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Captain Edwin wired as follows at 1 p.m. to-day Glass further rise, with southerly winds, and weather continue very cold. Telegrams notify the arrival of the Eimutaka at London on Monday last, so that Dr Perkins and family have finished the sea voyage part of their holiday. The Craigieburn Station of 50,000 acres, in the Sehvyn County, will he put up for lease for a period of eight years by the Government on 28th August next. “ Teddy ” McLaughlin, a very old Wanganui identity, died at the Hospital there early on Saturday morning. McLaughlin, who camo to the Colony as private in the Gsth Regiment, and saw some active service, resided in the Wanganui district for almost the last 50 years. At the meeting of tha Christchurch City Council on Monday evening, on the recommendation of the Finance Committee, it was decided that the Rating on Unimproved Values Bill was uncalled for, and that it would be inadvisable to disturb the present incidence of taxtion for the city. This is another story which should be added to the long list of blunders made in the course of the church service. A young clergyman startled a certain con gregation by announcing, “Hymn foiir and sevenpence halfpenny.” In his nervousness he had confused the offertory total of the previous Sunday with the hymn figures. The Rev C, H. Garland gave an excellent “evening with Tennyson” on Monday last, but the audience was not numerically good. The Rev Mr Ham - mond occupied the chair. The evening opened with an instrumental overture. after which Mr Garland took the stage, the pieces selected by him being -(1) Northern Cobbler; (2) The Revenge; (3) The Children’ Hospital; (4) In Memoriara (parts only). The reciting was of an exceedingly high class, the reciter holding his audience most completely, aud giving a most excellent interpretation of the theme’s chosen. Between the recitations, Mrs Horner sang, “Alice,” Mr Horner, “Crossing the Bar,” and Miss I. Paterson “The Holy City;” and singing God Save the Queen brought the evening to a close. It is not often that such an enjoyable way of spending an evening can be obtained in Patca, and it seems passing strange that so few take advantage of the opportunities when they do offer.

The most successful and perfect cleanse and polisher for all kinds of metaj especially tinware, also windows, cutlery and paintwork, is Bock’s Putz Paste, sold at The Bazaar, in largo tins Is each. Also the following lines of P. Bock and Co.’s are kept in stockMortein Insect Powder and Spreaders Is each, Non Mer* curial Plating Fluid Is Gd, Bock’s Water* proof Cement Is, Campheylene Balls for Moths Is each jar, Herb Extract, an Infallible Cure for Toothache Is, German Cure for Corns and Warts Is. Certainly*tbo best medicine known i Sander & Son’s Eucalypti Extract Test its eminently wonderful effects in colds, coughs, influenza; the relief is nstantaneous. Inseiiescases,andaccidonts of all kinds, be they wounds, burns, scald iugs, bruises, sprains, it is the safest remedy—no swelling—no inflammation. Like surprising effects produced in coughs, diphtheria, bronchitis, inflammation of hj) ungs, swellings, etc. diarrhoea dysentery, diseases of kidneys and urinary organs. In use at hospital and medical clinics all over the globe, patronised by His Excellency the King Italy; crowned j with medal and diploma at Internationa exhibition at Amsterdam. Trust in the approved article and reject all others.

OFTEN TIRED BUT NEVER WEARY. Let’s discuss this point for two minutes. Here’s a man who says that at a certain period ho began to feel “tired and weary.” That’s precisely the way he > puts it in his letter. Now anybody has a right to feel tired or fatigued (it’s the same thing), after labour or much exercise. It’s the body’s fashion of telling you to hold up, to give it a rest. It is a natural and, in health, with supper and j sleep just ahead, a pleasant feeling. But weariness !—that’s different. That comes of monotony, of waiting, of lonliness. Weariness is of the mind not of the body. But it can arise in the body, all tho same. If this bothers you at first, don’t say, “Stuff!” “humbug!” but study up on it. A man may be lived and happy, but not weary and happy. For Weariness means depressed spirits, and nerves all sagged down in the middle. And when yon get both at once you will be wise to find out what’s gone wrong. It is a short letter, this is, and wo can just as well quote tho whole of it. The writer says : “ It was in November, 1887, when I began to feel tired and weary, it seemed us if I had no strength loft in me. Before that I had always been strong and healthy. My appetite was p or, and for days together I could not (touch any food that was placed before rue. -After every meal that I did succeed in forcing down I had such dreadful pains in the chest and back that I was almost afraid to eat. Then there was a sharp pain around tho heart, too, as though I was stabbed with a knife. “ I lost a deal of sleep, and for nights together I didn’t sleep at all. Then I began to lose flesh rapidly, and was afraid I was going into a consumption. Yet kept on with my work, however, but it as a hard thing for me, because I was so eak and nervous that I trembled from ead to foot. As time wont on I gradually

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PATM18950731.2.29.1

Bibliographic details

Patea Mail, Volume VIII, Issue 91, 31 July 1895, Page 3

Word Count
926

Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Patea Mail, Volume VIII, Issue 91, 31 July 1895, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Patea Mail, Volume VIII, Issue 91, 31 July 1895, Page 3

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