AN INTERESTING LETTER FROM A VETERAN.
As this is Jubilee year it tends to make one I: ok back and think of the flight of time, and in this way I am reminded that 1 am one of the veterans in the sale of jour valuable and •uccrsiful medicine. I bare sold it from the very first, and bays sent it into every o.unty in England and into many parts ot Scotland. Well do I remember the flnt circular yon sent out some nine or ten years ago. Ton had come to England from America to introduce Mother Seigel'i Curt, tire Syrup, and 1 was struck by a paragraph in which you used these word-; Being a stranger in a strange land, 1 do not wieh the people to feel that I want to take the least idvintage over them, I feel that 1 have a remedy that will cure disease, and 1 hare so much confidence in it that 1 authorise my agents to refund the money if people should say (hat they have not benefited by its use.” I felt at onoe (bat you would never say that unless the medicine had merit, and I applied for the agency, a step which I now look back upon with pride and satiafaction; Ever since that time I have found it by far the beet remedy for Indigestion and Dyspepsia I have met with, and I have sc Id thousands of bottles. It has never failed in any case where there were any of the following symptoms; —Nervous or six headache, sour, ness of the stomach, rising of the food after eating, a sense of fulnesss and heaviness, dizziness, bad breath, slime and muocut on the game and teeth, constipation, and yellowness of the eyes and skin, dull and sleepy seneations, ringing in the ears, heartburn, loss of appetite, and, in short, whereever there are signs that the system is dogged, and the blood ie out of order. Upon repeated inquiries, covering a great variety of ailments, my customers have always answered, “I am better,” or "I am perfectly well.’ What I have seldom or never eeen before in the case of any medicine is that the people tell each other of its virtuei, and thoie who have been cured say to the suffering i “ Go and get Mother Beigel’a Curative Syrup, it will make you well.*' Out of (he hundreds of curea I will name one or two that happen to come into my mind. Two old gentlemen, whose names they would not like me to give yon, had been martyrs to [lndigestion and Dyspepsia for many years. They had tried all kinds of medicine without relief. One of them wae so bad that he could not bear a glass of ale Both were advised to use the Syrup and both recovered, and were as hale and hearty ae men in (he prime of life. A remarkable ease is that of a house painter named Jeffries, who lived at Penshurst, in Kent. Hia business obliged him to expose himself a great deal to wind and weather, and he was seized with rheumatism, and his joints soon swelled up with dropsy, and were very stiff and painful. Nothing Chat the doctors could do seemed to reach the seat of trouble. It so crippled him that he could do hardly any work, and for the whole of the winter of 1878 and ’79, he had to gve up and take to his bed. He had been fllioted in this sorry way for three years, and was getting worn out and duoonrased. Besides, he had spent ovc-r £lB for what he called "doctor’s stuff” without the least benefi 1 . In the Spring he heard of what Mother Seigel’s Curative Syrup has done for others and bought a2. fid bottle of me. In a few days he sent me word he was much better—before he had finished the bottle, He then sent to me for a 4i, fid. bottle, and as 1 was going that way 1 carried it down to him myself. On getting to his house what was my astonishment and surprise to find him out in ihi garden weeding an onion bed. I could hardly believe my own eyes, and said “ Yon ought not to be out here, man, it may be the death of yon, after being laid up eli winter with rheumatism and dropsy,” His reply wan—" There is no danger. The weather is fine, and Mother Seigel’s Curative • Syrup has done for me in a few days what the doctors could not do in three yeara. I think 1 shall get well no<r.” ' He kept on with the Byiup, and in three weeks he was at work again, and has had no return of the trouble for now nearly ten years. Auy medicine that can do this should be known all over (be world. Tours faithfully. (Signed) Bursas Gbaham, Qv Gbahax * Sob. Holloway House, S anbury, Middlesex, June 26th, 1887. The above wonderful cure of Rheumatism irai the result of the remarkable power of Mother Seigel’a Curative Syrup to cleanse the blood of the poisonous humours that arise from Indigestion and Dyspepsia, Mother SeigeTs Curative Syrup is for sale by all chemists and medicine vendors, and by the proprietors, A. J. White, Limited, 36, Farringdon Road, London, Eng.
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Temuka Leader, Issue 1783, 30 August 1888, Page 3
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891AN INTERESTING LETTER FROM A VETERAN. Temuka Leader, Issue 1783, 30 August 1888, Page 3
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