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NATURE’S DANGER SIGNALS

Keep your eye open for danger signals —especially those that threaten your health. If people would only do this, the diseases that afflict the world would be reduced by one-half. Illness rarely comes on without warning. For example, when you lose the sharp appetite for food; when you feel dull and sluggish; when your ordinary work or duties seem to require more than ordinary exertion ; when yon are constipated, have little dull headaches, and your mouth is scummy—these and other like signs show, unmistakably, that your physical machinery is not in good order. That is the time for doing something to ward off an attack of real illness. A our t rouble is incipient indigestion, the complaint which Mother .Seigel’s .Syrup always checks and cures. And don’t forge., that it is easier to conquer indigestion in its earlier stages than when it has become chronic. Mother Seigel's Syrup, so acts upon the stomach, liver and bowels, that indigestion is impossible. A purely herbal remedy, containing no mineral drugs, it purifies the blood, strengthens the digestive organs and tones up the system generally. Mr. Thomas F. Flower, 171, Hall Street, Bondi, N.S.W., the celebrated painter of birds, w rites (12.3.08) :—“I used to be for ever wanting to sit down or to lean against something. I was always drowsy, and when I tried to exert myself I went so" dizzy that I was afraid I should-fall in the street. Then the complaint took a queer turn. I couldn’t sleep at all, and used to lie awake often till daybreak. I was much troubled with wind and palpitation, and fits of trembling used to come over me —a serious matter in my_. profession. But at last the recollection of an old friend who was always praising it made me" think of Mother Seigel’s Syrup. Four bottles cured me, and an occasional dose keeps me in splendid health.” Digestion is the hey to health. Take Mother Seigel's Syrup.

Telescoped Voices.

Many excellent voices are ruined, according to a communication whfeh Dr. Weiss has made to the French Academic du Mwlecine, by practising in too small a room. A public singer must throw every intonation of his voice distance of thirty or forty yards, he says, but a student practising in a small room is only able to throw it a yard or two, an<J the consequence is that the voice, instead of expanding, becomes telescoped.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZGRAP19080916.2.75.1

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Graphic, Volume XLI, Issue 12, 16 September 1908, Page 46

Word Count
405

Page 46 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealand Graphic, Volume XLI, Issue 12, 16 September 1908, Page 46

Page 46 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealand Graphic, Volume XLI, Issue 12, 16 September 1908, Page 46