gTHE ART PRESERVATIVE OF ALL ARTS. CROMWELL ARGUS MBLMORE TERRACE. MATTHEWS & FENWICK, -o** f 'r # PRINTERS, EXECUTE ORDERS FOR OF EVERY KIND In the most modern styles of the Art. BOOK AND PAMPHLET WORK. Unsurpassed in the Colony. plain, ) CAH;DS | COLORED, ENAMELLED, ) In endless variety of style. ADMISSION TICKETS For Balls, Concerts, Lectures, Entertainments, Soirees, Ac. Ac. BALL PEOGEAIMES, NEWEST STYLES. Business & Invitation Circulars, Printed in New and Elegant Type, On Fine Post or Fancy Note Paper. MINING COMPANIES’ SCRIP, (Superior to Lithographed) ON BEST HAND-MADE PAPER. POSTERS, ANY SIZE, BLACK OR COLOURED INKS. ILLUMINATED SHOW-CARDS, SUPERB DESIGNS, In Coloured Inks or Gold Bronx. Receipt and Delivery Books Neatly printed and strongly hound. Catalogues, Hand Bills, Programmes, Labels, Memo.’s, Societies’ Pules, Bags and Wrapping Papers, Prospectuses, Envelopes, Ale & Porter Labels, Circular Labels, —AND—EVERY OTHER KIND OF PRINTING !
Patent Medicine PARADOX !—TO SUFFERERS. NERVOUSNESS, ITS NATURE AND CURE. What is Nervousness? Various answers might be given to this question, according to the constitution and knowledge of the individual. Strong healthy persons, whether medically educated or not, generally regard nervousness as more or less an “ imaginary complaint” ; it is sometimes only believed to be real when the patient is found to be dying or dead. The best answer to the question, probably, is this,— Nervousness is an Unnatural Condition oe the Nervous System. Sometimes this unnatural state is accompanied with considerable bodily weakness, loss of flesh, and loss of strength ; but in most cases there is in the earlier stages of the disorder no outward sign of weakness. The sufferers are found in both sexes ; they often have the bloom of health upon the cheek ; they are surrounded by kind friends, yet existence to them has no charms, for they feel that they cannot enjoy it. Without intending it. they annoy other people about the merest trifles ; if they encounter some person unexpectedly they feel confused, afraid, and alarmed ; the heart beats violently, the hand shakes when writing, and the whole frame at times experiences a complete tremulousness. The intellect also is sometimes
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Bibliographic details
Cromwell Argus, Volume III, Issue 142, 30 July 1872, Page 8
Word Count
341Page 8 Advertisements Column 2 Cromwell Argus, Volume III, Issue 142, 30 July 1872, Page 8
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