MOTHER SEIGELS SYRUP THE WORLD'S REMEDY FOR DfDICESTIOX. BOOKING WELL. John Bull looks as well as anyone and jovial too. So broad, so sturdy, and so, strong. Folks say, " How well you look! " Poor John is really ill like so many of us, and dare not say so—people would not believe him. Looks belie people. Only those who are ill know how much suffering there is. How we wish our heads didn't ache! Or we wish food was enjoyable and would digest—wish we hadn't the pain, the flatulence, and the acidity that follows eating. Why " wish " only ? Take a short course of Mother Seigel's Syrup. There is renewed hope and renewed health in every drop of it. It will so tone up and strengthen the digestion that life itself becomes a new joy. " For six months I suffered severely from indigestion. I bad pain across the chest after eating, and my eyes became so clouaed I could scarcely see. My appetite, too, was verv poor, and often after a hard day's work I was unable to eat. After professional treatment hid failed to benefit me, three bottles of Mother Seigel's Syrup effected my complete cure."—Mß. Arthur Ttuatsjs, 113, Auckland, K.Z., July iota, 1908. MOTHER
The Rev Dr Horton asserts that people in England spend as much on ;ol£ balls as they do on foreign missions. «• Beer," said a sententious Salford guardian, " mußt be either good or bad. There ia no compromise. It is like a wife." While a man was cleaning one of the windows of the Leeds Town Hall he was caught by a gust of wind, and fell a distance of 200 ft, receiving fatal injuries. The London County Council will be recommended to erect an indication of the site of Tyburn Tree. Careful research into old maps and other records has been necfss*ry in order to ascertain the exact spot Marble Arch where the gallows stood. In a lecture given to Huddersfield hairdressers, Dr M. Macdonald (the newly-appoiuted medical officer of schools) recommended the free exposure of the head to sun and wind, and also advised that males should have their hair cut monthly in order to stimulate its growth. " Babies ought to be fed eight times a day," was the dictum of the Manchester health officer the other day. What does Dr Truby King say to that? A plebiscite taken by a St. Petersburg newspaper shows that the books considered most suitable for children there are «Uncle Tom's Cabin,' Vriloy's ' Fables/ and «Robinson Crusoe.' Of the fifteen books that received most votes six were translations of English works. Three days' treatment with Dr. Sheldon's New Discovery entirely cured me of a severe cold on the chest. I can heartily recommend it, writes John W. Riall, Hon. Sec. of the Melbourne Press Assoc, and Publisher of the Port Melbourne "Standard." Alexandra Agent : Ja<. Rivers.
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AHCOG19090210.2.37.1
Bibliographic details
Alexandra Herald and Central Otago Gazette, Issue 661, 10 February 1909, Page 6
Word Count
477Page 6 Advertisements Column 1 Alexandra Herald and Central Otago Gazette, Issue 661, 10 February 1909, Page 6
Using This Item
Allied Press Ltd is the copyright owner for the Alexandra Herald and Central Otago Gazette. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons New Zealand BY-NC-SA licence. This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Allied Press Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.