Medical '" ; PUR-K VOLATILE EUCALYPTUS G.LQBTJLUS EXTRACT. • ' ■ " ■''. i • rTND.EE- the distinßuialted' patronage of \J His Majesty the King of Italy, at Home, according to communication rocajved from the Conaul-Geberal for Italy, »t Melbourne, U[)bn instructioriß from the Minister for Foreign Affaire, dated 14th March, 1878. TESTIMONIALS. ' Certificate. Sandhurst, the Ist of M»rob, 1878. = I have been investigating Meßsre Sander and Sons' Eucalypti Extract' since its discovery, and I have to admit that there is besides it. no medicament I Inow of, of such universal" effect'dn" the*human system. I observed in the first instance that it. checks completely all inflammations of ■whatever kind—inflammation of the cheer, lunge, all throat affections, such as bronchitis, and diptlieria. It alleviates and ourea all painsof rheumatic nature, neuralgia, &c, I hate used ib with unparalleled buccosb in swellings, bruises, spruins, wot.nda of all kinds, and of moist teriou's nature, as well as in all disorders of, the bowels, diarrhoea, &c. lam fully convinced that the invention of that medicament will meet with the greatest estimation, and I gladly acknowledge its merits ! for the benefit of the public,—JOHN CbttiCKsiiahk, M.D., L.R.0.8.E., Health Officer. 2nd March, 1878. " I certify to the seal of the Council of the City of Sandhurst being affixed to this document, D. Macdougiill, Town Clerk. Statutory Declaration. > I, Frnnz Baabe, of Ironbnrk, Sandhutat, in the Colony of Victoria, Australia, do solemnly and sincerely declare, that guided *by the desire that' all ; who may become afflicted as I was may be enabled to fake advantage fof my .publication/I make the following declaration,: On the 25th June, 1877, my son Alfred, six years of age, was accidentally hurt with an axe on the knee. lat once took all pains to procure mrdical assistance, by calling at first on Dr Austin, who was subsequently aesisted by Drs Penfold and Macgillivrny. However, in spite of all the combined efforts of the said gentlemen, the malady took such a bad turn that the patient was lying in uninterrupted ■wound-fever, and on the 17th August, 1877, the opinion was given by Dr Maegillivray, that an amputation of the injured limb had become imperative, r iu order to save lif«. At this jiiheture I called oh Messrs Bander and Sons, procuring .some of their. Extract of the Eucalyptus Globulua, end by the application of the same I had the satisfaction of seeing my son within % fortnight out of all danger, and to-day he is recovered. I may just add that it was when the crisis had been reached, that the extract referred to was first applied. I abstain from expressing my feeliugs towards > Messrs Sender .and Sons in this declaration, but anyone may imagine them better than I can describe them in words. And I make this solemn declaration conscientiously believing tho same to be true, and by. virtue of the provisions of an Act of the Parliament of Victoria, rendering persons making a false declaration punishable for wilful and corrupt perjury.—Fkanz Kaabe, Decland at Sandhurst, in the Colony of Victoria, this seventeenth day of October, one thousand eight hundred ,and seventy-Beven, before me, Moriti Cohn, J.P. * From the Donald Times. '■ February 2,1878. Mr H. Brown, a splitter and laborer, who resides about Donald, informs, and has shown us, that he has suffered from a sprained aukle -for seven months. He procured the best medical advice in the district, and paid as high us 17s for one bottle of lotion. It did him, no good; and at last he tried Sander's .Eucalypti Essence. Three bottles cured his leg; and he is now as strong as ever. Government Botanist's . Opinion \ ' Baron Yon Mueller, the Government bota- , nist, declares our extract to be a most excellent one. Cases of "Earaclte. In November, 1877, the eldest boy of Mr i Qr. Morgan, Donald, awoke in the night crying with earache. After some time the > extract was thought of, and tried. 'The little 1 fellow was cured and asleep in ten minutes. A day or two after this Mr Morgan met Mr French, of Coracb station, who complained of having a bad earache and pain in the head. He persuaded the sufferer to try the Eucalypti * Extract, and having "put two drops in his ear, and rubbed some round the ear, the pain instantly disappeared. ; ■ .< / Cases of Severe Bruises In November, 1877, Mrs Weppner who resides in Colbinabbin (Runnymede), informed the manufacturers that the extract applied twice restored health to her daughter, eleven years -of ago, who hud been rushed and trampled upon by a cow. The child was bruised more or leßs all over the body, bleeding profusely at the.head, and the templet hod become quite black*. ' ' | Mr D. Obermann,, residing near the gas Works, who was suffering from wounds which ■he could not. get rid Qf during six months, and wko was cured by the use of the extract [' :-within four weeks,' introduced to Sander and Sons, in November, a man having his arm ' ; bruised severely at a crushing machine in Long Gully. That man applied the extract, and the accident did not even necessitate as much as an interruption in bis attendance at work. <■<!■ Mr* Franz Webrie, Sailor's Gully, has like•wiee'cured one of hia hands, 1 which was severely bruised —or rather, we should Bay, crushed—through a fall of stone upon it.,.. , Mr H, Fickel, of ironbark, hns also successfully applied the extract to a finger injared in the same.way. , , , To the Editor of the Newcastle Morning f Herald, and Miners' Advocate. f i«i 7 i 12th February, 1878. \ Having received an ugly wound some tbort time ago in the forearm from a dog bite, and \ which caused me great puin, the arm qwelling up to the shoulder,; iind partially deterring me trom following my daily avocation—that tiie flesh had been poisoned ,1 had nofc the j doubt —I tried fomentation and other remedies, but still the limb got worse. | Seeing" the Eucalypti* Essence advertised in . the columns of the Herald end Advocate^" 1 purchased a bottle-in order to tty its efficacy upon the wound. Upon the first application the swelling almost entirely disappeared, the pain was considerably relieved^ and the third day after, applying the oil, 1 felt no incon- , venience whatever, and lam now firmly convinced that in cases of wounds, swellings, 1 strains, or" bruises; the"Eucalypti Is a" safe* ' remedy, and would advise all who might be suffering from" any of/the • above to give < the, J "Essence" a trial." ' I nm, sir, yours &c, J. Peedom. Plattsburg, February 6th, 1878. From the Ben&igo Evening News. Mr Adolphue Junghenn, of Ironbark, called at our office on Monday, the 24th December, 1877, and narrated the following:—"My ! little girl, ten years of age, had been complaining some time of her leg being very aore übova tho knee, and I cent her 1 to see Dr Atkinson, who immediately pronounced the cose a bad one, and said he could give thechild. nothing, but' she must lay • still '■ for three months, after which period ' a! piece of bono would work its way out. t Nob satisfied with that opinion/1 went the next day to Dr James Boyd, who attended my
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THS18791014.2.19.3
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Thames Star, Volume X, Issue 3373, 14 October 1879, Page 4
Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,186Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 Thames Star, Volume X, Issue 3373, 14 October 1879, Page 4
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
No known copyright (New Zealand)
To the best of the National Library of New Zealand’s knowledge, under New Zealand law, there is no copyright in this item in New Zealand.
You can copy this item, share it, and post it on a blog or website. It can be modified, remixed and built upon. It can be used commercially. If reproducing this item, it is helpful to include the source.
For further information please refer to the Copyright guide.