AN INTERESTING LETTER FROM
A VETERAN.
As this is Jubilee year it tends to make one look back and think of the flight of time, and in this way I am reminded that I am one of the veterans in the sale of your valuable and luoceaiful medicine. I have sold it from the very first, and hayo sent it into every county in England and into many parta of Scotland. Well do I remembor the first circular you sent out some nine or ten years ago. You had come to England from America to introduce Mothor Heigel'a Curati?e Syrup, and I was etruok by a paragraph in which you used these words :—" Being a stranger in a strange land, I do not wish the people to feel that I want to tske the least advantage ovor them. I feel that I have a remedy that; will cure disaaie, and I have so much oonfidenoo in it that I authorise my agents to refund the monsy if peoplo should gay that they have not benefited by its use." I felt at cnee t'aafc you would novoi' eay that unless the medicine had merit, and I applied for the agency, a step which I now look back upon with pride and eatiefaotton. Ever sinoe that time I have found it by far the best remedy for Indigestion and Djspepsia I have met with, and I h&vo scld thousands of bottles. It has never failed in any case where there were any of following symptoms:—Nervouo or headache, sourness of the stomach, rising of the food aftor eating, a nsnse of fulnesss and heaviness, dizzineso, bad breath, olime and mucous on the gums and teeth, constipation, and yellowness of the eyea and skin, dull and sleepy sensations, ringiug in the ears, heartburn, lose of appetite, and, in iihort, whereever there are signs that the system is clogged, and the blood is out of order. Upon repeated inquiries, covering a great variety of ailments, my ouatomers have always answered, *'|l am better," or "I am perfectly well." What I have seldom or never leen before in the oase of any medicine is that tho people tell eaoh other of its virtues, and those who have been oured say to the suffering: "Go and get Mothsr Seigel's Curative Syrup, it will make you well." Out of the hundreds of cures I will nsme one or two that happen to come into my mind, Two old gentlemen, whose names they would not like me to give you, had been martyrs to Indigestion and Dyspepsia for many ycara. They had tried nil kinds of medioine without relief. One of them was so bad that he oould not bear a glass of ale. Both were advised to uso the Syrup and both recovered, and were as hale and hearty as men in the prime of life. A remarkable oase \s thai; of a house painter named Jeffries, who lived at Penshurst, in Kent. His business obliged biin to expose himself a great deal to wind and weather, and he was eaisssdwith rheumatism, and his joints soon swelled up trith dropsy, and were very stiff end painful. Nothing that the doctois could do seemed to reach the seat of trouble. It bo crippled hira that he could do hardly »ny work, and for tho whole of the winter of 1878 and 79, he hud to give up and take to his bed. He had boon afflicted in thieoorry way for three years, and was getting worn out and discoursed. Besides, he had spent over £l3 for what ha called "doctor's stuff" without the least benefit:. In the Spring he heard of what Mothor Seigel'fl Curative Syrup has done for others and bought aB3 §<* bottle of me. In a few days he cent me word ho waH muoh better—bofore he hsd finished tho bottle. Ho then sent to me for a 4i. 6d. bottle, and aa I was going that way 1 carried it down to him myself. On getting to his house what was my astoniihmeut and puvpriae to Snd h\xa \a tho garden weeding an onion bd. I could hardly believe my own eyes, find said . " You ought cot to be out here, man, it may bo the death of you, after bdintf Uid up all winter with theumatiem and dropsy."
His reply was:—"There ia no danger. Tha weather ia fine, and MoLher Sfligel'a Curative Syrup has done for me iin, a feif
day* what the dootors could not do in three years. I think I shall get well bop." He kept on with the ;*yrup, and in three weeks he was at work p.gain, and has had no return of the trouble for now nearly ten years. Any medioine that can do this should be known all over the world. Yours faithfully, (Signed) Rtjpbht Gkaham, Of Graham & Son. Holloway House, Sunbury, Middlesex, Juno 25th, 1887.
The above wonderful oure of Rheumatism was the result of the remarkable power of Mother Seigol'a Curative Syrup to cleanse ho blood of the poisonous humours that riao from Indigestion and Dyspepsia. Mother Seifjel'D Curative Syrup is for sale by all chemnfs and medioine vondors, and by the propriotori, A. J. White, Limited, 35 Farringdon Road, London, Bng.
The contractors for lighting Wellington with electjicity have received 2000 applications for privn'6 b'jgh'B.
Hollowat's Oistmekt and Pills Coughs, Irfluenza.—The soothing properties of these medicaments render them well worthy of lri*l in all diieaieo of the respiratory organ*. Jn common colds and influenza the Pills, taken internally, and the Ointment robbed over the oheat and throat, are exceedingly efficacious. When influenza is epidemic, this treatment is the easiest, safest, and sureofc. Hollawaj'a Pills purify the blood, remove all obstacles to it* free circulation through the lungs, relieve the engorged air tubes, and render respiration free without reducing the strength, irritating the nerves, or depressing the spirits; such are the ready m°ana of caving suffering when anyone is afflicted with oolds, coughi», bronchitis, and other chest complaintp, by which so many persons are seriously and permanently afflioted in most countries.
A Maori, about 84 years ef age, living by himself at \l«hikiwi, near Raugitikei, was burnt lo death through his whar catchiEg fire on Friday night. The noted quality of the Coffee made in the Oafus of Turkey, Eranoe, and Amerioa ii ohiefly due Vi the fact that only Fresh Boasted Coffee is used ; so that nono of the volatile oil and other essentials are lott. Ask your grocer for Anderson's Coffee, and you will have a b9vorage alike refreshing and b imulating, as it is fresh roasted and ground at the faotory, Tioaaru.—[Adtt. 2J.
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Temuka Leader, Issue 1886, 2 May 1889, Page 3
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1,110AN INTERESTING LETTER FROM Temuka Leader, Issue 1886, 2 May 1889, Page 3
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