A BAD CASE. SEVERE CONST [PATIO'S 1- , INDIGESTION AND SWOLLEN PAINFUL STOMACH. ALL CURED. AS USUAL, BY MOTHER SEIGEL’S SYRUP. The moral of the following story is just this, that however severely you may suffer, if your suffering is due to indigestion, Mother Seigcl o ,_j j.l l . ..ill cure you. Other means may have failed, but this great remedy will net fail, because it goes to the root of the trouble and ends it by restoring your stomach, liver and bowels to health and acliv'ty. The story comes to us from Mr Jeremiah Breen, Adelaide Lane, Maryborough, Queensland, under date September (sth, PJO7, and runs thus:— “ I have much pleasure,” says Mr Breen, “ in recommending your famous medicine to all who are afflicted with that terrible scourge, indigestion. I myself was a martyr to t-Ro complaint. I suffered tori-mo from pains in the lower portion of the stomach, wh-Ah was hard and swollen. My i appetite was bad, and I of ton went for days with hardly enough food to nourish a sparrow. 1 was very costive, aud felt so dreadfully ill that it was ouly by a great 1 effort that I managed to keep to my work. OTHER MEANS FAILED. “ I tried several remedies, but the results were very discouraging, and I kept on going down hill all the while. I was several times advised by friends and workmates to try Mother Seigel’s Syrup ; but would not do so till one day a small booklet about Mother SoigoTs Syrup was left at my house, and after reading it my wife said' it seemed to be just the medicine I required. She bought a bottle, and persuaded me to make a trial of it. After the third dose I began, much to my surprise, to feel considerable relief. This went on until* hy the time the bottle was emptied, I felt like a different man altogether. I could eat and .enjoy my meals again, and iho minis and other stomach troubles had left me. together with the constipation. Three more bottles cuiiiplclcd my cure, aud left me quite strong and hearty. “ And now, two years later, lam still in the be.-t of nealth. I take a dose of the syrup occasionally as I feel the need, and am more firmly convinced that ever that Mother Seigel’s Syrup is the best medicine ever made for the cure of indigestion and all digestive troubles.” If you suffer from indigestion in any form take Mother Seigel’s Syrup. Do not delay ; delay means suffering, and with such evidence as Mr Breen’s it is surely foolish to delay. If you doubt the truth of the story, refer to Mr Breen; he has lived for over 25 years in Maryborough, and is wellknown. This medicine that cured Mr Breen will certainly cure you. MOTHER SEIGEL’S SYRUP CURES WHEN ALL ELSE HAS FAILED.
Keith Worley, aged ten and a half years, son of a teacher at the Central School, Nelson, died of lock-jaw on Wednesday. While running across a field, chasing a horse, he trod on a piece of glass on Friday week, and cut his foot. Thec.twas stitched, and seemed to be healing, when tetanus set in. Sir David Gill mentioned during a lecture at the Royal Institution in London on January 2, that while he was on a visit to South Africa, King Cetewayo (father of Dinizulu) asked him how long it would take to make a journey to the sun in a Cape waggon. Sir David replied, after making a calculation on his thumb nail, 13,000 years. All goods will be sold at a great sacrifice during the drapery sale at the Economic (Mrs Hamer’s) in order to make room for the arrival of new goods.* To Flaxmileers. —We are prepared to print the new tin and leather regulation tags for hemp bales, and would request millers to inspect samples of leather before placing orders for same. Inferior leather will be condemned by the d epartment. We hold samples and invite inspection. —The Heraed Printery. A bad taste in the mouth always arises from a disordered stomach, and may be corrected by taking a dose of Chamberlain’s Tablets, They cleanse and invigorate the stomach, improve the digestion and give one a relish for food. For sale at Gardner & Whibley’ Grocers. Weekly English Mail Service —A scoamer will leave Wellington for Sydney every Friday, and will connect with mail leaving Sydney for London on Tuesday evening.
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Manawatu Herald, Volume XXX, Issue 380, 20 February 1908, Page 4
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743Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Manawatu Herald, Volume XXX, Issue 380, 20 February 1908, Page 4
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