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One-ijXDerioaoe a'f Many, •Having experienced a great ileal of '"Tronble'!" from indigestion, so mttchio that T came near losing my life I My trotiblejalwsys oame attef eating *ay f food— g- t] /, However light, ,n Jlf And digestiolejK *V For two or three hours at a timi I had to ego through the most / 4 Excruciating pains, / •« And the only way I ever got" '•-Relief;!'* . 'Was by throwing up all my stomach •contained ! I No one can conceive the pains that 1 had to go through, until "At last?" ' r I was taken! "So that for three weeks I ; lay in bed and Could eit nothing 111 My sufferings were so that I called two doctors to give me somethinz that would > stop the pain. Their efforts were no good to me. At last I heard a good deal «• About your Hop Sitters ! And determined to try them." Got a bottle—in four hours I took the >'contents of K One !! ! ! ■ Next day I washout of bed, and have '*ot seen a %«' Sick !" 'Hour, from the same cause, since. ■*«—l'have recommenced it to hundreds of ■ others. Yon have no such "Advocate as I am." tQjso. Kb>dall, Allston, Boston, Mass. downright Cruelty. "To permit yourself and family to "Suffer!" With sickness when it'can.be prevented ■ and cured so easily With Hop Bitters ! 1 ! Prosecute the Swindlers!! H when you call for American Hop Bit- ' ters (see green twig of Hops on the white ■ label and Br Foule's name bloton in the • bottle) the vendor hands out anything but Amirican Hop Bitters refuse it and shun ' that vendor as yoa would a viper ; and if he . has taken your money for anything else in« 'diet him for the fraud and sue him for damages for the swindle, and we will pay : you liberally for the conviction. GREAT EXCITEMENT/ IN WALES ABOUT A M A ■"'*" "«'«> CUBE. • LIVING SIX YEABS*wriuiOUT GOING TO BEU.J Mr. Edtcok.—While spending a few days iat the pleasantVseaside* town of Aberyst- - with, Cardiganshire, Wales, f heard related what seemed to me either a fabulous story - or a marvellous cure. The story was that a poor sufferer who had not been able to lie down in bed for six long years, given up to die by all doctors, .ad been speedily cured by soma Patent T Medicine. It was related with the more : implicit confidence from the circumstance •• as was said, that the Vicar of the Lianry- ; styd was familiar with the facts and could ■ vouch for the truth of the report. Having a little curiosity to know how ;such stones grow in travelling, I took the liberty while at the village of Llanrystyd to • call on the Vicar, the Rev, T. Evans, and ■ to enquire about this wonderful cure. " Though a total stranger to him, both he and his wife most graciously entertained me in an half hour's conversation, principally touching the case of Mr Pngh, in which ' they Beemed to take a d<sep and sympa* thetic interest, having bees familiar with his sufferings, and now rejoiced in what Beemed to them a most remarkable cure. - The Vicar remarked that he presumed ■ his name had been connected with the report from his having mentioned the case to Mr John Thomas, a chemist of Llanon. He said Mr. Pugh was formerly a resident of their parish, but was now living in the • parish of Llanddeinol. He strongly vouched Mr. Wm. Pagh's • character as a respectable farmer and •worthy of credit. I left the venerable Vicar with a livelier sense of the happy relation of a pastor and people, feeling that he was one who truly sympathised with all who are afflicted in mind, body, or estate. On my return to Aberystwith, 1 was im--5 pressed with a desire to see Mr Pugh, • whose reputation stood so high. His faira is called Pancom-Mawr signifying "above the dingle," situated near the summit of a smooth round hill, overlooking a beautiful - valley in which is situated the lonely ivy* -..mantled Church of Llanddeinol. T found 'Mr Pugh apparently about 40 years old, of . medium height, rather slight, with a. pleas* ant and intelligent face. I tell him I had heard of his great affliction, and of his remarkable, and almost miraculous relief, and that I had come to learn from bis own lips, what there was of truth in the reports. Mr Pugh remarked that his neighbours had taken a kindly and sympathetic! interest an his case for many years, but of late theii interest had been greatly awakened by a happy change in my condition. What you ..report as having heard abroad, said he, is substantially trne, with one exception. 1 . never understood that my case was ever given up as hopeless by any Physician. 1 have been treated by several Doctors hereabouts, as good a3 any in Wales, but unfor--Innately no prescription of theirs evei broupht the desired relief. Fifteen years ago, he said, I first becamt conscious of a sou* and der-tnsed stomacl and loss of appetite, which the Doctors told

«Ie was Dyspepsia. What food I could hold in my stomach seemed to do me no good and was often thrown up with painful This was followed after a time with a hoarseness and raw soreness of thi .throat which the Doctors called bronchitis, and T was treated for that but with lifc'le success. Then came shortness of breath «nd a sense of suffocation, especially nights with a clammy sweat and I would have to open a dcor or window in winter weather to fill my Inngs with the cold air.

About six years ago I became so bad that -' could not sleep in bed, but had to take y unquiet rest and dreamy sleep sitting; an arm chair my affliction seeded to be downward into my bowels as well as upwards into my lungs and throat. In ±he violent cou hing spasms which, grew more frequent, abdonen would -collapse and at times HSwonld seentthat I should suffocate. All this time I wai reduced in strength so that 1 cou'd perform no hard labour and my spirits were conse much depressed. Early in this last spring I a Rli'l more Severe upwmodic attack, and my family •and neighbours became alarmed, believing I that certainly I wonld nit survlvo, when a neighbour, who had_ some knowle Ige, or nad heard of the medicine, sent to Aberyst.with by the driver of the Omnibus Post, Bomo seven miles distant, and fetched a bottle of Mother Ssiiiel's Curativo Syrup. jtiris' medicine they administered to me according to the directions, when to their surprise and delight no less than my own, the spasm ceased, I became at ease, and my •tomach w.is calmol. My bowels were Moved as by a gen tie cathartic, and i felt a

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DUNST18861231.2.17.1

Bibliographic details

Dunstan Times, Issue 1296, 31 December 1886, Page 4

Word Count
1,130

Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Dunstan Times, Issue 1296, 31 December 1886, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 Dunstan Times, Issue 1296, 31 December 1886, Page 4

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