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Arc you ‘‘Liverish?”

To feel “liverish” is to feel wretched,’ bat to be really bilious is indeed agony. Livorishness often becomes biliousness if you leave your liver to work out its own salvation. A few doses of a time-proved stoinach and . liver corrective and tonic such as Mother SejgelV,Syrup is generally all that is needed to’ ensure the regular and even flow of bile so necessary to the perfect .digestion of food , and the regular daily action of the bowels. It is a simple matter to take thirty drop* of Mother Seigel’s Syrup in * little water whenever | you feel the tendency to livorishness or i have partaken heartily of food that ia j liable to disagree with you; yet thousands i of people avoid the consequences of bilious- i ness and indigestion in just this simple way. They ‘keep a bottle of Mother Seigel’s Syrup handy ftr use when needed, and many of them have stated that they w uld not willingly be without it in the house if the cost were six times as great as it is. “Two years back,” writes Miss Maggie McGrath, 3, Kermoda Street, North Adelaide, South Australia, “I was practically little belter than a physical wreck and Absolutely broken dofcn in health as well As (spirits. 1 was suffering from quite a complication- of . ailments and bad symptoms, embracing biliousness, headaches, indigestion, and.h«U't palpitation, and the pain and distress’l endured are quite beyond ray powers of description. I believe that an ill-conditioned liver was the foundation of all my troubles and sufferings. “I heard such good reports of Mother Seigel’s Syrup that I decided to try it. I purchased a supply, and felt an improvement in my condition after using the first bottle. As I continued the course rny troubles grew less and leas, until at length the. headaches, indigestion, and bilious symptom* hid all disappeared, and I found ! myself as vijprous and well as ever I had I been in my life. There are many medii ciues, but few real remedies, and of thesa latter Mother.Jjeigel’a..Syrup i* ( .the very best I know.” ‘

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/STEP19160810.2.14.3

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXI, Issue 10, 10 August 1916, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
349

Page 3 Advertisements Column 3 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXI, Issue 10, 10 August 1916, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 3 Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXI, Issue 10, 10 August 1916, Page 3

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