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IS. 55. Kaiiweys.. NEW ZEALAND RAILWAYS, ALTERATION OF THURSDAY TRAIN TO FAIRLIE GREEK. BEGINNING- on 12th June, the Train from Timaru to Fairlie Creek on THURSDAYS, will start at 4 p.m., and nm at the same times as the Train on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays. BY ORDER. Wauted. IVTOTIOB TO THE LADIES AND GENTLEMEN OF TIMARU.—W. Penkose, the Premier Bootmaker, has his already large stock supplemented with Autumn and Winter Goods for 1890 of the Best Quality procurable in the English and Continental Markets. Special line of our own make for mustering. Note address, opposite King’s Stables, Timaru. HE CHURCH STREET CASH STORE Is Selling Fresh Eggs, Is 3d per doz Good Salt Butter, lOd per lb 4 Bushel Bag Feed Oats, 6s per bag. DAVID HOUSTON, Proprietor, WHY suffer agonising Toothache when such a remedy as "DEN TAG BA" can bo obtained for Is P This preparation gives instant relief. Try it. Prepared and sold only by G. B. WABBUBTON, Dispensing and Family Chemist, “ The Pharmacy,” Stafford Street, Timaru. ILate Advertise aw cuts. JJ! OR MORNING BEVERAGE TRY DAVID OWEJftS’ Mild Cared Bacon. AND Fresh. Ground Coffee. i Our COFFEE is Roasted and Ground on tie Premises and CANNOT BE BEAT. DAVID OWERS, THE PEOPLE’S GBOOBB, Stafford Steeet. TEN MONTHS’ SUFFERING IN AN HOSPITAL. There is an old saying that physicians are a class of men who dour drugs, of which they know little, into bodies of which they know less. This is both true and untrue at the same time. There are good and poor lawyers, and good and poor doctors. The trouble with these medical gentlemen as a profession is that they are clannish, and apt to be conceited. They don’t like obe beaten at their own trade by outsiders who have never studied medicine. They therefore pay, by their frequent failures, the penalty of refusing instruction unless the teacher bears their own “ Hall Mark.” An eminent physician—Dr Brown-Sequard, of Paris—states the case accurately when he says :—“ The medical profession are so bound up in their own self-confidence and conceit that they allow the diamond truths of science to be picked up by persons entirely outside their ranks." We give a most interesting incident, which illustrates this important truth. The steamship “ Concordia,” of the Donaldson Line, sailed from Glasgow for Baltimore in 1887, having on board as a fireman a man named Richard Wade, of Glasgow. He had been a fireman for fourteen years on various ships sailing to America, China and India. He had borne the hard and exhausting labour, and had been healthy and strong. On the trip we now name he began for the first time to feel weak and ill. His appetite failed, and h suffered from drowsiness, heartburn, a bad taste in the mouth, and costivoness, and. irregularity of the bowels. Sometimes when at work he bad attacks of giddiness, but supposed it to bo caused by the heat of the fire room. Quite often he was sick and felt like vomiting, and had some pain in the head. Later during the passage he grew worse, and when the ship reached Halifax he was placed in the Victoria General Hospital, and the ship sailed away without him. The house surgeon gave him some powder to stop the vomiting, end the next day the visiting surgeon gave him a mixture to take every four hours. Within two days Wade was so much worse that the doctors stopped both the powders and the mixture. A month passed, the poor fireman getting worse and worse. Then came another doetor, who was to be visiting physician for the next five months. He gave other medicines, but not much relief. Nearly all that time Wade suffered great torture ; ho digested nothing, throwing up all he ate. There was terrible pain in the bowels, burning heat in the throat, heartburn and racking headache. The patient was now taking a mixture every four hours, powders one after each meal to digest the food, operating pills one every night, and temperature pills two each nights to stop the cold sweats. If drugs could cure him at all, Richard had an idea that he took enough to do it. But on the other hand pleurisy set in and the doctors took ninety ounces of matter from his right side, and then told him he was sure to die. Five months more rolled by, and there was another change of visiting physicians. The new one gave Wade a mixture which he said made him tremble like a leaf on a tree. At this crisis Wade’s Scotch blood asserted itself. He refused to stand any more dosing, and told the doctors that if he must die he could die as well without them as with them. By this time a cup of milk would turn sour on his stomach, and lie there for days. Our friend from Glasgow was like a wreck on a shoal, fast going to pieces. We will let him tell the rest of his experience in the words in which he communicated it to the press. He says:—“When I was in this state a lady whom I had never seen came to the hospital and talked with mo. She proved to be on angel of mercy, for without her I should not now be alive. She told me of a medicine called ‘ Mother Soigel’s Curative Syrup,’ and brought me a bottle next day, I started with it without consulting the doctors, and in only a fete dags'time I was out of bed calling for ham and eggs for breakfast. From that time, keeping on with Mother Seigel’s great remedy, I got well fast and was soon able to leave the hospital and come home to Glasgow. I now feel as if I was in another world, and have no illness of any kind.” The above facts are calmly and impartially stated, and the reader may draw his own conclusion. We deem it best to use no names, although Mr Wade gave them in bis original! deposition. His address is No. 244, Stoboroes ' Street, Glasgow, where letters will reach him.; Editor, <

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SCANT18900609.2.32.2

Bibliographic details

South Canterbury Times, Issue 6237, 9 June 1890, Page 3

Word Count
1,022

Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 South Canterbury Times, Issue 6237, 9 June 1890, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 South Canterbury Times, Issue 6237, 9 June 1890, Page 3