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Startling Event in a Village.

To the Editor of " Saturday Night," Birmingham. 1 recently came into possession of a certain facts of go remarkable nature, that 1 am euro you will bo glad to assist in making them publio. Tho following letters wero shown to me, and I at once bogged permission to copy thorn for tho press, They come from a highly responsible source, and may bo received without question, Mossage from George Jambs UosTUilo, L.D.8., R.C.9.1., Ph C.1., Licentiate in Pharmacy and Dental Burgeon, Slowmarket, July 18,1889, To Mb Whii 1 ; The enclosed remarkable cureshould, 1 think, bo printed and circulated in Suffolk, The statomeHt was entirely workable cure was related to me by tho the husband, Mary Ann Spink, of Finborough, Suffolk, was for over twenty yeara afflicted with rheumatism and neuralgia, and although comparatively a yountr woman at tho time sho was attacked (she is now fifty), she was compelled in consequence, to walk with two sticks, and even then with difficulty and pain, About a year and a half airo sho was advised to try Mother Seigel'a Syrup, and after taking three bottles and two boiea of Seigel's Operating Pills, the i«e of kr limbs were raimit, and alio is now able to walk three mile! to Stowmarket with ease, frequently (loin? the distance in three-quartore of an hour, Any sufferer who doubts this story can fully ascertain its truthfulness by paying a visit to the village and enquiring of the villagers, who will cortify to tho fact", ' Appended is tho hiißband'a signature to the statement. (R, ijpink.) " G, J, Gosxuno Ipswich Street, " Stowmarkot." This is certainly a very pitiable case, and the happy cure wrought by this simple but. powerful remedy, mustinovq tho sympathy of all hearts in a common pleasure, This poor woman had been a cripple for twenty of her best years; years in which she should have had such ooinfort and enjoyment as lifo has to giro. But. on the contrary, she was a miserable burden to hersolf and a sourco of care to her friends. Now, at an age when the rest of us are growing feeble, she, in a manner, rsnoivs her youth and alraost-begins a.now existence. What a blessing and- what a wonder it is I ;No one who knoitß her, or who reads her Btory, but will bo glad that the good Lord has enabled mon to discover, a remedy capablo of bringiu;' about a cure that reminds us—we speak it reverently —of tho age of miracles, It should be explained that this most remarkable cure is due to tho fact that rheumatism is a disease of the blood Indigestion, c'omtipatinn, and dyßpopsia cause the poison from tho partially digested food to enter tho circulation and the blood deposits it in the joints and muscles. This is rheumatism. Heigel's Syrup corrects the digestion, and to stops the further formation and deposit of the poison, It then removes from the ■ system the poison already there. It is not a cure-all. It does its wonderful work entirely by its mysterious action upon the digeßtiyo organs. Hut whon we remembor that nine-tenths of our ailmonts arise in those organs, wo can understand why Seigel'a Syrup cures so many diseases that appear to bo so different in their nature.. In othor words rheumatism and nouralgia are but symptoms of indigestion, constipation and dyspepsia,

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WDT18900131.2.15

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XI, Issue 3423, 31 January 1890, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
562

Startling Event in a Village. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XI, Issue 3423, 31 January 1890, Page 3

Startling Event in a Village. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XI, Issue 3423, 31 January 1890, Page 3

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