A WOMAN FROM. AUSTRIA.
Near the village- of Zillingdorf, hi Lower Austiia, lives Maria Haas, an intelligent and industrious : womau, whose sfory of physical : suffering and final relief, as related by herself, is of interest to English women. " I was employed," . she says,'" in tlio work of n large farmhouse. Ovorwork brought on Bick headaohe, followed by a deathly fainting nnd "\ BiukneEfl of tlio stomach, until • I was unable to retain either food or drink. I was compelled to take my bed for several troeks. Getting a little better from rest and quiet, 1 sought to do some work, but was soon taken with a pain in my side, which, in a little while, seemed to spread oyer my'wiiolo body, and throbbed in my overy limb. This wan followed by a cough and shortness of breath, until finally 1 could not sew, and I took to my bed for a second, and, as I thought, for a last time. My friends told me that my time bad nearly come, and that I could not live longer than when tho trees put •n their gioon once moro. Then I hapieucd to get one of theSeigcl pamphlets, read it, and my dear mother bought me a bottle of Seigei's Syrup, which I took exactly according to directions, andl had not takou tho whole of it before I felt a great change for the better. My last illness ■ began June 3;d, 1882, and continued to August Pjth, when I began to tuko the. Syrup. 'Very soon 1 could do somo k little light work. Tho cough left me and ' ' Ijvas iio more troubled in'breathing. ■ ■ Now 1 am perfectly cured. A nd; oh, how happy I am I 1 cannot'oxpress gratitude • • euough fop Sqiqci's Syrup. ' Now I must tell you that tho doctors in-our district . :'4Wn.buUd. liP.iidhillß cautioning people : '■' ijjaiußfthe iricdicino, telline themthat it ■ -would do them no-good, and many were ; ■/■f.'thw'flhjf ipfluonced to destroy the Siegel .'v';]&mpilliits:j'. ; bij|.:'|jpn* wherover one is to ■'■•• ; j». got, it is kept like a folio.' The few //Weaerved nre hollowed to road, and I . We 'lent uu'nV for six miles around-our ". 'l', 'district.. People have come eighteeu ■milee'Togot'iiifl to buy tho medicine for- <: them, knowing that it cufod me, and to ;■ be sure to got.the right kind. 1 know-a .' wpmanwhowaslookinglikedeath,andwho, told them there was no help for her, aud , tjiat she had cppfinH'ed several doctors, but. ' n,pnp cpuld help her, 1 told her of Siegel'B a'yrup and .write tho name down for her Uptake might make no mistake.- Shu took wy advice and the Syrup, and now sho is . inperiocthealth, and the people around ut» are amazed. .Tho medicine has made such progress in'our neighborhood that p'eeplo say they don't want the doctor any • more, tut they take the Syrup. Sufforcra, tout whowero confined to their bed '■ and could hardly uiove a finger, have . been cured hy.it. There is- a girl in our district.-who] siughfc a cold by eoinij. through some water, and was in bed five ; ; years with icostiveiieas and .rheumatic pains, and had to have an attendant' to. • ' wntch by her-.' There was not a doctor in ;.:-• the'surrounding districts to whom her ■''- mother had not applied to, rpiiovo her child, bUjteyerj-'ftw'crossed themselves I. Mtj'pd thoy could not help her; 'When- ?>: ever the littloboll rang which is runt; in '" ' our place when somebody is dead, we f thought surely it was' for her, but Seigei's •/■' ByrupandPillssaved-her life, and now '7 she is as healthy ns anybody, goes to ;'; ■ church, and can work' even in the fjeldi. •.. Everybody was astpnis]icd when thoy saw fcftrpu.t, knowing hQf many years she "' fid been in bed. To-day she adds her Mitude to mine for God's mercieß and Seigei's Syrup. , . Miw.Haab,'
Tlw people of England speak confivining thu above. AFTEK MAXY. YEARS. " Whittle-le-Woods, neav Chorley, •' Decetubur 20th, 1883. Dear Sir,-Mother Seigel's medicine aella exceeding well with üb, all that try it speak highly in its favor. Wo had a caae of a young lady that had been troubled many years with paiiu after eating She tells us that the pains were entirely taken away after a few'doses of your medicine, -tours truly,.- •;' "E.Psel." AFIEKSEVEBAI YKAM. ■• • ■'.' ' " January 9th, 1884 ' l ''Qe'ntlem'en,-l have used'• Seigel's Syrup for several tears, and I have found it-a most''efficacious remedy fur Liver complaint and' general debility, and I always keep '.some by me, and cannot spesk fob highly in its praise.—l; remain youta truly, ' . : '•' Harriet King,"
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Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume IX, Issue 2599, 16 May 1887, Page 3
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738A WOMAN FROM. AUSTRIA. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume IX, Issue 2599, 16 May 1887, Page 3
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