TIT-ORI T OCA^/ ;^Vlpo&|fclJ| ' ■ ■ ' . .ON; THE- : '"?_- ■';-".;-'v i ';VT.V:;; CURATIVE PROPERTIES; ! / ■ " '. • O^ ' '"'. ' /.V-.C/'. ; -' ~'. '','[■': PROFESSOR G U S S G 6 T T'S ' r; HERBAL TREATMENT. : To Professor Gusscott, Shortland-streofc. Dear SirIt is with great pleasure that I add to the number of ' your valuable testimonials for the miraculous cure yoiir ;', medicine has performed on me. I have been troublea .with what some. medical men call indigestion, others *. v . dyspepsia, hut when I came to you on the 16th of Sep^ V. tember, you told ma that I had Kver complaint '• ybu.. l ; explained to me my symptoms about the palpitation of , the heart, the wind on the stomach,. cold hands and feet, the sourness of the wind and gas I used to belch, cold chills running down my back, and, in facti you described my feelings so minutely, that I was quite satisfied that you understood my complaint, and I am happy to say thaij, through your herbal treatment you have, effected a perfect cure. — Yours ever grateful, Mrs M. Little, Hobson-street, Auckland. . , To Professor Gusscott, Shortland-street. Sir,— l - have been troubled with rheumatism for the last three r years. As I explained to yen when I called oa the 25th , .< of October that I had been a seafaring man for many , years. lam well known in Auckland. For some years . I have been a perfect martyr. For six months before I consulted you I had been on crutches ; and lam happy ! to say that now I feel as free from pain as ever I did in my life, the swelling has all disappeared, and I am 'a ', new man through your treatment ; and I should recommend anyone troubled with rhenmatism to apply to yon ; as I speak from experience. — I am, yours ever grateful, Joseph Hunter, Symonds-street. • To Professor Gusscott, Shortland-street. Dear Sir,— { I am happy to inform you that through your herbal '"- treatment I can safely say that I have received more; benefit through your herbal treatment than, all the medicine that I have ever taken. I have been troubled with asthma for the last five years. I was obliged to ■'- give up my business and come to Auckland for medical treatment, and seeing your testimonials and the many „ cures you had effected, and also thnt you required no information and that you could tell a man's complaint as soon as you saw him — you did so to me correctly, and' that is more than any medical man ever told me before, ... and it gave me confidence to place myself under your treatment. lam well known in Cambridge. I shall ' ' return home on Wednesday, and you may rely you will ' have many applications from that district. — Yours, truly, John Hargreaves, Queen-street, Auckland. ' ..' j ' To Professor Gusscott, Shortland-street. Sir,— As you are aware that I explained to you; when I applied to ' ' you, that I have been troubled with bleeding piles for the last five or six years, as I told yoii I have tried medical men, chemists, and old women's curesj but never had a perfect cure until I applied to you, about ' six weeks ago. They used to come down and bleed for . an hour at a time so that I should have to - change my. clothes, but when you told me you would make mo . . worse ftefore I should be better, I could not reckon you ; up. I thought I should have to give up business altogether, if I should be worse, but in four days you convinced me that I could give you this testimonial with confidence. That in five weeks you have effected a perfect cure on me. I shall ever be a believer in herbs . after the wonderful cure you have performed on me.r Yours, ever grateful, Henry Marsh, Albert-street, October 11. To Professor Gusscott, Shortland-street. Sir, — I am happy to inform you of the perfect cure I have received through your medicinal treatment. I came to you on the 27th of September last, at that time my leg was pronounced incurable ; but when I came to you you told 1 me that you would convince me in a fortnight, and I am happy to say you have fulfilled your promise, although : I was rather doubtful • hut I was told by a friend of mine that, if I said so, you would not treat me. My friend's name is Mrs Walker, who knew you in Christchurch. She was also a patient of yours which you cured of the dropsy. lam happy to say that I have dispensed with my crutches, and able to attend to my domestic duties.I give you this for the benefit of others who are suffering as I have been for years.— Yours, ever thankful, Mrs Eiy Joyce Newton-road. December 1. To Professor fcfusscott, Shortland-street. Sir,— have been troubled with neuralgia in both my head and face, and been deprived of many nights' sleep, and when I sat dqwiY to my food many tim.es I have had'to get up . from the table and walk about without everlasting food. As' I told you, when I applied to you, that I had tried all the chemists in town, and I only got temporary .