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MANY people believe that nature has somewhere a remedy for every disease. . So many and so terrible are the-ills of life, and so Blight the pleasur'd we get as time flies past, that subh a belief is the least faith we cau show in a gracious and all-wise Provi dence. A few remedies—but, alas, how few !—have been found. ■ Others, so far, lie hidden from human-, inquiry. Occasionally death follows quickly on the .heels of the evil—an illustration of the dangerous character of the ailment to be relieved. ’ JFor example, Nervous Dyspepsia is a com- > paratively new disease, growing out of the conditions of modern -life.-. It is a joint affeotion of the digestive organs and cf the nervous system. These two were formerly treated as separate ailments, and it was left for the clear-sighted thinkers to prove that the basis of this terrible and often fatal complication lies chiefly in the disordered and depraved functions of digestion andnutritioni They reasoned thus : ‘lf we can induce the stomach to do its work, and stimulate the excretive organs to drive out of the body the ■ poisonous waste matters which remains after ; the life-giving elements of the food have been absorbed, wa shall have conquered |Nervou3; Dyspepsia and Nervous-E-xhattstfoiT.’ And they were right. Knowing the infallible: powers of Siegel’s Syrup in;less complicated though similar diseases, resolved to test it fully in this. To leave no ground for doubt, they prescribed the remedy in hun- ■ dreds of cases which had been pronounced insurable —with perfect success in every instance where their directions as to living and diet were scrupulously followed.' Ner- ; vous Dyspepsia and Exhaustion' may almost; be called a peculiarly English disease. To a ; greater or less extent half the people of this country suffer from it—r-both sexes and all ages. In no country in the world are there so many insane asylums filled to overflowing, all resulting from this alarming disease. Its leading symptoms are these’; frequent or continual headache : a dull pain at the base of the brain ; bad breath; nauseous eructations; the rising of sour and pungent fluids to the throat; a sense of oppression and faintness' at tbe pit of the stomach, flatulence ; wakefulness and loss of sleep : disgust with food even when weak from the need of it ; sticky and slimy matter on the teeth or in the month, especially on rising in the morning ; furred and coated tongue ; dull eyes ; cold hands and feet; constipation ; dry or rough skin ; inability to fix the mind on any laber or calling requiring continuous attention ; and oppressive and sad forbodings and fears. All this terrible group Mother Seigel’s Curative Syrup removes by its positive, powerful, direct, yet painless and gentle action upon the functions of digestion and assimilation. Those elements of the food that build up and strengthen the system are sent upon their mission, while all waste matters (the ashes of life’s fire) which, unremoved poison and kill, are expelled from the body through the bowels, kidneys, and skin. The weak and prostrated nerves are quieted, toned, and fed by the purified blood. As the result, health, with its enjoyments, blessings, and power, returns to the sufferer, who had abandoned all hope of ever seeing t uotber well day. Mother Seigel’s Curative Syrup is for Bale by all chemists and medicine, vendors, and by the proprietors, A. : J. TVhite, Limited, i-5, Farriagdon Koad, London. Who is so poor an art critic as Admiral Tuctcer ? Twelve paintings for which he paid £IOOO recently brought 15- guineas.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZMAIL18880615.2.43.1

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Mail, Issue 850, 15 June 1888, Page 10

Word Count
587

Page 10 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealand Mail, Issue 850, 15 June 1888, Page 10

Page 10 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealand Mail, Issue 850, 15 June 1888, Page 10

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