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A CLEAN CUT INDIVIDUAL OPINION BOLDLY EXPRESSED.

It is for this reassn that an assertion like the following sticks up ajboy.e .the dead level of our stupid talk, and becomes noticeable : " When I saw how pale I had grown I said to mysdf it was because something had gone out of my blood." There 1 thab is a statement with the seeds of an idea in ib. Suppose we follow it up by quoting the rest of the letter which contains it. In December, 1890, says the writer, I fell into a poor state of health. I was tired, languid, and weary without any apparent! cause. My appetite left me, and all food, even tbo lightest and simplest kinds, caused me great pain in the chest and etomach. When I saw how pale I bad ft-Own, I said to myself it was because joniething had gone oub of my blood. •'Then was my aleep broken, and night after night I Bcarcely closed my eyes. Ib wasn't long before I became so weak nnd dejected that I took no interest in thiuga around me. I was co nervous thab common sounds annoyed and worried mo; even the noises made by my own children in their talk and at their play.

"There waa a disgusting taate in my mouth ; ib made, me sick, and often gave me a shivering sensation all over. When I saw others eating and enjoying their meals I felt as though ib were a strange thing; in a way. I wondered how they could do it. For myself I could eat hardly anything. Food went against me, and I burned away from it, aa one burns from smells or eights thab are offensive. And yet I knew, what everyone knows, that without sufficient food the body languishes and weakens. And such was the case with me as month after month wenh by. . '• During all this time, bo full of pain and discouragemenb, I was attended by a doctor who did what he could to relieve me, bnb without success. Ido nob cay he did nob understand my complaint; for may he not have understood it without haying the means of curing it ?" ■ The answer to the lady's question is s Yes, easily enough, AH intelligent, studious doctors M Hnderaband " consumption, cholera, cancer, etc., without (aa yet}

havine the means of curing tbe__. Thert is usually a wide gap bebween the dUcovery of a want and the way to enpply it. MI will now," continues the letter, tell you how 1 came to be cured. In April, 1891, I read in a email book or pamphlet aboub Mother Seigel'B Syrup. The book said the Syrup wae a certain remedy for all diseases df the stomach, indigestion in every form, and dysuep.ia; and it also said tKab moeb of the complaints we euHer from are caused by thab. ' On looking over the symptoms' .described in the book, ana comparing them with my own, I caw plainly bhab my ailment was dyipepsia. "We «6nb immediately for a bobble oi this medicine, and after taking ife a few days I began bo feel better. In a very snort time, by keeping oa with the Syrup according to the directions, I could cab wifcnoub pain o» distress, and digest my food. I also elepb soundly and naturally. lne« my strength came back and with its the colour to my face. In sborfc, after a few weeks nee of Mother Seigel'e >y_ u P. { was hearty and sbrong as ever. And I should be indeed ungrafeeful if I were nob willing tbab others should have tbo benenb of my experience. You are, therefore, free to print my letter if you think id will be useful. (Signed) (Mrs) M.Truran, Marbon, Lincoln, April 24bh, 1895." _ I simply deeire to cay to Mrs Trnran that her idea about the blood is a perfectly correct one. All our food (the digestible port of it) is turned into blood, and in that shape ib feeds the entire body. When the blood gets thin and poor (lacking in nourishment), w« lose flesh and grow feeble and palei And the cause of the blood getting thin and poor is indigestion, or dyspepsia. Fow easy this ia to understand when once you geb hold of the right end of ib. Mother Seigel's Syrup has tho peculiar power to correct what ja wrong aboub the digosbion, and thus ennblea the digestive machinery to m-ke good rich blood, which is Ufa and health and beauty.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS18960704.2.10

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume XXVII, Issue 156, 4 July 1896, Page 2

Word Count
751

A CLEAN CUT INDIVIDUAL OPINION BOLDLY EXPRESSED. Auckland Star, Volume XXVII, Issue 156, 4 July 1896, Page 2

A CLEAN CUT INDIVIDUAL OPINION BOLDLY EXPRESSED. Auckland Star, Volume XXVII, Issue 156, 4 July 1896, Page 2

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