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MOTHER SEIGEL'S OPERATING FOR CONSTIPATION, SLUGGISH . ' LIVER. &c, TTNLIKE many kinds of eattwrtao modiU cities, do not make you feel worse oiiit., ~ rpjjejr operation 13 SS.C f &£S*;-nd unattended with disagreeable effects, such as nausea, griping f Operating Pills are the -best [ family physic that lias over been discovered. Thov"cleanso the bowels from all irritating ' substances, and leave them in a healthy condition. r 10 t )es t remedy extant for the bane of s our lives—constipation and sluggish liver. Those Pills prevent fevers and all kinds I o f sickness, by removing all poisonous , matter from the bowels. They operate - briskly, yet mildly, without any pain. s If you take a severe cold, and are threatened with a fever, with pains iv the r head, back, and limbs, ono or two doses of i Seigel's Operating Pills will break up the cold and prevent the fever, j A coated tongue, with a brackish tasto, is caused by foul matter in the stomnch. A g few doses of Seigel's Operating Pills will cleanse the stomach, reniovo the bud taste, and restoro the appetite, and with it bring 3 good health. 0 Oftentimes diseased, or partially decayed * food, causes sickness, nausea, and diarrhoea. > If the bowols are cleansed from this im- ■ purity with a doso of Seigel's Operating c Pills, these disagreeable effects will vanish c and good health will result. Seigel's Operating Pills prevent ill-effects a from excess in eating or drinking. A good dose at bedtime renders a person fit for n business in the morning. t These Pills, being Sugar-coated, arc a pleasant to take. The disagreeable taste . common to most pills is obviated. c For Sale by all Chemists, Druggists, and Medicine Vendors. n PEOPBiEions: A. J. WHITE, LIMITED, d London, Exo. il , .1 " TEN MONTH T S~SUFFERINa IN A , 0 HOSPITAL. J There is an old saying that physieans are a clasa of men who pour drugs, of which st they know little, into bodys of which they 0. know less. There, is both truo and untrue it lawyers, and good and poor doctors. The m trouble with these medical gentlemen as a ;d profession is that they are clannish, and apt is to be conceited. They don't like to be 1- beaten at their own trade by outsiders who c- have never studied medicine They there[is fore- pay, by their frequent failures, the penalty of refusing instruction unless the eacher bears their own ' Hall Mark.' 00 An eminent physician—Dr. Brownf lB Sequard, of Paris—states the fact accurately f when ho says: ' The medical profession are so bound up in their self-confidence and *T conceit that they allow the diamond truths of science to be picked up by persons entirely ; cc outside their ranks.' We give a most "' interesting incident, which illustrates this important truth. c ) Tbo steamship ' Concordia,' of the Donald eon Line, sailed from Glasgow for Baltimore in 1887, having on board as a fireman a icr man named Jttichard Wude, of Glasgow he He hud been a fireman for fourteen years to °n various ships sailing to America, China, nit and India. He had borne the hard aud tid exhausting labour, mid had been healthy - ;l ] yid strong. On the trip we no«- name he be began ft>r ibo first time to foci weak nnd ill. );{> His sjppetito failed, and ha muttered from d< drows.ine.-s, heartburn, a bud la.-te in the iat mouth, and and irregularity n- of the bowels. Sometimes when at work he an had attacks of giddiness, but supposed it to be (jaast'd by the heat of the iire-room. Quite often he was sick and felt like vomiting, Dn and had some pain in the Lead. Later "h_ during the, paasago ho grew worse, and n <* when the chip reached Halifax ho was U8 placed in the Victoria General Hospital, and k° the ship failed away without him. Tho h° houao surgeon gave him eomo powders to * s stor. the vomiting, aud tho noxt day the >'• visiting physician gavo him a mixture to v } take every "four hours. Within two days II Wade was so much worse that the doctors ,n stopped both tho powders and the mixture. ?■ A month passed, the poor fireman getting re lyorsa and worse Then came another doctor, who was to j n be visiting physiciiius for tho next five j,, mouths. He gavo other medecines, but a not much relief. Nearly all thut time Wade a suffered great torture ;he digested nothing, 10 throwing up nil he ate. There was terrible |lt pain in the bowels, burning heat in the o f throat, heartburn, and racking headache. ,j The patient was now taking a mixture q' very four hours, powders one after each r ]3 meal to digest the food, operating pills one c . every night, and temperature pills two ,j eacli night to stop the cold sweats. If drugs , ss could euro him at nil, Richard had an idea ,'Jj that he took enough to do it. But on the o f other hand pleurisy set in and the doctors |C j took ninety ounces of mutter from his riyht V side, and then told him ho was sure to die. 0 ' Five months moro rolled by, nnd there was another chango of visiting physicians. it The new one gavo Wade a mixture which ;i) he said made him (rouble like a leaf on a tree. \s At this crisis Wade's Scotch blood h, asserted itself. He refused to stand any 1. dosing ; and told the doctors that if ho id must die he could die as well without them