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FROM A VETERAN.

As this is jubilee year it tends to make on look back and think of the flight of time, and m this way I am reminded that I am one of the veterans m the sale of your valuable and and successful medicine. I have Isold it m England and many parts of Scotland, Well do J remember the first circular yon tent ci|t

some nine or ten years aga. You had come to England from America to introduce Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup, and I was struck by a paragraph m which you used these words : — "Being a stranger m a strange land, I do not 'wish the people to ieel that I want to take the least advantage over them. I feel that / have a remedy that will cure disease, and I have so much confidence m it that I authorise my agents to refund the money if people should ay that they ha»e not benefitted ts use»"y Two old gentlemen, whose names then would not like me to give you, had bees, martyrs to Indigestion for many yearut They had tiied all kinds of medicine without relief. One of them was so bad he could nse bear a glass of ale. Both were advised to uas the Syrup and both recovered, and were hale and hearty as men m the prime of life.

A remarkable case is that of a house painter named Jetteries, who lived at Penshurst, m Keut. His business obliged him to expose himself a great deal to wind and weather, and he was seized wi(h rheumatism, and his joints soon swelled up with dropsy, and were very stiff and painful. Nothing that the doctors could do seemed to reach the seat of the trouble. It so crippled him that he could do hardly any work, and tor the whole of the winter ot 1878 and '79, he had to give up and take to hisbed. He had been afflicted m this sorry way for three years, and was getting 1 worn out and discouraged. Besides, he had spent over £13 for what he called " doctor's stun " without the least benefit. In the Spring he heard of what Mother Seigels Curative Syrup has done for others and bought a 2s 6d bottle of me. In a few days he sent me word 1 he was much better — before he had finished the bottle. He then sent to me for a45 6d bottle, and as I was going that way I carried it down to him myself. On getting to his house what was my astonishment and surpiisc to find him weeding an onion bed. I could hardly believe my own eyes, and said : — "You ought not to be out here, man, itp be the death of you, after having being lai all winter with rheumatism and dropsy." His reply was : " There is no danger. The weather is fine, and Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup has done for mc m a few days what the octors could not do m three years. I think shall get well now." He kept on with the syrup, and m three weeks he was at work again, and has had no return of the trouble ior now nearly ten years. Any medicine that can do this should be known all over the world. Yours faithfully, (Signed) Rupert Graham. Of Graham d! son. Holloway House, Sunbury, Middlesex, June 25th, 1887 The above wonderful cure of Rheumatism was the result of the wonderful power of Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup to cleanse the blood of the poise nous humours that arise rom Indigestion nd Dyspepsia.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AG18890627.2.27

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Ashburton Guardian, Volume VII, Issue 2159, 27 June 1889, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
604

FROM A VETERAN. Ashburton Guardian, Volume VII, Issue 2159, 27 June 1889, Page 3

FROM A VETERAN. Ashburton Guardian, Volume VII, Issue 2159, 27 June 1889, Page 3

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