Medical
PUKE VOLATILE EUCALYPTUS OLOBULUB
EXTRACT.
TTNDER the distinguished patronago of kJ His Majesty the King of Italy, at Home, according to communication received from the Consul-General for Italy, at Melbourne, upon instructions front th» Ministor for Foreign Aftkire, dated 14th March, 1878.
TESTIMONIALS.
Certificate,
Sandhurst, the Ist of Muroh, 1878,
I hnve been investigating Messrs Sander and Sons' Eucalypti Extract since its dincoverj, and I hare to admit that there is besides it no medicament I know of, of such i universal eficct on the fauunnn system. I observed in the first iwstance that it checks completely all inflammations of -whatever ltind —inflammation of the chest, lungs, all throut affections, such as bronchitis, and diptheriu. It. alleviates and cures ull pains of rheumutic nature, neuralgia, &c, I have used it with unparalleled success i:i swellings, bruises, sprains, wounds of all kinds, and of moat eerions nature, as well as in all disorders of the bowels, diarrhcea, Ac. lam fully convinced that the invention of that medicament will meet with the greatest, estimation, nnd I gladly acknowledge ite merits for the benefit of the public,—Job 2* CanlCEshauk, M.D., L.RC.S.E., Health Officer. 2nd March, 1878. 1 certify to the seul of the Council of the City of fcanriburst being affixed to this document, D. ilacdougall, Town Clerk. Statutory Declaration. I, Franz Eaabe, of Ironbark, Sandhurst, in the Colony of Victoria, Australia, do solemnly and sincerely declare, that guided by the desire that all who may become ufliicted as I was may be enubled to lake adrant'ago of my publication, Iknake 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 assisted by Drs Penfold and Macgillivray. 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 Macgillivray, that an amputation of the injured limb had become imperative, in order to save life. At ; this juncture I called on Messrs Sander ond Sons, procuring come of their Extract of the Euculjptutt Globulue, and by the application of ihe.satno 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 espreeniug myfeeliugs towards Messrs Sander and Sons in (his declaration, but anyone may imagine them better than I can describe them in words. And I make this solemn declarntion conscientiously believing the same to be true, and by virtue of the provisions of an Act of the Parliament of Vicforia, rendering persons making a fulee declaration punishable for wilful and corrupt perjury.—Fbasz Raabe, Declartd at Sandhurst, in the Colony of Victoria, this seventeenth day of October, one thousand eight hundred and seventy-seven, before me, Moritz Cohn, J.P. From the Donald Times.
February 2,1878. Mr H. Brown, a cplitter and laborer, -who resides about Donald, informs, and lias shown us, that he has suffered from a sprained ankle for seven months. He procured the best medical advice in the district, and paid as high as 17s"for one bottle of lotion. It did him no good, srd at last he tried Sander's EuealyptLEssence. Three bottles cured bis leg, and he is now as strong as ever. Oonerriinent Botanist's Opinion Baron Yon Mueller, the Government botanißt, declarea our extract to be a most excellent one. , Cases of Earache. In November, 1877, the eldest boy of Mr Q-, Morgan, Donald, awoke in the night crying witb earache. After some time the extract was thought of, and tried. 3ho little fellow was cured and asleep in ten minutes.
A day or two after this Mr Morgan met Mr Frent'h,of Corack station, who complained of having ti bad earache and paiw in the head. He persuaded the suiferer to try the Eucalypti Extract,' and Laving put two drops in hi? ear, and rubbed some round the ear, the pain instantly disappeared. Cases of Severe Bruises In November, 1877, Mrs Weppner who resides in Colbihabbin (Runnymede), informed the manufacturers that the extract applied twice restored health to her daughter, eleven years of age, who had been ruehed; and trampled upon by a cow. Tbe child was bruised more or leas all over the body, bleeding profusely at the head, and the temples hud become quite black. .
Mr D. Obermann, residing near tbe gas Works, who was suffering from wounds which he could not get rid of during six months, and who was cured by the uco 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. Ihufc man appiied the extract, and the accident did not even necessitate us much as an interruption in his attendance at work. Mr. Fr;mz Wchrle, Sailor's Gully, has likewise cured one of his bunds, which was severely bruised—or rather, we Bbould say, crushed—through a fall of stone upon it. Mr 11. Fickel, of Iron bark, hus also successfully applied the extract to a finger injured in the same way.
To the Editor of the Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners' Advocate.
12th February, 1878. Hating received a» ugly wound some short time ngo in the forearm from a dog bite, and which caused vie great puin, the arm swelling up to the shoulder, and partially deterring me irom follovviug my daily avocation—that tim flesh had been poisoned I had not the slightest doubt—l tried fomentation and other remedies, but still the limb got worse. Seeing the Eucalypti Essence advertised in tho columns of tho Herald und Advocate, I purchased a bottle in order to try its efficacy upon the wound. Upon tho first applicatiou tho swelling almost entirely disappeared, the pain was considerably relieved, and the third day after applying Che oil, 1 felt no inconvenience whatever, and I am now firmly convinced that in cases of wounds, swellings, strains, or bruises, the Eucalypti iB a safe remedy, and would advise all who might be suffering from any of the above to give tho "Eeßunce" a trial.
I am, sir, yours &c, J. Peedom. Plattaburg, February 6th, 1878.
From the Bendigo Evening News.
Mr AdolphuE Juughenn, of Ironbark, culled at. our ollico on Monday, the 2'JLtU December, 1877, and narrated the following!—"My little girl, tea yeara of age, had been complaining fsotiiu time of her leg being very sore übovo the kueo, and I sent her to see Dr Atkinson, who immediately pronounced the. cuao a bad one, and said he could givo the child nothing, but eho must ivy still for three months, after which period a .piece of bone would work its way out. Not aatisticil with that opinion, I wont the next day to Pi 1 Jauto* Jioyd, who attended my
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THS18791027.2.20.3
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Thames Star, Volume X, Issue 3384, 27 October 1879, Page 4
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1,180Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 Thames Star, Volume X, Issue 3384, 27 October 1879, Page 4
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