INDIGESTION AND COMMON SENSE.
Your common sense tells yoii that no man or woman who suffers from indigestion can possibly enjoy really good health. It is therefore the part of common s<:nse to avoid Indigestion if you can; but if you have not been able to avoid it altogether, it is wise to banish it in its early stages, because the longer this ailment continues the more its pains and penalties increase. Unfortunately, most of us can't avoid a little digestive trouble now and then, because the stomach is a sensitive organ. The little worries of life, the strenuous days that tire us out, and even the changes of weather that upset us, all affect the tone of the stomach, and thus cause indigestion. The stomach, however, is only part of your digestive machinery, and it often happens that as soon as the stomach ceases to do its work properly the other digestive organs become affected, and the whole machinery of digestion becomes nior.j or less disturbed. Now, common sense dictates that if you suffer because your stomach and liver have lost tone and vigour, you must restore their lost vigour and tone in order to get well again; and the remedy which common sense dictates is the well-tried stomach tonic and liver invigorator. Mother Seigel's Syrup. Every day more and more people who once suffered from stomach and liver troubles, from indigestion, flatulence, acidity, heartburn, biliousness, and constipation are gratefully testifying that Mother Seigel's Syrup has successfully banished their digestive troubles, even after other remedies have been tried in vain, and it haa kept them well. The Syrup is not a cure-all. It owes its success to the face that the medicinal oxtracts it contains have a wonderfully beneficial effect not only upon the stomach, but upon the liver and bowels as well, restoring their tone and vigour, and thus promoting good digestion, the true basis of good health.
Jackscy : " Yus, my poor brother had no eddication, an' it wur his rain !'' Rickscy: "How was that?" Jacksey: "Ho forged a name on a. cheque, an' the spellin' wur bad."
17 t/'.A
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Otago Witness, Issue 3247, 7 June 1916, Page 69
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352Page 69 Advertisements Column 1 Otago Witness, Issue 3247, 7 June 1916, Page 69
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