ANNEXED BY GERMANY.
T;he naturailj propensity of some men for wandering has been variously, explained as an inability to feel at home any where, and as. the faculty of feeling at home wjjerevei' they may happen to be. Obviously, one of these theories is quite wrong. Mr Alphonse Burger, of 67, Kiley Street, Sydney, N.S.W., has as good an excuse for wandering as any man could have, for he was born in Strasburg two years before that city teased to bo French and became German. Doubtless it is hard to think of one's native place being in possession of 'the enemy; but what Mr Burger ha* found harder to e-nduie is indigestion, which tortured him for three years before he had the good fortune to try Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup. " After eating I 'had a sense of oppression across the chest, and could not sleep well at night, although I was drowsy by •day," says. Mr Burger. "All energy seemed to desert me, and I was depressed by the failure of many medicines, when a trial of Seigel's Syrup restored me to health. I have sine© remained well and strong." 1983
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TS19040201.2.56
Bibliographic details
Star (Christchurch), Issue 7924, 1 February 1904, Page 4
Word Count
191ANNEXED BY GERMANY. Star (Christchurch), Issue 7924, 1 February 1904, Page 4
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