HOW PILLS ARE MADE.
The custom of taking meaioino in th form; or pills dates far baok in history. Tho object is to enablo us to swallow ; easily in a cnudcnßcd form disagreeable and uftttscua, but very useful drugs. To what vast dimensions pill-taking has grown may be iumglneu when we say thatinEnglandulonuaboiit2,ooo,ooo,ooo ,/ two thousand ihillion) pills areconßumed ovcry year. In early days pills were' made Bloivly by hand, as the demandwas comparatively small, To-day eliey arc - produced with infinitely greater ranidit by machines especially contrived for tli ~, purpose, and with greater acouiacy, too in tho proportions of the various iogred ients employed. No form of medication can be hotter than a pill, provided only it- is intelligently prepared. But right hore occurs tlio difficulty. Easy.as.it may seem to make a pill, or a 'million of them, tliero are really very few pills. that o\n bo honestly commended for popular wOi Most of them oither undershoot or overshoot the mark, As everybody take' pills of somo kind,'it may be well t mention what a good, safo and roliabl pill should be. Now, when due fee / dull and sloepy, and' ha» • more or le pain in the head, sides, and back, h maybosuro his bowels are constipate . and his livor slwglsk . To remedy th unhappy state of things'thero is nothi like a pood cathartic pill. It will act like a charm by stimulating tho liver into doing its duty, and ,ridin?, the digestiro organs of the- accumulated' poisonous matter., -
But the good pill.does not gripe and pain us, neither Joes it make us sick and miserable tor a fow hours, orawhole day- It acts on tbo entire glandular system at the same time, else the after effects of the pill will be worse than the disease itself, The griping caused by most pills is theresult ofirritatingdruga which they contain. Such pills' aro harmful, and should never bo used. /They sometimes even produce hemorrhoids. Without having any partionlat desire to praiso one pill abovo another, we may, nevertheless, name Mothor S eigell'sPills, manufactured by tho well-known house of A, J. White, Limited, 35, Farringdoii Boad, London,, and now sold by all ohemists and medicine vendors, as tho only ono we know ot thatactially possesses every desirable qualitv, 'They remove tho pressure upon tfio brain, -orrectthe liver, and cause the bowels to act with ease and regularity, They rover gripe or produce the slightest sicknesa of the stomach, or any other unpleasant feeling or symptom, Neither do they induce further constipation, as nearly all other pills do,' As a turthor and crowning merit, Mother Seigoll's Pis aro covered with a tasteless and harmless coatins, which causes them to resemble pearls, thus rendering them as pleasan to the palate as they aro effeOtivo in curing diseases. If you have a severe cold, and aro threatened with a lever, ono or twoin the head, back, and limbs, and'prove doses will break up; tho cold with a bnttlie fever. A coatod tonguoi caused brackish tasto in the mouth, y foul matter in the stomach. A dose of Seigel's Pills will effect a speedy cure. Oftentimes partially decayed food in the stomaoh' and bovlea produces sickness, nausea, &c. Cleanso tho bowels with a dose of these pills, and good health will follow. Unlike many kinds of pills, they do not make you feel worse before you are bettor. They aro, without doubt, tho best family ph;sio eyordiscovered. Thoy remove all obstructions to tho nature, functions without any unpleasant effects, Startling fiyent m a Villas ) To tho Editor of "Saturday Night," Birmingham. I recently came into possession of a certain facts of so remarkable nature, that 1 am sure you will ho glad to assist in making these public. The following letters woro shown to me, and I at once begged permission to copy them for the press' They coma from & Jiighly rosponeibla sourco, and may bo received without question. Message from Geokqe Gosihno, 1.1) 8., E. 0.5.1,, rn C.1., Licentiate in Pharmacy and Dental Surgeon, Stowmarket, July 18; 1889. To Mk White The enclosed remark able euro »hould, 1 think, ho printed and' circulated in Suffolk. The statoiiient was entirely markable euro'was related to me by the the husband, Mary Ann Spink, of Finborough, Suffolk, was for oveu twenty yeard afllioted with rheumatism and neuralgia, and although comparatively a youn? woman at tho time sha was attacked (she is now fifty), she was compelled in consequence, to walk with two sticks, and even then withdifiiculty and pain, About a year and a half airo shewas advised to try Mother Seigel'ss Syrup, and after taking three bottle and two boxes of Seigol's Operating Pills, the m of her limbs were restored, and she is now ablo to walk three miles Stowmarket with ease, frequently doing the distance in three-quarters of an hour. Any sufferer who doubts tlri story can fully ascertain its truthfulness by paying a visit to the village and enquiring of tho villagers, who will oertifytothofact l !,
■' Appended ia tho husband's signature to the statement. (R, Spink,) • ' "G. J, Gostuno. Ipswich Street, . " Btowmarket." This is cortalnly a very pitiable case, \ "I'd the linppy cure .wrought by tho simplo but powerful remedy, mustmovu the sympathy of ali hearts in a common ploasuro. 'This poor woman had been acripplo. foy twenty of her best years; years in which she should havo had such comfort and enjoyment as life has to give. But, on tho contrary, she was a miserable burdon to horsclf and a source of care to her frionds, Now, at an ago when tho rest of us are growing feeblo sho, in a manner, runows her youth an almost begins a new oxlstenco. Whet & blessing and what a wonder it is I No ono who Itnous her, or who read hue story, but will bo glad that the good Lord has enabled mon to discover, a remedy capable of bringing about a euro that reminds us-wo speak it rovorontly o tho ajje of miracles. It should bo explained that this most remarkable cure is dun to the fact that rheumatism is a disease of the blood Indigestion, conitipation, and dyspepsia cause tho poison from tho partially digested'food to'enter tho circulation and tho blood deposit* it in the joints and muscles. This is rheumatism, Seigel's Syrup corrects thedigestion, and so stops tho further .formation and deposit of the poison. It then removes from tho system tho poison already there. It ia not a cure-all. It doos its wondorful work entirely by its mysterlous action upon tho organs But when we remember that ninertonths of our ailments arise in those organs, wo can understand • why Seigel's Syrup uros so many diseases that appear to be odifforont in their nature, In. other words rheumatism and neuralgia are bu sir.ptoms of indigestion, constipation and dyspepsia
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Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XI, Issue 3550, 1 July 1890, Page 4
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1,135HOW PILLS ARE MADE. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XI, Issue 3550, 1 July 1890, Page 4
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