THEORY OF THE FLAMING SWORD.
"Ah" talk of b'ef sings! What a blessing is digestion ! To digest. Do you know what it means? It is to have the sun always shining and the shade always ready for you. It is to to met by smiles and greeted with ki3 es. It is to hear sweet sounds, to (deep with pleasant dreims, to be touched ever by gentle, soft cool handr. It is to be in Patadisa.
'•There came a great indigestion upon the earth and it was called a deluge. All the evel comes from this Macbeth could not sleep ; it was supper, not the murder. His wife talked and talked ; it was supper again. Milton had a bad digrston, and Oirlyle must have had the worst digestion in the world. Ah! to digest is to be happy "
There! — how does that strike you for a burst of eloquence ? I quote from Trollope. If there ib aaythiug wrong about tf-e theofopy you must hold him responsible. As for its physiology and pathology (pardon all these "ologies") £ can answer for the correctness of these two. And so can millioas of people besides me... They speak of the oun>e of indigestion continually in every lan uage ; they groan and writhe under it in every land and climate. " For many year?, ""Bays one of this innumerable army of martyrs, " I was obliged to bear as best I oauld the torm nts of in ligestion. My appetite was praoiilly destroyed. I ate, of course, because one must eat or die! but afte* meals I had great pain at the chest and atound the s dee.
Sleep almost forsook my pillow, and naturally I was tired and exhausted, ooaaerimes better and then worse, but n ver free from pain and illness, I liv mI on with little or no hope of getting wll It is hardly necessary to Bay th 1 1 had medical treatment, yet no real benefit resulted from it. Happily at this Urn* Mother BeigePs Syittp was brvHght to my n uiw, and so s rontrly 001 amended that I laid aside other mciiui'es, which were doiug me no good, and began using this one only. * In a shore time I realised a greut impr< vement / food agreed wi'h me and I g lined strength. A little later —con* tiouiag to take thu Syrup regularly as directed —the pains at ha stomach, aides and chest whilly ceased, and I havenotfflt them since Myindtjrestiou was cured at last, and I eti joyed the ble-sing of health. My»on who sufiE-^r-ed severely from ihsumatism h s been releived by Mother Seigel's Syrnp as by nothing else ha ever tried. In gratitude I give you full permission to publish my letter should you desire. " (Signed) (Mrs.) Ann Barker, Field Lane, Braughing, Ware, Herts, Oct. 7th. 189*. .
It was a fortunate eircumsUnoa for Mrs. Sarah Gell^f Melchbourue Bedfodshire, that one day she had a personal talk with Mr. Smith, thbutcher at Rushden. He told the lady that in his opinion if the Went on suffering from indigestion and asthma (one of its consequences) it would be b-wau*e the neglected to use Mother ?eig l's Syrap. " And, " s«d Mr. Smith, (> I speak from knowledge. " Bhe had beon ill with abominable ail* onente for Jtnany. years, and hid spent time and money in unavailing efforts to obtain relief . Acting on Mr. Fnvth'a advice, Mrs.*Gell began using this remedy at once, aud Mis the outcome in a letter of which we have room for the conclusion onlv :— - " "I was better almost immediifcaly, and was soon as well and healthy as one could wi-h to op. Now I keep ' Mpther Beimel' in the hiusa and it n*errr fails to help us when needed for any passing com plaint." (Signed) SaraH &ell, Oct. SIH, IS&S, »Tu<JgiDi{ from The force of iti* com • meet on the diseas-e, I ah >uid say Mr. rrullope knew something 1 about mdiii gestion from experience. Host literary people do. To them, and to nil otlnr victims, I confidently comnead 'Jo. beotronaedy yet found -M> h jc SeTgJt'a Syrup. ,
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Bibliographic details
Bay of Plenty Times, Volume XXIV, Issue 3837, 21 April 1899, Page 2
Word Count
681THEORY OF THE FLAMING SWORD. Bay of Plenty Times, Volume XXIV, Issue 3837, 21 April 1899, Page 2
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