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HOW PILLS AKE MADE. The custom nf taking medicine in the form of pills dates far holt in history, The objoct is to enable us to swallow easily in a condensed form disagreeable and nauseus,.bat very useful drags. To what vast dimensions pill-taking has grown may be imagined'when,we say thatinEnglandftloneabout2,ooo,ooo,ooo two thousand million) pills areconsumed every year. In early dayß pills were made slowly by hand, as tho demand was comparatively small. To-day they are produced with infinitely greater rafeidit by machines especially contrived for th purpose, and with greater accuracy, too in tho proportions of the various ingred ients employed. : ■' No form of medication can bo belter than a pill, provided only it is intolli(jently prepared. But right here occurs the difficulty. Easy as it may seem to make a pill, or a million of them, there are really very few pills that can bo honestly commended for popular use. Most of them either undershoot or overshoot the mark. As everybody takes pills of some kind, it'may be well to mention what a good, safe aud roliablo pill should be, Now, whon one feelsdull and sleepy, and ha* more or leas ir pain in the head, sides, and back, htJff may be sure his bowels are constipated-., and his liver sluggish, To remedy this unhappy state of things there is nothing like a rood cathartic pill. It will act like a charm by stimulating the liver into doing its duty, and ridine the digestiro organs of the accumulated poisonous mattor, But the good pill does not gripe and pain us, neither Joes it make us sick and miserable for a few houri, brawholo day. It acts on the entire glandular system at the samo time, ela-j the effects of the pill will bo worse than tho disease itself. The griping; caused by most pills is the result of irritating drugs which thoy contain, jfacji piling harmful, and should never bo used, They sometimes even produce hemorrhoids. Without having any particular desire to praise one pill above another, we may, nevertheless, name Mother Seigell'sPilb, manufactured by. the well-known house of A. J. White, Limited, 35, Farringdon Boad, London, and now sold by all chemists and medicine vendors, as the only one we know ot that actually possesses every deiirable quality, They remove the pressure upon the brain, '■orrect the liver, and cause the bowels ta act with ease and regularity, Thoy rover gripe or produce the slightest sickness of the stomach, or any other unpleasant feeling or symptom, Neither do they induce further constipation, as nearly all. ot her' pills do. Asalnrtherand crowning merit, Mother Seigell's Pills are covered with a tastelois and harmless coatine, which causes them to resemble pearls, thus rendering them as pleasant to. the palate as they are effective in curiiig diseasoa. If you have a severo culd, and are threatened with a fever, uuu or two in the head, back', and limbs, ' and prevo doses will breakup the cold ' with a bit the f over. A coated tongue, uausud b rnckish taste in the mouth, A doßo y matter in the stomach, speedy °f' Seiaal'e Pills will effect 5 tayed .cure- Oftentimes partially doprudti . m ' ne B ' omaon ahdbowles Cs s sickness, nausea, &t>. Oleanse food health will follow. Unliko many kinds of pills, they do not make you feel worse before you are better. They are, without doubt, tho best family phjsicoverdiscovored. They remove all obstructions to the nature, functions without any unpleasant effects.

Startling Event in a VillageTothe Editoro( "Saturday Night," Birmingham. I recently came.into possession of a certain facts nf so reinarkable nature, that 1 am sore you will bo glad to assist in making theso public- The following letters were shown to me, and I at once begged permission to copy thcra (or the press 1 . They como from a highly responsible aoorco, and may be roceived without - question, Message from George Jane's (Jbsrasa, L,D,8., R. 0.5.1., Ph O.I;, ■' Xiicen.tidtQ in Pliitrmagy and Dental, fiurgcou, Stowmarket, July 18,1889. To Mr White .. . The enolcisedrematkablecureshould, I think, bq printed and circulated in Suffolk. The statement was entirely inarkable cure wan related to mo by the the husband. Maty Ann Spink, of Finborough, Suffolk, was for over' twenty yearn afflicted with rheumatism and neuralgia, and although comparatively a young woman at tho timo she. was attacked (she is now fifty), she wan compelled in cohscquenoe, to walk with two stioks, and even then withdifficulty and pain. About a year and a half a? 6 shewas advised to try Mother Seigel'ss Syrup, and after taking threo bottle and two boxes'of Seigel's Operating Pills, </ie m ofher.limh wmmiored, and she is now able to walk threo miles to_ Stowmarket with .ease, frequently doinf ■ the distance in throo-qaartora of an hour, Any Bufforer who doubts this story ean fully ascertain its truthfulnoss by paying a visit to the village and enquiring of the villagers, who. will certify to the fact', to the stfttomont. (Opink.) "G.J, Gostuhg Ipswich Street, "Stowmarket." This is certainly a very pitiable easel and the happy cure wrought by tho simple but powerful remedy, must movo tho sympathy of all hoarts in a common pleasure, .This poor woman had been a oripple for twenty of her best years; years in whioh she should have had suoh oomfort and enjoyment as life has to give. But. on the contrary.fehe was a miserable burdon to hersolf and a source of care to her friends. Now, at an ago when the rest of us are growing feeblo she, in a mannor, renews her youth an almost begins a new existence What a blessing and what & wo'ndor it is I Wo nno who knons her, or who read her story, but will bo glad.that the good Lord has enabled men to discover a remedy oapable of bringing about a oure that reminds us-we speak it reverontly cfo tho age nf miraoles, • ' It should bo explained that this most remarkable cure is dun 'to the faot that rheumatism is a disease of the blood cause the poison from the partially digested.food,to enter tho circulation ; and the blood deposits it'in the joints. and muscles,. This is rheumatism, .. Soigel's'Syrup cotveots the digestion, and so stops the further formation and deposit of the poißon. It then removes • from tho system the poison alroadjr there; It is not a core-all.. It does its wonderful work entirely by its mysterious action npon the digestive organs but when wo rornpmberthat nine-tenths of our aliments arise in those organs, we can understand why Seigel's Byrup Jfr euros so many diseases that appear to bo', ' so different in their nature. In other 4 ords rhouraatism and neuralgia are buj yraptonw of indigestion, constipation, nddvspo psia ..•.■.

booaiiiei} • of either tbelr own lo>. alitlcs at woik or us, New business, 'All meet w tli wonderful success. Any one can ilu the work. Capital not Kijuired. We will Btart you,: Outflt worth k 1 Bailed free.' Th» employment is particularly adapted to th« regio- it which this publication circulates Now is tho time— delay, but write to uj stance. Address Btlnson k Co,Fortlnnd, Maino.United States,' ■ '

EKFTAHUNA TOWN HALL, AY be liad by travelling com - panies, or for balls, parties, public meetings, &c,, at MODERATE OHAEGEB. The Hall is commodiout and fitted with every, convenience. For tomu apply to the proprietor." AUGUSTMALBERG,

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WDT18900530.2.15.9

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XI, Issue 3523, 30 May 1890, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,221

Page 4 Advertisements Column 9 Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XI, Issue 3523, 30 May 1890, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 9 Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XI, Issue 3523, 30 May 1890, Page 4

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