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MOTHER SEIGEL'S OPERATING TILLS, FOR CONSTIPATION, SLUGGISH LIVER. &c, UNLIKE many kinds of cathartic medicines, do not, make you feel worse before you feel better. Their operation is gcntle,*but thorough, and unattended with disagreeable effects, such as nausea, griping pains, &c. Seigel's Operating Pills tiro the bes family physic that has ever been discovered. They cleanse tho bowels from all irritating substances, and leave them in a healthy condition. The best remedy extant for the Lime of our lives—constipation and sluggish liver. These Pills prevent fevers and all kinds of sickness, by removing all poi'-onous matrer from the bowels. They operate briskly, yet mildly, without an v p:«iti. If you take a severo cod, ard are threatened with a fever, with paius iv the head, back, and limbs, one or two coses of Seigel's Operating Pills will brerk up tho cold and prevent tho fever. A coated tongue, with a brackish taste, is caused by foul matter iv the stomach. A few doses of Seigel's Operating Pills will cleanse the stomach, remove the bad taste, and restore the appetite, and with it bring good health. Oftentimes diseased, or partially decayed food, causes sickness, nausea, and diarrha-n. If the bowels are cleansed from this impurity with a dose of Seigel's Operating Pills, these disagreeable effects will vanish and good health will result. Seigel's Operating Pills prevent ill-effects from excess in eating or drinking. A good dose at bedtime renders a person fit for business iv tho morning. These Pills, being Sugar-coated, aro pleasant to take. The disagreeable taste common to most pills is obviated. For Sale by all Chemists, Druggists, and Medicine Vendors. Peoprihtoes : A. J. WHITE, LIMITED, London, Eng. TEN MONTH'S SUFFERING IN A HOSPITAL. There is an old saying that physicans aro a class of men who pour drugs, of which they know little, into bodys of which they know less. There is both true and untrue lawyers, and good and poor doctors. The trouble with these medical gentlemen as a profession is that they are clannish, and apt to bo conceited. They don't like to be beaten at their own trade by outsiders who have never studied medicine. They therefore pay, by their frequent failures, tho penalty of refusing instruction unless the eacher bears their own ' Hall Mark.' An eminent physician—Dr. BrownSequard, of Paris—states the fact accurately when ho says: ' Tho medical profession lire so bound up in their self-confidence and conceit that they allow the diamond truths Df science to be picked up by persons entirely outside their ranks.' Wo give a most interesting incident, which illustrates this important truth. The steamship ' Concordia,'of the Donaldson X.me, sailed from for Baltimore in 3857, having on board as a fireman a man named Richard Wade, of Glasgow fie had been a fireman for fourteen years on various ships sailing to America, China, and India. He had borne the hard and exhausting labour, and had been healthy Hid strong. On the trip we now mime he began for the first time to feel weak and ill. His appetite failed, and he suffered from drowsiness, heartburn, a bad taste in tho mouth, and costiveness and irregularity of tho bowels. Sometimes when at work ho had attacks of giddines-t, but supposed it to bo caused by tho heat of the fire-room. Quite often he was sick and felt like vomiting, and had some pain in the head. Later during tho paasage ho grew worse, and when tho ship reached Halifax ho was placed in tho Victoria General Hospital, and tho ship tailed away without him. Tho house surgeon gave him some powders to stop the vomiting, and the next day the visiting physician gave him a rnixtiiro to take every four hours. Within two days Wade was so much worse that tho doctors stopped both the powders and the mixture. A mouth passed, tho poor fireman getting worse and worse. Then came another doctor, who was to ' ho visiting physicians for the next five " months. lie gave other medecines, but 1 ant much relief. Nearly all that time Wade suffered great torture ; he digested nothing, throwing up all he ate. There was terrible J [lain in the bowels, burning heat in the Jiroat, heartburn, and racking headache. The patient was now taking v mixturo J i-ery four hours, powders one after each I neal to digest tho food, operating pills one svory night, and temperature pills two ;ach night to stop tho cold sweats. If drugs f jould cure him at all, Riohard had an idea :hat ho took enough to do it. But on tho ither hand pleurisy set in and the doctors . 'ooI; ninety ounces of matter from his right ':,' • ide, and then told him ho was sure to die. *' Five months more rolled by, and there was mother change of visiting physicians. _ The new one gave Wade a mixturo which ft re said made him tremble like a leaf on a tree At this crisis Wade's Scotch blood isserted itself. He refused to stand any % losing ; and told tho doctors that if ho "" uust die he could die as well without them is with them. By this time a cup of milk T vould turn sour on his stomach and lie Jl hero tor days. Our friend from Glasgow J - vim like a wieek on a shoal, fast goim? to neees. We will let him tell tL.J' r us \ of lis experience in the words in which }, 0 lommimicatcd it to the press. He says: 'When I was in this state a --■ ady whom I had never seen camo to the Ci< lospital and talked with me. She proved O o be an angel of mercy, for without her I hould not now be alive. She told me of a nedioino culled ' Mother Seigel's Curative lyrup,' and brought me a bottle next day. '. Started with it, without consulting tho Bn lectors, and in only a fete days' time J teas tttofbedcallinyfor ham and eggs for breakfast. ''Rom this time keeping ou with Mother 1 ieigel's great remedy, 1 got well fust, and ft mj .•as soon able to leave tho hospital aud p ro ome heme to Glasgow I now fell a.s if I | Je jj /as in another world, and have no illness me , f any kind.' q The above facts aro calmly and impartially to 1 fated, and the reader may draw his own F oii'-lusiou. We deem it best to use no | takt ames, although Mr Wade gave them iv j i.-> original deposition. His address is No. J -ii. Stouer., a s Street, Glasgow, Where ' -tters will r.-ueh him. jj- 0] Editor. Mai NIGH'iViOIL CONTRACT. li. 1 i I T ■ _~" " r , ■f >ote 4 LL communications of whutever nature Elli* rl. referring to the .Nightsoil Contract lust be addressed to liox 1. '>, l'.O ' ;i r<«';TOLLN GRIFFIN. I

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DTN18900730.2.26.2

Bibliographic details

Daily Telegraph (Napier), Issue 5896, 30 July 1890, Page 4

Word Count
1,142

Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Daily Telegraph (Napier), Issue 5896, 30 July 1890, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Daily Telegraph (Napier), Issue 5896, 30 July 1890, Page 4

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