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f» 1 31 c a I. OLD Dit JACOB TOWNSEND'S SAESAPAEILLA. SPHERE are three principal avenues by which S. Nature expels from the body what is necessary should be expelled therefrom. These three nre the Stool, the Urine, nnd the Pores. These MUST be kept in a healthy condition, or disease is certain. THIS IS A FIXED AND POSITIVE LAW ; nd no human being can safely disregard it. Inaddition to this, the Liver must be kept in order. The LIVBR is the LARGEST ORGANS in the BODY. and has some of the moat important functions to fulfil. It regulates the Bile, and consequently he dipeslinn and the bowels. The stomach must be invigorated and made healthy. Added to all this, tho strength and tone of the system must be kept up by proper nourishment, exercise, c::d r = st these ahe Plain and simple laws; and when they 11 work harmoniously, a person is in sound health. This position will not be ijuesned. [gg* Now, when the system is diseased, it is the first grand object to set all these functions at work, Uth to expel Disease and to restore the Health. The bowels must be opened, cleansed, soothed, and strengthened; the uriue must be made to flow healthfully and naturally, asd to throw off the impurities of ihe blood ; the livef and stomach must be regulated; and above all he PORES must be opened and the skin made healthy. Tiles'- things done, and nature will go toiler wirlc; and ruddy health will sit smiling upon the cheek; and Life will be again a Luxury. We will suppose the case of a person afflicted with a bilious complaint. His head aches,.his appetite is poor, his bones and back ache, he is weak and nervous, bis complexion is yellow, the- skin dry. and his tongue fnrred. ITe goes to a doctor for relief, and is given a dose of medicine to purge him fieely. He takes it, and it operates profusely, and "lie gels some temporary relief. But he is not Cured! In a few days the same symptoms return, and the same old purge is administered; and so on, until the poor man becomes a martyr to heavy, drastic purgatives. Now, what would be the TRUE PRACTICE in such a case ? What is the practice that nature herself points out ? Why, to set in healthy operation ALL the means that Nature possesses to throv) ov.l of the system the causes of ditu&sc. The bowels must of course be evacuated, but tho work is hut begun at this stage of the businttt. The Indneys must be prompted to do their work, for they have a most important work to do; the stomach mnst be cleansed ; and above all the pores must be relieved aud enohled to throw off the secretions which ought (O pass off through them. We repeat that by The Bowels—the Urine-'-the Pores, the disease must be expelled from the system, and not by the bowels alone, na is tho usual practise. And to effect all this, a Medicine of no ordinary kind will answer the purpose. Hesort must be had to » remedy that is congenial to the tinman system, a remedy that strengthens while it subdues disease. Such is the remedy fonni in Old Dr. Jacob Townsend's American Sarsaparilla and Pills. They will cleanse and invigorate the stomnch ; freely purge the bowels ; make tho urine to flow healthily and clear ; open he pores; give a pleasant temperature ntid tone to the skin, and do all this in the gentlest manner, without doing violence to tho system. Tho Creator has laid down certain fixed and immutable laws, which govern both the physical and moral mau. One of these is, that everything that lives shall TAKE FOOD Oft DIE. Whatever is endowed with life, nuist have that life supplied with the elements which sustain it. Deprived of a proper amonnt of nutritiou, and the body languishes and dies. It is upon this principle that sickness induces an abnormal condition of the system, and then medicine becomes as necessary as food. The question arises, What is the right kind of Medicine ? Reason and Science reply. That which back to the body the natural and healthy use of its functions. This Medicine is found in Old Dr. Jacob Townsend's Snrsnparillß. AT NO SEASON OF THE YEAR is a person's system so open to the assaults of disease as in the Spring and Fall seasons. Every person undergoes certain changes with Ihe season, and wheu Spring succeeds the Winter, the body is encumbered with a load of impurities, which will generate disease unless speedily removed. The blood moves sluggishly along, being black and thick, with humours nnd decayed matter, the atom Rah is gorged with bile, while costiveness on the one linnd, and great looseness on the other, prevail, and tho body is ready tosink under disease. To meet tMs condition of things, resort must be bad to medicine that , will PURIFY THE BLOOD, nnd, at the same time, impart energy, vigour, and' new life to the whole physical mnchineiy. Wholesale Warehouse—Slß, Strand. Original Retail Depot—373, Strand, adjoining Exeter-Hall Went (formeily Pomeroy, Andrews, aud Co.) J. J. HALUIIAY & CO., Sale Proprietors. Prices of Saisaparilla—Half-pints, .Iβ. Od ; Tints Os.; Quarts, 10s. Od. Agonts for Now Zealand, C. & F. BARRAUD, Chemists. Wellington. FOE SALE Ex "ACASTA. THIRTY TONS PIG IRON. Apply lo SMITH & Co. Wellington, April 3!), 1850. TO BE LET. A FIVE-ROOMED HOUSE, situated in Courtenay Place, Te Aro, being next, doiw lo !Ur. rSurgess. There is a Stable nnd Cow shed attached to the Building, with a ucver-failiiig well of pure water. For farther particular!*, apply to Mr. nurgess, next door to tho Premises, or to Mr. Mitchell, second door from it. May 23rd, lSflO. FUItNISHED APARTMENTS TO LET. A LADY or Gent'emaii can be accommodated with Furnished Apartments in a comfortable cottage, in an eligible part of Ihe Town. For particulars apply at the ollice of this paper, . Ootofcer 6, JI.BOO,

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WI18591028.2.2.4

Bibliographic details

Wellington Independent, Volume XV, Issue 1375, 28 October 1859, Page 1

Word Count
998

Page 1 Advertisements Column 4 Wellington Independent, Volume XV, Issue 1375, 28 October 1859, Page 1

Page 1 Advertisements Column 4 Wellington Independent, Volume XV, Issue 1375, 28 October 1859, Page 1

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