INDIGESTION. ..•WHY IT IS SO COMMON. The strenuous modern life we lead often upsets the digestive system.. Then, too, worry, over-work, anxieties of various sorts, excitement, late hours, trying climatic conditions, lack of exercise, or too violent exercise, are each and all capable of bringing about a deranged condition of \the stomach. Add to these excessive tea drinking, to which many of us must plead guilty, and you see clearly enough why indigestion is so common. To avoid indigestion, and its distressing symptoms, you must take an occasional dose of Mother Seigel's Syrup. But to banish indigestion and its healthdestroying effects, its pains and discomforts, you must take a regular course of Mother Seigel’s Syrup. There isn't a remedy in existence that can cure you at once if you-have been suffering for a long time, but quick relief and eventual restoration to good health arc certainly well within the powers oi Mother Seigel s Syrup, and usually follow its use. Of that there is no doubt. Tens of thousands of people in the last forty years have frankly stated, and entirely on their own initiative, that this oldfashioned remedy is of real and lasting service in banishing the common ailments of the digestive system—the stomach, liver, and bowels. Listen to Mrs. G. Banner, of 91 Matherson-road, Linwood, Christchurch, N.Z., who wrote on October 25th, 1917: — “I suffered from very severe indigestion for seven years, and nothing I tried to remedy it gave me the slightest relief, until a friend induced me to give Mother Seigel’s Syrup a trial. The contents of one bottle gave me relief, and I continued taking your specific after meals, until three bottles- in all had been consumed, when I found that my stomach troubles had disappeared. Since experiencing the curative properties of Mother Seigel’s Syrup I have always recommended your specific to sufferers from indigestion.”
Does your boy write home on Red Triangle Paper? The Y.M.C.A. supplies over 1 80 million sheets of note paper per year free "of cost, and always urges the boys to “write home first.” Send donations to OAPT. d. a. ewbn, Hon. National Y.M.O.A, Treasnrcr, Baker’s Building, Wellington. /
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Bibliographic details
Gisborne Times, Volume XLIX, Issue 4876, 23 May 1918, Page 2
Word Count
358Page 2 Advertisements Column 5 Gisborne Times, Volume XLIX, Issue 4876, 23 May 1918, Page 2
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