[advertisement,] AN ALARMING DISEASE AFFLICTING A NUMEROUS CLASS. The disease commences with a slight derangement of the stomach,hut, if neglected, it m time involves the who u fra ne, em bracing the kidneys, liver, pancreas, and, in fact, the entire glandular system, and the afflicted one drags out a miserable existence until death gives relief from suffering. The disease, is often mistaken for other com plaints ; hut, if the reader will ask him self the following questions, he will be aukto determine whether he himself is one of the afflicted : —Have I distress, pain, or difficulty in breathing after eating? Is there a dull, heavy feeling attended by drowsiness ? Have tue eyes a yellow tinge ? Does a thick, sticky mucous gather about the gums and teeth in the mormons, aocom panied by a disagreeable taste ? Is the tongue coated ? Is there pain in the sd s and back ? Is there a fullness about tue right, sides as if the liver were enlarging? Is there costiveness ? 1s there vertigo or dizziness when rising suddenly from an horizontal position? Are the secretioiis from j; the kidneys scanty' and highly coloured, with a deposit alter standing? Does food ferment soon after eating, accompanied by flatulence or a belching of gas' from the stoinach ? Is there frequent palpitation of the heart? These vaiims symptohs may not he, present - at »ue time, but they torment the sufferer in turn as the dreadful disease progresses. If the case be one of long standing, there will be a dry, hacking cough, attended after a time by expectoration. In very advanced stages the the skin assumes a dirty brownish appearance, and the hands and feet are covered by a cold, sticky perspiration. As the liver and kidneys become more and more diseased, rheumatic pains appear, and the usual treatment proves entirely unavailing against this latter agonising disorder. The origin of this malady is indigestion or dyspeptia, and a small quantity of the promedicine will remove the disease if taken in its iuoipiency. It is most important that the disease should be promptly and properly treated in its first stages, when a little medicine will effect a cure, and even when it has obtained a strong hold the correct remedy should be persevered in until every vestige of the disease is eradicated, until the appetite has returned, and the digestive organs are restored 10 a healthy erudition. The surest and most effectual remedy for this- distressing complaint is “ Seigel’.s Curative Syrup,’’ a vegetable preparation sold by all chemists ami medicine vendors throughout the world, and by the proprietors, A. .1. White,' Limited, 21, Farringdon road, London, or the wholesale agents, Kempthorne, Prosser and Co.’s JSew Zealand Drug Coy. (Limited), Dune din, Christchurch, Wellington, and Auckland. This Syrup strikes at the very foundation of the disease, and drives it, root and branch, out of the system. Ask your chemist for Seigel’s Curative tiyrnp. “ Angus-street, Clunes, Australia, “May 17th, 18S0. “ Dear Sir,—lt is with great pleasure that I bear testimony to the value of your excellent medicine. For some time I had suffered with liver complaint and billiuus-n-.-ss, afterwards yellow jaundice set in, and was very ill indeed for over twelve months. During that time 1 consulted several medical men and took the medicine tin y prescribed without any benefit, and at last 3 began to despair of ever getting well again. However, I was induced to try Mother Seigel’s Curative Syrup, and after taking the fifth bottle I began to get better. 1 continued taking it for some time, and now 1 feel better than I have done for years. I send you this hoping that it may induce similarly afflicted persons to try your valuable remedy. I shall he very glad to ausvver any questions, either personally or by letter, in reference to the Syrup. “0. Clarke.” Seigel’s Operating Pills, unlike many Kinds of cathartic medicines, do not make you feel worse before you feel better. Their operation is gentle but thorough, and tinattended with disagreeable effects, such as nausea, griping pains, &o. “ St. Mary Street, Peterborough, “Nov. 29, 1831. “ Sir, —lt gives me great pleasure to inform you of the benefit I have received from Seigel’s Syrup. I have been troubled for years with dyspepsia, but after a few doses of the Syrup 1 found re'ief„and after taking two bottles of it I feel quite cured, “ I am, Sir, yours truly, “Mr A. J. Whit < >.” “William Brent.
REMEMBER THIS. IF YOU ARE SiCK. If you are nick, HOP BITTERS will surely aid Nature in making you well again when all else fails. If you are comparatively well, but • feel the'need of a grand tonic and Stimulant, never rest easy till you are made a new being by the use of HOP BITTERS. It you are costive or dyspeptic, or are suffering from any other of the numerous diseases of the stomach or bowels, it is your own fault if you remain iff, for hop bitters: are a sovereign remedy in all auch com- ", plaints. If yiV are wasting‘away with any form of Kidney I isease, stop tempting Death this moment, and'turn for n cure to HOP BITTERS. It you are sick with that terrible sickness Nervousness, you will (iud a “ Balm in Gilead ” in the use of HOP BITTERS. If you are a frequenter, or a resident of a miasmatic district, barricade your system against the scourge of all countries—malarial, epidemic, bilious and intermittent fevers—by the use of HOP BITIERS. It you have rough, pimply, or sallow skin, bad breath, pains and aches, and feel miserablegenerally.HOP BITTERS will give you fair skin, rich blood, the sweetest breath, health, and comfort. In short, they cure ALL Diseases of the Stomach, Bowels, Blood, Liver, Nerves, Kidneys. &c., and £SOO •will be paid for a case they will not cure or help, or for anything impure or injurious found in them. That poor, bedridden, invalid wife, sister, mother or daughter, can be made the picture of health by a few bottler of Hop Bitters, costing hut a trifle. Will you let them Suffer? Cleanse, Purify, &. Enrich the Blood with Slop Bltlers. And you will have no sickness or suffering or doctors’ bills to pay.
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Dunstan Times, Issue 1101, 1 June 1883, Page 3
Word Count
1,033Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 Dunstan Times, Issue 1101, 1 June 1883, Page 3
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