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"WHY HE NEVER LOOKED BEHIND HIM."

" After this I never looked behind me. " This is a very common expression. What d» people mean by it? Lot's wife looked behind her and was changed into a pillar of salt A locomotive driver in America looked behind him one day la3t summer and so didn't see an open drawbridge in front of him. Hence a wreck and great loss of life. A mon in London failed to look behind him and was run down by a hansom. What shall we do as a rule ? Look behind us or not ? We introduce a man who says he never looked behind him -after a certain time. How are we to take his meaning? Whyby letting him explain it. He goes on to say that in one day in February, 1890, he was suddenly seized with dizziness and pain in his dead. Like all healthy people, under similar circumstances, he didn't know what to make of it. He says he felt strange and queer, he shivered as though the weatner had suddenly turned cold, and then flushed with the heat as though it had turned hot again. What ailed him ? His doctor said he was attacked with influenza, and ordered him to bed. He went to bed. A few days later the fever left him, but the illness did not It merely assumed another form. His tongtle looked like a piece of brown leather, and his skin and the whites of his eyesbecame yellow, like old parchment. We must eat to live, but when this man tried to eat, the food went against him, and after he had swallowed it by main force, it caused such pain in the chest, side, and stomach that he Wished he had let it alone. Then his heart began to palpitate, and he says he felt low, languid, and tired. He had what he calls a sinking feeiing at the pit of his stomach and a craving which nothing satisfied.*

Being unable to take any but liquid food he grew so weak that he was barely able to walk. Then his heart troubled him once more, and, to quote his own words, " As I sat in my chair I could hear my heart thumping as if somebody was pounding me on the back. " This showed that the heart had too much work on hand and was struggling under it like a horse trying to carry two men. " I got very little sleep at night," he says, " and would lie awake for hours tossing about on the bed." This sort of thing is very wearing, and we are not surprised to learn that he lost flesh until little was left of him but skin and bone. "My cheeks," he says, " sank in until they were almost drawn together, and people shook their heads Mid predicted that my time in this world was nearly up. Still I had all confidence in my physician and kept on taking his medicine. From first to last I took some forty or fifty bottles of it (of all kinds) without benefit. " Finally one day the doctor sounded my luugs and asked me if any of our family died of consumption. He said that the heart palpitation was caused by dyspepsia. Then he said I had better take further advice ; he could do no more for me. This was after nine months of his treatment. I gave up all hopes of getting better, and, indeed, no one expected me to. " It was now winter again, December, 1890. One day I found a little book or pamphlet in the house, that I had never seen before. It was about a medicine called Mother Seigel's Syrup, and described a case like mine having been cured by it Without going into all my hopes and fears on the point, it is enough to say that I got a bottle from Mr Kirkman, Chemist, Ellerby Lane. I took the contents of that bottle and certainly felt a little better, I took a second and began to eat some food, which agreed with me. "After this I never looked behind me, thought my recovery was a work of time, for I was very much reduced. I stuck to the medicine, and with good reason, and at last got back to my work, strong and well, and have remained so ever since. When I went back to the works the foreman and others gathered rouno me and asked what had wrought the wonderfnl change. I answered, "Mother SeigeVs Syrup had wrought it." When I said I wished to start work they told me I must first be examined by a doctor. The doctor said I was fit for work and I went to work the next morning and have never lost a minute since.

The doctor was right in saying that the apparent heart trouble in Mr Askew's case arose from dyspepsia, for dyspepsia was his only ailment And if he had nsed Mother SeigeFs Syrup in February, 1890, he would have had no tale to tell, for he would have been all right directly. As it is we are glad that after he did try it he had no relapse. He never looked behind him.

Garlick and Cranwell have just issued the most complete Ulastrated Furnishing Book Catalogue that has been published in the colony. It will prove especially convenient for country settlers, storekeepers and others about to furnish. Illnstrations are given of hall, drawing, dining and bedroom furniture. Young people about to marry will find it a great assistance in making up their list and estimating cost of furnishing. It also showi how a 3 roomed house can be furnished for £17 10 0 ; four rooms for £38; five rooms for £80; and six room for £150. Full particulars of bedding, iron bedsteads and general furnishing goods. You will not do better than furnish from Gabligk & CRAinrsife Queen St, Auckland.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/BOPT18920704.2.25

Bibliographic details

Bay of Plenty Times, Volume XX, Issue 2850, 4 July 1892, Page 4

Word Count
990

"WHY HE NEVER LOOKED BEHIND HIM." Bay of Plenty Times, Volume XX, Issue 2850, 4 July 1892, Page 4

"WHY HE NEVER LOOKED BEHIND HIM." Bay of Plenty Times, Volume XX, Issue 2850, 4 July 1892, Page 4

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