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His Honour Speaks.

It is singular, seeing bow much depends on good health, that a little more pains is not tak<m to impress on the people a few simple rules for its preservation. Thus bad drainage is the jpam cause of typhoid fever, which kills 20,000 people in England yearly. Small and low bed-rooms engender consumption and loss of vitality unless well ventilated, not only in daytime, but at night. An ill-ventiiated bed-room is a frequent cause of gleepliness. Children are especially sufferers from badly ventilated bod-rooms. That js the chief cause why children of the poor look so sickly. It may bo' said that people have a right to be filthy. So they have, unless they are an active annoyance and danger to their neighbours. F>r that reason there is greater logic in prosecuting a dirty than a drunken man. Where disease heralds its approach by such signs as indigestion, headache, neuralgia, tired aching limbs and other well-known symptoms, a course of Clements’ lonic will quickly restore the normal health, as instanced in the case of His Honour Judge Miller, who writes;—Courthouse, Winton, Queensland, June 15, Last December while travelling Muttaburra to Winton, I was seized with a violent attack of Vomiting and diarrhoea. On my arrival at Winton, Mr Campbell, (of Corfield and Fitemaurice) persuaded me to take Clements’ Tunic ; one dose relieved me. 1 continued to take it for two days, at the expiration of which I was complete'y re.ovciecl, and 1 have much pleasure in testifying to the beneficial effects I experienced from taking it.—Granville George Miller, iudge” of the Central District Court, Winton. J. H. Jones, Esp., Survey Camp, Toko Block, N.Z., writes:The bottle of Clements’ Tonic I received from you gave me great satisfaction and ease. 1 have hem suffering from debility and prickly heat, and I found the one bottle had done me a power of good, aud as I obtained such relief'! intend keeping it in stock. f i ‘ " ' ■ ' •

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PGAMA18921209.2.13

Bibliographic details

Pelorus Guardian and Miners' Advocate., Volume 3, Issue 92, 9 December 1892, Page 3

Word Count
327

His Honour Speaks. Pelorus Guardian and Miners' Advocate., Volume 3, Issue 92, 9 December 1892, Page 3

His Honour Speaks. Pelorus Guardian and Miners' Advocate., Volume 3, Issue 92, 9 December 1892, Page 3