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THS NEW FRENCH REMEDY. ! u By Royal Letters PuW • under the special section of c Her Majesty’s Gent ) uni, and the Chiejs oj <e Faculle ile France. . rpHERAPION:—or CUKE OF CURES; This ii J[ successful and highly popular medicament, as employed in the continental hospitals by Kostan, c Jobert, Velpeau, and others, combines all the desiae- c rata to be sought in a medicine of the kind, and surpasses everything hitherto employed. Devoid ot a taste , oilour, and appearance of medicine, it can be j left or carried anywhere, and taken from time to time without exciting suspicion. Each package contains full instructions for every case. THERAPION, No. 1, in three days only—removes gonorrhoea, gleet, and all discharges; effectually superseding injections, the use of which docs irreparable harm by laying the foundation ot stricture and other • serious diseases. In dysentery, piles, irritation of the lower bowel, cough, bronchitis, asthma, and some ol the more trying complaints of this kind, it will be found astonishingly efficacious, affording prompt relief where other well-tried remedies have been powerless. THERAPION, No. 2, for syphillis. disease of the • bones, sore throat, threatened destruction of the nose and palate; impurity of blood, scurvy, pimples, spots, 1 blotches, and all diseases for w'hich it has been too 1 much a fashion to employ mercury, sarsaparilla, &c., j to the destruction of the sufferer’s teeth; and rum ot j 1 health. Under this medicine every vestige of disease j rapidly disappears; and the skin assumes the pleasing softness of infancy. THERAPION, No. 3, for relaxation, spcmialorr- i hoca, and all the distressing consequences arising from i early abuse, excess, residence in hot, unhealthy climates, &c. It possesses surprising power in restoring strength and vigour to the debilitated. To those who are prevented entering the marriage state by the consequences of early error, it will render essential aid by subduing all disqualifications; and restoring the lost tone to the system. Therapion may be procured at 11s, and 335, per package, through all medicine vendors, or in £5 packages for Ibrcign shipment, direct from London only, by which £1 12s. are saved: and XlO packages for the more inveterate cases, by which a still greater saving is effected. In ordering the above, the purchaser should state which of the three numbers he requires. Hmi Majesty’s llox. Commissioners have graciously permitted the government stamp bearing the word “ Therapion” in white letters, to be attached to each package; thus insuring the public against fraudulent imitations, and securing to the proprietor the sole right of supply throughout her dominions; and any infringement of which they will prosecute with the utmost severity. Agents for England:—Thomas & Co., 7, Upper St. Martin’s Lane, London; Raines & Co., Liverpool; Apothecaries Comp., Glasgow; Ferris & Co., Bristol; Cornish & Co., Plymouth; Howe, Devonport; Randall & Co., Southampton; and obtainable through all medicine vendors in the known world, or in ease ot difficulty, by enclosing a draft or order for £5 or £lO, according to the nature of the case, payable in London to Messrs. Thomas & Co., as above, a large package will be sent by return mail, carefully secured from observation or accident. I PREMATURE DECAY OF THE SYSTEM, and its perfect restoration, whether arising from youthful imprudence, or the excesses of adult life, infection, climate, &c. Observations on marriage, the prevention and removal of certain disqualifications. Rules and numerous prescriptions for self-treatment. Sufferers who are prevented from matrimony by the consequences of imprudence, should read this work, es pointing out the sure way to restoration of health. Sent post free in an envelope on receipt of 35., by air. LAWES, Medical Publisher, 14, Hand Court, London. The Cause and Cure of Premature Decline. Sola by all the Ayents for Dr. de Boos' Medicines, or sent post free, secure from obser cation, direct from the Author for 2s. 6 d. qnilE MEDICAL ADVISER, on the modern ( 1 treatment of mental and physical incapacity, | syphillis, stricture, &c., with unfailing rules and prej scriptions for the speedy cure, by very simple means, I of all the more common diseases and supposed incu- | rable maladies of the sexual system. Bv Dr. W. (Deßoos, M.D., M.K.C.S., L.S.A., &c., of the Ecole I tie Medicine, Paris, Graduate in Medicine, Surgery and | Midwifery ; Licentiate of the Royal Society of Apolhe- | caries , REVIEWS AND NOTICES, “ To be your own counsel or your own doctor, en- | tails risks that have become proverbial to a degree \ that prevents much good resolution from taking any I benefit or advantage when reasonably offered. Suspicion begets irresolution, and where there is no confij deuce good results seldom follow. Medical books are a field for the faculty alone, and the public act wisely |in refraining from their study. ‘ Drink deep or taste | not the Pierian spring,’ is good advice where the uninformed mind, listening to its own apprehensions, is | oftener ready to imagine than use its cool judgment. : There is one class of medical lore, however, that stands i in a postion somewhat exceptional to our remark, and I which treats on disorders and irregularities in which morality is offended. For ibis reason the patient too ! often suffers in secret, or pursues in ignorance practices ■ that daily bring him into a more hopeless condition for S want of friendly advice. To such we recommend a perusal of the ‘ Medical Adviser’ of Walter De Eoos, i M.D., of London, an established Physician, graduate, and licentiate of all the regular institutions of London and Paris; and who has made nervous disorders and their baneful origin his particular stud}', and obtained such a practice in this branch of therapeutics, as qualities him to be a safe and competent adviser.”— County Chronicle, May 7th, 1861. “The MEDICAL ADVISER, by Walter De Roos, M.D., for the class of diseases upon which it treats, is undoubtedly the best and most soundly pracj tical book which has come under our notice. The j Author is a man of most enlarged experience.”— ! Derby Telegraph, June 29th, 1861. To those who contemplate m triage its perusal is j especially recommended. The knowledge it imparts i must come some time, and happy they who do not pos- | sess it too late. Cure is certain in every curable ease, and few indeed are they which are not so. It is calculated io effect a complete revolution in the treatment of these complaints. Simple and inexpensive, every sufferer may cure himself speedily, privately, and at the least possible cost. From long practical observation of the treatment pursued in the most famous Institutions of this country and the continent, for those diseases referred to in the above work, the Proprietor has had somewhat unusual facilities for acquiring that uniform success which has hitherto characterized his practice, in which the distressing consequences resulting from the injurious employment of mercury, capivi, sarsaparilla, ■ and similar dangerous medicines arc entirely obviated, j Lasting benetit in these cases can only be reasonably ; expected at the hands of those who devote their chief attention to such diseases; and to such only can confidence he safely extended. Dr. dc R. refers with pride to the numbers he has been instrumental in restoring to health and happiness; whilst to all who need such I aid he offers every assurance of speedy restoration, j Foreign Residents can be successfully treated by correspondence, on sending the details of their case; with a Bank note or Bill on a London house for £5 or £lO, in order that a package of medicines to meet the exigencies of the case, may be sent out by next mail; thus avoiding the protracted suffering and unnecessary loss of valuable lime, which must otherwise occur.

