ONLY A LITTLE AT A TIME.
not Tftor'e are aofand objeotlono to one roy kuoftmg too much about his own bod ,in lam going to tell you what they an ay, Dot to-dßy, bnt soon; To make Bare ( sub them- yoti will hate to wotob the! oat articles sharply in the newepspeia. ¥< ind wo (should kbofr a little ; and a fractlo nn of that little I will aerve up now. fleas ,nd favour me with your attention. In- _ Bight across the middle of the bod ids is a large, thin, flat muscle, stretohei p's like a oanvap awning-r-tha diaphragm 00 By it you arts divided into two largi Vd stofeys or compartments. The uppoi be one contains the heart and lungg, thi ho lower one contains (chiefly) the Btomach ie the Intestines, and the liver. Tho mosl at painful (internal) diseases ooour down, at stairs, the leaßt painful upstairs. al Tho entire right side of the lower to compartment, from the top down to the l- short ribs, is filled by tho liver, which is )f suspended to a mere point of tho diaph- \, ragm and shakea about with every move s, meat you make. n Now, from the location of the liver it we have a word used for ages to express n one of tho most unhappy conditions a [1 human being being can fall into— the . world hypochondria (often abbreviated r to " hypo "), the word meaning under -. the cartilages. " For seven years, 1 ' writes a correa--1 pondent, " I suffered from complaint of j the liver, I was very bilions, my skin [ was sallow and dry, and the whites of i my eyes yellow. I had mnch pain and i weight at my right side, and was con- > stantly depressed and melancholy. It i seemed to ba out of my power to take a ■ hopeful or cheerful view of anything. . The effect of this complaint on the mind i was one of the aspeota of ithardest to bean "I had lost my natural appetite, and ate to support life ; but there was not any genuioe relish for food or drink. The bad taato in my mou;h made all that I took taste bad. Sometimes I would ba taken nick and throw up all I bad eaten j and after a meal, no matter how slender and simple, I was troubled with fullnesß end pain at the chest, j used many kinds of medioinos and while some of them may have relieved me for the moment, none conferred any lasting benefit, and I wan soon as bad as ever. "la March, 1892, I read in a small book of what Mothtr Seigel's Curative Syrup had done in cases similar 10 mine, and was especially interested in the account given in the book of the nature and dutieß of the' liver, aud its disorders. I got a bottle of the syrup from Boots' Drug Stores and after taking it a few days felt quite like a now man. It seemed to correct my otouuch and liver and clear my system of all bile; and it left me in. capital health. Since that time I have alwayu kept Mother Seigel'u Syrup in the house as a family medicine and have commended it to all my friends as the best known cure for ailments like the one from which I suffered so miserably and so long. You can use this statement as you like. (Signed) John Gent, 59, Coventry Boad, Bulwoll, Nottingham, Maroh 21st, 1895." j "In the spring of 1891,' writes J another, "I found myself in bad health | had no appetite, and Ihe little I did eat did my no good, gave me no strength. I had great pain and weight at the chest a'-r- ught sido, and a>y skin turned ss' 1 ,./- and dry. My kidneys also an'a^ Dadly, and from time to time I had attacks of gravel ; aud cold, dampy, weakening sweats broke oat all over me. Being only seventeen years i old when the trouble began I was greatly alarmed and anxious. Mo dootor was able to help mo, and I continued thus for over three years. In Juno, 1894, I began to use Mother Seigel's Syrup and soon felt better, lighter, and more cheerful. And by taking it a few weeks longer I recovered my health and strength. Since then, wheu I have any stomach, liver, or kidney symptoms I resort to Mother Seigel's Syrup and it meyer fails to set mo right. You can publish this loiter (Signed) 0. Hansou, 6, New Inn Lana Gloucester, May 3lßt, 1895." The stomach, the liver and the kidneys are all connected parts of the food and digestive oyetom. When dia ordered (usually through torpidity of the stomach) they cripple the body and throw a gloom aa of night over the mind. On the earliest si^ns of anything wrong with them use Mother soigol's S/rup at once.
ONLY A LITTLE AT A TIME.
Hawke's Bay Herald, Volume XXXI, Issue 10465, 21 November 1896, Page 5
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