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STARTLING EVENT IN A VILLAGE

To tho Editor of "Saturday Night," Birmingham. I recently came into possession of certain facts of so remarkable a nature, that I am sure you will be glad to assist in making them public. The following letters were shown to me, and 1 at once begged permission to copy them for the Press. They come from h highly responsible source, and may be receive! without question. MESSAGE from George James Gostmng, L.D.S., R.C.5.1., Ph.C.L, Licentiate in Pharmacy and Dental Surgeon. Stowmarket, July 18, 1889. To M«, Wuite, The enclosed remarkable cure should, I think, bo printed and circulated in Saffolk. Tho Htatoment was entirely voluntary, and is genuine in fact and detail. G. J. G* "To tho Proprietors of Mother Seigel's Syrup. " Gentlemen, — The following; remarkable euro was relatod to me by the husband. Mary Ann Spink, of Finbornugh, Suffolk, was for over twenty yenrs afflicted with rheumatism and neuralgia, and although comparatively a young woman at the time she was attneked (sho is now fifty), f-ho was compelled, in cousequence, to walk with two sticks, and even then with difficulty and p.iin. About a year and a half asro she was advised to try Mother Seigel's Syrup, and after taking three bottles and two boxes of Seigel's Operating Pilis, the use of her Umbt were restored, and bug iv dow able to walk three miles to Stowmarket with ease, frequently doing the distiince in three-quartars of an hour. Any sufferer who doubts this story can fully ascertain its truthfulness oy paying a visit to the village and enquiring of the villagers who will certify to the facts. "Appended is the husband's signature to the statement. (R Spink.) " G. J. GOSTLING, " Ipswich Street, " Stowmarkot." This is certainly a very pitiable case, •and the huppy cure wrought by this simple but powerful remedy, must move the sympathy of all hearts iv a common pleasure. This poor woman had been a cripple for twenty of her best years ; years in which she should have had such comfort and enjoyment as life has to give. But, on the contrary, she was a miserable burden to herself and ti Bource of care to her friends. Now at an age when tbe rest of us are growing feeble, ?he, in a manner, renews her youth and almost begins a new existence What a blessing and what a wouder it is 1 No one who knows her, or who reads her story, but will bo thankful that the good Lord haß enabled men to discover a remedy capable of bringing about a cure that reminds vs — we speak it reverently— of the age of miracles. It should be explained that this most remarkable cure is due to the fact that rhetim.itiain is a disease of tbo blood. Indigestion, constipation, and dyspepsia cause the poison from the partially digested food to enter the circulation, and the biood deposits it in the jcints and muscles. This is rheumatism. Seigel's Syrup corrects tho digestion, and bo stops the further formation and deposit of the poison. It then removes from the system the poison already there. It is not a cureall. It does its wonderful work entirely by its mysterious action upon the digestive organs. But when we remember that nine-tenths of our ailments arise in those organs, we can understand why Seigel'B Syrup cures so many diseases that appear to be so different ia their nature. In other words rheumatism and neuralgia are butßymptoms of indigestion, constipation, and dyspepsia.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TH18900416.2.24

Bibliographic details

Taranaki Herald, Volume XXXIX, Issue 8754, 16 April 1890, Page 4

Word Count
585

STARTLING EVENT IN A VILLAGE Taranaki Herald, Volume XXXIX, Issue 8754, 16 April 1890, Page 4

STARTLING EVENT IN A VILLAGE Taranaki Herald, Volume XXXIX, Issue 8754, 16 April 1890, Page 4