Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

AN UNSCRUPULOUS FOE

creeps upon us unawares like an assassin in the dark and whose dangerous proximity we never suspect until it makes the last fatal clutch on some vital organ. We are always warned in ample time of the impending danger, but with criminal carelessness neglect those warnings: that tired feeling, those aching limbs, and that grand feeling one day and seedy condition the next, the sour taste on waking in the morning, and the frequent sick and splitting headaches, all make their debut before serious illness sets in. All or any of these symptoms indicate the approach of disease, they are faithful signs that the liver and kidneys are not doing their duties, that the morbid and effete matter instead of being eliminated from the # system, is being retained, and is positively poisoning and destroying the whole physical structure. .Neglect in such cases is criminal, recourse to rational treatment should be had at once, Clements Tonic should be taken to strengthen the digestion, purify and fortify the blood, to stimulate the liver and brace up the kidneys, to resolve and eliminate the poisonous urea. Liver and kidney complaints are the most prevalent diseases of this country, and so long as we consume such large quantities of animal food and condiments, and drink so freely of tea and stimulants, so long will this unhealthy condition last. It is this mode of life that causes such numbers of deaths from heart disease, Bright’s disease, dropsy, cancer, inflammation and enlargement of the liver, and similar causes, all of which herald their approach by feelings of lassitude, headache, languor &c., and if prompt treatment at once is adopted by a regular use of Clements Tonic, the progress of disease is arrested, the stomach, liver and kidneys resume their normal action and the poisonous accumulations are expelled, the system and normal health is restored. That Clements Tonic is reliable is proved beyond all question and we have grateful beneficiaries in every town and village who are continually writing us in terms similar to the following:— . St Leonards, Sydney,—Dear sir,—l can with pleasure bear witness to the great relief I have received from the use of Clements Tonic and Dr Fletcher’s Pills. I have been a great sufferer for 11 years from liver disease, with at times considerable enlargement, which caused a swelling in the side under the ribs and was very painful, the abdomen, bowels, &c., always felt very tender on pressure, with most obstinate constipation for which I took Fletcher’s Pills, the first dose caused a copious vacuation and gave great relief, and I thought I was all right, but after a week I was as bad again as before, I again had to recourse to Fletcher’s Pills but I took Clements Tonic as well this time and continued it for a couple of months, after the first dose I felt better and got rid of all the symptoms I used to have, as flushings of heat and cold, splitting headaches, pains in the side and small of the back, extreme lassitude, and the general feeling of ‘all right to-day seedy to-morrow,’ all these symptoms with many others I used to have, but now thanks to Clements Tonic I am quite cured, I can get up in a morning refreshed by the night’s rest and can eat a good breakfast, whereas before taking the medicine I scarcely ever could eat anything, and when I did it nearly always made me vomit, but now I am quite well and have been so for five months, I have no cause tp fear a relapse. I don’t mind you publishing my case if you add nothing to it, and it may bring relief to similar sufferers.—Yours very truly, H. Garkell.”

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WOODEX18910130.2.13

Bibliographic details

Woodville Examiner, Volume VII, Issue 659, 30 January 1891, Page 2

Word Count
625

AN UNSCRUPULOUS FOE Woodville Examiner, Volume VII, Issue 659, 30 January 1891, Page 2

AN UNSCRUPULOUS FOE Woodville Examiner, Volume VII, Issue 659, 30 January 1891, Page 2