HIS LEGACY.
(S i AThMI ST Ml A Blil nsn I 'll \ :,l( I AX.) “ The only thing 1 inhcrileil Irmn my permits,” :i young le.lluw In nu |. e other day, weic poverty and a weak st much.”
The .statement is sugg, stive. Ilia poverty came with his had digestion, and remained because id it, Ini’ he grew to he a chronic dyspi ptic, lacking I he amhiiioir so necessary to win a living against the compelition nlTiic healthy and strong.”
“ Dm ing the whole of my pmh ssional career,” says one ot Ihe most sueees. - ful physicians in Kngland, ” 1 have been tilling my patients that, so far as physical weakness and disease is the, cause <tf failmcs in life, (he responsible ailment in nine eases out of ten is digestive weakness.” The, doctor is rigid; and fortunately some good work is going on in (hat direction, as the following case wcdl When Mrs Fitton’s health failed ai d she became alai mingly ill, her medical advises s (old her that she was siillering from general debility and indige-lion.
The information was doubtless correct, but it would liaoc lx en 1 elh rif Mis b'dton’s informants had n I put Ihe cart before the horse, hut said, " indi geslion and general dchiii y f r o course, the general dehihly was oily a result of tlie indigestion. “For eighteen men hs,” says M's billon, ” 1 was imib r medical lira ■ incut ; hut I grew wiakn all (he time, and was tar w-or.-e at the end than at flic beginning ol that period. 1 could not digest, and was so weak Irom want of imm ishmenl and sh cp II at my lion ewoik became a liiinf n 100 hard lor me to hear. Headaches, too, and ])ains in various parts ol my body, troubled me gn ally, so (bat my condition was pitiable.
” A Inend’s advice (tint I should la y Mother Se gel's Syrup was not given a moment to soon. Alie.r taking that remedy for live days, 1 was lomewhat relieved. The tigiiti ess at my eh st which had been a most unbearable, cased somewhat, and there was no pain a ler eating. Fach bottle ol the Syrup marked a long s-trp loiwaul in my march toward complete ircoviry, for winch (en i.otlks proved sufficient. That was in 1898, and 1 have since continued in the enjoyment of per cel health, recommending Mother Si-igcdV S\ nip to every sufferer from Indigestion who comes in my wan.” —(.Sign cd) Lucy Imtton, 4, Ryder Sin ct, Su ray Mil's, Sydney, N.S.W , March 1 olh, 1908. The lesson of Mr.-, billon’s experience is this: you must cat to live—yon cannot doubt ihatnnd your strength and encigy depend upon the way in which your stomach deals with the food you c it. It must he properly digested, so as to give yon the nourishment it contains. The more thoroughly this is done, the heller will he your health ol both mind and body. Never neglect the first signs of indigestion ; if you do, a core will bo more difficult. Mother Seigel’s Syrup, the famous herbal remedy for all stomach and liver disorders, is composed ot roots, leaves, and barks, of great medcinal value, and may be retied upon to cure indigestion, headache, wind, constipation, and loss of appetite. Try it.
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Manawatu Herald, Volume XXX, Issue 442, 17 November 1908, Page 4
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560HIS LEGACY. Manawatu Herald, Volume XXX, Issue 442, 17 November 1908, Page 4
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