USE OF STIMULANTS.
A stimulant can do no more than draw on the reserves; it borrows for one hour what must be paid back the next hour. No horse-owner will believe that whips and* 6purs can ba substituted for oats and hay ! And so it is with men and women; no amount- of stimulant* can tako the place of good food, weH-~dige6fced. Wlhen, appetite and digestion break down and you feel ,weak, nervous, prostrated, you need Mother Seigel'e Syrup, the remedy that cures. It does not spar you up and ■ let you doww> afterwards, but it restores the Jost powers,, to yom stomach, livor, and kidneys, soTJ that you can digest your food and get|? form it t\u-> substantial nourishment that Natnro intended you to have. "Tun \<>ars ago I was suffering greatly, from tnritrestion. My stomach was derangpcti «nd my bowels constipated. My, liv«>r >v*s (■lugg'ish, and I wac constantly foiling a«l*vp at my work, in a shop where " tho machinery made a great .qoise. I was nor yon -, p.o » could be, my whole frame trembled : f wont home irritable, but got' no real sloop in the night, end rose in the* • mornings fooling worse than ever. I -was 6trongly advised to take Mother Seigel's Syrup, and I did so, and after taking a couple of bottles there was a great cbangef. in my health. I continued taking thV . Syrup, and afte-. using a fow bottles more » all the Indigestion left me. I still remainf frs-3 from the trouble*, and now I can eat, work, and sleep a» well as any man." Thomas Williams, 32 JRosehill street, Red-fei-n, K.S.W.
Mother Seigel's Syrup is a purely herbar medicine that exerts a tonic, ourative effect on etomaoh, liver and bowels. Taken daily, aftsr meals, it aids dig-estion, makes food! nourish you, and -hus ensures the. vigour and buoyancy of health*
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There were no Chinese working in Sydney on the last Friday in July. Inquiries elicited the fact that it was the 2320 th anniversary of the invention of carpentering and architecture by Low Barm Throughout the Chinese Empire and amongst Chinese abroad this anniversary is always kept as a holiday. Flags were flown on the public offices in Akaroa on August 11, that date being the anniversary of the annexation of the South Island at Akaroa bj Captain Stanley, of H.M.S. Britomart, ir> 1840. The commemoration flag, presented to the borough by Mr F. A Aneon, was hoisted on Saturday, the date of the landing of the British at Peraki. The Portuguese Parliamentary Commission report* that the grants made by the Royal family to the Treasury in the time of urgent need counterbalanced the advances made by the Treasury, to the Royal familj>
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Otago Witness, Issue 2892, 18 August 1909, Page 34
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454USE OF STIMULANTS. Otago Witness, Issue 2892, 18 August 1909, Page 34
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