Fatent Medicines ministration, by a remarkable increase of nervous power with a feeling of vigor and comfort to which the patient has long been unaccustomed. Digestion is improved ; the appetite increases wonderfully; the bowels become regular; the eyes brighter ; the skin clear and healthy ; and the hair acquires strength, showing the importance of the Phosphodyne on the organs of nutrition. Finally, the Phosphodyne maintains a certain degree of activity in the previously debilitated nervous.system ; its use enables all debilitated organs to return to their sound state and perform their natural functions. Persons-suffering from Nervous Debility, or any of the hundred symptoms which this distressing disease assumes, may rest assured of an effectual and even-speedy cure by the judicious use of this most invaluable remedy. DR BRIGHT'S PHOSPHODYNE is sold only in cases at L.l Is., containing Two bottles ; and L.2 25., containing Five bottles ; also in family cases at L.5, containing Sixteen bottles. To be had of all Chemists aud upcountry Storekeepers throughout the Colonies. Full directions for tine, in the English, French, and German languages, accompany each case. SELECT MEDICAL OPINIONS: Sir Charles Locock, Physician Accoucheur to her Majesty the Queen, stated at a meeting of the Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society that in thirteen cases of debility and nervous prostration he had effected permanent cures by the use of Dr Brigbt's Phosphodyne. Sir Wm. Ferguson, Bart., F.R.S, surgeon to her Majesty the Queen, says :—" I have repeatedly prescribed Dr Briglit's Phosphodyne and found it an agreeable and beneficial remedy. I have but one objection regarding it, and that is, the elaborate process required in the preparation will not allow of the retail price being within the reach of all classes." Dr Lancaster, the eminent coroner, says : "Dr Briglit's Phosphodyne is calculated to entirely supersede iron, mercury, sarsaparilla, quinine, and cod-liver oil. Dr It. Quain, F.R.C.P., physician to the Hospital for Consumption, Brompton, remarks : "It cannot be doubted that this Phosphatic preparation will henceforth rank foremost in therapeutics ; it generates all the important elements of the human frame, the peculiar character of this substance fitting it for vital uses. 1 ' Sir T. Lawrence says : ■' I have found Dr Briglit's Phosphodyne an excellent remedy in skin diseases. 1 presume it is by oxydisation." Professor Svme says : —" The effects of the Phosphodyne in obstinate cases of disease are as astonishing as perplexing." Dr Handtield Jones, F.R.C.P., F.R.S., physician to St. Marv's Hospital, says in atrophy, and general debility, Phosphodyne is a mos f admirable remedy ; it invigorates the nutritive functions, anl increases the vital energy, ''it not only acts as an absorbent," but retards or repairs the waste of tissue, anl restores the nutritive functions to their normal condition. The Lancet considers the Phosphodyne one of the mostimportant contributions made to materia medica during the last century. Caution. —Be particular to ask for Dr Brigbt's Phosphodyne, as imitations are abroad. Pamphlets containing testimonials may be obtaided from all chemists and up-country storekeepers. Wholesale agents for New Zealand : KEMPTHORNE, PROSSER AND CO., PARADOX !—TO SUBTELIERS. L NERVOUSNESS, ITS NATURE AND CURE.
What is Nervousness?— Various answers might bo 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 of 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 thev 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 \iolently, the hand shakes when writing, and the whole frame at times experiences a complete tremulousness. The intellect also is sometimes clouded, the memory fails, the judgment becomes indistinct, the will capricious and undecided, the taste vitiated, the imagination broods upon unpleasant topics, the spirits are either very low or very excited, the ordinary duties of life become burdensome, society is shunned, and business neglected. A Strange Spectacle.—lt is certainly strange, but not the less true, that perfectly sane persons in the prime of life, with firm step and healthy countenance, may occasionally be met with, who, in spite of possessing all the advantages of education, religion, ample means, and kind friends, nevertheless are victims of the nervousness above des ribed ; unhappy themselves, they render other pe 'pie unhappy. Why is this? What cause has operated to change the cheerful, active, obliging, unsuspecting, and uncomplaining youth into the unhappy, drowsy, listless, suspicious, an I gloomy misanthrope? Many causes, or one caus" only, mav operate to produce this sad state : the cause may be either mentil or physical, or both combined. Attempts to Cure Nervousness by means of ordinary tomes h>ve so frequently proven limitless, that the leading physicians now for the most part recunmend hyirienic means, such as exercise in the open air. regular habits, seabathing, the cold bath friction ; change of air and scene, as in travelling. If all these fail, as they often do, what is to be doue ?
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Bibliographic details
Cromwell Argus, Volume III, Issue 146, 27 August 1872, Page 8
Word Count
923Page 8 Advertisements Column 3 Cromwell Argus, Volume III, Issue 146, 27 August 1872, Page 8
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