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Medical GEEAT CUBE FOE PILES. , TTERBiL AINTMENTI For curing Piles of every description internal ■ or external. "^Guaranteed to cure, and is free i from all chemicals or substances calculated to injure the syttem. ' | Mr LoDKBB,-after many years experience of , its merits has been induced to make his discovery known, so as to benefit all sufferers , by this most unpleasant disease, and desires to acquaint the Thames publio that he has appointed Mr John Lexdon his agent, at whose establishment the Ointment may be obtained (either wholesale or retail), and where genuine testimonials of its success may be seen by all parties desirous of examining them. Ointment Bold in boxes, 6d, 9d, and Is 3d each. WM. LODEIR. 1394 tj i t c he n ' 8 celebrated JBlood .Restores! The Benoyatob or the Human Blood 1 NO MORE PHYSICAL DEGENERATION If the Laws of Health are observe i, ordinary care exercised, and BiOOD REBTOBEB FfiEELY TAKEN ! hitchen's Celebrated £ Jjlood -Kestorer CERTAIN CURE For the Langour, Lassitude and Disease which attend the Heat and Drought of semi-tropical and tropical Climates. Fevers which so quickly fasten on the debilitated system may easily bb kept AWAY by the (imely use of this .«^r MOST WONDERFUL REMEDY ..g* In fact, by its use the Most Malignant of Tropical Fevers have been ejected from the Human System, and by its aid Dying, Fever-stricken Men have been, as it were, RAISED FROM THE DEAD ! As is shown from the following interesting TALE OF THE PACIFIC A TALE OF THE PACIFIC. Wm. Opperman, Esq., a wealthy island trader, was for some months lying ill at Happemamma, an island of the Eingsm Group, in the Pacific. He had been seized with rheumatic fever, which was followed by complicated disorders of a terribly severe nature, assuming the font of a species of j palsy never before known. The sufferer's j limbs bwelled, the legs lost all sensibility to pain ; the foot could be wrenched round or the skin pierced with a lance without in fiicting the slightest suffering^. The sick man j was evidently unconscious of* bis having legs, i and his brain was seriously affected as if with lunacy. In this deplorable state he was kindly brought from the islands to Auck land by Mr H. Henderson in the schooner Coronet, Captain Moeller, and, being a Gerni'an, he was received by ihe German Consul, G. Yon der Heyde, Eoq., and placed in the District Hospital, where he received treatment for three weeks with no indication of improvement, his caße being pronounced by one and all a hopeless one. The captain of the Coronet, knowing that extraordinary cures had been effected by the use of Hitch ens' Celebrated Blood Restorer requested the proprietor of the Blood Restorer to take the case in hand, and a contract was entered into of "No cure, no pay." Mr Hitchens proceeded to the Hospital, examined the invalid and found him in an apparently dying state, with scarcely a spark of life left. Mr Hitchen? ordered the suffering man to be removed to his (Mr H's) private residence, where his wants could be personally attended to by Mr Hitchens. The latter administered the medicine (the Blood Restorer) and used the ointment freely. Meanwhile clergymen oalled, pronouncing the case beyond the power of man. to effect a cure. However after six weeks the effect of the medicine became wonderfully apparent. The Blood Restorer had acted steadily but surely en the blood; the deadly impurities were gradually eliminated from the system until the stream of life flowed unchecked in its natural channels over the entire man. The brain became clear and active, and the limbs once again rejoiced in natural circulation, the patient rising to his feet cured of diseases which hud baffled the skill of leading physicians, a living proof of the wonderful healing powers of Hitchens' Celebrated Blood Restorer. TESTIMONIAL. Auckland, N.Z. To H. A. H, Hitchens, Esq. Before leaving Auckland on my return voyage to the Islands, I have to perform the pleasing duty of acknowledging the surprising cure I have received at your hands. Coming to Auckland as I did a dying man, being palsied and generally unconscious, and bearing from others that no hope of recovery was held out by medical men, I look upon you now as the preserver of my life. I am convinced that to your medicine alone is due the credit for my now being a living man. I beg to thank you most sincerely for the kindness you have shewn me while staying in your house, and in conclusion would earnestly recommend sick people to use your Blood Restorer, as it is the most extraordinary purifier of the blood I ever heard of, or met with in my travels. It is one of the many good gifts of a beneficent Creator to his suffering children on this earth. W. OPPfiRMAN. Auckland, December 19, 1879. Signed in the presence of G. Yon dbb Heyde, Imperial German Consul. Agent for the Thames— GEORGE DEN BY, „ Bbown Stbbet, GRAHAMBTOWN 82 • GRATEFUL—COMFORTING. BREAKFAST. ■, Xj\ PPS ' S pO.P Q A By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern, the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of well-selected cocoa, Mr Spps has provided our - breakfast tables with a delicately flavoured beverage which may save us many heavy doctors' bills. It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease; Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with- pure blood and a properly nourished frame/—See article in the Civil Service Qatttte. - V Sold in packet* labelled— JAMES EPPS AND CO., HOMOEOPATHIC CHEMISTS, \ " LONDON. w247

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THS18810124.2.21.6

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Thames Star, Volume XII, Issue 3767, 24 January 1881, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
980

Page 4 Advertisements Column 6 Thames Star, Volume XII, Issue 3767, 24 January 1881, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 6 Thames Star, Volume XII, Issue 3767, 24 January 1881, Page 4

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