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PUBLIC NOTIOES. HOW PILLS ARE MADE. ,HE Custom of taking medicine in the form of Pills dates far back in history. The object is io enable us to swallow easily in a condensed form disagreeable and nauseous, but very useless drugs. To what vast dimensions pilltaking 1 has grown may be imagined when we say that in England alone about 2,000,000,000 (two thousand million) pills are consumed every year. In early days pills were made slowly by hand, as the demand was comparatively small-To-day they are produced with infinitely greater rapidity by machines especially contrived for the purpose, and with greater accuracy, too, No form of medication can be better than a pill, provided only it is intelligently prepared. But right here occurs the difficulty. Easy as it may seem to make a,pill, or a million of them, there are really very few pills that can be honestly commended for popular use. Most of them either undershoot or overshoot the mark. As everybody takes pills of some kind, it may be well to mention what a good, safe, and reliable pill should be. Now, when one feels dull and sleepy, and has more or loss pain in the head, sides, and back, he may be sure bis bowels are constipated and his liver sluggish. To remedy this unhappy state of things there is nothing like a good cathartic pill. It will aot like a charm by stimulating the liver into doing its duty and ridding the digestive organs of the accumulated poisonous matter. But the good pill does not gripe and pain üb, neither does it make us siok and miserable for a few hours or a whole day. It acts on the entiro glandular system at the same time, else the after-effects of the pill will be worse than the disease itself. The griping caused by most pills is tho result of irritating drugs which they contain. Such pills are harmful, and should never be used. They sometimes even produce hemorrhoids. Without having any particular desire to praise one pill above another, we may, nevertheless, name Mother Seigel's Pills, manufactured by the well-known house of A. J. White (Limited), 35 Farringdon road, London, and now sold by all chemists and medicine vendors, as the enly one we know of that actually possesses every desirable quality. They remove the pressure upon the brain, correct the liver, and cause the bowels to act with caso and regularity. They nevergripe or produce the slightest sickness of the stomach, or any other unpleasant feeling or symptom. Neither do they induce further constipation, as nearly all other pills do. As a further and crowning merit, Mother Seigel's Pills are covered with a tasteless and harmless coating, which causes them to resemble pearls, thus rendering them as pleasant to the palate as they are effective in curing disease. If you have a severe cold and are threatened with a fever, with pains in the head, back, and limbs, one or two doses will break up the cold and prevent the fever. A coated tongue, with a brackish taste in the mouth, is caused by foul matter in the stomach. A dose of Seigel's Pills will effect a speedy cure. Oftentimes partially decayed food in the stomach and bowels produces sickness, nausea, etc. Cleanse the bowels with a dose of these Pills, and good health will follow.

Unlike many kinds of pills, they do not make you feel worse beforo you are better. They are, without doubt, the best family physic ever discovered. They remove all obstructions to the natural functions in either sex without any unpleasant effects.

I DVBRTISING CHEATS. "It baß becomo so common to begin an article in an elegant, interesting style, " Then run it into some advertisement tbat we avoid all such, " And simply call attention to the merits of Dr Soule's American Hop Bitters in as plain, honest terms as possible, " To induce people "To give them one trial, whioh so proves their value that they will never use anything else." " The Remedy so favorably noticed in all the papers, " Religious and secular, is "Having a large sale, and supplanting all other medicine. " There is no denying the virtue of the Hop plants, and the proprietors of Dr Soules American Hop Bitters have shown great shrewdness and ability. ... "In compounding a medicine whose virtues are so palpable to every one's observation. Did She Lie? "No! • * "She lingered and suffered (Jong, pining away all the time for years." " The doctors doing her no good "; "And at hwt was cured by this Dr Soule's American Hop Bitters the papers say so much about" "Indeed! Indeed!" "How thankful we should be for that, medioine." A Daughter's Mibbry. " Eleven years our daughter suffered on a bed of misery, i. "From a complication of kidney, liver, rheumatic trouble, and Nervous debility, " Under the care of the best physicians, "Who gave her disease various names, " But no relief, "And now she is restored to us in good health by as simple a remedy as Dr Son'e s American Hop Bitters, that we had shunned for years before using it."—The Tarents.s Father is Getting Well. " My daughter says:— . "How much better father is since he ÜBed Dr Soule's American Hop Bitters." "He is getting well after his long suffering from a disease declared incurable." . 5 "And we are so glad that &e nsett your Bitters."—A LADY of N.Y. j '' o"None genuine without a bunch' of.,green .. »,,.,_,.-, —j ™-"ouleVnaUrtP blown in the bottle. BswABE of all'thelvilepoisonousr stuff made to iititate the »bove. i ■,:■• " SIRIUS."i AND " ORION *■ OKRN.3 for burning wood or e^jt'fltted.wi&JMOMlir; Jow pressure boilers. ; . v ..' ~,, +;;«■,: ;i ahhi i ?■"'' gmtamf'^ '.-■■"■' H. ■.*>' BiHfJWß Xm'Q&k,®"* \ t' RIZK STOCK BmOTfcEßßtf*) • tat IMMBNSE TOSELAX THIS «VBIWNGUIE a. dorlSlwli.l's SHOP, iN GBORGB-SWBET. Bv«ry^hißg,, r 'tfae " of brawn, etc.; VALiBT ROAD,; - O T IG K.—M'MILLAN :BBIDGE *fc UNSAFE for Qrww, nA*M no* CLOSED for Repair until further notion E. S. CLARKE, . Town Clerk, •> December 22nd, 1887. '■■:■■' , RICHARD BREW, House! Agent,, Rents And on exmmijaßton. Money to lend.,: 2 BaMm* street,,, ,; -, ~j,£;±: , EW Zealand Dianea^for,

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD18880103.2.4.7

Bibliographic details

Evening Star, Issue 7409, 3 January 1888, Page 1

Word Count
1,008

Page 1 Advertisements Column 7 Evening Star, Issue 7409, 3 January 1888, Page 1

Page 1 Advertisements Column 7 Evening Star, Issue 7409, 3 January 1888, Page 1