KITCHENS' —CELEBRATED— T3LOOD T> E S T O RE R, The Renovatob op the Hitman Beood. I No more Physical Degeneration if the Laws J i of Health are observed, ordinary care exercised, and BLOOD RESTORER freely taken. THE want of a reliable remedy for Rheumatism, Sciatica, Gout, Lumbago, &c, has long been felt as one of the greatest calamities of the age. While other means and medicines have been proving themselves vain and delusive, this remedy has been silently and steadily unloosing the cruel fingers of disease, and freeing captive men from their deadly embrace. The people are now requested to give Blood Bestobbb a fair and impartial trial, as the Proprietor would have it distinctly understood that the cures of Rheumatism, &c, are due entirely to his Medicine's Wonderful Effect upon the Blood, by its Gleaming, Purifying and Invigorating power. Mr Hitchkns recently has received the following testimonial: — Auckland. " SIBB, —I am fulfilling an urgent request j of Mrs Andrews, of Lord Howe's Island, in the Pacific, in stating to you and to Mr Batchens the extraordinary cure made in her case by the use of Hitcbens' Medioinal Blood Restorer. Living on the laland, lam an eyewitness of the fact, and feel it a duty both to Mr Hitchens and to the general public to testify to the really wonderful effect of that medicine. " Mrs Andrews was for four or five years a martyr to agonising pains in her hip; medical men calling it sciatica. She had been treated for it by the several doctovs of the British men-o'-war visiting the Island from time to time, without the slightest relief to the intense pain. She was afterwards taken to Sydney, hoping for some relief, if not a permanent cure, from treatment of the medical men of that city She was told she was suffering from the hip disease, and her case was incurable. Without a ray of hope to lighten her future life; pain and despair her constant attendants, her case was really deplorable. Mr C. E Ponder, the Manager of the Guano Company at Lord Howe's Island, one day recammended her to try Hitchen's Blood Restorer, as tbe remedy was just becoming known at the Islands, through the advertisement of Oppermane's cure, testified to the German Consul. Mrs Andrews readily yielded to the recommendation and seat for two bottles to Mr ' Hitoheus, Auckland. Within three weeks after uoing it she was able to rise and wait with tbe use of the crutch, and the pain in the hip bad entirely gone. Tbe medical action was truly marvellous, and her gratitude to Mr Hitcbons ia expressed daily in her prayers thanking God fo.r her relief. "It is my firm belief that another two or three bottles —unfortunately not obtainable , without long delay—would have wrought such a complete cure as to make orutches unneceaary. On my return to Lord Howe'e Island, I shall take a stock of this wonderful medicine so that a supply will never be quite out; for no words of mine can adequately express my faith in its curative properties, after seeing the result of it in Mrs Andrew's case. 111 am, dear Sire, "Yours faithfully, " Thos. Geo. Chas, Niohois, " Master Mariner." I certify to the correctness of the above in every particular, Chabies C. Pondbb. Declared before me this 13th day of January, 1882. P. A. Phillips, J.P. Sole agent for the Thames District for the Medicinal Blood Restorer, J. W. Hall, Chemist, Owen street. For the Cordialized, for hotel use only. 0. Cttbtis, PaciGc Hotel. NOTICE. TT7 ANTED KNOWN JUST PRINTED, and now on SALE ar the Evening- Stab Office, Albert street Grahamstown, TRIBUTERS' AGREEMENT FORMS. All Tributes should POSSESS a COPY of the AGREEMENT under which their ribute is hold* and they .can now do so at at merely NOMINAL COST. ENTERTAINMENTS, CONCERTS, &o r JLU should always be announced.in THE STAR if their promoter! wieh to aohieve success
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THS18830104.2.23.4
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Thames Star, Volume XIV, Issue 4369, 4 January 1883, Page 4
Word count
Tapeke kupu
656Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 Thames Star, Volume XIV, Issue 4369, 4 January 1883, 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.