WHAT PEOPLE SAY. S. C. REILLY, ESQ., MARRICKVILLE,
N.S.W., writes :—": — " Garner's Avenue, Marrickville, N.S.W., I can with confidence bear testimony to the wonderful [efficacy of Clements Tonic. For years I have been periodically attacked, and a great sufferer from neuralgia and general debility, and anyone who has ever been afflicted with such nervous misery can form an idea of what I suffered. I had also chronic indigestion, general languid feelings, and an utter dislike to exert myself. The neuralgia was so severe that I have paced the hall all night, and the agony was so excruciating that I was almost outf of my mind. I tried all socalled remedies, also galvanic treatment, which did no good. At last a friend recommended Clements Tonic, and I was so miserable and disheartened that I purchased a small bottle, and after the second dose felt great relief. I continued its use and am thankful to say that after 24 hours the pain had disappeared, and I was free from the nervous terror. I continued Clements Tonic, and have taken four bottles ; all my languor is gone, I am free from indigestion, I can do a day's work with any man, and eat like a horse ; and have great pleasure in recommending Clements Tonic to any one suffering from nervous complaints.—Yours truly, S. C. REiLLy." When people right at the home of Clements Tonic praise the remedy as so many do, it proves the value of it to everybody, even in spite of the old saying, "No man is a prophet I in his own country."
At the inquest on the man Dickson, who w.is found dying in a paddock in Wellington, on the 2nd, a woman named Margaret Tierney gave evidence that she saw another woman strike deceased on the head with a hottle. There was a third person present, but whether a man or a woman she could not say. The two afterwards threw Dickson over the fence. The doctor said the man's skull was the thinnest he had ever seen, and almost any blow would kill him.
WHAT PEOPLE SAY. S. C. REILLY, ESQ., MARRICKVILLE,
Otago Witness, Issue 1994, 12 May 1892, Page 30
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