DR. DE RODS’ G UTT7E YITiE OR LIFE DROPS; Protected by Royal Letters Patent of England; Seals of the Faculte de France ; Royal College of Prussia, S;c,; have in numberless instances proved their superiority over every other advertised remedy for Spermatorrhoea; languor; lassitude; depression of spirits; irritability; anger; excitement; needless fear; distaste and incapacity for society, study, or business; indigestion, pains in the side, palpitation of the heart; giddiness, noises in the head; impotenev impediments to marriage, See. This medicine strengthens the vitality of the whole system, gives energy to the muscles and nerves, thus speedily removes nervous complaints, renovates the impaired powers of life, and invigorates the most shattered constitution. For skin eruptions, sore throat, pains in the bones, and all those diseases in which mercury, sarsaparilla, &c., are too often employed in vain, to the serious detriment of health, its surprising efficacy has only to be tested to be appreciated. As these complaints if neglected become “ chronic” or incurable, sufferers will do well before they waste valuable time in seeking aid from instruments, and other absurdities professing to supersede medicines; to make fair trial of a remedy, which concocted on unerring scientific principles cannot fail; and may be carried about the person, or left upon the toilet table, without exciting a suspicion of its nature. Price 1 Is.! and four times the quantity at 335. per bottle. The £5 packages containing twelve 11s. quantities, by which it saving of £'l 12s. is effected, will be sent from 2.0, Bedford Place, only, on receipt of the amount per draft on a London house or otherwise. Extracts from letters which can be seen by anyone. “I am happy to say that 1 am now quite well, thanks to you and your medicine of medicines.”— l). P., Sh 'Asaph, “'I am happy to say that I shall not tsh

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZ18620917.2.16.5

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

New Zealander, Volume XVIII, Issue 1724, 17 September 1862, Page 6

Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,580

Page 6 Advertisements Column 5 New Zealander, Volume XVIII, Issue 1724, 17 September 1862, Page 6

Page 6 Advertisements Column 5 New Zealander, Volume XVIII, Issue 1724, 17 September 1862, Page 6

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