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Two Buckets and a Pipe.

Take two common water-buckets ; connect them at the bottom with a small pipe. Now undertake to fill one of them with water ; you perceive at once that the water tends to fill the other pail also. " What'e the use of saying that ?" you ask ra?. "Every fool knows that water in connected reservoirs will assume the same level." Quite so. Yet the wisest men on earth didn't know it once. If the ancient Romans had known it they wouldn't have gone to the trouble and expense of building their great acqueducts. Oh, dear I oh, dear ! After a thing is pointed out what a lot of people are able to see it. But to see it thefost time ? Ah I that takes eyes. To explain it the first time ? Ah that takes brains. The blood circulated through pipes in the human body thousands of years before anybody even suspected it. Isn't that queer ? Now, there is a matter — But let's haye an example or two first, and the theory afterwards. A father writes thus about his daughter : "During the summer of 1890 my daughter, Rebecca, got into a weak, languid way. Her appetite was poor, and after eating she had so much pain at the chest and sides that she didn't know where to put herself. She also complained of pain in the pit of the stomach, in the throat, and at the back of the neck. Cold, clammy sweats used to break out all over her. Her breathing became short and laboured, and at times she could not even lie in bed on account of it. She consulted two physicians, who prescribed for her without avail. " This was her general condition until January, 1893, when she began taking Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup. This preparation certainly had a remarkable effect. One bottle alone great'y relieved her. She relished her food, and got stronger. By simply continuing to use this medicine in thr«e months she was completely cured. Since then she has been well as ever she was. My married daughter, who has suffered from indigestion for a long time, seeing what this remedy had done for Rebecca, took it also, with the same good results. Yours truly, (Signed) Bartholomew Bell Grocer, Ac, Brompton, Northallerton, October 25th, 1893." 11 All my life," writes a women, " I have suffered more or less from siokn«sß and spasms. I always felt weak, tired, and languid, and had no desire for company. I had a bad taste in the mouth, and frequently felt sick and prostrate. I had no relish for food, and, after eating, had pain at the chest and side. Buch was my manner of life for years. Two years ago my sister told me of Seigel's Syrup ; I tried it and even a few doses relieved me. I continued taking it, and soon my appetite improved, and my food digested. Since that time I have felt quite a new being— so light hearted and strong. What a pity for me that I didn't know of Seigel's Syrup years before. Bat-better late than never. Yours truly, (Signed) Mrs Annie Goodger, 20, Bardolph Street, Leicester, May 10th, 1893." "From childhood," says another, "I have suffered from indigestion and sick headaches. I never felt as if I wanted food, and after eating I experienced the usual pains and distresses of the confirmed dyspeptic. The attacks of sickness and headache were often no les3 than dreadful. So-called medicines and remedies were, at the best, only temporarily useful. In January. 1892, a friend, living at Hackney, told me of Seigel's Syrup. I used it, and it cured me / never felt so xvdl in my life as Ido now. (Signed) Miss L. White 92 Barnsbury Road, Is'ington, London, April 20th, 1893." ' Now, see. Evidence like the above (though much more impressive) proves that Mother Seigel's Syrup either cures or relieves almost every known complaint. Yet it never was (nor is it now) recommended for any disease except indigestion and dyspepsia. What is the inference? That nearly every known complaint is caused by indigestion and dyspepsia— is, indeed, a symptom of it. " But everybody believes that nowadays, you say. Not everybody, but very many The rest will bye-and-bye. Although thf fact is as old as Adam, the discovery of 11 ia new. Yet the principle will presently be as obvious to all as it now 1b to few.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH18980517.2.20

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Manawatu Herald, 17 May 1898, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
734

Two Buckets and a Pipe. Manawatu Herald, 17 May 1898, Page 3

Two Buckets and a Pipe. Manawatu Herald, 17 May 1898, Page 3

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