Thank you for correcting the text in this article. Your corrections improve Papers Past searches for everyone. See the latest corrections.

This article contains searchable text which was automatically generated and may contain errors. Join the community and correct any errors you spot to help us improve Papers Past.

Article image
Article image

What dm a. Spur do for a Horse', Your horse la weak and weary with a lqng day's journey, Yon have, ridden i him since early morning. Impatient to resol a shelter for the night, you drive the spur into his panting sides, He leaps and for a time trots onward rapidly. MatM (Ae spur do for Mm ? Did it give him strength ? If bo, why feed him I- If not, what made him go faster V Here is a shott personal' state* merit whfoha man makes. Try if you' can Bee any likeness between the two He says: "Up to August, 1885, I was always'a tang, healthy man, At that time I began to feel, tired, dull, and hoavyi witk'a faint, dizzy sensation as if 1 should tumble down any minute, I could not imagine what was comiri g over me. There was a bad taste in my month, my breath waß bad, and my. mouth f would , often fill with an often- . siveslimy matter: My appetite was poor, , and afbr eating I buffeted great pain, , and wind -would roll all over me. I had much pain at the stomach, and wassick • very morning, and threw up a great deal of phlegtr. 1 also had a pain like tho thrust of a knife cutting me between the shoulders and low down in the back o,t the kidneya.t. "When at work I got tired in fife minutes, and had to stand and rest, - . , " I kept on with my work, howeyer, . for some time as best I oould, for I had I a wife and family depending opon me. , But it was a hard and tedious task, as , evcn_ stooping made me cry dat with , pain." After a while I </ rew so weak 1 , could scarcely crswl about; and waa com* pelled to give up ray employment,; When I ventured out of doors I felt so dizzy that I had frequently to stop and restfor fear of falling, and waa so bad that • people would think 1 was in drink, and I had often to call at a chbmißt'a and get a draught to help me home, I tried |. herbs and other medicines, and was at- • tended by a doctor, but I got no better. J In this dead-and-alive way 1 lingered on . until April, 1890, whon my wife got an almanac from the druggist, and I ) read of a case of a railway guard at Man- , cheater, who 'hod beon cured by a medicine called Mot er Bezel's Curative , Syrup after the doctors had up. So I wrote to him, and he replied that it had - cured.him ahd would do me good, f Upon this 1 got a bottle, and altera few doses 1 felt better, and by keeping on using it I was soon all right and back at my work, and have been well ever since. When I feel any sign of stomach disorder , a few doses cure me directly. I feel very grateful for. the great benefit I have received; and wieh otheiß who' may he ill to know of it j as, if I had known of Mother Seigel's Syrup at the onset I would hayo been saved over four yoars suffering. I have lived in Birkdale fifteen years, and if any one mites tome I shall be glad to reply, (Signed)" Thomas Spersin, ; "Kitchenßange Setter, "28, Stamford Road, "Bukdalo,Southport." Now, where is the likeness between Mr Sperrin's experience and our illustration about the horse ? It is this: The horse gains no new strength from the application of the spur. . Of course we all see that he cannot. But the , pain arouses him and makes a draf . on his reserved nervous power—with >' a corresponding degree of exhaustion to follow. This is til ways Nature's way. • She gives nothing for nothing, all must J be paid for, Look back at Mr Sperrin's statement where he says: "Ikept on at my work, fori hi a wife and jmily ae])eiid%oiime," That was his spur, It was work or worßO for him, as it ia , with most of us. But ho had to pay for labouring when he was unable, by having , to give up work altogether, and whai > the end would have been had not Beigel'a Syrup como to the rescue, nobody can say. Possibly tho saddost thing wo can think of, Any way this triumphant medicine saved hhn, and he oan work now without a spur. If the reader also has indigestion and dyspepsia, with its painful and alarming e consequences and Bytuptumß, or knows of another who has, he will bo able to treat himßelf or advise his friend. PEOTEGTION. !HE BEVERLEY MANUFAOI TURING COMPANY, of Wordsley City, Ontario, are now manufacturing a , first-olass burglar-defiant.and fire-proof I SAFE, in sixteen different sizes, patHANDSOME, MASSIVE AND RELI NONELIKETHEM. Suitable for Mansion, Office, Bank, or America, England, and the Ooloniea OUR MUSIC ■DEPARTMENT ACTIVE. THE profession, ■ music amateur and concert-goers, have now an oppor-, tuhity of SELECTING from an SHEET and BOOK MUSIC. SOHOOL of PIANOFORTE TEOH- . NIQDETausig,Plaidy, and'Lebertahd'Stark, STUDIES by Cramer, edited by Hans VonBulow; Olemehti,' edited by Tausig; MoscheW (Augener edition) and Henselfc, Czorny, Burgmulier, and other oumposers, l; .The Rom Edition-. Mendelssohn, Mozart, Beethoven, Handel, Schumann, Rubenstein, Liszt and Wagner. Classical and Modebn compositions The famous Au?eher edition ; The famous Peters* edition ; The famous Litoff edition. ' Sheet Mubio a Speciality, I '.■ PIANOS „ By Schwechteri.Ltpp ahd bohn, Sohiedr hiayer; Ployelj Bohm, CollardandiCollaid, and other high class makerß. .■.>■■ ■ ■ ,> ,Nomatterwbereyouhveourunequalled time mMENi system pnableß, you to become the Owner of a piano oh'oesan by the, English, and Gebman MAKEHB;;by simply paying- & small deposit and monthly instalments from 20s, Catalogues, Terms etc, Sent Free on Application, THE DRESDEN PIANO CO, ■ Laubion Qdm; 'WiumoTos. Manager

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WDT18920516.2.18.8

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XIII, Issue 4114, 16 May 1892, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
954

Page 4 Advertisements Column 8 Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XIII, Issue 4114, 16 May 1892, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 8 Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XIII, Issue 4114, 16 May 1892, Page 4

Help

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert