Startling Event in a Village.
To the Editor of "Saturday Night," Birmingham. 1 recently camo into possession of a certain facts of so remarkable nnture, that 1 am sure you will bo glad to assist in making thesa public. The. following letters were shown to me, and I at once' begged /' permission them for tho I They come from a'highly respnnsijH Bource, and may be received question. Jfessago from Georoe JajiA" £4 b'oßTiiNO, L.D.S., R. 0.5.1,, Hi C.1,, 'W Licentiate in Pharmacy and Dental : Surgeon, Stowmarket, July 18, 1889. • To Mr Whiib
The enclosedremarkablecureshonld, 1 think, bo printed and circulated in Suffolk. Tho atatomoflt waa entirely markable ouro wait related to me by tho tho husband. Mary Ann Spink, of Finborousjh, Suffolk, waa for over twenty yeara afflicted with rheumatism and neuralgia, and although comparatively a young woman at the time ah# was attacked (she ia now fifty), she waa compelled in consequent, to walk with two stick?, and even then withdiffioulty and pain. About a year and a half aro shewas advised to try Mother Seigel'ea Syrup, and after taking three but! a and two boxes of Seigel'a Operating Pills, Me mm of her limbs iuero ratorei, and she is now able to walk three miles to_ Stowmarket with ease, frequently doin? the distanoo in throo-quartersof an hour,. Any suflorer who doubts thia story can fully ascertain its truthfulnosi by paying a visit lo the village and enquiring of tho villagers, who will certify t« the ' Appended is tho husband's signature to the ato.temeat.
(R, Spmk.) "G. J, Gostiing Ipswich Street, ir _ , " Stowniarket." This is oertainly a very pitiaj)|,) case, . and the happy cure wrought by the simple but powerful remedy, must move tho sympathy of all hearts in a common pleasure. This poor woman had'heoo a cripple for fcwonty of her best years; '■ yearsjn which she should have had such comfort and enjoyment as life has to give. But. on tho contrary, sho was a miserable burden to herself and a source' of care to her friends. Now, at an aw when the rent of us are growing feoblo she, in a manner, ronows her youth and almost begins a new esistenco. What a blosßing and what a wonder it is I No one who knows her, or who read her story, but will be glad that the good Lord has enabled men. to discover a remody capablo of bringing about a oure that reminds us—we speak it reverently to the age rif miracles.
It should be oxplained that this most remarkable cure is duo to tho fact that ' rheumatism is a disease of the blood Indication, conitipatinn, and dyspepsia cause tho poison from the partially, digested food to ewer tho ciroulatinw. and the blood deposits it in tho joint? and muscles. This is rheumatism, Soigol's Syrup corrects tho digestion, and so stops tho further formation and deposit of tho poison, It then removes from the system tho poison, already ■ there. It is not'a cure-all, It does its wonderful work entirely by its mysterious action upon the digestive But when we romeraberthat nine-tenthipjk of our aliments arise in those organs, wo can understand why Seigel'a. Syrup enres so rnauy diseases that appear toba sodifforont in their nature. In other ■ words rheumatism and neuralgia are hut symptoms of indigestion, constipation and dyspepnia
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Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XI, Issue 3518, 23 May 1890, Page 4
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553Startling Event in a Village. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XI, Issue 3518, 23 May 1890, Page 4
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