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It is proved by tests made by the Medioa Clinics of the Universities of Bonn and Griefswald (Prussia), and reported to by Dr Schultz Professor of Pharmacology at Bonn, and Professor Dr Mossier, Director of the Medical Clines at Griefswald, that only products that are saturated with oxygen and freed of acids resinous and other substances adherent _to primary distillation, will develop the sanative qualities proper to the plant. All crude oils or so-called Eucalypti Extracts, are to be classed according to the named authority ss, among the turpentines, which are abandoned long since as an internal medicament. T 1 ®se crude oil, or so-called Eucalypti Extracts, are discernible:

1. By their deficiency in pungent odor Iwhich our product, the only genuine Euca ypti Extract, develops most freely through ts surplus oxygon.)

2. By their alcoholic, thin, and mobile ap pearance, being reduced to specific density through the presence o£ acids. 3. By their taste, the result of contract ing tendency of resins and tanats. If these crude oils, or so-called_ Eucalypti Extracts, are applied by mistake in cases of croup, bronchitis, dipthcria, internal inflammation, dysentry, etc., the consequences are most appalling. For safety’s sake ask always or Sander and Sons’ Eucalypti Extract. — Sandhurst, Victoria, Australia. —SANDER & SONS.

When they put a man in gaol, he cannot follow his natural inclination. Hia enjoyment cf life is limited. He cannot eat what he wants to. Ke is limited to a very frugal diet. Ha is alive, to he sure, but life doesn’t possess very many advantages. Are cot all these things equally true of the dyspeptic ? For all the real enjoyment he gets out of life, he might as well be in gaol. Ho cannot cat what he likes, nor as much of it ai he would like. If he transgresses any of the rules of his diet, he is punished for it. He suffers much ; gets little sympathy. Dyspepsia starts with indigestion, 1 and may lead to almost anything. Indig-stion means a variety of things—it shows itself in many ways. At first, perhaps, a little heaviness in the stomach, a little sourness, windy belohings, and heartburn. Headaches begin to come pretty soon after that, and biliousness and a f ull taste in the mouth in the morning. Chronic constipation is almost inevitable, and it is probably the most serious trouble that ever takes hold of a man. Its seeming simplicity is the thing that makes it most dangerous, because it leads to neglect. Constipation means that the body is holding poisonous, impure matter, that should be gotten rid of. The poison is being reabsorbed into the blood, and the whole body is being tilled with it. Impurity in the blood mav lead to almost any disease. Thtre is no telling what may come of it. And yet people arc careless about it. It is the most serious thing in the world, and the easiest tc cure if you go about it right. Dr. Morse’s Indian Root Pills cure Constipation. Cure it positively, certainly, infallibly.'-' Cure it so it stays cured. _ Cure it so you can stop taking medicine. And that is something that no other remedy in the world will do. They positively cure Biliousness. Indigestion, Constipation, Dyspepsia, Sallow Complexion, Liver and Kidney Troubles, Piles, Pimples and Blot hes. A porfeet blood purifier, and for female ailments they stand alone as a woman's best it-.ud. S..ld by chemists and storekeej ers, price, Is ill per bottle, or six bottles Ts, •• -'(no will be mailed, post paid, upon receipt i p:ic f- Solo proprietors. The Vi. H, Comstock Co., Ltd. (Australasian Depot), 6S I’iit-stn et, Sydney. They are packed in amber bottles, and the full name blown thereon. EVtiti as sa mm assets® .-■ hC • >- wm

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GEST19011128.2.40.2

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Greymouth Evening Star, Volume XXXI, 28 November 1901, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
624

Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Greymouth Evening Star, Volume XXXI, 28 November 1901, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Greymouth Evening Star, Volume XXXI, 28 November 1901, Page 4

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