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WHY HE DID NOT GO TO TBE HOSPITAL. HE COULD LEAP THROUGH THE AIR.

My object in writing is two-fold : to expreßß'toy gratitude for a great benefit, and to "teller short story which cannot fail to 'interest the feelings of many others'. ! It is all about myself, but I have remarked that when a nan tolls the honest truth, about himself lie is all tnem'or'eabletobe'of use tohis fellow-crea-tures. Tobogin, then, you rnu3t know I had long been more or less subject to attaoks of bronchi i is, a complaint thai you "are aware is very common and troublesome in Great Britain ie cortain seasons of the year. Some months ago I had a very severe turn of it, worse, I think, than I ever had before. It was probably brought on by my catchiup pdld', as we 'are all apf to do when we le.ast expeojj'lt. \^eeks passed by, and my' trouble proved to be very obstinate, Jt woiild not yield to medicine, and as ] also began to have violent racking painß in my limbs and back, I becami greatly alarmed. I could neither en por sjeep. JE I had besn a ftjeble Bipkly m|n, I should' havo thought les Btrangely of it ; but as, on the contrary !f wasliearty and robust, I feared som paw and terrible thing had got hold o me, which might make my strength o $o avail against it. I say, that was tli way I thought. Presently I pould not lie down for tli pain all over my body. I asked m dootor what he thought of my conditioi and he frankly said, "I am Borry 1 have to tell you that you are gettir worse)" This so frightened n friends, as well as myself, that th< said "Thomas, you must go to Hie He vital; it may be your only chance j life I" Bat I didn't want to go to the hos] tftl. Who does, when he thinks he c possibly get along without doing it P am a laboring man,' with a large f ami depending 1 on mo for support, and Plight almost Aa well bo in my grave

I fo be laid on my back in a hospiti I unable to lift a hand for moaths, < he I God only knows how long. Eight a ad j this point I had a thought fhsh acros i. I my mind like a streak of sunshine in i ly I cloudy day. I had heard and read i if I good deal üboiit Mother Sei^el's Cura : I tire Syrup, nnd I resolved, befon I consenti!]}: to he taken to the hospital 3t I I would try that well-known remedy ,' I On this I gavo up the doctor's inediciat n } and bognn taking the Syrup. Mark th< wonderful result! I bad taken bul k I three doses within twenty-four houn q I when I was seizod with a fit of coughing, 3 I aad threw up the phlegm and muens ofj i I my chest by the monlhfal. Tbi^ Syrup ? I bad loo3ened and broken it u|). • Conr j timiing with the Sirup, the racking ; I pain, which I believe came from the s I bitter and poison humours in my blood | j and joints, soon left me entirely, and I I felt like going to sloep, and I did sleep ; I sound and quiet. Then I felt hungry, I with a natural appetite, and aa I ate I I soon got strong and well. I T felt I could leap through Hie air with delight \ In a week I was able to go to my work again. It doesn't aeem possible, yet it is true, and the neighbours know it. There aro plenty of witnesses to prove it. And, therefore, when I say I preach the good news of the great power of Seigel's Syrup to cure pain and disease far and wide, nobody will wonder at me. Thomas Canning. 75, Military-road, Canterbury. Kent. Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup is for sale by all chemists and medicine vendors ; and by the Proprietors, John White, Limited, 35, Farringdou-road, London E,. C., Ergloni.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HBH18890413.2.23.7

Bibliographic details

Hawke's Bay Herald, Volume XXIV, Issue 8337, 13 April 1889, Page 6

Word Count
689

WHY HE DID NOT GO TO TBE HOSPITAL. HE COULD LEAP THROUGH THE AIR. Hawke's Bay Herald, Volume XXIV, Issue 8337, 13 April 1889, Page 6

WHY HE DID NOT GO TO TBE HOSPITAL. HE COULD LEAP THROUGH THE AIR. Hawke's Bay Herald, Volume XXIV, Issue 8337, 13 April 1889, Page 6

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