YOU AND YOURSELF. When you are 111, do you know what makes you ill ? “Know thyself,” is a useful proverb Bu how many people do know themselves ? Do you P When you are ill, do you know what is making you ill P Could you give a reason P Could you guess the cause ? If you have an abscess, there is no doubt about your condition. There is the sore place to be seen. (Similarly, men or women with a cold on the chest and a severe cough, have definite symptoms and can describe precisely what is wrong with them, when the doctor calls. But most people arc not ill in these plain, obvious, matter-of-fact ways—many times in their lives. They may be constantly ill, in vague, uneasy ways. Beyond realising one o two vague causes of distress, apparently of little moment, they seem well and feel they ought to be well. Only—they never are well. One gets up in the morning tired. Another feels dull and heavy. Another Hushes in the face and has palpitation on mounting the stairs. Still another feels depressed at the end of the day and cannot sleep at night, though tired out. Or, the longue is coated. Food docs not tempt and gives no pleasure. Eating is an ordeal and pain follows it sometimes sickness. Dizziness occurs. Flatulence is common. The system becomes irregular. But they go on suffering. Why P The stomach is the cause. The stomach is the most used, most delicate, most important organ of the body. It is worked harder than any other. It literally keeps the body alive in the same way that the fire makes steam for the engine. Put it ever so slightly out of order and there is trouble. A distressing symptom is set up. Discomfort follows. A feeling of actual illness sets in. Next time you feel that way don’t worry and suffer. Go to your Chemist. Ask for a medicine he knows—a medicine millions know—Mother SeigeTs Syrup. Take a dose as directed, day by day, faithfully. You will find the system toned up. The little disquieting vvorries disappear one by one. Again, why ? Mother Seigel’s Syrup deals with the stomach and makes it do its own work in the proper way. |JI igestion, the root cause of ninetertbs of human suffering, once corrected, you get well. Your other troubes arising from indigestion disappear they cannot exist with a digestion set right by Mother Seigol’s Syrup. Mrs M. Majoram, 51, Barwon Park Hoad, St. Peter’s, N.S.W., writing on June 23rd, 1908, says : “I used to suffer terribly from indigestion, and existence was a burden to me. .Various medicines which I tried afforded only temporary relief, and I despaired of finding a cure, when a lady friend urged me to try Mother Seigel’s Syrup After using two bottles of the Syrup, the worst symptoms of my complaint were much reduced, and by the time I had taken nine bottles my recovery was complete.”
Mr William E. Goode, 107 Victoriastreet, Christchurch, N.Z. says; “I have been a bilious subject all my life, and though I have tried all sorts of things for it, have never found anything like Chamberlain’s Tablets for warding off bilious attacks. When I feel one of these attacks coming on I take two of Chamberlain’s Tablets and lam soon well again.” For sale everywhere.— Advt. There was a young man of Madrid, Who said to a l‘J-ycar-old Kid ; “Take my advice, Sonny, don’t waste all your money, Buy a lied Bird,’’ —The Kid did. MrW. A. Kcllow, Taranaki-street Wellington, N.Z., writes: “There is no question about it —Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy is a hue one. I have used it several times and it always gives me immediate relief. Not long ago one of my carters came home with a very severe attack of Colic and Diarrhoea and it oulytook two doses of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy to fix him up in good shape. I never go away on a trip without a bottle of this medicine, for I find that change of water often affects one. For sale everywhere.— Advt. For contiimation of Reading Matter see page 4. MAGISTRATE’S COURT, FOXTON. SHADBOLT AND HO WAN v. WALTER ANDERSON. THE Bailiff of the above Court will sell by Public Auction, at the Courthouse, Foxton, at 2 p.tn. on the 6th inst., 1 Iron. Grey Trotting Stallion, 5 years old, broken to saddle and harness. By virtue of a Distress Warrant issued in , the above case, unless judgment is previously satisfied. ONE 3-roomed house, 4s per week ; 1 4-roomed house and scullery, 7s per week ; 1 4-roomed house, scullery, washhouse and copper set in, 8s 6d per week. —Apply F. WOODS, Bailiff. TO LET. MOQRE & BARNARP, Solicitors.
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Manawatu Herald, Volume XXXI, Issue 451, 2 March 1909, Page 3
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796Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 Manawatu Herald, Volume XXXI, Issue 451, 2 March 1909, Page 3
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