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Far. Far Into the Future.

J? cop be •aid ihab fo no enlightened country io tbe world is fair play held i» higbe> esteem than Ui Greab Britain i newbsrft glee aro peopU so »snsltUa so irbatIi lujd, and fust io proportion aj tibey are 4enfitive : they arc ever ready to concede wbab It rigbD They bavo tbeir standard* of judg'taeoc nob founded on prejudice. no 3 their .crgan» of. opinion neither narrow minded nor selfish to which they fidusre inflexibly, So when the foremost* of their; ffreab nevvspapera and journals—the Bounde3U, the surest, and mosb searching of tbe Anglo-Saxon race—bepan in the light of science bo epeali unreservedly, and in a manner >aa quoted below, the auguries of success to the object of their oncomiumn were as bright) as the Bun. For instance, the " London Sunday Times," concluding ix leading article upon the value of a great discovery, pays : " This, added to wbab our personal experience and inquiries have brougbb forward, muato place ib in reputation ab the top of the list, and satisfy the mosb incredulous tbab ib accomplishes all t.habis claimed forifc." Tbe '■' London Maga zinc of Chemistry and Medicino" publishes eoano mosb remarkablefncbs,and states "that eminenb professioual men, in difforenti parte of Oreah Britain, have, after the most thorough and exhaustive tests, given it> as their opinion bhafe ib is a discovery of mar vellous efficiency " Tbo London " Christian Globe" conclude? a recital of some convinc ing experiments '«n tbe cur© of suffering, and says i "With such experience ib is irn possiblo to say too mucb in its favour, and fcbo'mosb sceptical can oeed no further proof of the astonishing eQicacy of this discovery." The " Whitehall Review," in an introductory and closing-, says j ** Ib has sucb a decided bearing upou human happiness, ib has been made the subject of considerable comtuenb and investigation on the part* of various newspapers. Id will no doubt prove of incalculable value." • .

Such oomtneDte were bub tbe forerunner! of-what) tbe proprietors of tbe discovery knew would follow from tno judgment 0/ the British people, and ot once they were id receipt of revelations from it? use and fair trial which are as wonderful <v true. Per example : Mr William Howes, Civil-Engi. neer, Red LioD-etreefe. Higb Hoiborn, London, write? t " Wa9 affected witb rbeu uoatisto for 20 years : hands swelled eDor moufily : joints were stiff? could no» walk f feeb ao sore I could nob bear tny weight. Before using' two bottles all pain left, and am cow in perfect health." Mrs Charles Webb, North Queensferry, Scotland. writes I " For many years suffered witb neuralgia in no;'head. Had given ap bope of every being? free from pains.) with toe most excruciating bad oo res* for three weeks. My husband also tuffered witb rheumatism eight years ( our condition wa« pitiable when I procured a bottle of the great remedy, but J was free frcn> pain in sever' minutes, and have no& had the slightest return. My husband1 * pain vanished, and he i» vow at work i" Mr! Pol som, wife of Mi John Polsom, Gray'i Inn Passage, Bedford Row, London, writes • " Suffered from a sprained ankle for nineteeD years. On applying your great remedy, the paiD vanished, the swelling was reduced, and my ankle is as strong as ever. "Mr George Stevens, coach painter, Levees, Sussex, writes; " Was a constant sufferer for thirty years from severe sciatica. By continued use of youi great remedy the pain entirely left and has never returned." The 96 are but a few samples of effects, which in a thousand equally marvellous cases have become familiar to the British public, and which that public knows, no othei remedy but St. Jacobs Oil, to which all this refers, could so completely accomplish. After such an accounting, alter the press has given id a rank among the discoveries of science, and treat ib as a beneficence which the poorest can get from chemists for only 3s.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS18870620.2.20

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume XVIII, Issue 144, 20 June 1887, Page 6

Word Count
658

Far. Far Into the Future. Auckland Star, Volume XVIII, Issue 144, 20 June 1887, Page 6

Far. Far Into the Future. Auckland Star, Volume XVIII, Issue 144, 20 June 1887, Page 6