A Southern paper says that a citizen scared by Wiggins’s earthquake predictions sent his two half-grown boys to a friend in the •country. A few days later his friend wrote him: “Dear sir, —Please take your boys back and send ns the earthquake.” Nervous Maladies. —New Zealand, like her sister Colonies, has, in the race for life and advanced civilization, acquired certain nervous maladies such as are found in the leading commercial cities of the world. Insomnia, or sleeplessness, is one of the earliest and most marked symptons of these distress ng affections, and so long as Nature’s sweet restorer * is denied them, the malady—whether it be one of the many forms of neuralgia, an over-worked brain, hypochondriasis, gouty pangs or flying pains—becomes intensified to an alarming degree, and debilitates the system generally. Since Freeman’s Chlcrod’yne was In'roducad into New Zealand these distressing nervous diseases are regarded as perfectly curable. Certain relief is obtained in every case, and by taking a full dose at bedtime refreshing sleep is ensured, and the sufferer wakes invigorated and strengthened. Insist upon having ' Freeman’s ’ only. Trade mark, an Elephant. —Sold everywhere. Obtainable from ail chemists and storekeepers.
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Mail, Issue 810, 9 September 1887, Page 29
Word Count
193Untitled New Zealand Mail, Issue 810, 9 September 1887, Page 29
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