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How Men Have Missed Making Fortunes.

It is astounding how many men may everywher- be found who are discontented —who feel instinctively that they were born for better things; who in some way, they scarce no how, have allowed life s golden opportunities to pass them by, failing to achieve what they believe might have been, nay shou'd have been, theirs. Ko one can point to any definite defect in them, yet they have failed. Why have they failed ? To the expert observer the cause is very obvious. Success is achieved only by ehergy, and energy is what th y lack. Now energy, whether of the hand or the aa d, is produced by food. A starved man Ccao neither dig the ground properly nor think out a matter clearly. Has B mUi therefore, in order to become energetic, merely to bo supplied with good food? . No, unfortunately the case is not so simplf M that. The food that he eats

must do its work properly; must make rieh, pure bleed, and repair the waste which is continually taking place in his system. Food can only do this when the digestive organs are in perfect working order. In persons whose digestion is impaired food stagnates, creates gases in the stomach, and not only fails to properly sustain them but aggravates their complaint and poisons the system. It is just here where Mother Seigel’e Curative Syrup comes in. It is the one thing thatcuves indigestion, and all the numerous maladies of which it is the parent, and in that way may be regarded as an unrivalled source to energv. " When in Tasmania four years ago I was attacked by a serious illness,” says Mr Bowden, of 23Pring Street, Woolloomool o, Sydney, N.S.W. " I eou'd neither eat, sleep, nor rest. A doctor whom I consul! ed said I was suffering from dyspepsia, and gave me some medicine which patched me up for awhile ; but I was soon as bad as ever again. Another doctor attended me for two months; but I received no benfit from his treatment, nor at the hospital where I afterwards went. My appetite ftlmost ceased, and the little 1 ate disagreed with me. I became dull and languid, and everything wafi a trouble to me. Accepting the advice of a friend to try Mother Seigel’s Syrup, these troubles soon disappeared. After a few doses, I felt better than I had done for months past. By the time I had taken five bottles I was restored -to health and energy.” Just so. That is precisely the effect that Mother Seigel’s Curative Syrup produces. Not on'y does that medicine eradicate disease ; it promotes health and energy, those absolutely indispensable qualities in all who are called upon to fight life’s battle. It is a purely natural tonic, composed of fruits, roots, and herbs, containing no mineral substance whatever. For thirty* five years it has occupied the first place among all medicines whatsoever; and evidence as to its curative power is constantly forthcoming from the sixteen principal countries of the world. Indigestion and biliousness are what some medical authorities terra " root diseases ; ” that is to say, if those complaints are neglected, they develop into others even more serious. More often than not, medicines supposed to be remedies are at first resorted to. Sometimes these are persevered with for considerable periods, resulting in loss of time and needless suf fering, besides rendering the subsequent' cure by Mother Seigel’s Syrup more difficult. In these circumstances Mr Bowden is to be congratulated on having his attention so early directed to Mother Seigel's Syrup, and upon the happy result of his use of it. Many a man who is poor to day would be walthy had he not been he’d down by ill-health. But there is bright hope for all such when once they clearly understand why they are so, and how they may unloose their bonds.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH19040329.2.22

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Manawatu Herald, 29 March 1904, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
651

How Men Have Missed Making Fortunes. Manawatu Herald, 29 March 1904, Page 3

How Men Have Missed Making Fortunes. Manawatu Herald, 29 March 1904, Page 3

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