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Things Slowly Learned.

There is a man in Scotland who used to write many readable and instructive things. He signed himself " A Country Parson," and a bright parson he is. One of his essays is entitled, "Things Slowly Learned," a good line of thought for anybody. Well, here is on« of the things slowly learned — that disease doesn't jump on a man like a wild cat out of a tree, but develops from seeds and conditions, just as roses and weeds do. We who write and print the essays of which these line« are one, have laid this a hundred times ; but all the people don't eeem to have thoroughly grasped the idea yet. For if Mr Theodore Treasure alone had done so, he wouldn't have suffered ten years from attacks of rheumatic fever. In November, 1891, he says he had a fearful time with it. He tells us in a letter that he had dreadful pains all over his body, and was bo sore he couldn't bear anything to touch him. Even the bedolothes hurt him, like a feather against a sore eye. "I got little or no sleep," he says, 11 tossing all the night long, and trying to get ease by a shift of position. " I had a foul taste in the mouth, and spat up a great quantity of slimy phlegm. My appetite left me, and the little food I I forced down gave' me great pain at the ! che=t and sides. For Jivn months I was ' confined to my room, most of the time unable to leave my bed, and what I suffered during that time I have no words to des-< cribe." 1 Any one who has ever been through that ; sort of thing can easily believe what Mr ; Treasure saye ; for when every muscle and joint in a man's body is throbbing with inflammation, it isn't any common collection of words that can Bet forth his feelings. It is agony and torment in tho supreme degree. Yet we ought to know better than to have it. But we don't — not jet. " I was perfectly helpless," continues our friend, " and could scarcely move. In fact, the people had to move me from one side of the bed to the other. Month after month I was laid up and suffering in this way. I had a doctor attending me, but he wasn't able to do much to relieve me. "Finally, to CDt the story shorty I came to hear of Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup. I read about it in a book that was left at my house. The book said this medicine was good for rheumatism, and bo my wife got me a bottle from Mr Ford, the J grocer, at Oakhill. After taking it for a j week I felt great refief. Then I kept on taking it and not long afterwards I found it had cured me ; it had completely driven j the rheumatism out of my si/stem. I am ' willing you should publish these facia, and you can refer any inquirers to me. (Signed) Theodore Treasure (Waggon and Horses | Inn), Doulting, Shepton Mallett, November I 3rd, 1893." Now let's hark back a moment. To the thoughtful reader Mr Treasure's story may ■ look a tr'.fle confused and mixed. That is, J he describes the symptoms of rheumatism | proper in connection with a lot of other symptoms which wouldn't seem at the fiist blush to have anything to do with rheumatism. But there's where Mr Treasure is right and the reader wrong. His account shows that he was a victim 1 of chronic indigestion, dyspepsia, and torpid liver — and that covers the wholo ground. Rheumatism {and this the slotoly learned lesson) is merely a nasty symptom of a dyspeptic condition of the digestive organs. At the outset it mean 3 too much eating and drinking. This results in the formation of a poisonous acid which fills the body and produces the looal outbreak called rheumatism. Hence we cure it from within not from without. And this is true idea is also a new idea— do you see ? Try to get this lesson by heart. You can prevent rheumatism by Seigel's Syrup : you can cure it by Seigel's Syrup. But it is more comfortable to prevent it.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH18980322.2.24

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Manawatu Herald, 22 March 1898, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
712

Things Slowly Learned. Manawatu Herald, 22 March 1898, Page 3

Things Slowly Learned. Manawatu Herald, 22 March 1898, Page 3

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