THE FASTING MAN.
Ewery now a i<i then, tr mi. Ne* Yo k, Loudou.tr sun other lii.> cty >o>i hca of a roai who can g> forty ■> y »i h ul food! But every such nun, a', tie e< i ■! his fast, links w«ak a>id il ! fie Laa scarcely strength enough to walk, an I is as thin as a lath That is sutfi iut p oof tlut we mu-t e«t to live ! Furth'-r. we must digest what we eit, or we ?bal be weik and ailing, lika a'l dyspeptics are ! If you are weik, rise tired, wth no relish for breakfast aul dreading your work ; if yo i have heulaehes, bi.i usuess, lonstipation, dizz nervousness or low f-pir ts, y>u need oily the power to dige t food to mike you well and strong r.ga ; n. You ntei the hrtlp thxt Moti er Stigel's Symo he'ps your ttoma<:h, liv«-rand boweh to do their work propily. Then y>u can dig st food, and good health fol ows naturally Take, for example, the experience of Mr William Cretan, Morse Strtet, The Valby, Biisbane, Queensland, who, i«i a le ter dated January 28th, 1910, says : For a jear and nine monthn, I was bidly afflicted with Indigestion and co istipation. These ailments shatterel my health, uiitd life became a burden. M*at, legetables, f uit and swce's all caused nn much pain and discomfor . I could only »at * slip-food," for when I had no apietit'. "I had a tight feelins? across my che t. and my st>mash was often dis'en* el with wind, whi h caused severe pains about my heart We kby»e kmy *tr< ibcliued and I lost flesh ui.tii ther<j wa< lit le left of me but skin an i b ue At night, I ael loin knew what it was t > g<-t two hours, at atm■, of sound tleep. I would just doze and wake up, ha f a dozeu times.iu a nignt. "In fie 'turnings I had abal tast; in my mouth, no appetite fir breakfast, and f It ai>thing lut fit to tacke the day*' work. The c instipstiou, to, kpt gt-tting worteand the d>dor ordered me purgative, which only afforded t mpora y r lief. For my indirection, after trjing d ctors' medicine, I tried a variety of advertised remedies but got no real i>e letit until an old friend iuducei me, two jean back, to t y M ther Se pe 's Syrup " Almost from the first, I cou'd feel that the Sy up was < oing mu good, and in a week I considira ly bitter in everyway. I began to eat ana take enjoyment in my fool. The pans to which 1 had been accustomed, after eating, gre.v leis after each dote of the Syrup, and my bowels acted more fieely. "As I ontinued to use the Syrup, I made rapid advances t awards recovery, and in the coarse of a couple of month', I was fully and completely restored ti health. "Asa reliable, effective remedy, for in digestion and constipation, there is nothing in all Australia to equal Mother Stigd's Syrup," Mr Cegan was sure to suffer as long as liis stomach was out of order—unable to digest aud gain nourishment from fool. Mother Seigel's Sjrup r turrei his stomal h to working order, made food nourish him, stimulated the a tion of hi* liver and bowels and thus it cure! him—once fir •11.
Mother Se ; ge!'s Syrup will cure \o\ too. if you have stomach or liver disorder Take it daily, after meals.
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Bibliographic details
Lake Wakatip Mail, Issue 2785, 20 September 1910, Page 3
Word Count
590THE FASTING MAN. Lake Wakatip Mail, Issue 2785, 20 September 1910, Page 3
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