ACTS LIKE A BURGLAR.
Indigestion is like a. burglar in "he body. ' It roba you cf that which you need {or your o_wn .support: «.nd comfort. What is more, the burglar is often practically an invited --f, We often allow -Indigestion to *nter oyr system through sheer carelessness. . We eat too much or -rce eat t"little. We eat food that we like bui •which does not like- us. We eat Ino quickly, generally, because' we ha-f. to do so in these activo, busy times, the stomach, itself. A few doses cf Syrup nisi tone uthe weak stomach. clekJD&s tLa \irvi and kidneys, and make you and well once more. - The blood i> purified, the muscles grow firm »»i<i strong, the nerves as -rue ss stsei, and the mind ciea-. alert. cLeerim. Mother Seigel's. Syrup cioaiiisea tfc* whole system, and makes the umas body secure against all nervous &bu functional disorder*. By using it oocasionally, you can eat a good meal without nervous anxiety about th* morrow. You can enjoy life to tht full, with the appetite and gestioa of a healthy young plough-boy. That is the feeling that makes .'ifo worth living. "Two years and three months »•_■< 3 wrote to tell \ou how greatly I had been benefited in health Ly using Mother Seigei'si Syrap. It i iiered me of severe. Indigestion aud Biliou* ness, and 1 am happy to say there ka* been no rtst-am of those distressing ' complaints, and I ,am at present quae well." . . "I continue to take a little of-, the fiyrup from time to time and find it very ben&ficial; besides being free from the drawbacks and unpieasect- » ness connected with most physics; Mother Seigel's Syrup is a vem»!dy that can be relied on to give satisfaction." Letter, dated October 10th, 1908, from Mr J. Bate, TO, CrenfeU •trfeet. Adelaide. South Arfioa. We commit many errors of diet, nnd Mr Indigestion.takes us off our guard one day. Then /we know what ne*i misery ib. The food we eat does u« little or no'good. Someijmee we <vui not even eat the food necessary to' sustain and invigorate ca. We grow depressed, irritable, nerv&^s, -nelincholic, lethargic, world-weary. »7h»t is to be done? • * , Don't tr- to cure Indigestion Ji, starving yourself, ss lome may 9A vise you to do. Don't become a ioA faddists, and limit yourself to any on* ho-breakfast or a.'iy, other raeal-sav-ing remedy. . Ke&p y-riur stomach tissues strong by eating good, nourishing food, and by taking Jlother Seigel's Syrup to help you to digest it. ' Indigestion—with all its accompanying disorders—constipation, oilioupTiees, nart^ilence, beartbrrn, nau■ea, dizziness, liver complaint—arises from a weakened''stomach. Tb* Btomadh, being weak, ' is unable to perform it 3 duties weil, become* charged with poisonous acids, fluids, and gases, and fements. Theeo force themselves into reco-iruit'on, «t the voakest point by syujptonis of pun or disoornfort. Mother Seigel's ;yrup cures all digestive disorders, by removing the ca.use and strengtlLening
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Thames Star, Volume XLVII, Issue 10355, 2 May 1911, Page 4
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485ACTS LIKE A BURGLAR. Thames Star, Volume XLVII, Issue 10355, 2 May 1911, Page 4
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