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FAIRLY WELL ISN'T WELL ENOUGH.

Let ua say that your wages are twenty shillings a week. You have worked hard, done your best, and foel that you have earned your money. Very good. Now imagined wheu Saturday night Seated ? What "L bS;bottnd.Sr(ib S; bottnd . Sr( i a .^ 6 ". 11 think yourself hardly I T,' JL- are th ! great Btrike9 in th « country commonly about ? Why, in some fashion they are about wages or hours ; it E^f *"• «»• **>'• Be it understood that the writer uses this fact as an illustration of another fact-that ia all. What is stotemen? ?We WiU WMk tt ° nt rf *» followi^ *°™™ 1 i«+ 1 ' **** Mrs Sarah D^by, 'I have been subftSi? n ? biliousness, accompanied with sickness, but got on fairly well up to the early part of 1882. At this, time I began to feel heavy, dull, and tired, with an all-gone, sinking sensationT My skin was sallow, and the whites of my eyes of a yellow tinge * u, ao wi cve £y b0 f7 ought to know, the colouring matter was ble The liver bemg-torpid, and, therefore, failing to remove SllSf^" 11 S^S^TW-:*** skin, and "howed itself on the surface. But the discolouration isn't the worst mischief done by the vagabond bile, containing many poisonous waste elements ; it disorders the whole system and sets up troublesome and dangerous symptoms, some of which the lady names. uwmwura ' I had a bad taste in the mouth,' she goes on to Bay • ' and in e^°I nin f Parttookriyi was often very sick, retching so' violently that 1 dreaded to see the dawn of day. 'My appetite was poor, and after eating I had pain at my chest and side, b requently I couldn't bring myself to touoh food at all • my stomach seemed to rebel at the very thought of it ' [This was bad, but the stomach was right, nevertheless. More tood would have made more pain, more indigested matter to ferment acd turn sour, more of a load for the sleepy liver, more poison for the nerves, kidneys, and skin. And yet, without the food, how was she to live 1 It waa like being ground between the upper and the nether millstones.] .. ' A {i er t J li9 '' runs *|j e fetter, • I had great pain and fluttering at the heart. 3ometimes I would have fits of dizziness and go off into a faint, which left me quite prostrated. Then my nerves became so upset and excitable that I got no proper sleep at night, and on account of loss of strength I was obliged to lie in bed all day for days together I went to one doctor art.r another, and attended at Bartholomews and the University Hospitals, but was none the better tor it all.

k *Sr JP 6tel S b ? ri , 883) my husband «»d in Reynolds' Newspaper about Mother Seigel a Curative Syrup, and got me a bottle of it After tukiug- it for three days I tele relieved. Encouraged and cheered by this I kept on taking the Syrup, and in a short time all the pam and distress abated, and I was well— better than I had ever been. Ihat is ten years ago, and since then I have never ailed anything Wuh smepre that.ka, I am, yours truly , (Signed) Mrs. Dalby, »3, Tottenham Road, Kingsland, Lono^VC January Now run your eye back to the first sentence of Mrs. Dalbv'a letter and you will come upon these words,' / got on fairly u -eIV &c. Ihis is the sad ti ought. Her life has always been at a discount; she has alwa>s got less than her due ; she lost part of her health— wages. Do you take my meaning ? Of course. Whatever way be our differences of opinion as to the rights of cat ital and the value of labour, it is ctrtaiu that every human being is entitled to perfect health— without reduction, without drawback. All the more, as nobody else loses what one person thus gains. No no Ua the contrary, a perfectly healthy person is a benefit and a blearing to all wh > are brought into relations with him But do all have buch health ? God help us, no: very, very few Why not J Ah, the answer is too.big ; ,lVt give it K To the vaet crowd who only gtt on 'fairly well' I tender mv g-mpathy, and advise a trial of the remedy mentioned by Mrs.

He that pleases nobody isjiot so much* to be pitied as he whom nobody can please. ~ • < ' „' ■„ ■. s; ™ Myers and Co., Dentists, Octagonroorner of George street They guarantee highest class work at moderate fees. Their artificial teeth give general satisfaction, and the fact of them supplying a temporary denture while the gums are healing does away with the inconvenience of being mouths without' teeth. They manufacture a single artificial tooth for Ten Shillin s, and sets equally moderate. The admiuwtration of nitrous-oxide gas iaalso a grent boon to those needing the extraction of a tooth. Read advertiaenittini — - m 0

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZT18981222.2.16

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXVI, Issue 33, 22 December 1898, Page 10

Word Count
836

FAIRLY WELL ISN'T WELL ENOUGH. New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXVI, Issue 33, 22 December 1898, Page 10

FAIRLY WELL ISN'T WELL ENOUGH. New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXVI, Issue 33, 22 December 1898, Page 10