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Medicali ?• • JJITCHENS'S CELEBRATED BLOOD RESTORER. THE RENOVATOR OF THE HtJIIAIT BLOOD. NO hore PHYSICAL DEGENERATION if the Jaws of Health are observed, ordinary care exerrfscd, and Blood Restorer freely taken. HITCHENS' CELEBRATED BLOOD RESTORERj is a certain cure |for the languor, lassitude, and disease which attend the heat andj drought of semitropical and tropical climates. Fevers, whieh so - quickly fasten on the debiliated eystem, may easily kept away by the timely use of the HOST WONDERFUL REMEDY; In fact, by its use the most malignant of tropical fevers have been ejected from the hum<m system, and by its aid, dying, fever-stricken men have beeo, as it wore, RAISED FROM THE DEAD, as is shewn by the following interesting TALE OF THE PACIFIC. Waldemar Oppermann, Esq., » wealthy Island trader, was for seme months lying ;ll at Abemama, an Island of the Kingsmill Group, in the Pacific ; he had been seized with rheumatic fever, which was followed by complicated disorders of a twribly severe nature, assuming the form of a species of palsy, never before known. The sufferer a limbs swelled, the legs lo3t all sensibility to pain; the foot could be wrenched round, or the skill p!©fccd with a lance, without inflicting the slightest suffering. The sick man was, ! evidently, unconscious of his having legs, and his brain was seriously affected, a3 if with lunacy. Iu this deplorable state he was kindly brought from the Islands to Auckland by Mr. H. W. Henderson, in the schooner Coronet (Capta!n Holler), and being a German, he was received by the German Consul, G. Von der Beyde, Esq., and. placed In the District Hospital, where he received treatment for three weeks, with no indication of improvement—his cise being pronounced by one and all a most hopeless one. The captain of the Coronet, knowing that extraordinary cures hid been effected by the use of Hitchen's celebrated Blo.d Restorer, requested the proprietor of the Blood Restorer to take the case in hand, and a contract was subsequently entered into of "no cure.no pay.* Mr. Kitchens jroccedcdto the Hospital, examined the invalid—found him in an app*r«ii:Jy dying state, with scircely a fpark of life left. Mr. Bltcfcra ordered the suffering man to be removed to lis (Mr. G.'s) private residence, where his wants could per/onally be attended to by Mr. HitcheiiS. The latter administered the medicine ;(the Blcod Restorer), and used fehe ointment freely. Meanwhile clergymen ciUrd, pronouncing the case beyond the power of man to effect a cure. However, after six weeks, tt; efect of ii* medicine became wonderfully apparent, V:& £lc-jd Restorer h&d acted steadily btv. v-rc'.y .. th t doc»J • ' the deadly impurities weie gn-.uUly el; j from the .system, until the stream o? Xif»i :•<:»*.•>-J i ■unchecked in its natural ohannsls t5- * diitii« j man. The brain became cleu? and active, and the limbs once again Tejoiced In natural action — the k patient rising again to his feet, ca**id o? diseases { which had baffled the tkill of leading ">hysicie.?!?--* } living proof of the wonderful he'Ur; powers o? j Kitchen's Celebrated Blood Restorer. j i TESTIMONIAL. i M AncWaml, I'ew Z.a'and. I " To H. A. D. Ilitchins, Esq — I ' Before leaving Auckland on my return voyage to the Islands, I have to perform the pI-KS'cg duty of acknowledging the surprising cure I ha'-'O received at your hand*. j " Coming to Auckland as I did a dyJnij* mm—beiu? ; palsied and generally unconscious, and hearing from others th»t no hopes of recovery was he'd out by medical men—X look upon you as the preserver of my life. *'1 am conviceec U»at to your medicine aioue & due the credit of my now being «*» living mau. I beg to thank you most sine rely for the kincicess you have shown me while staying in your house : and in conclusion, would earnestly recommend tick people to use your Blood Restorer, a-j it is the most extraordiniry purifier of the blood I heard of or met with in my travels. It is one of the many good gifts of a beneficent Creator to his suffering children on this earth. "W. OtPKRXItf. "Auckland, December 19, 1579. " Signed in the presence of "O. VOK dep. HSY.OE, Jmnsrial German Consv'i, '

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH18800105.2.76.7

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume XVII, Issue 5657, 5 January 1880, Page 8

Word Count
696

Page 8 Advertisements Column 7 New Zealand Herald, Volume XVII, Issue 5657, 5 January 1880, Page 8

Page 8 Advertisements Column 7 New Zealand Herald, Volume XVII, Issue 5657, 5 January 1880, Page 8

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