-. relief. When you told" me you would cure me in a minute I was very doubtful, but I am happy to say you did so. I should recommend' any lady suffering from the same to give you a trial, as you told me, if no cure, no pay. Believe me to be, yours ever thankful, Eachel > Consens, Victoria-street. 24. . . .. : Professor Gusscott, South Town Belt. Dear Sir, — I have been troubled with nervous debility for the past eight years, brought on, as you have explained in the Canterbury Times, by the indiscretion of early youth. I have spent scores of poimcls first with one and then, with another, but never received any permanent benefit. Some said that I had heart disease, others that' I was consumptive, but when I wrote to you from the Eakaia yon explained my symptoms, so exactly that I was . induced to come to town at once, though you told me. you could treat rue equally as well by stopping and - attending to my work as in losing time by coming io town. I was itnfifc for work,, so decided to come to town - for a spell, as I could neither cat nor sleep.. My mind wandered ; I had a desire to be away from company, and yet when alone my own company was hateful to iae. I was troubled with the most hideous dreams, and was in ' that low, nervous state which made mo sometimes feel s as if death would be a happy release. My head ached my heart palpitated violently, I would start almost : at . nay own shadow. My mind, in fact, was not my own. I ;■ . , • saw you on my arrival in town, when you were in .i Manchester-street, and you then told me that it would . , take three months at the very least to* effect a perfect cure, and that I must comply exactly with your instruc-.. tions ; if not, you would not guarantee a cure. I am,; now happy to say that I did as you told me to the very ' regulating my hours and habits, and that now, after the , lapse of fifteen weeks, my memory is restored, my< sight . has become strong again, my mind has ceased to wander; . I can enjoy company, and, in short, EiehardV himself . again. I should not go to the trouble of describing so minutely my sufferings, but that I know of so many young men who are living secluded lives whose. sufferings are precisely what my own were' before I' came. to 'you, and who, although in health, would bo really' amiable and estimable persons, are looked upon as gloomy, morose, and unsociable men simply because of that puuse of the disease which I have named, a hatred for company. If this should be read by any of those . persons, suffering as I did, and they are induced to apply to you for relief, I will guarantee that they wilf say after a few weeks that they have never laid out a more profitable sum of money than when they came to Professor Gusscott. — Believe me, yours faithfully^ Eichard Dobson. P.S.— I return to my work to-morrow, ; and I know my friends there will be agreeably surprised at my present appearance. Victouia-street, Christchurch, Jan. 20, 1880. • . . / Professor Gusscott would impress upon those who may do him the honour to csnsvilt him that the utmost. ; secrecy can bo relied upon; moreover, from long, experience, and a careful study of the human system, he' l , can decide almost at a glance the diagnosis of ■ the case, ; thereby relieving the patient of a great deal of nervous-; ness and hesitation. ."•"".. Professor Gusscott invites the confidenbe of either . sex suffering from functional derangements, spermatorrhceu, exhausting dreams, &c. „ .... Professor Gusscott has made.norvous debility, and ■". t loss of power his special study, from whatever cjatteo i'-' ; arising. He would earnestly impress" upon? those 1 who ' do suffer, to seek immediate advice arid counseli if they.. . desire "an old age serene and bright." . Let .no, false, delicacy deter suffering victims jrom. removing' the cause of this blight to manhood. ' The strictest'eonfi- <: dence may be relied upon. : . ■ ■■)-■:■'■ />•••.>• Consultation Gbatis. Can be consulted by letter. :\ Public Inspection -• invited to the Large : ■ . ■ Assortment of r . . ;.-••. RITISH AND AMERICAN HERBS. < Note. the Aodbess— : , .. \f.. ■ Jit OPES 5,6 V WOjpsg-0| ext door to Messrs Winks and HaHs Bstablianme^b;4
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Bibliographic details
Observer, Volume 4, Issue 82, 8 April 1882, Page 58
Word Count
1,584Page 58 Advertisements Column 4 Observer, Volume 4, Issue 82, 8 April 1882, Page 58
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