r- as with them. By this time a cup of milk p, would turn sour on bin stomach and lio at there for days. Our friend from Glasgow a was like a wreck on a shoal, fast going to ,n pieces. We will let him tell the rest of 30 his experience in tho words iv which ho 10 communicated it to the press. ■y He says: ' When I was in this stuto a r, lady whom I had never seen camo to tho " hospital and talktd with mo. She proved iS to bo an angel of mercy, for without her I :e should not now bo alive. She told rae of a y medicino called ' Mother Seiirel's Curative ir Syrup,' and brought me a bottle next day. I started with it, without consulting tho doctors, aud in only a few days , time I was y cit of bed calling for ham and cy/js for breakfast. From this tiniu keeping on with Mother :l Seigel's great remedy, I got well fast, nnd 0 was goon able to leave the hospital and come home to Glasgow I now fell as if I 0 was in another world, and have no illness of any kind.' ' ? The above facts nre calmly and impartially stated, tind the render may draw hia own n conclusion. Wβ deem it best to vms no '° names, although Mr Wadn gave them in '" hia original deposition, ilia address in No. t- 244. StobcrosH Street, Glasgow, Where '1 letters will reach him. \ Editok. ■c HOW PILLS ARE MADE. Tho Custom of taking medicine in tho _ form of pills, dates fur back in history. Tho object is to enable 11.1 to swallow easily iv a '" condensed form tliragreeablo and nauseous, t j but very useful, druga. To what vast j dimensions pill-taking has grown may bu imagined when we say that in England alone ~ t about •.',000,000,01.10 (two thousand million) pills are consumed every year. In curly days L pills were made .vlouiy by hand, as the t \ demand was comparatively small. To-duv ". they aro produced with infinitely greater !p rapidity by machines especially contrived ' t for the purpose, and with greater accuracy too, in the proportions of tho various in- ( j gmlients employed. ■ N<i form of medication can be better than II pill, provided only it is intelligently prepared. But right here occurs the diflieulty. Easy as it may i-e>:m to tako a pill, or a miilk'ii 'if them, Ue.ro ::ro really very few pills ; \:itcau l<o honestly commended for popular use. Host of them either undershoot or overshoot tho mark. As everybody take.-.-, pills of Koir.y kind, it may bo well to mention what a good, uafo, and reliable pill should be. Now, when one feels dull und sleepy, and has more or let's pain iv the head, side.-, and back, ho may be sure his bowel.-* aro confirm :d, and his liver ."liigi/ish. To remedy thi.-i unhappy state of things there is iiotliiiiij lik " "• trood. c.-itliut-lic piU. It will ai.-t like a clmrm by niiiiulating the liver into doing il.s duty, ai:d ridding tho digintive (irg:iiiH oi the atiiiimulitUd poisonous) ( matter, Kiit the irood pill doe-! not gripe and pain us, iv.ii.her do,■.-; it make us "si-.-k und miserable for a few hourn or a wliole day. It acts on tho (Mitiro glandular system at tho same time, (..■!*.<; thu itfter-eJl'i.-i'.ts" of tlio pill ( wiil be worse than tlio disease it .self. The griping caused by most pills is the result of irritatlujr drugs which they contain. Such pills u:e harmful, and should nover be used. -\ TJiijy .sometimes even produce hemorrhoids. 1 Without having uny particuhtr desire to prai.-i.' one pili above, aiiotlicr, wo may, t nevertheless, name Mother Seigel's Tills, manufactured by the well-known house of A. J. White, Limited, i>s, Farringdon Road j London, and now sold by all cheiniatri and medicine vendors, as the only one we know <• of that uctually p-issessea every desirable j qualify. They remove the pressuro upon tiiu "brain, correct the liver, and cuitsu tho bowels to net with ea<o and regularity. - They never gripe or produce the slightest sickness of the stoin:.<:h, or any other un- p pleiisini). feeling or symptom. Neither ilo ■*■ they induce further constipation, us. nearly all A other piils do. As a further and crowning merit, Tills are covered with ii iMhte.'t-.-s and hannk-ss coating - , wiiii;ii CM.-TS lh--::i Jo i-est-uible jieiiils, ihiisremleri;:;c liiei'i 11- i>h-:tsant to thu palate as they iue t ti. 'live in cuiiiig dise;t.-e. If you huvo * • !• -••.■vero culd and are threatened with a fever, wiiii : uins. in the Jiead, back, and limb-, n.-if '•!• two doses will break up tho _~ coiii :tnd I'l'.'vent the iVvci - . A eonteil tongue, \v"li :i bri;./!:ish t.i.itu in tin; mouth i- eiiii.-i.'i )■■: tV'iil m::; : cv v.\ t!:o slomacli. A T <Vj.-e of S.-i:.rer ; ' i'i!i-. will eli.ei.-t a ,-_pcedy t' cure. OUe!i-.i.i:i..?.s partially decayed" food p in tiie storu.i'L and howels yi-i'lu/'e-: sii;l»-n:ui.-e;i. .V-;. <Ji'.:iM.-J the in.wels wiih ;i do.-i: oi thttu pills, uud good iiealth will lollow.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DTN18900724.2.31.2

Bibliographic details

Daily Telegraph (Napier), Issue 5891, 24 July 1890, Page 4

Word Count
1,775

Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Daily Telegraph (Napier), Issue 5891, 24 July 1890, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Daily Telegraph (Napier), Issue 5891, 24 July 1890, Page 4

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