Obstinate, inveterate, and habitual constipation, - costiveness - not only totally overcome, but also completely destroyed - without using either purgatives, injections or baths - by a natural, simple, agreeable, and infallible means, recently discovered in France.
- Warton, Mr.
- Date:
- 1846
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Obstinate, inveterate, and habitual constipation, - costiveness - not only totally overcome, but also completely destroyed - without using either purgatives, injections or baths - by a natural, simple, agreeable, and infallible means, recently discovered in France. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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![II] —■ and nothing out the truth” by the Documents which this same treatise contains, and which consist, not only of nume¬ rous Certificates from many eminent Physicians, of Testi¬ monials from many worthy Ministers of Religion, of De¬ clarations from Cloistered Religious, of Attestations from a multitude of other most estimable persons in each class of society, but also of a very great number of AUTHENTIC DOCUMENTS recently produced before the COUR ROYALE DE PARIS, on the occasion of the process in law carried on against us, under the charge of propagating the use of SECRET Remedies, the Ervalenta, and the Cochin—Chinese Melasse; process which was definitively decided in our favour, before the Cour Royale de Pains, the 1st of July, 1843, in consequence of an appeal made by the Govern¬ ment against the sentence of discharge passed, from the com¬ mencement, in our favour before the Court of Police Cor- **ectionnelle. (See in the Title the three passages, reproduced rom the Public Journals.) We give in this book a number sufficiently great of the Series of Documents, Certificates, Testimonials, Declarations, tnd Attestations which were produced before the Cour Royale de Paris, to convince the Reader that never probably (Util this day, relatively to any means newly proposed for curing iseases, were proofs furnished so clear, so complete, so in- ontestable, and so multiplied ; for on reading the Docu- lents, he will remark: 1st. That the persons who declare* ttest, depose, are not obscure, but on the contrary, well nown; 2dly. That they are not of a doubtful respectability, ut often of the highest distinction; 3dly. That their resi- ences are not described vaguely, but indicated with the great- *t precision; 41hly. That they are not persons who live all in ie same neighbourhood, where one might be suspected to in-](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b29348043_0011.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


