THEY RESENT INTRUSION.
That dear old dog of mine; he is dead long ago. He troubled nobody who passed his post outside the fence. It he was in the mood for a nap. be would he in some shady spot, and, with half-closed eyis' take in dreamily what a great English preacher used to call " this whirling •world of God's."
But if a stranger opened the gate, evidently meaning to walk up the gravel path to the house, Don Quinote was qui vive in the rustle of a graes blade. J; or it was his duty to resent intrusion, lhe more he violated the Gospel precept, the more he hated his neighbour, the more useful he was; the more commendable 1 his conduct in the sight of his frienae. He is dead, as 1 said. Iu pace. He was worth the tears we dropped on the soils that cover him. We loved him for the enemies he made.
Yon tet the lesson, don't you J Things that are entitled to respect, things that have any decent claim to exist, Will no, stand to be imposed upon ; they will fight, if neees'atv. the, «ill kill vou Thais why Mrs Margaret Robertson said in her' letter, ''My . stomach rebelled : and whenever I fancied I had an appetite and ventured to satisfy t, the I underwent were fearfully di M e rd S, asen S eofful'nessintheches t and abdomen ; and often a dear tour fluid ejected f.om the ttomacn, lan from, my mouth before I was able to control it. I use™ to employ means to make myself rick ia order to get rid of the intolerable na " £ Ot*her measures for relief having failed, I adopted the suggestion of an acqua ntance. and began using Mother Srimsl's Svrup. This was about eight yeafs ago? From the first my digestion
improved and when I hj da tak«n the remedy for a short time I wai in good health. . , "Kot a symptom of disease remained although 1 had been a martyr to inflammatory dyapepsfa for Beveral yeara •-•.have been iu brVnass in Melbourne fctreetN. Adelaide, . A., for nine years and tlii« is tVe 12th of April. 1900. "Ail who wish corroboration of my written ttutement can obtain it by calling on :ne at my store. I have a word further to say abou. Sfligel's Syrup and may as well say it now About four years ago my son developed a kidney derangement, which was prononced Blight's disease. No medical treatment proved of any avail I believed the Syrup would help him, and it did. He was distinctly better before he had finished the first fcottle; then I stopped the mediciue (too eoou), and he hau a relapse. t . " 1 recommene3d at once, giving him the doses regularly after he atei and in eight weeks he was cured. He was then about 17, and is now as healthy a young man as you are likely to meet anywhere." My mother's statement about my case is in every respect true. (Signed) "John Robertson, Austral Hotel, liundle Street, Adelaide.
The stomach, the kidneys, the liver, &c, are watch-dogs set to give and to guard the life of the body; They resent bad treatment ; but when you have been eicher unforiunate or foolish, consider what the people say as to the curative virtues of the niedicme named by this mother and her son. to whom be continual health and prosperity,
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Dunstan Times, Issue 2094, 10 September 1901, Page 2
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571THEY RESENT INTRUSION. Dunstan Times, Issue 2094, 10 September 1901, Page 2
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