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UNKNOWN

In dig !£»/instinct' m*#Mtfc-fea&v wealthy, fatraordteary £ ability to art, literature, oresfenoe wlu*t beet obtain ton Ha poesetsor oo mow tbwi » comfortable, competence- Probably there will never feig a tim* when the combined possessions os the painter, writw.wid adentigt-w!U not bo exceeded by tbo fortune of •» tingle ■: Thasertaeotionlinduceoneto'lMk/Whai' qnaUtJef*«wenUai to a successful more space this newspaper contains; bat iii«ay , l)* tation, that the first essential in a merchant i« sound health. Those two simple words include the qualities of industry and cheeW fainesa. These are not the only qualities needful for success in trading,'<but theyjaraones.To.;en;joj;.iroundihaattn* a man most digest. hia food; properly. - A very few—about one in a thousand—do so perfectly. They are' the mosfc>Jbrtunafce\ people in the world. .Bat to of men and women digestion las jniposfiblc-without-the aid of Mother Seigel's Curative Syrnp. Of these, a section have either not beard of, or from some other cause have failed to try that grand remedy;"and-«© continue-to soffer, and fail of success in all they attempt—a strange thing when one' considers that Mother Sejgel's Byrup has been for thirty-five ye rs the unrivalledoure for indigestion in the sixteen principal countries of the world.

f I suffered terribly from indigestion, with its usual train of horrors, for fully three ; years," wrote Mr Charles Alberts, of 193, Gastiereagh Street, Sydney, N 8 W, on 27th July July, 1903. »I bad no appetite, but loathed the very sight and smell ot tend. I could not sleep, and was always restless, irritable, and nervous. I consulted various doctors at different stages of my illness, and took a number of medicines without obtaining any good result, finally, I became so weak and dispirited that J had to give up my employment. About twelve months ago. while in this wretched condition, I happened to read an,advertisement describing a ease of indigestion very similar ito mine, which had been cured by Mother Seigel' s Syrupl After some consideration, I decided to give that remedy a trial—mora, I confess, as an experiment than from any real expectation of re ief. But lam glad to say that the experiment proved a complete success. The Syrup seemed to go direct to the seat of my trouble, for before the first bottle was emptied I bad made a long stride towards recovery. ; Four bottles were sufficient iio complete my cure, And now, owing enttralyi to Mother Seigel's Syrnp, E can sleep well at night, do a fair day's work without &elii& unduly fatigued, and eat ordinary food with relish, unspoiled by a dread of afterpunlshi ment. So complete has been my cure, i could now desire nothing better than that all the world may know it; for doubles!* there are many people still in"the miseialilel condition that once was mine to whom Seigel's Syrup could bring health, and oasiaf as it has done to me..•••*''.-".•'

In these days ot fierce and ever increasing competition, when all meni are in haste to grow rich—to make their pile so as to allow; at least a margin of ten years for its enjoyment before passing ,over to the great majority, to suffer from indigestion is a fatal handicap. - No amount of natural ability will neutralise it. In life's battle, a healthy tool comes out ahead of a clever dyspeptic. And it is no more than natural that such should be the case. Fortunately, nature and modern science have provided the remedy, a remedy of which all who have tried it speak as highly as Mr Alberts.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AHCOG19040114.2.22

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Alexandra Herald and Central Otago Gazette, Issue 401, 14 January 1904, Page 5

Word count
Tapeke kupu
581

UNKNOWN Alexandra Herald and Central Otago Gazette, Issue 401, 14 January 1904, Page 5

UNKNOWN Alexandra Herald and Central Otago Gazette, Issue 401, 14 January 1904, Page 5

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