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THE EFFECT OF A LAZY LIVER. If you are affected by digestive troubles—the symptoms may be the ordinary everyday ones of a headache, biliousness, pains after eating, acidity, or flatulency—you may be oertain that your liver is not acting its part properly. I/iveriahness leads, straight to headaches, sickness, to torturing bouts of biliousness, to irritability, blurred vision, bad skin, dull and drowsy eyes, and chronic weariness. _ On the 'other hand, when the liver is healthv, you don't realise that iyou havs a liver. Daily, hourly, this important} organ performs its natural functions, and, so long as it docs you are blissfully unaware of its existence. But hvcrishness, with its distressing symptoms, makes the best of us willing to quarrel with an angel, if Mother Seigel's Syrup, by the very nature J of its ingredients, exerts a beneficial action on the liver, and having stated that we now give Mr Harris's confirmation., who, writing on August 3, 1916, from 183 Gawlef place, Adelaide, says: "I have found your fine herbal prapnration very beneficial in the treatment of severe liverish symptoms. My appetite failed. I did not relish the little I did eat, and had frequent attacks of biliousness and bad headaches. There was an uncopv fortablo sense of heaviness, together with a dull, continuous pain in the right jdda, and the slightest pressure over the liver hurt dreadfully. I felt languid, dull, and listless. " I failed to get any lasting relief, until I began a course of Mother Seigel's Syrup. That excellent remedy did more good in a. few weeks than all the other medicines I had taken lumped together. It allayed th-3 pains, sharpened the appetite, regulated tha bowels, banished the bilious attacks, and, after using several bottles, all the old symptoms of liver and stomach trouble had disappeared."

Sam. the cowman, returned from Loa, don with a scarf-pin that contained a "dit> mond" of no usual size. It was* the pride of his heart and tho enw of his village companions. H<? treated all inquiries from them as to ita value and its authenticity with high booth. His employer, after a week of basking in ita radiance, asked Snm about its history. "Sam," he said, "is it a real diamond?" "Well," said Sam, "it it ain't, I'y<j been dono out of half a crown/'

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/OW19170411.2.150.2

Bibliographic details

Otago Witness, Issue 3291, 11 April 1917, Page 53

Word Count
385

Page 53 Advertisements Column 2 Otago Witness, Issue 3291, 11 April 1917, Page 53

Page 53 Advertisements Column 2 Otago Witness, Issue 3291, 11 April 1917, Page 53