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When they put a man in gaol, ho cannot follow liis natural inclination. His enjoyment of life is limited. He cannot eat what he wants to. He is limited ,to a very frugal diet. He is alive, to be sure, but life doesn't possess very many advantages. Are not all these things equally true of the dyspeptic? For all the renl enjoyment he gets out of life, he might as well be in gaol. He cannot eat what he likes, nor as much of it as he would like. If ho transgresses any of the rules of his diet, lie is punished for it. Me suffers much ; gets little sympathy. Dyspepsia Btarti with indigestion, and may load to almost anything. Indigstion means a variety of things—it shows itself in many ways. At fir/'t, perhaps, a little heaviness in the stomach, a little sourness, windy belchings, and heartburn. Headaches begin to come pretty soon after that, and biliousness and a foul taste in the mouth iu the morning. Chronic constipation is almost inevitable, and it is probably the most serious trouble that ever takes hold of a man. Its seeming simplicity is the thing that makes it most dangerous, because it leads to neglect. Constipation means that the body is holding poisonous, impure matter, that should bo gotten rid of. The poia nis being reabsorbed into the blood, and the whole body is being tilled with it. impurity in the blood may load to almost any disease. There is no telling what may come of it. And yet pe. pie are careie.is about, ic. It is the most serious thing in the world, and the easiest tc cure if you go about it right. Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills cure Constipation. Cure it positively, certainly, infallibly. . Cure it; su it stays cured. Cure it so you can atop taking medicine. And that is something that no other remedy in the worl■' will do. They positively euro Biliousru'SS, Indigestion, Constipation, Dyspepsia, "allow Complexion, Liver and Kidney Troubles, Tiles, Pimples and Bint lies. A perfect blood purifier, and for female ailments ) h*-y stand alone as a woman's best fii'-nd. S hi by chemists and storek-epers, price 1- .'! I per bottle, or six b .ttles 7s, ornann w 1> mailed, post paid, upon receipt ;.f piic f Solh proprietors, The \V. I[, Comstoe. -'o., Ltd. (Australasian Depot.), bS I'itt-stn ot, Sydney. They are packed in amber bottles, and the f-jll name blown thereon.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GEST19010828.2.35

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Greymouth Evening Star, Volume XXXI, 28 August 1901, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
409

Untitled Greymouth Evening Star, Volume XXXI, 28 August 1901, Page 4

Untitled Greymouth Evening Star, Volume XXXI, 28 August 1901, Page 4

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