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SOD IMPURITY.

PIMPLES LIKE YOUNG BOILS. SJUOUSNESS and~~DYSPEPSfA. A REMARKABLE CURE IN DUNEDIN.

The Case of Mr. P. PALMER. (By « Local Rsp*rter„) Our interviewer met Mr. Frederick Palmer, of No. 107 Hanover-street, Dunedin, who stated that whilst working in the fruit trade between Auckland and Fiji, his blood got in jL bad state. " rimp.es came out all oyer my body," said Mr. Palmer. " They were just like young boils, with a distressing aching pain, which proved a source of continual annoyance. After a while these pimples became very itchy and irritating, and the moro I scratched, the more they itched. The torture was unendurable, floracuimes making me rub and rub till 9 the tops came off, and* thus /the exasperating irritation was -intensified. I got no proper rest at night—very often no sleep at ali—jffnd I got up nearly every morning feeling thoroughly unfit for work. U 1 got four or five hours sleep out of tlu twenty-four I did remarkably well, bul it was not an unusual thjiig for me '■o Vie in misery all night through and ,:•(<*, sleep haJf-an-hour. did dose off it was generally /abqut the tune I should be getting up/, bur*! was =o ox h.-Misted and done up that I was g acl to yield at any time to the overpowering sense of weariness which sometimes brought a brief repose. On awaking, I always found my pillow wet .villi a saliva which had been running frcm my mouth." "Perhaps you wero also suffering from *»i! ousness?" hazarded the reporter. " I am sure I was. Anybody labourTig under an attack of biliousness is i)<9ver in doubt about the matter, as the 9$ uiptonis are made too forcibly evident jo aliow of any room for doubt. I can advance no reason whatever for this ailment coming on, unless it be attributab'e to the hot spells of weather I experienced whilst doing business in .the tropical islands. I do not remember iutfering from bile before this attack, neither are any of my relatives of a biiious temperament. But, at any rate, I fell into a frightfully bad state of health altogether. I had not the least desire for food, having completely lost my appetite. About as much food as would satisfy a delicate child was always enough for me, and I felt quite bloated and stuffed after eating it. A most uncomfortable feeling appeared in my chest, which felt overburdened and weighed down. These symptoms were followed by depressing, stifling sensations which I had to endure for long periods*J> On getting out of bed in the mornings, the objectionable taste of bile was in my mouth, and my tongue was dry and furred. The food that lay undigested in my stomach turned to wind, thits causing almost incessant belchings of sour gases. Sickly headaches were my incessant tormentors; but the heaviest load I had to carry wae a terrible mental gloom that made my existence a hardship. Of course, I sank into a serious state of weakness, and my flesh quickly went out of sighb. The last »unce of strength seemed to sapped '. out of me, my nerves also' being nn- ] •ettlcd and deranged. Costiveness was j a regular trouble from which I tried j in vain to get relief." ( "What kind of medicines did you ' take, Mr. Palmer?" " I cannot remember the names of aH . of them now, but at all events they j did me no good. In spite of everything i [ took my ailments remained uicomquer-1 ed. However, whilst readinft fii#saper one evening, my eyes happfnrajtorest on a report relating to one of tneThost j wonderful things I ever read. It was j all about a person who had suffered greatly like myself, and who'was made \ well by a course of Clements Tonie. The j idea struck me at once that I ought to ; follow in that man's footsteps, ana so I did. The first bottle of Clements Tonic worked wonders. I felt greatly improved in many ways- ''For instance, the aggravating itching soon became a little easier, and there was a considerable i cessation of those painful aches which nad so long affected my limbs. IThs confined state of my bowels was altered to a regularity whioh was hitherto un-

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AHCOG19030108.2.14.3

Bibliographic details

Alexandra Herald and Central Otago Gazette, Issue 348, 8 January 1903, Page 3

Word Count
857

Page 3 Advertisements Column 3 Alexandra Herald and Central Otago Gazette, Issue 348, 8 January 1903, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 3 Alexandra Herald and Central Otago Gazette, Issue 348, 8 January 1903, Page 3