HOW PILLS ARE MADE.
ThbiOUßtom .of taking niedibine,in|th / forin ot pills date's, far bact in history. • The'*6bject. is tolenable -iirto. swallow ! easily in a cbiideDsed" form disagreeable' and naiiseus," but very useful drus.' %6 '. *M Taat. dimensions grown: may'be' imagined when '. We say thatin Englandulouo ab6iit2,000,000,000 .kqthousandinillionjpillsareconsiimed/ every year., In eirly^days, piils.were; raado sloiyly by hand, as thodem'ah'dwas comparatively siiiall.!':To-day they areproduced with infinitely greater rapidit v by machines especially contrivee 1 for th ■'' purpose, and ffith greater a'ccutacy, too • in the proportions' of the variouYingredf ients employed. ,r 7 .; • ' I No form of medi«itioh "bettet'S than a pill, pro'vijJed oiilyjt'is .intelligently prepared;' But right'; ■ the difficulty. Easy m it may seem to make a pill, or a ;miilion of them,' there are really very few/pills : that : can' be ;; honestly oqramended'. for popular use. Most of them either undershoot or over-' shoot the mark. As everybody take ! pills of some, kind, it may, be well'to: mention what a good,' safe ■ and' reliable ■: pill should; be; Now, when 'one fee": dull and ileepy, and !ha» hioreorhf : . pain in the head, sides',';and'backj'h ,i' may be sure'-;his bowels are constipate'' and his liver sluggish. To remedy, th';; : unhappy state of things there ; is nothi ''' like a pood cathartio pill, It will act" like a charm by stimulating the liver: into .doing' Its' diityi and ridinp the V digestive; organs' Of' the accumulated' poisonousmatter.: ■', - ; ■ '"' r '
But the good pill does hot gripe'.'and:,; pain us. neither 'does it make ..us sick'and miserableforafewhbur'BJ br'awhblo'. day. - It ;acts on the entire glandular system at;the Bame time, else! the aftOr effects of tho pill will be worse thaii the , disease itself. The griping caused "by"-' most pills is the result of irritating drugs' whiohthey contain;' Such pille ire harmful, and should nbver be used.' They ' sometimes .even produce' hemorrhoids. : Without having any'particular deaire to : : praise one pill above' another, we may, nevertheless, name Mother Seigei'sKlls, manufactured by the well-known house: of A. J. White, Limited, 35, Farrlngdoa Eoad, London, '.and now sold by all ■ ouomists andmedicine vendors, as the' only one we know ot thataotaally possesses every desirable quality. ' They • remove the pressure upon the brain, -orrect the liver, and causo the bowels to act with ease and regularity; They r-ever . gripe or preduce the slightest sickness: of the stomach, or any other unpleasant • feeling or symptom; Neither do they induce further conßtipafion, as nearly all other pills do,' As a further and crown-' ing merit, Mother Soigell'a Pills' are , covered with a tasteless and harmless ! coating, which causes thorn to reaemblo pearls, thus rendering them as pleasan' to the palate as they are effective in curing diseases. If you havo a severe cold, and are threatened with a lever, ' one or twoin tho head, hack, and limbs,' and preve doses will' break up the cold with a bnt the fever. A coated tonguo, causod brackish taste in the'muuth, yfoul matter'in tho Btomaoli. A dose of Seigol's Pills will effect a speedy cure. 'Oftentimes' partially decayed food in Hie stomaoh and bowles produces sickness, nausea, &o. Oleanse, : tho bowels with a dose of these pills, and good health will follow.
Unlike many kinds of pills, thoydo notmakoyou feel worse before you are better. They aro, without doubt, : the best family physio eyerdiscovered,' They remove'all obstructions to the 'nature.: ; functions without any unpleasant effects. Startling Eyent in a viiia?e."l3 Totho EditoroC"Saturday Night," Birmingham. ; I recently came.into possession of a certain' facts of so remarkable nature, that .1 ain sure you will bo glad to'assist in making, these public-'.. The following, letters, were shown to; mo, and I at once begged permission to ; copy'thorn for the'press' Thby come from a highly responsible source, and may' be received without' question. Message fromGEOROE Jambs Gostuno,:L,D.S., R. 0.5.1.,, Ph GI„ Licentiate in Pharmacy, and-Dental Surgeon;' Stowtaarketj July 18,1889. : To Me White- ■■ ■„ , -.- ■■
Theeriolosedrcmarkablecureshouldi 1 think, be printed aiid circulated in Suffolk, • The stat'eriie.nt was entirely markable cure was related to me by the the husband, Mary Amv.Spink, .of: Fihborough, Suffolk, was. for over twenty yean afflicted with- rheumatism and neuralgia, and although compara. tiyely ayoun? woman at the time'lma was attacked (she is. now fifty), she ma compelled fin"obMeqiience, to walk with two stioke, and even then withdifficuHy and. pain,; About a year.and a half aro bliowas advised to try Mother Seigel'aa Syrup, and after'taking three bottle and two boxes of Seigel's Operating fills, M use of her limbs were rejforeoV and she is now able to walk three miles to_ Stowmarket with ease, frequently doin?: the distance in throe-quartorsof an hour, Any sufferer who doubts thi story can fully ascertain its truthfulnoss by paying a visit; to the village and enquiring of the 'villagers; who will certify to the fact?.. . „, 1 Appended is the husband's signature to the statement..
(R, Spink,) : ' :i. . "G;J, Gosiunq. • Ipswich Street, ■ ' •"' "StOwmarket." This is certainly a very pitiable case, and the happy cure wrought by the ; simple but.powerful remedy, must move the sympathy of all hearts in a common ploasure, 'This poor woman had'been ■ »cripplo for twenty of her best years; years in which she shouldhavo had such ' comfort and enjoyment as life' has to give. But. on the contrary, she was a miserable burden to horself and a source of care to her friends. Now, at anasja' when tho reßt of us are growing feeblo '.'■ she, in a manner, renews her youth an : ■: almost begins a new existence ■■' What a. blessing and what'a'wonder it is I No one who knot»s her, or who read her story, but will be glad, that the'good' Lord has enabled-men to. discover a ■ • remedy capable of bringing about a cure' that reminds us-we speak it reverently ut theageofmiraoles, ■■'•■■•■ ' , "It should be explained that this most ' remarkable cure is due to tho fact that ' rheumatism.'is a'.disease of the Mood ! " Indigestion,, cbmtipstion, and dyspepsia cause the ; poison"' from tho > partially " digested food to enter tho circulation and tho jblood deposits it in the joints : ' and; muscles. This is rheumatism, ; Seigel's Syrup corrects the digestion, and, so 'stops the .further, .formation,and : deposit of tlie poison..'It theri:remove« ;: ' from the jsystem■■ the poison .already •- there. Mt is not a cure-all. v It does its ;; wonderful work entirely by its"niysterious action upon the digestiyo organs " : - '■' of our ailments arise in those organs, we •• ' can under'stand.'why' Seigel's • Syrup ''■•■ ures so many diseases that appear to be ■'■"■'■ o different in their'fliliri!'-ltif'other £~' : words rheuiriatism'ahd neuralgia are.btt; ' srr.ptotns ;of. indigestion, constipation'" and dyspepsia v'^"- I '' ';■ •':•';];'■'
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Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XI, Issue 3548, 28 June 1890, Page 4
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1,073HOW PILLS ARE MADE. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XI, Issue 3548, 28 June 1890, Page 4
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