LIVERISHNESS! THE JOY-KILLER. Did you ever know a cheerful, happy-go-lucky chap, one of the buoyant, successful sort, who was liverish ? Just think it over! The man who is periodically troubled with his liver simply can't be cheerful or happy. He feels too miserable, and often too irritable and out-of-sorts to raise a smile. He does not meet you in a morning with the glad light of welcome in the eye, and the hearty handshake. And why not ? Why, because liverishness is a joy-killer, a smile banisher. When a man has a " liver," he feels more like hitting the other fellow in the eye, rather than slapping him ,on the back and shouting " How are you, old boy ? " He wants to crouch in a chair, hug his misery and brood over his present difficulties, and the possible misfortunes looming in the near future. As hasheen well said, liverishness distils bad temper as surely as the sun dispels the morning mist. It is so! The great men of the world, the great thinkers, the men who have done things, are not liverish. And if you want to be like them, and to do things, you must get the liver into a sound and healthily active condition, for liverishness is the'enemy of achievement. A few doses of a time-proved stomach and 'liver corrective and tonic such as Mother Seigel's 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-drops of Mother Seigel's Syrup in a little water whenever you feel the tendency to liverishness or have partaken heartily of food that is liable to disagree with you; yet.thousands ' of people avoid the consequences of biliousness and indigestion in just this simple way. ' REjVSOVAL NOTIC% JOE JENKINSON, Car Painter, etc., has removed from h)3 premises in Gill Street to_ Brougham Street Hall. The hall lias been trar.sfir.ned ir.to the most up-to-date ear renovating shop in town. Clients can de ,>id on full satisfaction.
QSMo.-utf EwcTKfi FLUID" Hi 'M& SMS ft <W(Q » OJMfmiji iM M^M^MSWi A Marvellous Cure for RED WATER in Cattle and Sheep. For Colds, Chills, Catarrh, • i Shivering Fits, Influenza, or Pink Eye. , Unequalled for Exhaustion, especially after Lambing, . Foaling and Calving. J For Thick Wind and /«///' Retention.of the •"""' Urine. For Roup in Poultry. J' W m m W mm i m m m m s* wm m -14/PER m a wm QUART TIN. (Costs 8d per dose) m The FIRST-AID REMEDY for all ANIMALS. SakManuf&clwrs . and a life to tired and jaded animals.
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Taranaki Daily News, 3 November 1916, Page 7
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442Page 7 Advertisements Column 2 Taranaki Daily News, 3 November 1916, Page 7
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