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THE WORLD RUNS AWAY FROM US

The other day we had a talk with a man who knew as little of the world around him as a baby. Yet he was a man of naturally fine intelligence. He had just been relieved from prison. Ten years ago ne was incarcerated under a life sentence. Recently, however, circumstances had arisen whicii proved his innocence, and he obtained his freedom. But nothing seemed as before. He had been stationary while the world moved on. Many of his old friends were dead, and all were changed. A big slice of his career was lost, and worse than lost. Could he ever make it up ? No, never, besides, although he had committed no offence, the mere fact that ho had been convicted of one, would always place him at a’ disadvantage. Different as it is in all outward conditions long illness produce results which resembles these of enforced solitude. When confined to our homes by disease we are virtually out of the world. Friends may, and do, pity us : but they do not lie down by our side and suffer with us. Ah 1 no. They go their own ways and leave us alone. In the midst of company we are still alone. Fnjoyrnent, food, sleep, fresh air, movement, work, etc. —those are for them, not for us. Alas 1 for the poor prisoner whose jailor is some relentless disease. Who shall open the iron floors and set him free.

“ I never had any'rest or pleasure.” So writes a man whose letter we have just finished reading. “In the early part of 1888,” he says, “ a strange feeling came over me. I felt heavy, drowsy, languid, and tired. S' mething appeared to he wrong with me, and I couldn’t account for it. I had a foul taste in the month, my appetite failed, and what 1 did eat lay on me like a stone. Soon I became afraid to eat, as the act was always followed by pain and distress. Sometimes I had a sensation of chok • ing in the throat as if 1 could not sw allow. I was swollen, too, around the body, and got about with difficulty owing to increasing weakness. “ At the pit of my stomach was a hungry, craving sensation, as though I needed support from food ; yet the little I took did not abate this feeling. My sleep was broken, and I awoke in the morning unrefreshed. For four years I continued in this wretched state before I found relief.”

Th;» letter is signed by Mr Charles H. Smith, of 19, Now City Road, Glasgow,- and dated February 15th, 1893.

Before we hear how .he was at last de livered from the slavery of illness, let us listen to the words of a lady on the same theme : Mrs Mary Ann Rusling, of Station Road, Misterton, near Gainsborough. In a brief note dated January 3rd, 1803, Mrs Rusling sajs she suffered in a similar way for over fifteen years. Her hands and feet were cold and clammy, and she was pale and bloodless. She had pain in the left side and palpitation, and her breathing was short and hurried. No medicines availed to help her unlfll two years ago. “At that time,” she says, “ our minister, the late Rev, Mr Watson, told me of Mother Seigel’s Curative Syrup, and ui ged me to make a trial of it. I did so, and presently felt great relief. It was not long before the bid symptoms all left me, and I gradually got strong. I keep in good health, and have pleasure in making known to others the remedy which did so much for me.”

Mr Smith was completely cured by the same remedy, and says had he known of it sooner he would have been saved years of misery. The real ailment in both these cases was indigestion and dyspepda, with its natural consequences. Throughout the civilised world its course is marked by a hundred forms of pain and suffering. Men and women are torn to pieces by it as vessels are by the rocks on which they are driven by tempests. So comprehensive and all-embracing i« it that we may almost ray that there is no other disease. It signifies li e transformed into death, bread turned into poison. Watch for its earliest signs—especially the feeling of weariness, languor, and fatigue, which announce its approach. Prevention is better than cure.

But, by the use of Mother Seigel’s Curative Syrup, cure is always possible ; anil poor captives iu the loathsome dungeons of illness are daily delivered as the hand of the good German nurse swings open the door.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/LCP18960213.2.23

Bibliographic details

Lake County Press, Issue 695, 13 February 1896, Page 7

Word Count
779

THE WORLD RUNS AWAY FROM US Lake County Press, Issue 695, 13 February 1896, Page 7

THE WORLD RUNS AWAY FROM US Lake County Press, Issue 695, 13 February 1896, Page 7