Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

YOU MUST HAVE A GOOD STOVE. ♦ Yon can't have a fire without burning some kind of fuel. Yon agree to this ? Wby, of coarse. Well, now suppose you had bought a stove in which no fuel whatever mould turn, what would you do ? Throw it back on the dealer's hands and get another 1 To be sure. Now, fancy you had But let ns have the story first and draw the conclusion afterwards. A woman tells this bit of experience : — " It was in 1882," she says, " when I began to feel ill and oat of sorts. I did not know what was the matter with me. In the morniag I was tired and languid, and was constantly spitting and belching up a clear fluid-like water. My appetite gradually left me, and I had great pain aft^r every morsel I ate. I had great pain at the caest, which at time 3 seemed to strike through to the back and shoulders. I lost a good deal of sleep at night, owing to sp«ma and to wind that appeared to gather in my sides. No food, however simple, agreed with me. For three years I Buffered like this, and could take no solid food, such as a meat dinrer. " Now, as I had always been of an active disposition, I s'rove hard to do my work and attend to my Bhop, but in April, 1885, 1 got so bad that I sent for my daughter, who was living at Priest Hutton, near Carnforth, an! 6he returned home. Whilst away she bad beea under a doctor for weakness aod neuralgia, but getting no better she had been iecommended to take a medicine called Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup and this cured her ; so she insisted upon my taking the same medicine. I got a bottle from Messrs Neeiham Bros., chemisis, Brighouse, and began to take it. Iq a day or two I found relief. Boon all my pains left me, and I gradually gained strength. I could eat my food, and after having used two bottles I found myself completely cured. " I have recommended this medicine to many of my frieDds and customers who come to my shop, and it has done them good ; bo I think it right that its virtue should be made as widely known as possible." (Signed) Mrs Collinge, grocer, Bastrick, Brighouse, near Halifax. Another woman says :—ln: — In December, 1885, after my confinement, 1 hegan to have a poor appetite and much pain and sickness after eating. My food seemed to turn to wind, and I suffered from fulness in the chest and pain in the stomach. I gradually lost my strength, and fell into a low despondent state of mind. However light food I took I had pain, so that I became afraid to eat. I lost a deal of Bleep, and got so weak I was frequently obliged to he down on the couch and rest. At times the pain was almost more than I could bear, and I hid to go to bed and have hot ealt applied to my chest ani s omach, for when these attacks came on I felt as if l was dying. The doctor who attended me said I was suffering from Chronic Indigestion, and that something was wrcng with the " upper stomach " Wbat a strange statement for a doctor to make 1 He did all he could to relieve m«, but without success, and I lingered on in this w«iy for twelve months. About this time Mr Connor, stevedore, living at Dennison street, told my lather of the great benefit he had danved from taking Mother Beimel's Syrup, and I sent at once and got a bottle, and after taking three bottles all pain left me. I got strong and could eat anything, and from that day to this I have never been ill. 1 keep the medicine in the house, and if any of the family ail anything a dose or two of Mother Beigel'i Syrup sets them right. (Signed) Mis Raid, 12 Galton street, Great Howard street, Liverpool. We slid you cannot have afire without burning some kind of fuel. The human s omach is a stove, aod food id the luel we pat into it. If the food is consumed, or digested the body ia nourished and built up, and we enjoy health and strength; but if otherwise we quickly waste away and perish. Njw, when tho Htocnach refuaas to digest, burn or consume food, we have what is called indigestion and dyspepsia, the most common and daogerous ot all diseases" This is what ailed these two women, and what ails millions more in this country. The conc'uaion is pla n enough : — The remedy which cured them will cure others. Then (i he fire burning well) we shall have heat, which is life and power.

OH A Ifiif OP A3 '•radical Watchmaker and IcwvlUt, fgj- All kinds of W;itohc«, Clocks, etc., Repaired under i UAWuUfti ■* Li( - !l ' lll o u (-'wivl, Pnnccb btnjet, DUfJEDSNi my own supervision. Jc^eUoxj Manufactured and Repaired on the premises. Old Jewellery Bought, made up into Fashionable Designs, or Exchanged,

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZT18920729.2.47.1

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Tablet, Volume XX, Issue 41, 29 July 1892, Page 29

Word Count
857

Page 29 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealand Tablet, Volume XX, Issue 41, 29 July 1892, Page 29

Page 29 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealand Tablet, Volume XX, Issue 41, 29 July 1892, Page 29