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SEIGEL’S SYRUP. SEIGEL’S SYRUP. SEIGEL’S SYRUP. SEIGEL'S SYRUP. SEIGBL'S SYRUP. 1 SEIGEL'S SYRUP. SEIGEL’S SIRUP. SEIGEL'S SYRUPSEIGEL’S SYRUP/ SEIGEL’S SYRUP. SEIGEL'S SYRUP, SEIGEL’S SYRUP. .SEIGEL'S SYRUP. SEIGEL'S SYRUP. SEIGEL’S SYRUP. SEIGEL'S SYEUP. SEIGEL’S SYEUP. SEIGEL’S SYRUP. SEIGEL’S SYRUP. SEIGEL’S SYEUP. SEIGEL'S SYEUP. SEIGEL’S SYRUP. SEIGELS SYEUP. SEIGEL’S SYEUP, SEIGEL'S SYEUP. SEIGEL'S SYEUP. SEIGEL'S SYRUP. THREE FORTUNATE WOMENi We will introduce you to the, oldest one first. Her name is Mrs Jessie Russell, and she lives near the city of New York, in America. She was born in London in 1787* and is therefore IQS years old. She remembers many incidents of her childhood, and still has traces of former beauty. Her eyes are bright, and become animated when she tails. 'She retains 1 her mental faculties completely. She descends two flights of stairs to every meal, and returns without assistance. Up to three years ago she was a regular attendant at the Greenwood Baptise Church. Her sight is excellent, and she the newspapers every day, and takes great interest in tho news from England. She has never had any sever© illness m her life, and her appetite and digestion are almost as good as they were fifty years ago. The second woman says: “ Ever since I was a child I have suffered from illness.' Thirteen years ago a tired, languid and heavy feeling came over me. The whites of my eyes became tinged with yellow, my. skin was sallow, and my hands and feet were cold and clammy. My mouth tasted: badly, especially in the morning, and I; j was often sick, vomiting a sour, frothy I fluid. I had a pain in the chest and sides,' i heartburn and flatulency. For four years' I suffered like this, and I shall be glad to! recommend the medicine that finally cured 1 me. (Sighed) (Mrs) Fbanceb Eaxntf Smith, 49a, Woodhouso Street, Leeds* January 25 th, 1892.” The third woman says: "I have been delicate all my life. , For the past etc years X have always felt tired, languid and weak. I had a poor appetite, a bad; taste in the mouth, and pain after every morsel I ate. I was dizzy, and often felt as if I waa going to fall. I always feltj sick, and would retch and strain, but could bring nothing up. There was a dtill pain at the right side and a dreadful pain between the shoulders. 1 never knew what it was to be well. After being on my feet for a time my legs would swell very much. Ho doctor was able to help me* nor any medicine ; that is, up to the timtif I took the one which gave me my health back. I never felt so well in my life as I do now. (Signed) (Mrs) Sabah Shabwaw; Glinton, near Market Deeping, Feb. 19fchj 1892.” Why do we put these three women in a group—the one venerable woman in America and the two others here in England ? They are perfect strangers to one another and always will be. We do it to show how lone and happily a woman may live if she only happens to escape the malady that everywhere threatens hefi sex; and also to show that those whd have been burdened and cursed with it may be cured and once more taste the joyi of health." Mrs Smith concludes her letter in these words After taking three bottles pt Mother Seigel’a Curative Syrup all pain and sickness left me, and I knew no morel of tho ailment that had troubled me B<j long, indigestion and dyspepsia., I know others who have been benefited by the Syrup. All sufferers should ti?e it,” Mrs Sharman adds that after she had doctored and doctored and taken everything, almost without getting any good from it, Mr Webster, a grocer of Glinton, said, 1 “Why don't you use Mother Seigel’B Curative Syrup?” She acted on hia suggestion, and’ health wasn’t long in coming. “I cannot speak too highly of Seigel’a Syrup,” she says. We should agree with her in that opinion, for a remedy that will in a few weeks put an end to a case of ohronio indigestion and dyspepsia is certainly worth a good word or two. How here you have these three Engliehwomen—one bo fortunate as to have lived more than a century without an illness; the others {still more fortunate) have known the sadness of suffering and the pleasures of recovery. ” .. ■ Oh, my! oh, my 1 how hard it is to tell, who is best off in this queer world. SEIGEL’S SYEUP. SEIGEL’S SYEUP. SEIGEL’S SYRUP. SEIGEL'S SYRUP. SEIGEL’S SYEUP. SEIGEL'S SYRUP. SEIGEL’S SYRUP. SEIGEL’S SYRUP. SEIGEL’S SYEUP. SEIGEL’S SYRUP. SEIGEL’S SYEUP. SEIGEL’S SYRUP. SEIGEL’S SYEUP. - ' . SEIGEL’S SYEUP/ SEIGEL'S SYEUP. ' SEIGEL'S SYEUP. SEIGEL'S SYEUP; SEIGEL’S SYEUP SEIGEL'S SYEUP 1 SEIGELS SYEUP, ! SEIGEL S SYEUP. ■ | SEIGEL’S SYEUP. SEIGEL’S SYEUP. SEIGEL'S SYEUP. SEIGEL’S SYEUP. SEIGEL’S SYRUP. | SEIGEL’S SYEUP. SEIGEL’S SYRUEr,

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/LT18940405.2.9.6

Bibliographic details

Lyttelton Times, Volume LXXXI, Issue 10314, 5 April 1894, Page 2

Word Count
817

Page 2 Advertisements Column 6 Lyttelton Times, Volume LXXXI, Issue 10314, 5 April 1894, Page 2

Page 2 Advertisements Column 6 Lyttelton Times, Volume LXXXI, Issue 10314, 5 April 1894, Page 2

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