WHAT DOES A SPUR DO FOR A HORSE.
Your horse is weak aud weary with a a long day's journey. You have ridden him since early morning. Impatient to reach a shelter for the night you dig the spurs into his panting sides. He leaps forward and for a time trots onward rapidly. What did the spur do for him ? Did it give him strength ? If so, why feed him ? Here is a short personal statement which a man makes. Try if you can see any likeness between the two cases. He says : "Up to August, 1885, I was always a strong, healthy man. At that time I began to feel tired, dull, and heavy, with a faint dizzy sensation as it 1 should tumble down any minute. I could not imagine what was coming over me. There was a bad taste in my mouth, my breath was bad, and my mouth would often fill with an offensively slimy matter. My. appetite was poor, and after eating I suffered great pain, and wind would roll all over me. I had much pain at the stomach, and was sick every morning, and threw up a great deal of phelgm. I also had a pain like the thrust of a knife cutting me between the shoulders and low down in the back at the kidneys. When at work I got tired in five minutes, and had to stand and rest.
"I kept on with a.y work, however, for some time as best I could, for I had a wife and family depending upon me. But it was a hard and tedious task, as even stooping made me ory out with pain. After a while I grew so weak I could scarcely crawl about, and was compelled to give up my employment. When I ventured out of doors I felt bo dizzy that I had frequently to stop and reat for fear of falling, and was so bad that people would think I was in drink, and I had often to call at a chemist's aud get a draught to help me home. 1 tried herbs and other medicneS; and was attended by a doctor, but I got no better. In thia dead-and-alive way I lingered on until April, 1890, when my wife got an almanac from the druggist, and I read a case of a railway guard at Manchester, who hid been oured by a medicine called Mother's Seigels Curative Syrup after the doctors had given him up. So I wrote to him, and he replied that it had cured him and would do me good. Upon this I got a bottle, and after a few doses I felt better and by keeping on using it I was soon all right and back at my work, and have been well ever since. When I. feel any signs of stomach disorder a few doses set me right directly. I feel very grateful for the great benefit I have received, and wieh others who may be ill (o know of it ; as if I had known of Mother Seigel's Syrup at the outset I would have been saved over four years' suffering. I have lived in Birkdale fifteen years, and if any one writes, to me I shall be glad to reply. (Signed ) ' ' Thomas Spberin, " Kitchen Range Setter, "28 Stamford Road, "Birkdale, Southport."
Now, where Is the likeness between Mr Sperrin's experience and our illustration about the horse 1 It is this : The horse gains no new strength from the application of the spur. Of course we all see that he cannot. But the pain arouses him and makeß a draft on his reserved nervoas power — with a corresponding degree of exhaustion to follow. This is always Nature's way. She gives nothing for nothing. All must be paid for. Look back at Mr Sperrin's statement where he says : '" J hept on at my work, for I had a wife and family depending on me' That was his spur. It was work or worse with him, as it is with most of us. But he had t-3 pay for labouring when he was unable, by having to give up work altogether, and what the end would have been had not Seigel's Syrup come to the rescue nobody can say. Possibly the saddest thing we can think of. Any way this triumphant medicine saved him, and he can work now without a spur.
If the reader also has indigestion and dyspepsia, with its painful and alarming consequences and symptoms, or knows of another who has, he will be able to treat himself or advise his friend.
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Bibliographic details
Tuapeka Times, Volume XXIV, Issue 1904, 15 June 1892, Page 4
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770WHAT DOES A SPUR DO FOR A HORSE. Tuapeka Times, Volume XXIV, Issue 1904, 15 June 1892, Page 4
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