery, St. Vitus’s dance, skin diseases, consumption, bronchitis, paralysis, etc. Sold by chemists and storekeepers, and the Dr Williams’s Medicine Company, Wellington, three shillings per box, six boxes sixteen and six, post free. Beware of useless substitutes, which, although offered at lower rates than the genuine Dr Williams’s pink pills, carry a larger profit to the retailer.—fAdvt]

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19020207.2.17

Bibliographic details

Evening Star, Issue 11676, 7 February 1902, Page 3

Word Count
307

ACCOUNTANT'S WORRIES ENDED. Evening Star, Issue 11676, 7 February 1902, Page 3

ACCOUNTANT'S WORRIES ENDED. Evening Star, Issue 11676, 7 February 1902, Page 3