TREATED FOE THE WRONG COMPLAINT.
It is at all times hard to lose one whom we hold dear, but it is terribly bo when we hare the conecioußnees that but for mistaken treatment the loTcd one might have been with us ■till. In some cases the faofc that the sufferer is treated for the wrong complaint is known in -sufficient lime to admit of the patient bein* >sYed, and the following is a oaee in poiats— A little more than two years ago, a beautiful young lady in New York was given up to die of consumption. Her fond parents took her to Paris as a last resort, honing to find some skilful physician there capable of arrest[ng tfee rspid strides of. the supposed dreadful disease. In this their hopes were bljgbted, t"t fo (unately away m that distant foreign cUy they met with a description of a new method "of treating Dyspepsia, nated fsom the Mount Lebanon Shakers of £• StaU of New York. The thought struck the parent of tbU helpless young girt that perhaps thVir daughter was •flf loted. l]^ t n h Jodigeitiw or P7»pep»i», »nd not consump.
tion ; nnd if so, there might be a chance for her recovery. Some of the Soigol'a Curative Syrup, made esperially for the cure of D? ■pepsia, was obtained i»nd . administered, to the patient, and the result was marvellous. To-day their daughter lives in the enjoyment of good health. The fact wag, the patient bad been treated for the wrong complaint, and when she was treated for Dyspepsia (her real trouble), all the alavming symptoms of consumption vanished. This is not an isolated ce)as. The country is full of suffering thousands that are being treated for Liver Con> plaint, Malaria, Kidney Disease, Lung Disorders, &c, &c, when the fact is they are afflicted with Indigestion in some of its varied forma, and all of such sufferers would obtain relief if they were properly treated for Dyspepsia.
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Thames Star, Volume XVII, Issue 5203, 19 September 1885, Page 3
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326TREATED FOE THE WRONG COMPLAINT. Thames Star, Volume XVII, Issue 5203, 19 September 1885, Page 3
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