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Chatv.borlahi’s Cough Remedy gives the best satisfaction of any cough medicine I handle, and as a seller leads all , other preparations iu this market. I |recommend it because it is the best medicine I over bandied for coughs, colds and croup. A. W. Baldridge, Millersville, 111. For sale by A. A. Gower. A severe rheama I ‘o pain in the left shoulder had troamed Mr J, 11. Loper, a well known druggist of Des Moines, lowa for over s's months. At times the pain was so se?ere that he could not lift anything. WLb all he coaid do bo cou 1 d not get rid of it until he applied Chamberlain’s Pain Balm. “ I only made three app’icaiions of it,” he says, “ And have since been free from all pain.” He now recommends it to poisons similarly afflicted. It is or sale by A. A. Gower. Certain 1 y the best medicine known i Sander & Con’s Eucalypti Extract Test its eu‘ : uent’y wonderful effects in colds, toughs, in Inenza; t e relief is iustan'ancons. In,.eriescases,atdaccidents of all 1 ‘ndg be they wounds, burns, scald ings, bruises, sprams, ic is the safest remedy— to swelling—no inflammation. Like surprsing effects prod need in coughs, diphthor'a, broechiCs, inflammation of th) lungs, sweflin ,s, ec. diarrhsea dysentery, dLousei of Sidneys and urinary organs. In use at liospi : ! and med’cal clinics all over t e globe, patror sed by His Excel ency tie King Italy; crowned with medal and dip’oma at Interna ional exhibition at Amsterdam. Trust in the approved article and reject all others.

WEN POUNDS 3N ONE WEEK. Not every man wbo is thin would thank you for fatte.rng him. He doesn’t want to be fat, and for very good reason®. Unnecessary fat is a load to carry about; ii inlerfeies with a man’s power to work, shortens his wind, and dulls his wits. Yet, on the other hand, a certain amount of flesh is needed for health and comfort. For example : A man five feet high should weigh about 120 ibs; a man five feet six inches, Plolbs; a man six feet, 17Slbs. It is a regular ascending scale. The insurance companies allow a valuation of 7 per cent above nr below it, and beyond those limits charge an extra premium. One shouldn’t be much under or over his proper weight if he wants to be sound and hearty—and we all do want that. Now we will tell you how Mr Thomas Crosby, being under weight, gained seven pounds in a week. Ho had lost U- stone, which is too much off for a man who was never fleshier than ho naturally ought to be. It was this way. He was right enough up to May, 1891. At that time ho began to feel ill and out of sorts. Ho had a nasty taste in his mouth—like rotten eggs, he says—and a thick, slimy stuff came on his gums and teeth. His appetite failed, and what he did eat was, as you might say, under compulsion ; and right afterwards he would have great pain in his stomach and chest. Plainly, something was amiss with him in that region, Ho was often dizzy, and cold chills ran over him as though he were threatened with fever. Of course we should expect a man who is bandied in this way to lose strength. Mr Crosby lost strength. In fact, ho got so weak and nervous that ho shook all over, and his bunds trembled as if a current of electricity were running through him. To use bis own words: “ I rapidly lost flesh, was 1£ stone lighter, and could hardly walk about. Once my parents thought I was dying, and sent in haste for the doc!or. I saw two doctors in Epworth and one at Haxey, but they were not able (o help mo out. Our vicar, Bov Mr Over!on, recommended mo to the Lincoln Infirmary, whore I aU tended for eight weeks us an outdoor patient, without benefit. “ Soon afterwards Mr Sharp, a chemist at Epworth, spoke to mo of the virtues of a medicine known as Mother Seigel’s Curative Syrup. Being interested in | what he eaul, I left off trying other things and begun taking this Syrup. In a few days I felt better, and presently I gained seven pounds in a week. At that rate I soon got back to my own work, and have bad the best of health ever since. I tell these facts to everybody, and am perfectly willing they should be published. Yours truly (Signed), Tom Ckosby, Ferry Boad, Epworth, via Doncaster, December 28rd, 1892.” After reading Mi Crosby’s story we scarcely need to ask why he lost flesh. The minuto ho stopped eating and digest* jug his usral allowance of food ho began to fall away. Treea, they say, grow as , much from the air by means of their leaves, as they o from the sol; But j men don’t. They’ve gat to be built up through their slomechs. Indigcsiion and dyspepsia (Mr Crosby’s complaint) stops this process and poisons those who have it, besides. That accounts for all the painful and dangerous symptoms our friend speaks of. The doctors do what they can, Dijt> unluckily, they don’t possess the medicine that goes to the bottom of this disease and cures it. The remedy is Mother Seigel’s Curative Syrup, and nothing else, so far as wo know, It restores ligestion, and digestion covers the J bones with fat enough fov health and good looks. ..... .

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PATM18950927.2.25.2

Bibliographic details

Patea Mail, Volume VIII, Issue 116, 27 September 1895, Page 3

Word Count
918

Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 Patea Mail, Volume VIII, Issue 116, 27 September 1895, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 Patea Mail, Volume VIII, Issue 116, 27 September 1895, Page 3