Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

"IN A CLASS BY ITSELF."

It has been proved beyond question by thousands upon thousands of men and. women in all parts of the world that Mother Seigei's byrup. exerts a wonderful influence for good on the organs of digestion—stomach, liver, and bowels. It has, however, been left to a resident of Newtoym, N.S.W., to express in enthusiastic terms the opinion that this, famous stomachic remedy is "in a class by itself." Such a statement, of-course, can only be sincerely made by one who has proved its merits by personal test. The full facts as expressed by Mrs. Francis are set forth below, and all that we need odd to this voluntary testimony is, that if you suffer much or little from stomach troubles, you will do well to try what Mother Seigei's Syrup will do in your case. Then wo feel sure you will endorse the terms used by Mrs. Francis, who, writing on the 11th January, 1916, from 46, Angel Street, Newtown, N.S.W., says: — j "As one who has tried, proved, and tested it with great personal advantage, allow me to congratulate you most heartily on the possession of a remedy of real merit, and wqnderful medicinal worth. Of the jnany medicines I have used in the past, Mother Seigei's Syrup stands in a class by itself. "For some years I was ill, delicate, and weakly, with severe neuralgic painsfrequently affecting the head. My digestion was very impaired, the appetite poor, and the little food I forced myself to swallow would usually lie like lead on my chest causing horrible sensations of suffocation and oppression. A friend in 1913 brought Mother Seigel?s Syrup to my notice. The. first bottle afforded more relief and did more,good than all the other medicines I had taken combined together. As1 I continued to use it, I visibly improved and grew stronger, stouter, and better with each successive bottle. In a short period I was sleeping like a top, eating with enjoyment, freb from the neuralgia, v and in the best of spirit's. Altogether I took eight bottles, of Mother Seigei's Syrupj and after reading the above, do you think that anyone has a better right or greater cause

The Dunedin City Council have decided to carry trvir own fire and accident risks, aim i,nting to something in the region of £200,000.

A Wellington correspondent suggasts that in return for their board and lodging the German prisoners on Somea Island might be employed in raising food stuffs, or doing something more useful than carving wooden images of the Kaiser and Hindenburg.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TC19170517.2.7

Bibliographic details

Colonist, Volume LVIII, Issue 14406, 17 May 1917, Page 7

Word Count
428

"IN A CLASS BY ITSELF." Colonist, Volume LVIII, Issue 14406, 17 May 1917, Page 7

"IN A CLASS BY ITSELF." Colonist, Volume LVIII, Issue 14406, 17 May 1917, Page 7