A Grandfather’s Story. MR CARROL 0# SYDNEY TELLS HOW HIS GRANDSON, HIS WIPE AND HIMSELF WERE CUBED. Any medical preparation that is trustworthily vouched for as bing equally effective with patients old or young would naturally seem‘to be entitled to public confidence. When a man over three-score years old gives you particulars of how his little grandson two and a half years old was cured of what seemed to be a hopeless ailment, and in the next brea h tells you that he himself afterwards used some of the same medicine, and was rapidly cured of.a variety of disorders, and mxt that hia wife and other members of his family have used ; that medicine and always with prompt ! cures!—well, it is needless to say any more, I except to tell you that there is only one ■ prepared medicine known that has such a ' record, and that one is the renowned | j Mother Seigel’s Syrup, which has stood ; the test of public use and approval for 35 ' years. Just read whiit Mr John Carroll, of 13, Little Barcom Street, Darlinghnrst, Sydney, wrote on December 7th, 1904, of its power in relieving debility or ‘]tho - wasting,sickness," weak stomach, nervousness, kidney troubles, constipation, indigestion, and how health, strength, and happiness came afterwards : LITTLE EDWARD, THE GRANDSON. . Two-and-a-balf years back my liitle grandson. Edward, then only two-and-a-half years old, was so ill and so thin, and frail from the wasting disease that we had to carry him.iWh We tried all ! kinds of infants’ foods for him, but nothing'! would remain on his stomach. -He was ; very fretful and seemed to be in constant I pain. His grandmother took him fre- ' quently, to .the children’s hospital; but. though they were..most kind andi attentive their treatment-did Kira no good*. % One day an old lady friend of my wife’s persuaded ; hereto .give him a course of M«th*r To our great- joy •littlS Edward within a very, few weeks-be-came bright and his food without, difficulty, and gained in weight and strength. Soon he was out of danger, ‘but w# continued togivehini the.Syrup.and he Soon developed in ter a Strong ; hearty;-' active child,, He is now five years old, as finelfridittfe’tellow-.for his age as ohe would Jwiah 'tO’-'Meet; and i firmly ’believe that hi§life.. ... 'ji '§pw.THEi ■*_ ’ myself am well along in years, and, for ivetirfl’it. from kidmsy. complaint,.chronic constipation and indigestion, I ;Kad tried manv ’ remedies ’ and had nearly ‘lost,faith in medicine ; but when I saw how the Syrup was helping ray little grandson, I decided to give it a trial. It regulated my bowels nicely, restored my digestion, and relieved me of a backache, which had for years caused me intense misery. lam now always in good health, and I feel twenty years younger than I did two years back, when I took the first dose of Seigel’s. j AND THE REST OP THE FAMILY. My good wife, and others of my family, j have also-often used the medicine for I various complaints and ailments, and it has always given prompt relief. We would ‘ almost as soon be without bread in our house as without, a bottle of Mother Seigel’s Syrup.
“ Scatter your minions 1” said Disease one day To the demon Cold and his friend Decay ; " Winter is here to give you a hand, Out 1 friend, out! and ravage the land.” “ I can’t,” said the Demon, "I'm quite out of work; A mortal namfd Woods pulls me up with ct jerk ; ... His Great Peppermint cure is death to ray host. Good-bye I” said the Demon and yive up the ghost.
Tiheumatism is one of the most painful diseases. Many are bent and physically disabled by the torture and suffering inflicted by this dreadful* The disease’may sortie in? tKpTarge m'uscTes of the back, neck, or thighTJo tha Joints oiLthe constant or occasional, but a d (hj^d tl i^iMS^MikW s %^Ws£m n and drives out acid, removes [ manent enre. A tna will satisfy you of ita merits.
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH19050704.2.14.1
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Manawatu Herald, Volume XXVII, Issue 3542, 4 July 1905, Page 3
Word count
Tapeke kupu
659Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Manawatu Herald, Volume XXVII, Issue 3542, 4 July 1905, Page 3
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
Stuff Ltd is the copyright owner for the Manawatu Herald. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Stuff Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.