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A Necessary, The Case of Mrs. A. TYLEB. (by a dunedin keporter). The necessity for taking action in a practical way for the es»entially practical purpose of striding over all p&gwioal obata* cles that bestrew our path is a subject t 4 which subscribers will do well to devote! their attention, and in that direction u better beginning cannot be made than by reading the narrative of Mrs. Agnes Tylee, of Rankielor-street, South Dunedin, ia which she stated:— •• I am now seventy-four years of age, and . have been living in Dunedin more than half that time, so you may depend that I an i acquainted with a good few people hereof abouts, and when a woman arrives at my age she does not usually cay things just for the sake of talking. Long experience teaches us that fiiere is no good in wasting words over subjects that cannot benefit any* one, and when I do speak it is generally with some tangible object in view. Thie is a rule with me either in health or in sickness." " You have had," said a reporter, " Home experience with the latter, I believe ? " " Ah, yes; a full share of it, and once I was so terribly i-un down that I felt myself all of a droop. I slept but very poorly, and , when I got up in the mornings I always fels weary and depressed and had headaches that took away all the pleasures of life. A'j heavy feeling in the eyes and a troublesome) dimness of sight were also my portion, and I had a very bitter taste in my mouth, too. j It was a long lime since my appetite wai anything like vigorous, and by degrees ill had dwindled away to nothing, so thafc X could not enjoy even the small quantity of food I took. More than that, I could no*! digest it, and I used to suffer terribly with wind on the stomach, and heavy pains ia ,ny chest, and sharp on between my moulders, like pins sticking into me. __ I > eras suffering for some considerable time lik* 4 this when 1 began to find that my nerves) were unhinged. Any little thing could! any mind bebaifte more gloomy than ever. Nothing s?«mecl to go right, and the most) limple thing made me feel irritable. All the time my vitality was wearing away, and lometimes | was so weak that I could icarcely w»lk the floor." "Were you receiving treatment?" " I had £ doctor* but his medicines only eased mo for a short while and then I was a ill as ever. I thought that age was igaiasfc mm and that I would never get rid »? my ailments. What an awful contemplation that was to be sure ! I shall never forget Siow miserable I felt." "Bufc <» seems that your ideas wen wrong ?" (■■■ " So they were, but I did not find out th€ bruth till I started taking Clements Tonic,, ind then my only regret was that I had not' jtarted on that medicine when my trouble*' Degan. Howiver, I am intensely p'.easeti; thai I. took uome Clements Tonic when I\, did, as it not only saved me from getting' worse, but it quite remedied all my, ;_ physical defects in no time. It was a great relief to my mind to feel so comforted under the influence of Clements Tonic, and there Is nothing that I know of (and I have been in touch with a lot of medicines in my time* to equd th* same medicine for toning up the nerves and giving perfect relief from the agonies of indigestion. With the banishment of those melancholy thoughts which had kept my spirits under I felt q>uto cheerful again, and it was all through the invigorating qualities 6f Clements Tonio that so much new life had been planted in my system. The more relief I got from my discomforts the easier it became for ma to sleep, and, oh, how thankful I was to be able to rest the whole nights through ! 16 was then that life became sweet again, and in the same way that my sufferings were left behind, so can others reap the same benefits If they adopt my advice and resort to Clements Tonic, for I know it to be a sure euro far such ailments as mine. For giving an appetite and building up my enfeebled system Clements Tonic has earned my last- 1 |i,g gratitude, aud I shall always advocate its use wherever I go." " Will you have your remarks in the papers ? " «* They will do good there, so you may publisb them in any way you like." HATUTORV DECLARATION. 1, Aonm Tvlbi, of Rankielor-street, South Dune* liln, In ths Colony of New Zealand, do solemnly Mid sincerely declare that I hare carefully read the annexed document, consisting o* two folios and consecutively numbered from one to two, r,nd that it contains and is a true and faithful account of my illness and cure by Clements Tonio, »sd alto contains my full permission to publish In any way my statements-which I gtYB roluntarlly, without receiving any payment; and, I unite thie solemn declaration conscientiously bellev« In? the tame to be true, and by virtue of ths provisions of an Act of the General Afsembly of New Ktalasd, Intituled "The Justices of Peace Act, 1882.'* cfuJLvC Declared at Bouth Dunedin, this fourteenth day o» t.housaud nine hundred and three, before" **'* WM. WARDROP. J.P. H

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/OW19100427.2.336.2

Bibliographic details

Otago Witness, Issue 2928, 27 April 1910, Page 85

Word Count
908

Page 85 Advertisements Column 2 Otago Witness, Issue 2928, 27 April 1910, Page 85

Page 85 Advertisements Column 2 Otago Witness, Issue 2928, 27 April 1910, Page 85