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THE MARSHAL'S THINKING.

1 1 thotyfhrj; JBir»,'\! v said one of Napol»on's Maenalift^ tiiifi during a private tnterview*« Abe Emperor wSUT living the military man certain important iontrqotionn, ' I (bought, Sire— '

Quick v a wink lhe small Oorsican went into one of bis fits of cold rage and flew at theJUarlhall like a jungle tiger at •U fc^phMft*! r "; ■ • rot* flt&g^yktrotf/ Your h» ■hrieked in a voice raucous as the'ery of ft peacock and foil of malignant devilry. ' What have Ton to do with thinking ? Obey youriordVrs^ ;Sir, and leave the thinking *t& mV Go, ■> now, before 1 ittik« jou with my riding.whip ; so, go 1* Yet in the Tenth finsiars there was s better thinker, than Napolen, for on ths latter's-rttutn from Elba the Hussar (onoe a Parisian cobbler) predioted Waterloo. Shoemakers and tailors J are commonly lotellrctail m«n, and moit of them dynpcptici. Too muoh oogiUtlon and too little exercise does It.

Mr B. P. Le Breton, 1 of. 128, King Street, Sydenham, Ohristchurch. New Zealaud, is a tailor, aud, judging from a clear-headed letter of his,dated D. cem* thinker* Away back in his younger days be lived at Seafield, Ashburtoo, where bis fathefrbad a large farm and employed a number of men. When any of these men bejameJlU aj !dfteu happened, Le Breton^n^^e'f tan^^ he used to core thetntt^StJMSttier' S^gel'i Syrup. They hid Stird of it through a pamphlet re•rived from London.

' When I was a mere youlb,' says Mi lie Breton,.-,' I underwent great pain aad ftQXiet]t>{r£m kld&y trouble. 1 No tre»tnent mitigated it. and I suffered thus «nlil I reached' -toy youtog manhood. It wai then we read of Mother Seigel's Srup^atfdT first tried it ' Thatfft-.ijt of the medicine surprised as all. '^Wlihin three mouths 1 was quite Well, my kidneys acting perfectly and the pain complete)/ gone. r ' It wijtshow how deep the core went down, and how real and genuine it was, when I mention that I felt not even a ■iiapioiun of my former complaint for t'even yem. ' We ihen removed here to Christchurch, where 1 began business as a tailor and ootter.* AfieF a time I had a •ligbt renewal of tte kldooy disorder, otuted no doubt by my sedentary mode of life. It troubled- me but little, yet why should I endure it at all when tht remedy which delivered me once before was within eaty reach ? Q' I*tdWd*im£D«tfureTy that its natural •tficaoy had not departed from Mother Heigel • Syrup. A fpw small doses — oulyten drops each— went straight, to the al JeeteoV parts and wade* them sound and whole onoe mdre.

' My naqlher^ifi 82 yeftrs old, enj >ys exoeHent/tieißhh'r atfl hits the skin and complexion of a youog woman. This ►he attribojtes.to her having used Mother SeigelVSyjap off and on for many years Ig/ I have lived in thii locality for eleven yean, and must of^tlje people^ hate can Vouch for the truth o|sirhatl fceUyou.' We all do gome- tnfle^of thinking for ourselves ; and among then things we vgree upon— as prayed by abundant ovidenee — is this t— Tbat if there is » remedy which, above all others, can bt trusted to care most of our complaints, tho Dime of it is Mother Sbigel's S?rup.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TT19010925.2.31

Bibliographic details

Tuapeka Times, Volume XXXIV, Issue 4894, 25 September 1901, Page 4

Word Count
535

THE MARSHAL'S THINKING. Tuapeka Times, Volume XXXIV, Issue 4894, 25 September 1901, Page 4

THE MARSHAL'S THINKING. Tuapeka Times, Volume XXXIV, Issue 4894, 25 September 1901, Page 4

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