PUBLIC NOTICES, I WE SHOULD BLOT OUT DISEASE IN j US EARLY STAGES. THE DISEASE commences with a slight derangement of the stomach, but if I neglected it in time involves the whole frame, . embracing the kidneys, liver, pinci-eas, and in • fact the entire glandular system ; and the i afflicted drags out, a miserable existence until ' death gives relief from suffering. The disease : is often mistaken for other complaints ; but if the reader will ask himself the following questions he will be able to determine whether he ! himself is one of the afflicted :—Have I distress, j pain, or difficulty in breathing after eating ? Is j there a dull, heavy feeling, attended by dron-si- ■ nos.s ? Have the eyes a yeilow tinge? Does a Hick, sticky mucous gather about the gums an I teeth in the mornings, accoin- . i>.uiied by a disagreeable taste? Is the ! tongue coated? Is tiieie pain in the sides ' and back ? Is there a fulness about . the right bide as if the liver were enlarging? Is there costivea-vs? Is there vertigo or dizzincss when 'lising suddenly from a horizontal position? Are the secretions from the kidneys highly colored, with a deposit after standing? ' Dues' ''oud ferment soon after heating, accompany !>y flatulence or belching of gas from the stomach ? Is there frequent palpitation of the , heart ? These various symptom* may not be I present at one time, but they torment the '. nifferc r in turn as the dreadful disease pro- : greases. If the case be one of long standing, ! there will be a dry, hacking cough, attended : after a time by expectoration. In veiy advanced r.tages the skin assumes a dirty brownish j appearance, an.i the hands and feet are covered iby a cold sticky peispiraiion. As the j liver and kidneys become more and more I diseased, rheumatic pains appear, and the usual treatment proves entirely unavailing against j the latter agonising disoider. The origin of j this malady is indigestion or dyspepsia, and a "' small quantity of the proper medicine will rei move the disease if taken in it 3 incipiency. It ! is most important that the disease should be 1 promptly and properly treated in its first stages, when a little medicine will effect a cure, and even when it lias obtained a strong hold the j correct remedy should be persevered in until - ! every vestige of the disease is eradicated, until i the appetite has returned, and the digestive oigans restored to a healthy condition. The surest and most effectual remedy for this distressing complaint is '' Seigcl's Curative Syrup," a vegetable preparation soid by all chemists and medicine vendors throughout the world, and by the proprietors, A. J. White, Limited, Loudon, i E.C. 'j his Syrup strikes at the very foundation iof the disease, and drives it, root and branch, out of the system. Ask your chemist for Seigel's Curative Syrup. I" Kast street Mills', Cambridge heath, '•London, E.C, July 24th, 1882. " Sir, —It gives me great pleasure to be able | to add my testimony in favor of your valuable | Syrup as a curative agent. I had suffered for j some length of time from a severe form of indi- ! ge.ition, and *die long t.aiu of distressing ! symptoms following that disease. I bad tried all possible means to get relief, by seeking the ' best medical advice. I had swallowed sufficient o; their stuff to float a man-of-war, so to speak, but all to no avail. A friend of mine, coming on the seenc in the midst of my suiferii.gs, brought with him a bottle of your Seige; Syrup; he advised me to try" it, seating" he felt confident it would benefit, me. Being weary of trying so many drugs, I condemned it before tiiai, thinking it could not possibly do me any good, but ultimately rh-.ti-i mined to take the Syrup. After do'teg so f<>: a shoit time it worked such a change in me that I continued tiking it 'or nearly two months, and I then felt thoroughly cured, fur I linve discontinued its use for five weeks, and feel in the bess of health, and can parfc.tku any kind of food with ease and comfort, 1 urn theiefoi'o thankful to ywu that, through the instrumentality of your valuable medicine, I am restored to the state of huslth I now enjov.— Yours truly, "W. S. Foester. "To Mr A. J. White." 'Waterloo Home, Londo* Stile, Chiswiek, "February 17th. 1882. "Messrs "White anil Co., London. "Gentlemen, —It is with gr at pleasure that I add my testimony to the wonderful effects of Hcigel's Syrup. For years I have been suffering from bilious attacks, which began with giddiness ; then a rnUt would come before my eyes, to that I should not be able to recognise any one or anything at the distance of a yard or two from my face. This would I>.> followed bv excessive trembling of my knees, so that I could n;t stand without support; after which a severe headache would occur, lasting often two or three days. I have tried vatious remedies for these distressing symptoms, but until I tried Seigel's Syrup I had no lelief. Since then I have had excellent health m every respect, and if ever I feel a headache coining on I take one dose of the .Syrup, which arrests it. Hoping that this testimonial may be the means ■ f inducing others (who suffer as I used) to try the Syrup, a« I feel sure they will receive speedy benefit and ultimately be cured, I beg to remain, yours faithfully, "A. H. Horton. ' THE EYESIGHT. to the Public when requiring 1 Spectacles not to purchase them from incompetent persons, who do not understand the science of optics, for by so doing they will injure their Sights by using Spectacles not properly ground or suited to their vision. Therefore, buy your Spectacles from Percival, the tniy Practical Optician, and Spectacle-maker to the Dunediu Hospital (established over 24 years), %vho will supply you with good and cheap Spectacles, and not the rubbish sold by some persons, that will surely blind you. Then why impair your vision when you can have it preserved bv buying vour Spectacles from PERCIVAL, the PRACTICAL OPTICIAN, with 40 years' experience in the eyesight. No. 7 George street, Dunedin. | YOUTHFUL VIGOK, HAPPY MAE EIAGE, HEALTHY OFFSPRING . * Medical Treatise by that eminent French Hospital Physician Dr. Rabonski, showing sufferers how tliey may cure themselves oi Nervous Debility, Lost Manhood, etc., etc. Sent by for Six Penny (N.Z.) Stamps. Address "Parisian," P. 0., Box 76;?, Sydney, "A boon to all desiring 'self-cure. ' Medical Review,'
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD18870919.2.3.7
Bibliographic details
Evening Star, Issue 7320, 19 September 1887, Page 1
Word Count
1,346Page 1 Advertisements Column 7 Evening Star, Issue 7320, 19 September 1887, Page 1
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