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The Bottom Principle.

Nothing "merly happens bo." Always keep that fact where you can see it. Whatr. soever comes to pass has an adequate , cause right behind it. I don't say this as j though it were a new discovery. Not a bit. . It is the bottom principle of ail knowledge. ] But we are apt to forget it— that's the ' ooint ; we forget it, and so have a lot ol 1 trouble there's no need to have. ■ Here is Miss Esther May, whom we arc * q'ad to hear from, and to know. In th< - .-natters act forth in her short letter sh< s speaks, not {or herself on'y, bat for two I, 1 thirds of the women in E»gl«id.

"In July, 1890," sho says, " I had an . attack of Influenza, which left me in a weak, exhausted condition. I felt languid and tired. Everything was a trouble to me. The good appetite that is natural to me was gone ; and when I did take a little food it gave me a dreadful pain in the chest. There was also a strange Bensalion in my stomach. I felt as if I had eaten too much when perhaps I had scarcely eaten anything. " Then, after a time, I began to have a dry, hacking cough, and to break out in cold, clammy sweats. Not very long afterwards my ankles began to puff up and swell, so that when I stood on my feet it was very painful. " I gtaduaWy got worse, and worse. The medicines given me by the doctors seemed to have no effect. I lost fleßh, like one in consumpi ion, and I feared I should never be any better. " In March, 1890, a gentleman told me about Mother Seigtls Curative Syrup and said he believed it would help me. Although I had no faith in it I sent for the Syrup, and began taking it. One bottle relieved me and gave me some appetite. I ate and enjoyed my food as I had not dona for years. I gained strength every day. "I am now as healthy and hearty as I ever was in my life, and I owe it to Mother Seigel's Syrup. (Signed) Esther May, Buckingham Road, North-fleet, Kent, September Bth, 1893." «• In the Spring of 1887." writes another correspondent, "my wife got into a low state of health. She complained at first of feeling tired and weary, and cou'd not do her work as usual. Her mouth tasted badly ; she couldn't eat and she bad a deal of pain in her chest and back. 11 Later on her legs began to swell, r and soon the swelling extended to her body. With all this her strength failed more and more, until she oonld just go about the house in a feeble fashion, and that was all. No medical treatment did more than to relieve her, as you may Fay, for the moment. " This was her condition' wh n Mother Seigel'a Syrup first came under our notice. We read of it in a book that was left at our house. After she had taken the Syrup only a few days she was decidedly better. And, to conolude, by a faitbfnl use of the medicine the swelling went down, her appetite came back, and she was soon as well and strong as ever. Seeing what the Syrup had done for my wife, I began to take it for indigestion and dyspepsia, which had t< oubled me for years ; and it completley cured me. (Signed) J. Heath, Orotava Bouse, Alpha Road, Cambridge, June 15th, 1893." We were speaking of nothing happening without a cause. The cause of all the suffericg of these two women was one and the same— indigestion and dyspepsia. Men have it often enough, but this disease is especially the bane of women — with chronic constipation as one of its worst features. It is the cause of nearly all the ills and ailments they suffer from. Let every women get the book whioh Mr Heath speaks of and Jearn all about it. They can thus find out what the first symptoms are, and take Mother Seigel's Syrup the very day they appear.

"■araßf

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH18980906.2.23

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Manawatu Herald, 6 September 1898, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
697

The Bottom Principle. Manawatu Herald, 6 September 1898, Page 3

The Bottom Principle. Manawatu Herald, 6 September 1898, Page 3

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