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ORDERS AND ARROWS.

Whrk the captain of a ship orders some hands aloft to furl the main b h o«rand In cr f e 8 dt JaokßeldOm »* £*W un ii n B 2.*£?/ tOOt 00 W Wbo l 8 ? BOTt °* CaptaiQ Wh6n OQe i 8 laid hLrfilnf w lockI ock of il ness-orders a patient to go abroad for the benefit of his health, it is quite another thinp. A trip and sojourn B ff a r y n ff i?% 6 '5 a 1 cx P enslTe .prescription, and most of us can't ar IL a Ifc th . c *« tor «»•*■ '* i> a choice bttween that and the graveyard we shall have to settle on the gray.yard ; it is handy by SnTfl 0 g f ?■ Bat " c wVeallyw V eally » hard "pushed ? That fi, as minSs^a 6 St™ 7 W6 mt UV * the matter ™»» ™ Arth^WKLS OOat^ t S t . i f pat to x, the P ur P° se - II concerns Mr W^ d ? on .ü M^ n t h^ Bh ' o! 3 Agent's Terrace, Polsloe Road, Exeter ; and for tha details we are indebted to a Utter written by him, dated March 7, 1893. He mentions that, in obedience to the orders of his doctors, be went to Cannes, in the South o France in £ O JS^ f . I 8 9°; a ? d BPeDt i he ™ ter thera - He al8 ° «P^Uhe e fo° »r.-nT « r 8 t J e Bame place ' He felt the *"« for the change : we will tell you why presently. But he obtained no radical benefit which also we will explain later on. oenent, 'xrr^w° Maicll ' 1890 ' he had * ' 3TCre " ? t m S? W * Want th * c reader t0 bonoor me with hiß best attention, as I must say ,n a few words what ought properly to take many Sboot an arrow into the air- as straight up as you can. You can t own W or ere n itWil »!-! 8 ! 1 ' " »" Ml °° " head, on you' ?™ni Z i Cblld '• ° r ° D the P» vement - Everybody's blood contains more or less poisonous elements. These are arrows, but unlike fn th« hn°H a T r fT th6 J al uWByBu WByB Btrike Oa the we » ke9t -P* or spots! n the body. If they hit the muscles and joints we call it rheuma turn and gout ; if they hit the liver we call it liver coipSt or bi!iousne8 8 ; if they hit the kidneys we call it Bright's disease •& they hit the nerves we call it nervous proatration, epilepsy, o^ any of fify other names ; if they hit the bronchial tubes wecall it Hot cmtis.etc; if they hit the air cells we call.it inflammation of tL ff Q L Ot J 7 '^, d ' b7 l' c r B r, ption ' And i^™°ch as ttesfpoisoned arrows pass through the delicate me B hes of the lungs a thousand times ee.ry day, it would be odd if they didn't hit them-wSn't M**lo?\ Wait a sit5 it- " folloW9 thata]l the variou a flo-called mere v iZt »" **"*»> at all *» «*** themelv^Z, merely symptoms of one only disease-namely, that disease which P AiLl/°Ti ?r d ' .Wewillß^ontotbeenlrtheßtory. Wewill B^ontotbeenlrthe B tory After the attack of lung inaammation Mr MeUuish suffered from loss of appetite pain in the ehe B t, sides, and stomach, and dangers™ constipauon. He could eat only liquid food and had to take S?bs n nl i 7 W6ek v h ? waß B 0 feeble that he could not »se in bed. He consulted one physician after another, obtaining no more than ternEave'reS. mediCine< be WM Ordered •««•"•■"« on ifo? iB i ett f r co ° clud ? Bin these words: "Whilst at Cannes I con7lf»*A %' W s° 88ld V ailment was weak digestion, and that I need not trouble about my lungs. But I never gained any real ground ' N 7S W when 1 began to take Mother Seigel's oSS ye S & helped me m one weak, and by continuing with it I got stronger and stronger, and am now in fair good health. This WhTddTn MellS .■' ° Ught l 8b ° Uld D6Ver rBCOVW - Arth " To sum up : This gentleman's real ailment was indigestion and dyspepsia, from whtch the blood poism comes that causes nearly all disorders and pains. The air of Southern France helped him fernporanly, because it is milder than ours ; it did not remove the poison. By care and the use of Mother Saigel's Curative Syrup he would have done better at home, as the result shows. So we see that it isn't the climate that kills or saves: it is the condition of the digestion. If, therefore, your doctor orders you CuraUve s'yJu" ' t6ll 77 ° n *"' filßt try Mother **$!

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZT18960320.2.43

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXIII, Issue 47, 20 March 1896, Page 29

Word Count
780

ORDERS AND ARROWS. New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXIII, Issue 47, 20 March 1896, Page 29

ORDERS AND ARROWS. New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXIII, Issue 47, 20 March 1896, Page 29