WE SHOULD BLOT OUT DISEASE IN ITS EARLY STAGES.
The disease oommenoes with a slight de r* ■ *ement ofithe storoaob, but, if negleoted, it in : . .mo involves the whole frame, embracing the kidneys, liver, panoreas, and in fact the entire glandular system ; and the afflicted drags out a miserable existence until death givag reliof from suffering. The disease is often mistaken for other complaints ; but if the reader will ask himself the following questions he will be able to determine whether he himself is one of the affioted : Have I distress, pain, or difficulty in breathing after eating P Is there a dull, heavy fueling, attended by drowsiness P Have the eyes a yellow tinge P Does a thick, sticky mucous gather about the gums and teeth in the mornings, accompanied by a disagreeable taste P Is the tongue coated P Is there pain in the sides and baok P Is there a fullness about the right side, aa if the liver were enlarging P Is there oostiveness P Is there vertigo or diarineßs when rising suddenly from a horizontal position P Are the secretions from the kidneys highly coloured, with a deposit after standing P Does food ferment soon after eating, aooompanied by flatulence or belching of gas from the atomaoh P Is there frequent palpitation of the heart P These various symptoms may not be present at one 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, haeking cough, attended after a time by expectoration. In very advanced tuges he skin assumes a dirty brownish apperanoe, and the hands and feet an covered by a cold sticky Serspiration, As the liver and kidneys eobme more and more diseased, rhenmatio pains appear, and the usual treatment proves entirely unaviling against the latter agonising disorder. The origin of this malady is indigestion or dyspepsia, and a small quantity of the proper medioine will remove the disease if taken in its inoipienoy. It is most important that the disease should be promptly and properly treated in its first stages, when a little medioine will effeot a oure, and eten when it has obtained a strong bold the oorreot retmedy should be perservreed in until every vest ge of the disease is eradicated, until the appetite has returned, and the digestive organs restored to a healthy condition. Tho surest and most effeotual remedy for this distressing complaint is " Seigel's Ourative Syrup," a vegetable preparation sold by all chemists and medioine vendors throughout the world, and by the proprietors, A. J. White, Limited, London, E.G. This syrup strikes at the very foundation of the disease, and drives it, root and branoh, out of the system. Ask your chemists for Seigel's Ourative Syrup. " East-street Mills, Cambridge-heath, "London, 1.0., July 24th, 1882, 1" Sir,—lt gives me great pleasure to be able to add my testimony in favor of your valuable Sprup as a curative agent. I had Buffered for some length of timt from a severe form of indigestion, and the long train of distressing symptoms following that disease. I had tried all possible means to get relief, by seeking the best medical advice. I had swallowed sufficient of their stuff to float a man-of-war, so to speak, but all to no avail. A friend of mine, coming on the soene in the midst of my sufferings, brought with him a bottle of your Seigel Syrup { he advised me to try it, stating he felt confident it would benefit me. Being weary of trying so many drugs, I condemned it before trial, thinking it could not possibly do me any good, but ultimately determined to take the Syrnp. After doing so for a short time it worked tuoh a change in me that I continued taking if for nearly two months, and I then felt thoroughly cured, for I have discontinued its use for five weeks, and feel in the best of health, and can partake of any kind of food with ease and eomfort. I am therefore thankful to you that, through tbe instrumentality of your valuable medioine, I am restored to the state of health I now enjoy.—Yours truly, "W. S.FOBBTBB.
"To Mr A J.White." Those who are in the " Asthma Furnace " should lose no time in obtaining relief by the we of " The Rosing weed Tar Mixture;" but do not use the medicine unless you will follow all the directions " to the letter."
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Temuka Leader, Issue 1599, 25 June 1887, Page 3
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748WE SHOULD BLOT OUT DISEASE IN ITS EARLY STAGES. Temuka Leader, Issue 1599, 25 June 1887, Page 3
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