HOW PILLS ARE MADE.
The custom of taking medicine in the form of pills dates far bjok in history," The object' is to enable ln.to swallow oaaily in a coudeneed form disagreeable ' and nauseas, but very useful druj(a.' To '. what vast dimensions pill-taking- has. •■'■ grown may' be iiuagthed when we say trhatinSnglaiicttilorioabou62,ooo,ooo,ooo' ; . [ two thousand million) pills arecuhsumed, . every year. ~ In early days :pills : Wefo : mado alowly by hand, as the demaud wis comparatively email. To-day they are, - ; produced with infinitely greater rapidib. - ' | by swchinesespeciallycontrived forth" : .;.> purpose, and with greatoraccuracy■ too ' ';t iii'the proportion's of the various irigred ientsemployed.' '., '',';'' '■''•. .■No fomi'uf medication can bo better - thati a pill, provided only it is intelli' gently prepared'..But right here •ocobrsthe difficulty, Easy as it may seem to'; make a pill, or a million of them,; there - are really vory' few 1 pills' that can'.W' honestly commended' for popular use," ; Most of them either undershoot or ovor-' shoot the mark.; As everybody takes J pills of some kind, it may;be well to fi mention what a good; Safe. aud reliable »f pill should' be. 'Now, whej£jjfte : feels dull and Bleepy, and ha«'more or"'less; 1 pain itfthe head,; sides, and bripk, he may be BUre his bowels are'eonattpated - dtidhis liveraln&ishr rToremedy thi unhappy state of things there is hothi n like a food cathartic pill. It will act like a' charm by stimulating the liver " into its .duty, and ridinp ; t!w digestif organs of the accumulated poisonous matter.'. •''"'•'' But the good pill does not gripe and pain us, neither Joes it make U8 tick" mid mißerable'fqra few hours, orVwhole'\ day.' It acts on'tho entire'glandular ' system at the samo time, else the after -'* effects of the pill will be worse than tho 4 disease itself, The griping caused by ; v most pills is the result of irritating drugs which they; contain; Such pills ira harmful, audshould noverbeiised,- They sometimes even produce'hemorrhoids, Without having any 'particular desire to praise one pill above another, we may, nevertheless, name MotherSeigoH'sPiilj, manufactured by the well-known house of A. J. YVbito, Limited, 35, Farrlngdon Road, London, and now sold by all ; ohemists and medioine vendors, as the : ' only one we know ot that actually pes- | Besses every desirable quality. They remove "the pressure upon the brain, ; -orrecbtho liveri arid oause the bovvelßto ■ act with ease and regularity; Thoyiever ' gripe or produce the slightest sickness. of the stomach, ur any other unpleasant' j feeling or symptom. Neither do, they induce further constipation, as nearly all - other pills do.' As a inrtherand crown' ' ing merit, Mothor Seigell's Pills are |. covered'with a tasteless; and harmless coating, which causes thorn to resemble J pearls, thus rendering them as pleasant to the palate as they are effective in J curing diseases. If you have a severo I cold, and are threatened with a lever,. j one or twoin the head, back, and limbs, , and preve doses will break up the eoldO e with a bnt tho fever, A coated tongue, f caused brackish tasto in the j : :.. y foul matter'jn the sfOmach, B A dose of Bezel's Pills will effect a r speedy cure. .Oftentimes, partially de«. B cayed. food in tho stomach and.bowlee 0 produces sickness, nausea,'&c. Cleanse the bowels with a dose of those pills, and pood health will follow.
Unlike many kinds of pills, they do not make you feel - worse before you are better. They are, without doubt, the best family physio eyerdiscovered. They remove all obstructions to the nature, functions without any unpleasint effects.
StartlingUyentin a Village., To the Editor of "Saturday Night," Birmingham, I recently came into possession of a, cortain facts of so remarkable nature, that 1 am sure you will be glad to assist in making these* • public Tho following letters were- ' shown to mo, and I at once beggetUl permission to copy them for the, ptessTf They come from a highly responsible suurce,. and may .be receivedfwithout question, Message from George James Uostiino, L.D.S., Ph O.L. Licentiate. in Pharmaoy. and Dental-i Surgeon, Stowmarket, July lb\ 1889. V. To Mr Whits "./, .
Theenoloaedrimiarkablecureahould, I think, be printed; and circulated in Suffolk, TJjo atatement"'' was"' entirely markable euro was related to mo by tha the husband,; Mary Ann'Spink, of Finborough, Suffolk,;'-was''for over twenty year* afflicted with rheumatism and .neuralgia, and although coinpara. tively a young, woman at the time she was attacked (she is' now fifty), she was compelled in consequence, to walk with two sticks, and even then with difficulty' aud paiu.' About a year and a halfaro shewae advised to try Mother Seigel'ss Syrup, and after taking three bottleand two boxes 'of Seigel's Operating fills, ik ■«« of her limhs We restored. and sbe ia now able to walk three miles to Stowmarket with we, frequently doirip the distance in three-quarters of an hour. Any Bufferer who doubtß this story can fully ascertain its truthfulness ■ by paying a visit to tho village and enquiring of the villagers, who will.' certify to tho 1 Appended is the husband's signature to the statement, (R, Spink,): '"G.J.GmtUNO, s l Ipawich Street, . \ ,; " Stowmarkot," Thisia certainly a very pitiable case, Mid tho happy cure wrought' by tho simple but powerful remedy, must move tho sympathy of "all hearts in a common pleasure* This poor woman had been a cripple for-twenty of her'best years}, years in which she should havejad such { comfort and enjoyment'as'life his to ' give. But, on. the contrary,,shewae a miserable burden to hersolf and a source of caro to. her friends. Now, at an age when the rest of us are growing feeble she,' in a manner, renews her"youth, an almost begins a now'existence. What.a, blessing and what a wonder it isl j(q one who khan's her, or.who read her story, but will bo glad that the good • Lord has enabled men to discover.»'. "remedy capable of bringing about a curethat reminds u's-we speak it reverently £o the age nf miracles, , ••; It should be explained that this most remarkable cufe fa dun to the fact that - rheura'atjsm is a disease-of the blood ■ Indigestion, conitipation, ans dyspepsia. cause the'vpoison from the. partially-, digested, food; to- enter tho ciroulatioi) >■ and the blood deposits it in the joints and muscles. This w, rheumatism, i Seigel's : Syrup <weots tho digestion,and •' bo stops the further formation arid - deposit of the poison, It'then removes, from \ the system the poison already there; It is hot a cure-all. It does its ' wonderful work entirely by itsmyßter... ious action upon tho digestive organs ! But when we romeraber that ninaAfttbs ' of our ailments arise in those can understand why Seigel's, Syrup, ures so many diseases that appear to be' o different in their-nature, .;lri other ivords rheumatism and neuralgia to' bu sfeptoms of indigestion,;.cohslipatiorj and dyspepsia ;>■'■':, :-',';■ •..-;.;;■ .
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Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XI, Issue 3536, 14 June 1890, Page 4
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1,114HOW PILLS ARE MADE. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XI, Issue 3536, 14 June 1890, Page 4
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