Thank you for correcting the text in this article. Your corrections improve Papers Past searches for everyone. See the latest corrections.

This article contains searchable text which was automatically generated and may contain errors. Join the community and correct any errors you spot to help us improve Papers Past.

Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

SIZE AND STRENGTH NO DEFENCE.

Here's a point for you to think over : She and development have nothing to do with health. A man may Btand six feet two inches in his stockings and have the muscles of a prize fighter, and yet be an essentially unhealthy man. His frail-looking wife may be really the better of the couple ; she may easily do more work, endure more exposure, bear more grief and worry, and outlive her big husband. There is a mystery in this that nobody can see into. It is a matter of vitality and organisation— not of dimensions. Take, for example, the case of Mr T. B. Staples, of Oakwood, Ont. He is a black smith ; and I well remember how, when a boy, I used to regard a blacksmith with awe and wonder on account of hia strength. It was fearsome to see him swing those mighty hammers and pick up a heavy cartwheel as though it were a child's hoop. Yet I saw only in part and understood in part. "Some twelve years ago," writes Mr Staples, " I became aware that the dreaded disease, dyspepsia, had chosen me for one of its many victims. It is hardly necessary for me to try to describe .ill the different feelings that came over me. I have talked with many people suffering with dyspepsia* and they have all had about the same experience. Among the symptoms on which we agreed are the following: Bad sasJe in the mouth ; fulness and deadness in the stomach after eating ; getting no good from one's food ; headache and papitation of the heart; gas and sour fluids from the stomach; dizziness, especially when one rises np suddenly, or bends over his work ; loss of appetite ; pains in the chest and back, and the weakness that comes from not eating and digesting enough food to keep the body going All these things I had ; and you can imagine how bad they are for any one ; particularly for a man who has got to earn his living by daily hard work, as in my case. " After I found out what was the matter I with me I consulted a doctor at once, and began to take the medicine he gave me. I am sorry to say it did me little or no good. Although there is a common opinion that stomach troubles are not very serious, and never dangerous, I must say that is not my opinion. No man who suffers from dyspepsia as long as I did (about six years) will ever talk foolishly or lightly about it. Even doctors admit it is the hardest of all diseases to keep track of, and to cure- If it does not kill a man right out of hand, it spread* the shadow of death ow him all the time he has it, and takei all the laughter out of his days. " Well, after the doctor's medicine failed, I kept on taking anything and everything that was recommended to be in hopes of relief. Yet none of them went to the root of the trouble. Sometimes I would feel a little better and sometimes worse, and that's the way things went on with me year after year, a dreary and miserable time. There's no money could hire me to live it over again. " I was still in this condition when a friend, that I had been talking to about myself, advised me to try Mother Seigel'E Curative Syrup. I didn't know the merits of the Syrup then, but being anxious to try anything that might help me, I bought a bottle from Messrs Hogg Brothers, and commenced taking it. All I oan say is, that 1 found relief immediately, and by continuing with it a short time, all my bad symptoms abated one by one, and I found myself completely rid of the dyspepsia. Since then I have never had a touch of the old complaint. If there is any other medicine in the world that is able to cure indigestion and dyspepsia as Mother Seigel's Syrup does it, why I have never heard of it. I have recommended the Syrnp to other BUfferers, and they have been more than pleased with it ; and I write these hasty lines in hope the publication of them may come in the nick of time to be useful to others still. Yours very truly (Signed) Thos. B. Staples, Oakwood, Ontario, February 25th, 1895. We need add but few words to Mr Staples' intelligent and manly letter. The disease which afflicted him attacks both sexes, all ages, and all classes and conditions of humanity. Nether youth nor strength is proof against it. It imitates other eomplaiats, and so leads to fatal mistakes in treatment. If you are wise you will acquaint yourself with its character, as described in Mother SeigePs almanack, and know what to do in time of need.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH18950924.2.17

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Manawatu Herald, 24 September 1895, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
818

SIZE AND STRENGTH NO DEFENCE. Manawatu Herald, 24 September 1895, Page 3

SIZE AND STRENGTH NO DEFENCE. Manawatu Herald, 24 September 1895, Page 3

Help

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert