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SHE NATURALLY THOUGHT SO.

Mrs Jlicken says she supposes the tlocior knew ivlmt was (he waiter with Lizzie. < Maybe ho and maybe he didu'i. Now*, let me have your oar for :i quarter of a minute, n» though you were a telephone, while T. talk a suggestive truth into it. t; Head any big medical book, intelligently a and honestly written, and you will be as- 1: touched to find what a lot of diseases there* a i ; t dcFcrtbcd sivc said to bo '"oi- unknown si (IMGIX." o 'therefore, the doctor might not have midorstnnd what ailod Liz/.ie Iliokon, and no blame to him. As it was. lie worked away p at the symptom* (the outside presentments, e you know) and trusted to luck for results. g And ho mu;ht have struck it right, but lie U did not. unfmiunatoly; and it came to paw ti what .Mr? Hirken is going to tell us about. t< ft was in 1896 that the young girl began tl to suffer terribly with pains which, as *he si put it, " ran right through" her, particu- {\ fo.rly across ihe stomach and under the. n shoulder blade*. A continuance of this so ci prostrated her that she would sometimes he li laid up for a month or six week**. We fan- ft eied it was riieumaiism, yet it did uot act o: quite like that complaint. u " She was also greatly troubled with a ir nasty cough that completely took the power a.« out of her.' I called upon the doctor with u my daughter, and told him how sho had d been handled: and I puppose he knew what y was the mailer with her, but. at all events, ai lam certain his medicines did her no good. - " Then 1 bought her all sorts of cough p medicines, but they had no more effect o than if slip had used m much water. e: "By this time (he poor girl could neither w eat nor sleep, and you may be wire we were w in great worriment and perplexity to know b what to do. II "However. 1 saw one of the Mother Soi- h; gel'tj Syrup advertisements, and gent to b the chemist for a bottle, and before slw it finished it T could see she vya* better. Ho wo kept on giving her this lemedv until p she was completely cured. ' Ki *'T have used the Nvrup mvself for in- \\ digestion, and it cured, after 'l had worn C out a deal of other tnedicincs to no pur- n , P°* p"I want to say, go strongly that there can \ i: ho no doubt of my meaning, thr.t the en- 0 j tire credit Lizzie's recovery due to \ Mother Seigel'a Svrup, and also for mv si ott ;n- , u We both Mvear by it. and are seldom Tjwithout a hottli* in ihe house. I commend w it to evervbody."—Mrs J. lJirken. Oraluun fa street, Auburn. X.S.W.. November 27, 1899. !tl — lbe railway stations in Sweden at which meals are served are known liy a ! ? j, sign which bear? the .mggestive emblem of j -j j a eroded knife and fork. I p', — The tfd)io of ascents of Mont Wane for "K 3900. which ha« been j>ub:i*hed. shows that | ei: the Swiss nation leads with 38 ascent*, fob ] it lowed by the French, Germans, and the ! m Americans, Knghmd being quite low down • he the list, having made only five .'.scents. The I at pioneers in the Kfcem «»f .Mont Blanc in 1 ,<m 1785 were Savoyard*. Tiic first Swis« and 'us the English asemts were in the follow-j re ing year. Then cam** the first German in Ifo 1802, the first "Polish in 1818. the first Aine-1 pi riean in 1819. the fin=t French in 1834, and I $\\ the first Italian in 1840. '

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ODT19010720.2.57

Bibliographic details

Otago Daily Times, Issue 12100, 20 July 1901, Page 8

Word Count
641

SHE NATURALLY THOUGHT SO. Otago Daily Times, Issue 12100, 20 July 1901, Page 8

SHE NATURALLY THOUGHT SO. Otago Daily Times, Issue 12100, 20 July 1901, Page 8