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IT IS EASY TO ASK QUESTIONS.

A child can ask questions that a wisO man caii’t answer; Yds; and there are some questions that the ablest debtors don’t like to havo people ask thorn; 'Sajr a qhestidn of this sdrWwhilo wo are about iti hSWevfer; we might ttß tVell tell tho story SW-dltflit rtiVAJi aiid httVe done with it; , . Mw Sdrail Mace Was Very ill with influenza. That wm in February, 1892, the jiiiio o* tlio - arnica ..lYili severe. She was'suddenly seized witll k violent pain in .the heqd (holli ,frynt and f'HrJrlKnd tehiplpsi.v ShaJida.jpihun joints, too, and was hot. imd • levcnshi: She . went W l>9d- wd ; «ont ; the doctor. Ho ' came', examined W,'took her temperature over 100 degrees—and said very little, like a wise man, Tho lady could not turn herself in bed. She lived on slops, such ns milk nnd broth; she toiild liot sWslibW A morsel of solid food; Jllic husband pressed bet to taka SttdliS foStL Siiyihif; "If yoti don’t dnt J’dii will stdi-vb.” Eight enough j bitt lid forgot thqt when one can’t oat ho can’t eatl dhdthtte’S ilh oHai ‘ tVelij she gjit ii’eaker aiid iveaker; ah 4 fell away until thdiro wasn’t- niuch left. of her but skih and hone. Then;.-Id liot ailSiotjq |3Ho Jirit hot HiteStitih j “ Ddfctbti QH shidl gel tyellf ( The dbcjtot’s answer and JipneSt,; wo like ai|d respect hiiii .fbr it... Hb^said,; “ Mrs Maco v I dOihot.khow,’’ lie, couldn’t tell'. Neither, otiior ;3o,etbr.; hot ev<?n if id had a Bt.'dnglof iti'tlbs to H U naine as long a kite’s tail. But did she get well? IVait a bit. tVe must hark back a minute nowv . ... * ; Along about the 10th of March/ 1880 Mrs Mace began to feel tired, languid, nnd weary, as if hor work wore too much for her,‘she said, Bho had a had taste-in the mouth, poor appetite, and whatever she ate gave her pain at tho chest and heart. “1 had;” .she .continues; “a dull heavy ■tfaiii. tight gjitlti afaft,|petfr66ii.'igif shbdiaeiSi' ah«'a - Siilklh§ feeling qt the pit of tho-stomaoh, and a ''rising' of foul gas ‘ in my throat.' Later on I had rhoumatib 1 pains in niy heart, chest and back. I sent tor a doctor, who attended mo for six 1 -weeks, but I got worse. Ono day tho cook ' said, * Why don’t you try Mother Soigel’s ' Curative Syrup ?’—this being a mcdioiuo my mistress (I was living with a lady iu Camden Town) kept in tho house for ’ family use. I did so, and was soon as 1 strong as ever." Years fledaWay, and in 1891 she had tho first attack of influenza, and in 1892 tho ■ Sdcohdj already described 111 part. Wo now L (ionlpleto the account of the 1892 attack; ’ Mrs Mace says: "Thedpoter continued td ? attend ,‘ihb fdt wbefe; 1 Mid I tdok fitt • medicines ft;: that tilde; h'it grtideil lid ? Strohgth. After havihg sdSefea fdf seteii , weeks I sajd to my lluSbatid, ■ I will ho# pee what Mbthbr Sbigdl’s CiiratiVo Syriiji ’ #ill do fob the. Xtethaps it maj turd ? iuflUehza as well ns other nllmonts.’ t carried, out this rbsOlUtion ; began tiikilig fho Sytiipj iiiid, fras ,sbbii i tJft idy, lobjt, ftdalil; - hud , haye sihoe, Itbpt in bidtllprit lipaltll; ' (Signed) SiKAir Mace, Mohk’s Ftirui; I (Stoat Warluy. Brentwood; Essex, August 27th, 1802.’’ - - - -mNow, we .hava-hev«r.-advortised Mothej Soigel’o Curative” Syvup as a remedy 0 fpr jnfluenza. ..Jfef f t)i®-,>f«cte dtirteil '* 1 y Mrs Maioo cannot ■ho disputed. Whsiii is the conclusion? A very simple - one ihl II deed.- She did' ilbt havo-influenza until 11 her system had been debilitated by indigestion and dyspepsia. It is such people ; generally (almost wholly) that all epidemic diseases attack. Tho dreaded '■ cholera scarcely ever touches anybody except a dyspeptic—cholera is a malady )' of the bowels only. The more we hear of disease the more the proof piles up showing that persons with a sound 0 digestion are safe against dying of any--0 thing except violence or old age. The 0 Syrup cured Mrs Mace’s' influenza by taking away tho ground it stood on—the 0 torpidity of hor digestion, o She once asked, “ Doctor, do you think c I shall got well?” Tima and Mother p Seigcl have said "Yds;"

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZTIM18950119.2.28

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Times, Volume LVII, Issue 2413, 19 January 1895, Page 4

Word Count
703

IT IS EASY TO ASK QUESTIONS. New Zealand Times, Volume LVII, Issue 2413, 19 January 1895, Page 4

IT IS EASY TO ASK QUESTIONS. New Zealand Times, Volume LVII, Issue 2413, 19 January 1895, Page 4

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