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OROPESSOR GUSCOTT X MAY NOW BE CONSULTED AT HIS RESIDENCE, SOUTH TOWN BELT, CHRISTCHURCH, Second Door East from Colombo Street. TESTIMONIALS.

A WONDERFUL CURE. Professor Guscott, South Town Belt. Dear Sib,— l have been troubled with nervous debility for the past eight years, brought on, as you have explained m the CanterOuri, Times by the indiscretion of early youth. I have spout scores ot pounds first with one and then with another, but never received any permanent benefits. Some said that I had heart disease, others that I was consumptive, but when I wrote to you from the Rakaia you explained my symptoms so exactly that I was induced to come to town at once, though you told me you could treat me equally as well by stopping and attending to my work as in losing time by comiug to town. I was unfit for work, so decided to come to town for a spell , as I could neither eat nor sleep. My mind wandered : I had a desire to bo away from company, and yet when alone my own company was hateful to me. I was troubled with the most hideous dreams, and was in that low, nervous state which made me sometimes feel as if death would be a happy release. My head ached, my heart palpitated violently, I would start almost at my own shadow. My mind, in fact, was not my own. I saw you on my arrival in town, when you were in Manchester street, and you then tokl me taat ie would take three months at the very least to effect a perrect cure, and that I must comply exactly with your instructions ; it not, you wouja not guarantee a cure. lam happy now to siy that I did as you told me to the very reflating my hours and habits, and that now, after the lap*e of fifteen weeks, my memory is restored, my sight has become strong a-ain, my mind has ceased to wander, I can enjoy company, and. in short. Richard's himself again. I should not go to the trouble of describing so minutely my sufferings, but that I know oC so many young men who are living secluded lives whose sufferings are precisely what my own were before I came to you, and who, although m health, would be really amiable and estimable persons, are looked upon as gloomy, morose, unsociable men simply because ot tuat phase of the disease which I have named, a hatred for company. It this should b 3 read by any of those persons, suffering a* I^anil they are induced to apply to you for relief, I will guarantee that they will say after a few weeks that they never laid out a more profitable sum of money than when they came to Professor Cmscott.— tfolievc me, yours faithfully, T .. ' J JJ RICHARD DOESON. P.S.-I icturn to my work to-morrow, and I know my friends there will be agreeably astonished at my present appearance. Victoria street, Christchurch, Jan. 20, ISBO. PUOFJESSOIi GUriUOTT, South Town Bdt. DEAU Siu,-I return the small case or medicine sent by bearer, as before the last case was finished my pain ha I ceased and J lelt so much better that I intended ealUnjj to scu you to ask tor soaiu otiict treatment which would restore my former strength, as weakness is now the only thin- from which I now suffer. The rheumatism has completely left me, and I assure yon I have not been tree trom it until now'for two years. lVrhapo if you scud me some tonic, to give me siu appetite, I shall hz able to regiiiu strength.— Yours jtauhlully, Ferry Roarl. Jan. 20. ISSO. Pnoi'-Esson Guscott. Deau Sir,— lt is rather a difficult matter to comply with your request, as I have some delicacy in advertising my cure. 1 reel, nowever, that I should be wanting in gratitude if I did not stale that when I came to you for treatment you refused to take any payment until I had taken sufficient of your medicine to satisfy myse.t tnat you could cure me of the distressing nervous debility trom ffiiicu i suffered. I may state shortly that you restored me to perrect healtn, but would rather not enter into a particular description or. my cumnlaint. — Yours truly, ,T, T J TllOilAb MOBAX. Southbridge, January 7, 1880. Professor Guescori 1 . South Town Belt. Deak b'm,— The last case of medicine has arrived all right, but the cost of carriage is rather high. Please send the next case by steamer, and I think I shall not require any more, as I am so inucu better. When I remember that you only commenced treating me at Christmas and that I am now on a fair way to recovery, I believe that I shall not want much more medicine. If you knew the amount of money I have spent in trying to get rid of this horrible sciatica which you have now almost driven off. I think I have been a tool in not writing to you when you were at Duoedin, but I put it oft from, time to time. I send you with this the second and last iustalment ot £o, which please acknowledge and oblige yours truly, Mauuick Waldek. Kuinara, January 17, 18S0. Peofessor Guscott, South Belt. Dear Sib, — I cannot give you the letter you ask for, as Ido no want people to know that you have been treating me, unless you like to publish my statement without showing my name. If you consent to do this you arc at liberty to state that I was suffering for about three years from unpleasant, weakening dreams, which brought on all the unpleasaj^t effects of languor and loss of en^my and a sort ot feeling that 1 was done tip. You treated me for ten wueks and I am now quite well. — Yours, &c. P. 3L'U .

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZT18800319.2.9.2

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Tablet, Volume VII, Issue 361, 19 March 1880, Page 10

Word Count
987

Page 10 Advertisements Column 2 New Zealand Tablet, Volume VII, Issue 361, 19 March 1880, Page 10

Page 10 Advertisements Column 2 New Zealand Tablet, Volume VII, Issue 361, 19 March 1880, Page 10