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A LESSON FOR THE WEAK.

Do you see that locomotive engine standing on the side-track. Something has broken oown about it. There is not a hiss of steam Iruni its valves ;it is still and cold as a d» j ad whale on a beach; it can't draw a train ; it can't even move itself. Now, tell me, do you believe that any amount of tinkering and hammering at it would make it go .' Not a bit. Nothing on earth will make it go except steam in the boiler, and even that won't unless the engine is in order. Everybody knows that, you say. Do they? Then why don't they act on this principle in every case where it applies ? Ileie is such a case. Willing concerning Uio wife, a gentleman siiys : " In the autumn of 1880 my wife lell into a low, desponding stale through family bereavement. Her appetite was p tor, and no food, however light, agreed with her. After eating she had pain and tightness at the chest, and a sense of fullness as if swollen around the waist. She was much troubled with flatulence, and had pain at the heart and palpitation. At times she was so prostrated that she was confined to her room for days together, and had barely strength to move. " At first she consulted a doctor at Ferry Hill, but getting worse, she went to see a physician at Ne*\ castle. The latter gave her some relief, but still she did not git her .strength up; and after being under his treatmer.t for six months she discontinued going to him Better and worse, she continued to suffer for over a year, when she heard of Mother Seigd's Curative Syrup. She began taking it, and soon her appetite revived and her food (jure 7ter strength. In a short time she was quite a new woman. Since that time (now nearly twelve ago) I have always kept this medicine in the house, and if any of my family ail anything a few doses puts us right.— Yours truly, (Signed) George Walker, Grocer, etc , Ferry Hill, near Durham, October 2.lth, 18!>3." We call attention especially to those words in Mr. Walker's letter which are printed in Italics. You can pick them ont at a glance. They show how fully he understands where human strength comes from — that it comes from digested food and not from any medicines the doctor or any one else can give us. Let U8 have no mistake or confusion of mind on this important point. For example. Mrs. Walker was ill with indigestion and dyspepsia. Her symptoms and how she suffered, her husband tells us. Tha disease destroyed her power to obtain any strength from food, and Nature suspended her appetite in order that she may not make worse by eating what could only ferment in the stomach and fill her blood with the resulting poisons. The onlyioutcome of such a state of things must be pain and weakness — weakness which, continued long enough, must end in absolute prostration and certain death. Well, then, she failed to get up her strength under the treatment of either doctor. Why / Simply becau-e the medicines they gave her — whatever they may have been — did not cure the torpid and inflamed stomach. If they hud cured it then she would have got up her strength exactly as she afterwards did when she took Seigel's Syrup. lSut the trouble is this : Medicines that will do this are rare. If the doctors possess them they would use them, and cure people with them, of course. Mother Seigel's is one of these rare and effective medicines. If there is anottv ras good the public has not yet been made acquainted with the fact. But even the Syrup does not impart strength; it is not a so-called "tonic;" there is no such thing. It (the Syrup) ourex the disease, drives out the poison, repairs the machine. Th-n comes the appetite (all of itself) and digestion and strength. You see the order— the sequence. Yes. Well, please bear it in mind. The mechanics set the engine in order ; then the stoker gets up the tteam. And of the human body — the noblest of all machines — Mother Seigtl's Syrup is the skilled mechanic. „,%

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZT18980624.2.21

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXVI, Issue 8, 24 June 1898, Page 13

Word Count
712

A LESSON FOR THE WEAK. New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXVI, Issue 8, 24 June 1898, Page 13

A LESSON FOR THE WEAK. New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXVI, Issue 8, 24 June 1898, Page 13

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