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A Lesson for Th&sa who Can Prdst fey it. The Case of W3r. J. E, FAHEV. (BY A BUKEDIN BBFORTBR.) When at certain seasons we see )'pvie\vß ef the yaar=mere dull catalogues e( what ate oallod public events dead and gone oven for such life as there ever was in them4-we eontraat such little budgets with that red review ef the year which is unknowable, savo that every individual may review his own infinitesimal pai't of in,' and if ha considers it expedient te make known his affairs ta the world ft reporter's services are called into requisition, us m dime in connection with Mr, John Edward Fahey, ef No. 30 Griuijju-ucreet, Dunedin, who said " About- eighteen months aga my health was in a shockingly bad state, and had baen for a good while before that. I was suffering from a.ll obstinate derangement of the internal organs, and matters had arrived at such an unwelcome stage t|mt I could not get my foatl to digest. The misery I experienced through that trouble wan greater than • I can find words to describe. The work I \m doing was uot by any means light, and by the time I ept home at night I was fairly done, the feelings of exhaustion being so intense that I could have almost dropped with fatigue," "I expect you would be fible to sleep v?ry soundly when in that condition!" sug. gestod the scribo. " VVell, that was one tiling I really could do, for exhausted liatuie oould not held out against any desire I might have had to keap awake. Yen, I could sleep right euoueh, but the difficulty about sleeping was Chut it did no); roffeeh me jn »oy wy, for when I awoke in the morning I ' e 'i dead tired, Mjdfor the first part of the Say I could feel sensations like aches running through niy limbs, One of the worst feafcui'M of my sickness wfts tho despendonoy whioh Beieed me, I looked upon life as an inaup> portable burden, us if there was nothing bub desolation all round, There was not one pleasant thought in my mind to build my. self up with, and aftor meals I felt particularly drowsy and uncomfortable," "What forms of diaeomfort. did you have, Mr. Fahey?" "J had a terribly heavy feeling in my ciliest, and pains used to attack me right between the shouldem. Often I had giddy turns whloh made me quite useless for awhile, and my sight seemed togetbespieared In some way or etlior, Blaolt spooks ap; paired at times before my ayes, "which felt heavy and somowlsat enlarged in the mornings, and I hud an awfully bitter tasie besides, aud a ooatiug over my tongue, When I walked or stooped I found that the aohos aorosH my loina got more eovete than what they usually were, and tho leas), eiortiou or exoiiemenl cnuaed my uorvet to shako terribly, for my nervous system was very much weakened. My appetite was getting poorer and poorer every dny, but whether I ate much or little it made nu differouoo to the sense «f fulness in the itomnch which followed my mealc, and it . was quite evident that every partiole of food fermented. Some days I oould hardly hold mr head up for tho excruciating aches that afflicted me, and I was just about as weak and miserable as a man could be when I hit upon a medicine that clanged my life entirely." " What medicinc was that ?" "It was Clements Tonic, and a, grand medicine it was, too. It was all a matter of (salt, and came about in this way. One Waning I was reading a Clements Tonic iestimonial to my wife, and when I got,to Kbe end of it I paid : 1 What do you say if f give it a trial?' Au affirmative answer was giyen, so I bought some Clements Touio, and by 'he time I had finished with thai remedy I was twice the man I had been. My health wan made so perfect by Clements Tonic that I think no house shpuld be without it. It beajan by soothing my nerves, and after several days' treatment t)ie weary sensations were not present when I got up in the mornings, neither was the vile tasto, nor the-posting-on my tongue. Really, I was spellbound with amazement to find that \ my appetite had come back already, and by-and-bye the flatulence was done with ; so were the depressiug headaches, giddiness, and the pains about my chest and shoulders. It sfjonied like a happy dream, but it wai better than that, It was a positive foot that Clement? Tonic had cured me, and now you can publish these words of truth in any "form you plense."

STATUTORY DECLARATION. !, John Edward Faubv, of No. 36 Orange-street. Duntdiy, in the Colony of New Zealand, do solemnly ind sincerely declare that I have carefully rewl the innexed dounment, consi&thig of two folloi. mid coneecutively numbered from on® to two, ana (thftt. it conUina and is a true■ and faithful account jf my jllnni and cure by OlemenU Touic; and alio fionUiut my full permisiiou to publish in any way my sUleuioiiU—v/lik'lt I gW» voluntarily, without raceivlujj any payment: and I make thia solemn ieoliTfttion eousoieitlionly believing the eaiae to btj true, and by virtue of the provisions of an Aot of tho Senarftl Aeiembly of Naw Zealand, intituled "Tin fuslices of Peaoe Act, ISS-V

DeclitJd it Duntdln, tliljH|):t«Bnth day «l March, on » 6ta»-l)«pdKd jud t)OM, bsfore nn,

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ODT19070223.2.20.2

Bibliographic details

Otago Daily Times, Issue 13835, 23 February 1907, Page 4

Word Count
921

Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Otago Daily Times, Issue 13835, 23 February 1907, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Otago Daily Times, Issue 13835, 23 February 1907, Page 4

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