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A CLEAN CUT INDIVIDUAL OPINION BOLDLY EXPRESSED.

Ib is for this reason tint an assertion like the following sticks up abnvo the levtl of our stupid ta k, and becomes notice'lie ; " When I saw h iw pale I had gtown I s .id to mys-rlf, it was because something had g me out o( my bl-.iod." Tiice! that is a statement with the see Is of an idea in it. Suppose we follow it up by quoting the rest of the Jetter wnicn contend it. ,

Io December, 1890, siys the writer, • I fell into a poor<state of health. Iw s tired, languid and we*ry with >ut aoparent ea'ise. My appetite left me, and all food, even the lightest and stmplest kinds, caused me gre.t p*in ia ihe chest and stoouch. When I saw how pa'e I had grown I to myself it was because something hid gone out of my blood.

' Then my sleep was broken, and night after night I scarcely closed my eyee. It wasn't long before I bec;me so weak and dejected that I took do interest in things around me. I was so nervous that common sounds annoyed me; the n >ices nude by my own children in thei r talk and at theii pay. ' There was a taste in my mo'ih; it nude me «o'c, and often gave me •a s..i\'-iing sensa'i'>n uu over. - WhVn I saw others eating and enj -ying th if meals I felt as th >ugh.it were a strange thing j in a way I wondered how they could do it. For myself I could e<it hardly anything. Food went against me, and 1 turned away from it, as one turns from smells or sigh's lhat are offensive. And yet I knew, wlut eve y >ne knows, that without sufficient food ths body languishes and weakens. And such was the case wich me as m jnth after month we.ifc

by. 4 During all this time, so full of pain and discouragement, I wis att-nded by a d >ctor who did all he could to relieve me, but without success. Ido not say he did not understand my complaint; for may he not have understood it without having thj means of cii'ini: it?' The answer to the lady's.question is: Yes, easily enough. All int Higent. studious doctors ' understand ' coisumption, chorea, cancer, Ac, without (jb yet) having the me'ins of curing them. There is usually a wide gip between the discovery of a wans and ihe way to supply it. ' I will now,' continues the letter.' tell you howl came to be cured In April, 1891, I read, in a snnall boik or pamphlet about Mother S igel's Syrup The book said the Syrup was a certain temelv for all the diseases of the stomach, indigestion in t-very form, and dyspepsia; and it also s->id that most of the complaints we suffer from are caused by that' On looking over the symptoms described in the bo>k, and cimparini, , them with my own, I s«w plainly that my ailment was dyspensia. • We sent immediately lor a bottle of this medicine, and after taking it a few da ys I begin to feel better. In a very short time, by keeping on wi'h the Syrup according to the directions, 1 could e*t without pnn or distress, and digest my f j od. . I also.slept soundly and naturally. Then my strength, came back and with it the colour to my face. In.short,'after a few Weeks use,of Mother Seigel's Syrup, I was hearty and strong sg' ever. Andl shou'd be indeed if > I were not willing that others should! have the benefit of my experience. You are therefore• free to print my letter if you think it will be useful. (Sisjned) (Mis) M. Trurjn, M-rfcon, Lincoln, Ap'il 24, 1895.' I simply desire to say to Mrs Traran that her idea about the blood is a periectly co> reot one. All our food; (the diatstible part of it is turned into blood, and in that ph'ipe it feeds the en'ire body. Wtien the blood ge's thin and poor'{lacking io nourishment), we < . lo«e fljesh and grow feeble and pale. And the cause; of the blood getting thin and p"O r ie indigestion, or dyspepsia. H->weasy this ie io understand when once you get hold of the right end r>f it. , Mother Seigel's Syrb'p has . the peculiar power, to correct wh*t is f ihe dige-tidn. andHhus enables''the t ':■ digestive machinery to make good rich blood. ,' Which is life and health and peaufcy-. "

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AMBPA18960821.2.16

Bibliographic details

Akaroa Mail and Banks Peninsula Advertiser, Volume XXIV, Issue 2080, 21 August 1896, Page 2

Word Count
752

A CLEAN CUT INDIVIDUAL OPINION BOLDLY EXPRESSED. Akaroa Mail and Banks Peninsula Advertiser, Volume XXIV, Issue 2080, 21 August 1896, Page 2

A CLEAN CUT INDIVIDUAL OPINION BOLDLY EXPRESSED. Akaroa Mail and Banks Peninsula Advertiser, Volume XXIV, Issue 2080, 21 August 1896, Page 2