WHELPTON'S' 1 .(.SURIFY/A,.. .".,. o\» i^ffl&L''' "Q .■■■'/ JV ' ' ' ' : *| TRrtOe- MARK < RECI9TEBEP )l '' U* ■■ " - ' ' ARE warranted not ' to 'contain a single particle , of .Mercury .or any . other Mineral Substance, but to consist entirely.of Medicinal matters, purely Vegetable ; hence they ' are , easily digested by, the stomach, taken up bythe absorbent vesslsls, and carried into tjhe blood, and thus the wholeisystemis brought under their purifying and renovating influenced , . ""\ -...' ,!,\ .7,:.'. '■■.'.'..,'..'..'. '. They have long since been used in one of the largest County Hospitals, in Great Britain, and.. received the commendation of several eminent physicians arid surgeons ; . arid .have proved their value'in thousands of i, nstances in diseases of the He«id, Chest, Bowels, Liver, and Kidneys ; and in all Skin Complaints are one of the best medicines, known. ,-..■•' - : Prepared and sold wholesale arid retail, in boxes, price 7£d, Is l^d, and 2s 9d each, byG. WHELPTON and SON, 3 Crane Court, Fleet street, London ; and may be had of all Chemists and Medicine Vendors. Wholesale Agents in the Colonies : Messrs Felton, Grrimwade and Co., : ' Melbourne ;Mr T; Padman, Adelaide ; Messrs Elliott Brothers, Sydney j Mr Jakins, Auckand ; Messrs Youngman, Dunedin. A PAJIAD OX.— TO SUFFERERS. NERVOUSNESS : ITS NATURE $ CURE What ts 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— Neivousness 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 .existenpe to them has no charms, for they feel that , they cannot enjoy it. Without intending it, ithey annoy other people about the merest trifles ; if they encounter some person unexpectedly they feel confused, afraid, arid' alarmed; the heart beats. violently,' the hand shakes when writing,' arid 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 very low or very excited, the ordinary duties of life beicome burdensome, society is shunned, and ; business neglected. , '''■'. \ A Stange Spectacle. —lt ' is certainly ; strange, but not the less true, that perfectly j sane persons in the prime of life, with .firm j step and healthy countenance, may occasioni ally be met with, who, in spite of possessing jail the advantages of education, religion, 1 ample means, and kind friends, nevertheless 1 are^ victims of the nervousness above described; 1 -unhappy theihselves, they render { other people unhappy. Why is this ? What j cause has operated to change the cheerful, active, obliging, unsuspecting, and uncomplaining youth into : the unhappy, drowsy, listle'st, suspicious, and gloomy misanthrope 1 Many causesj or one cause only, may operate to produce this sad state; the cause may be either mental or physical, or both combined. .Attempts to Gure Nervousness by means of ordinary tonics' have so' frequently proved fruitless that the leading ■ physicians now for the most part recommend hygienic means, such as exercise in the open air, .regular jhabits, sea bathing, the cold bath friction ; jchange of air and scene, as in- travelling. ; If [all these fail, as they often do, what'is to be jdone? '- ■■■:■ -i : - yr-.-." • ■'." ■ ■-^ . 1 < • . ■ -i j '..■■ • . . I .' ' . , '•.■-..- --; The Answer -will be found by : carefully 'perusing, the Following iWorb:~ '.' '. . I .■,.,.. Ninth 'lEdition^ post free is 4d,: ■> INERVOUS DEBILITY, ITS CAUSE AND ; . cure, •'.':'"! iWith Plain Directions for Perfect Eestpra- : tipn to Health. : ' : ' , ,' : Applicatieris' for -aicopy of the above work must be accompanied by the. amount" in New Zealand or other stamps, also' a properlydiiected envelope. . ; Address—- I ■ •. ! '■"'."! I CHARLES SENNET, Agent ..'.■..• i Brooklyn House, I Flag-s*,aft Gardens. Melbourne. '• ' SECOND EDITION NOW READY: Priced ss ; Post, 65. ' , . • ; . \ \ - S,P E RsM A TORE H CE Ay v In its 1 Physiological, Medical,' : and Legal \ :'" ■ ; .' ",;Aspects, : ' ■■ '■;'-' j By JAMES GEO. BEANEY F.R.C.S., Formerly Surgebri to tne'Melbpurne Hospital I and Her Majesty's Trooips.during I the War in the Crimea. Agents for J Jl 'e w ' J Zealand— Messrs WISE, I . Dunedin. I Spermatorrhoea, : with impotence and sterility: M are subjects; of muchigreater practical importance than has been conceived ' by manyi'/and often involve the happiness and perpetuation of families. Yet have they, by a! sorb of professional prudery, been either entirely, overlooked by medical writers' or vlery.iniperfectlyi discussed, arid thereby rehnquisued tothe.irregular practitioner, or to tVe entirely unqualified empiric. In the pressnt era of high refinement and of luxurious, if not vicious enjoyments,, and under , the in.fluence of noxious plans and systems of educition, instances are very ; numerous for vrhich medical advice; is required for the re- , n>oval of ,the morbidly; disqualifying conditions about ; -to ■> ; be considered, . but is I not resorted to so frequently as it bughtto." be. S^nce advice is thus often necessaryy the ability of those from: whom the community hjave a righb to-, expectit, of the most f judicious kind, should be equally great in providing >,it, ; -;Tb.ere is every , reason,, alsojrto believe; that, it -would, be of tenpr sought after ii 1 the. subject were known to. ibft; more fully c ltertained by the duly qualified: members of tjie profession."— Dr Copland's Medical. Dictionary, voL II. ,-:■■: , •;•.- --j "The only way: by which some of the most important functional ailments, and aberrant physiological states affecting humanity ;can be rescued from the grasp of; the most.disg isting and villainous quackery, and treated ; v ith benefit, to f the patient^ :ia by tbescien- ; t: fie and conscientious 'practitioner openly ti.king them under his own, .charge. —Lancet 3 >th May, 1851 ' -..,.•■! ■•'.•■ i We are glad that Dr Beaney, a Melbourne -surgeon of established reputation, has had 1 tl c courage to grapple with this subject, and ■'. b r the pubiication ; of this, work .point out a ■ wiyof escape to sufferers from the injuries ' o] t their constitution, and the drain made on :tneir purse by. impudent, charlatans. To such sufferers we commend' a "perusal of Mr Beaney's volume.— -Victorian Telegraph, 1
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Bibliographic details
Grey River Argus, Volume XIII, Issue 1537, 8 July 1873, Page 4
Word Count
1,066Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 Grey River Argus, Volume XIII, Issue 1537, 8 July 1873, Page 4
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