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MASTEBI'ON PRODUCE JfARKET. The present week's prices current are : — Wheat, new, 3s 3d ; oats, new Is 10d ; barley, ;i/- ; maize, 4s; Hour, £1010s(iorsacks); straw chaff, 32s 6d ; oaten sheaf, new 70s ; pollard, £6 ; bran, £110s ; potatoes, new £2 5s ; grass seeds: rye, Hawke's Bay, os 9cl to 6s; Southern, 4s 6d to 4s 9d. Butter, GU, factory 10d to lid ; eggs, 10i cheese, s£d. These j.u'i't't's are wholesale buying, and apply to this district only, unless otherwise stated.

A Remarkable Cure IN YOUR MIDST.

The Case of Mrs. A. MORRIS.

(by a special kepoktek.)

To prepare the ordinary citizen for the battle of life first place should be given to subjects which would prove most serviceable during one's career, and the "extras" could be learned at leisure. One of the principal things to know is how to take care of one's health, or, having lost it, how it may be regained. The remarks of Mrs. Annie Morris, of No. S Elizabeth-street, Wellington, should Le helpful in this respect.

" Although T have lived in Wellington for some considerable time," said Mrs. Morris to a special writer, "lam not a native of the place, as I come from a suburb of •Sydney, named Stanmore, and that is the place where I first fell sick and ill some years ago."

" Did you think it necessary to consult a doctor? " asked the reporter.

"I was not well informed in matters of sickness then,'" was the reply, "so I thought the only thing to be done μ-jk to see a medical man. If the same thing occurred to me again, though, I would think differently, because I have found a safe remedy ftt the complaint I sutiered with. Well, I was going to say that the medicine which my physician ordered me was of no avail. It diil not help mo at all. Hud it kept me as 1 v. a-* it would not have been so bad, but it didn't. I kept getting worse. Several linns 1 had to take to my bed and lie there I'..t a few days until the paralysing weakness wore o!l' a bit ; but it was an awful struggle to koep up, even at the best of tunes. When 1 saw that f was not making any progress 1 consulted another doctor, and his advice was to go under an operation. He maintained that my health would be much better if I did, but J objected to it altogether, and I am glad .J. did now, bcj ; iuse I saved nnself all that risk and all tint pain by taking the advice my mother gave me."

" What was your mother's recommendation V " enquired the interested listener. " She said I should give Clements Tonic a trial, as she was sure it would do me the world of good. It was quite a family medicine with us, I may tell you, although I had not taken any myself up to that time, for I was fully occupied in doling myself with what, my medical attendants had given me. However, I did as my mother said, and the improvi in Mils that fallowed were the talk of the neighbourhood. Constipation .\as one of my leading troubles, ami I had an tinmen iful time both day and night with the worst kind of headache you could think of. Really, sometimes I hardly knew where I. was or what I was doing ; and a nasty ta te in the mornings nauseated me for the rest of the day. 1 fell as if 1 wanted no food at all, but there were lonie kinds that I could not keep down even after I had swallowed it. Heartburn, pains beneath my shoulder blades and in my chest soon followed the taking of food, while the agonising tortures I had across my loins made me think I had Brighf*s disease. I always wanted to lie down at every chance, I felt so weary, and I was alleeted with giddy sensations a dozen times a day. If anybody coughed I'd scream with flight, so you may tell how nervous I was, and the slightest thing would throw me into a violent state of excitement. My nose used to bleed very frequently, and the 10-s of blood I sustained in that way must have materially assisted in getting me down to such a fruitfully feeble and nervous condition. Upon my word, I was getting quite scared, and during my long hours of restlessness my thoughts were very woeful indeed.'"' "It would take some time to recover from such a condition as you were in, surely '! " " Not so long as you would think, for Clements Tonic turned to ridicule the medicines I had taken before, by building me up very rapidly after the first stages of my recovery were got over. The pains that had blasted my life were promptly subdued, and I cculd actually feel my vitality increasing each week. I slept grandly and relished my meals immensely, and before long I was entirely free from nervousness and my digestion was perfect. lam under an obligation to Clements-Tonic for all this, and I wish the world to know these facts, which you can publish in any manner you think fit." STATUTORY DECLARATION. I, Asxik Moiiris, of No. 8 Elizabeth-street, Wellington, in the Colony of New Zealand, do solemnly and sincerely declare that I have carefully tead tlie annexed document, consisting of two folios, and consecutively numbered from one to two, and that it contains and is a true and faithful account of my illness and cure by Clements Tonic; and also contains me full permission to publish in any way my statements—which 1 give voluntarily, without receiving any payment; and I make this solemn declaration conscientiously believing the same to be true, and by \ it'tue of the provisions of an Act of the General Assembly of New Zealand, intituled "The Justices of Peace Act, JBS2." re'clared at Wellington, this ninth day of May, one thousand nine hundred and three, before me, HENRY FIELDER, J.P.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WDT19040813.2.48.1

Bibliographic details

Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XXVIII, Issue 7822, 13 August 1904, Page 7

Word Count
1,005

Page 7 Advertisements Column 1 Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XXVIII, Issue 7822, 13 August 1904, Page 7

Page 7 Advertisements Column 1 Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XXVIII, Issue 7822, 13 August 1904, Page 7

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