SEIGEI/S fiYEUE. seigei/s syßup. SEIGEL’S SYEUP. SBIGBL’S IIS’SfBDP* SEIiGEL’S STEUP. SEIGE^SSTBCiPi SEIGBL’S SYEUPSBIGBL’S SYSUP. SEIGBL’S SYSOP. SBIGBL’S SYRUP. SEIGEI/S SYEUP. . SEIGEL’S. ■ SBIGEL’S SYSOP. SEIGBL’S SYSOP. SEIGEL’S SYRUP. SEIGEL’S SYRUP. • • SBIGEL’S SYRUP. SEIGEL’S SYEUP. SBIGEL’S . SYRUP. SEIGELS SYEUP. SEIGEL’S SYEUP. SEIGEL’S SYEUP. SEIGEL’S SYEUP. SEIGBL’S SYEUP. " GOOD ADVICE AND A WOODEN leg:* . , If I hadn’t given pay friendJtoSßMtfiaf the bestpiece'of advice" wla. youngfellow could give another weehould he etiU>—that .• if •*Jim- lived without the' advice. This may Bound rather strange and mixed to yon,' bnfcit’e all right whenyou taka it by thehandlA ' You see it was this way. Jim wi*-e handsome chap, twenty-five years old. foppish and dressy, fond of society. ■ had plenty of money, bub with the seeds of consumption in him.' Got ’em from his mother, who died of it. Well, Jim began to cough, aad ' run down hill fast. The doctors couldn’t help him. and told , him so. One day he was talking to me about it, and actually broke down and cried. ” Jim,” says L** there’* just one chance for you, and I want yea to ' jump for it right away. That’s to go out; West in America and live on the elopes of the Rooky Mountains, in the pine woods, 1 in a hot or a tent, and stay there till yonare dead or well. Don’t write to me (or a year, then come hack or let me hear from you.” Bidding a sad farewell to the young girl he was engaged to .be married to. Jun went- 1 * Two years afterwards I met him. is town; he was as hearty as a buck, bat walked with a limp. He had lost his eight leg, below the knee, in a fight with a grizzly hear, and now hobbled around on 0 wooden one. <r And ifa all your fault,” ha said. ”If it hadn’t been for your advice I’d ;never gone there. Now Edith won’t marry me. Says she don’t want a husband with a wooden- leg, and I don’t want a friend who gave me the wooden leg.” Well, there.! I -was never so taken aback. My advice had saved Jim’s life and restored ms health, yet because he oonldwi have two sound: lags and a wife besides ■ he threw me overboard. I . vowed I’d never give anybody :s hit of, good advice again. I’d let ’em die first. , But thafe •where 1 was hasty and wrong..' It if a man’s duty to keep on doing good, whether people, are grateful or not.. Here |a Mg Prank Stanley Langman.’. Hii-wifogave him a piece of good- advice, and he was sensible enough to act 'on’ it. In Jbm» 1882, it was that, he fell ill.- Be feU weak, tired apd t weary without any ehs» side reason for it. His appetite there was a bitter taste in his montivenn. a bad pain in the chest and etocmo&Jtajr. eating. Sometimes.. be wbijld : break ■‘OUfc into a sweat and feel so -prostrated hind have to lie down. It was feared he had some Mnd of internal tnmour. Oaoeha had an attack at-the railway station, .awl people crowded . round. him, thinkxnjp he was dying. ■ r ’ . During another attach, he kissed:; hi* child, believing his . time had come* A doctor examined him for heart disease, bat couldn’t find any. He advised LtOffman to take, only milk and brandy. mQk and water and such slops." Still ns bad those frightful periodic attacks. After attending him some time the doctor said, “I can’t find out what is the matter with you; you had better see a Weet.End physician.” Mr Langman did so. aihcl the West End doctor said, the’ patient’s fiver made too much bile, and ordered medicine and a milkdiet. ' Two more doctors were cdnsuXted" with no better result,. aad the unhappy man remained in that game miserable form for seven years. In February.lSSS.bo read in a , newspaper of a .cate like his having'been dared by MctherSeigel’e Curative Sy?ap. but inasmuch as the best medical advice in London Was of no nts, what could be expected from aU advertiaed medicine P “ Nothing, of course,” siidMr Laugman. .. ' . , His wife thought differently. ** Tow try SeSgel’s Syrup,” she said, " Ev&jhotytpeakM well of iti* He did try it/aadin three months he was well, and has been well evar siuca. In a letter dated Ilea, 47. 1891, he«»ye,-/ , Mother.Seigal’a Curative Syrup ehved my life,” and slga% his name to- what he says—" prank Stanley Laagman, 44, RppelfUy.” His malady or tumours, but the oause of almost'alj‘pangs, aadpaiaa, call them what you,wilt, ;. Mr Langman. was rawed by f&fm and a good medicine, for -which grateful. So I take notice that everybody isn’t like Jim Smalley, withhlajirr bear and his wooden, leg. G.WJ?. London, February, 1892. .SEIGEL’S SYEUP. ; ' SEIGEL’S SYRUP. ‘ SBIGEL’S SYEUP. SBIGEL’S SYEUP. SEIGEL’S SYEUP. SEIGEI/S SYRUP. SEIGEI/S SYRUP. " iEIGByS SYRUP. IBIGEI/S SYRUK SBIGEL’S SYRUP. SEIGEI/S SYEUP. lEIGEI/S SYEUP. SEIGEI/S syrup; SEIGEL’S SYRUPi SEIGBL’S SYRUP. SEIGEI/S SYRUP. IBIGEL’S STEUPi IEIGBI/S SYRUP SBIGEL’S SYRUP : SEIGELS SYEUP, (EIGBL S SYRUP. I SEIGEL’S SYEUH | SEIGEI/S SYRUP. V SBIGEI/Si SYRUP. M . :r.-
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Bibliographic details
Lyttelton Times, Volume LXXXI, Issue 10308, 29 March 1894, Page 3
Word Count
841Page 3 Advertisements Column 6 Lyttelton Times, Volume LXXXI, Issue 10308, 29 March 1894, Page 3
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