Three Doctors in Consultation. From Benjamin Franklin. " When you are sick, what yon like best is to be chosen lor a medicine in the first place ; what experience tells you is best, to be chosen in the second place ; what reason (i.e., Theory) say is the best to be chosen .ip the last place. But if you can get Dr Inc'ination, Dr Experience and Dr Beason to hold a consultation together, they will give you the, best advice that can betaken." Wade's Worm Fiszs are most effective and not unpleasant f children thrive after taking them. Price, Is.
Explained in Five Minutes. ii + -— ;- Yon bft*f heard it said that the boy is father to the man Yes. Very good. Now see what a prodigious deal may be tied up In that idea. Youth is the sowing time of life and natur'ty the reaping time. You agree to that. Very good— again. In youth nature puts forth every effort to build up your body. She absorbs everything she can lay hands on for that purpose. The whole body throbs with life as at no other time. Nature scrapes together building material (I mean food) trom every direction. You w know what eaters healthy children are. Natoer is not thinking of the future. Bhft is thinking only of now— NOW. She is Breeds to make you. a man, and perfectly Sutfeot oi what becomes of you after Your appetite is gauged by the needs of growth— not by your ability to digest. So it oonwa to pass that, in no end of cases, young people eat too muoh. They eat wrong thugs, they eat without any thought of regularity. Hence insufficient gastric iuice (digesting juice), stomach distension, and fermentation. Biß (small bits, of course) of undigested food get imo the circulation, ,and through the right side of the heart fato the lungs, where they obstruct the minute blood vessels at the top of the lungs. „ , What then ? Why, they finally become oraanis d into tubercle or changed into the chalky or cheesy deposits so often found there The end. sooner or later, is consumption. Overfeeding, irregular feeding or under feeding, all give rise to indigestion and indigestion is, more than anything else the cause of consumption, and of a lot of ailments whioh we suffer from be- " For examp'e, a woman says ; •• In the anrios of 1891 I began to suffer from SESSau. I had a bad pain at the back of mvhead; my sight was dim and specks floated before my eyes. I got very nervous and lost a deal of sleep, feeling no better «hr going to bed. Gradually I got weaker /•fc weaker, ard so thin I was nothing but ■kta and bone. I got so weak I had to be lifted from the bed to a chair by the fire; aniwhen I felt stronger I went about by
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Manawatu Herald, 17 April 1900, Page 3
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480Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Manawatu Herald, 17 April 1900, Page 3
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