- Medical. , ;v/ TTOLLOWAY'S OINTMENT Bad Legs, Bad Breasts, Wouvds. and Ulceratiqns oj all kinds.— There do medical preparation which may be : so thoroughly - relied upon in the treatment of the above : ailments as Holloway's Ointment.; Nothing , can be more simple and safe than the manner in which it is applied, nothing more salutary ■ than its action on the body, both locally and constitutionally; The Ointment rubbed about the part affected enters the pores as salt permeates meat. It quickly penetrates to the ; : source of the evil and drives it from the ! system. ' ; Bronchitis, jjipt/ieria, Golds, Goughs, 8«r« Throats, and Sliortness of Breath— Relaxed ' and congested throats, elongated uvula, ulcerated or turgid tonsils, whooping cough, croup, asthma, wheezing from accumulated : : mucous, and other difficulties*of respiration, also palpitation, stitches, and shortness of breath, may with certainty . be- cured by rubbing this healing Ointment over the chbst and back for at least half an hour twice a day; accompanied by appropriate doses of Holloway's Pills. ; For Glandular Swellings, Stiff Joints and. Diseases oj tlie Skin.— •There is no preparation • • for salutary effects comparable to this remedy. ' .;ff Ib should be well : rubbed over the affected .:.:< parts after their due formation with warm. . water. It acts by stimulating the absorbents .•> to increased activity, by preventing conge** ,■ tion and promoting a free and copious circu- , lation in the parts affected ; then speedily < and effectually ie ensures a cure. , . Gout and Rlieumatism. — This invaluable ■' unguent has greater power over gout and rheumatism than any other ' preparation? ' None need remain in pain if its removal be ' set about in good earnest, by using this infallible remedy according to the printed instructions affixed to each pot. All settled ; aches and pains are remediable in the same manner. , , ; ...■, ■■] , Piles, Fistulas, and Mecoriations.— The ''■ cure which this Ointment effects in healing . piles and fistulas of longstanding, after. they . have resisted all other applications^ have. .. been so countless and so notorious. throughout the world that any effort to give an ; adequately detailed statement of their number or character would be vain." It is sufficient to know that the Ointment has never- - proved inefficacious , . - ■ .■ In Disorders of the Kidneys— Stone. and li Gravel. — The Ointment is a sovereign ,> remedy if it be well rubbed twice a day into the small of the back, ever the region of the • kidneys, into which it will gradually penev trate, and in almost every case give imme- ' diate relief. Whenever this Ointment haa ! been once used it has established its, own worth, and has again been eagerly sought for as the easiest and safest remedy in all the ' disorders of the kidneys. '♦• Both the Ointment and Pills should be twea in the foUowing cases :— Bad Legs Fistulas Sore Throats' ■ Bad Breasts Gout Skin Diseases : Burns Glandular Scurvy V; '. Bunions Swellings Sore Heads .; Chilblains Lumbago Tumours: r Chapp'd hands Piles . Ulcers : .■'.'.. Corns (soft) Rheumatism Woundt • . ' Contract'd and Sore Nipples &c. &c, "' Stiff Joints. Scalds I The Pills and Ointment are soldat Profes* sor Holloway's Establishment, 533, Oxford street, London; also by nearly every re., spectable Vendor of Medicine throughout' the civilised world, in boxes and pots, at Is : ■ l^d, 2s 9d, 4s 6d, lls, 225, and 33s each: > The 2s 9d size contains tnree, the 4s 6d sizi r six, the lls size sixteen, the 22a size thirty* three, and the 33s size fifty-two times .the, ; quantity of a Is ljd box or pot. The; .. smallest box of Pills contains four dozen and the smallest pot of Ointment one ounce. Full printed directions are affixed ' t« eacb . box and pot, and can be had in any language, ' even in Turkish, Arab, Armenian, Persian, ' or Chinese. • ; NERVOUS NESS, Debility, ,;., v V, ; j Losb of Power, ■ Spermatorrhoea, ;: Indiscretions of Early Youth , Syphilitic Diseases. In all the above cases, ARisiNasßOM brro* : AND THE YIELDING TO THE PAS^N, no tim should be lost to at once arrest the (progress of the disease. DR L. L. SMI fH. Has devoted himself for twenty years in the ! colony to the practice of this branch of his • profession, while previously in England he i was the pupil of, and practised with, the celebrated Dr Culverwell, the only medical*? < practitioner who ever exclusively adoptesT" ; this as the sole branch of his profession. ; , Dr L. L. Smith hereby informs the public that HE IS THE ONLY LEGALLY-QD-ALniBL MEDICAL MAN IN THIS SPECIALITY OP HIS PRO FEBSIONJ that others advertising are un> : qualified, and that, therefore, in' pretending ' to be qualified are obtaining money under ' false pretences > .' - Dr L. L. Smith also warns the publio against the quackeries advertising. If the ; taker of any of these advertised, nostrums .; escape with his life, or his system be not . thoroughly and irreparably undermined .by ; : them, he may look upon himself as the most : p fortunate mortal,. ' J . ", , ; " r '"'.. '■'!', Dr L. L. Smith has been applied to by so ' - - . many, unfortunate broken-down young-old- ' men. utterly crushed in spirft, ruined in : body, and filched in pocket, that he deems ' ' it a duty to publish thia to the world. ;. ■ ! Those men and women who have been th« '- victims of unprincipled charlatans frequently ■ seek that reoovery which is often beyond : Dr Smith's control . : ; When will the public. ; . understand that it is to their interest to con-^ ; * - suit a duly qualified medical man, who has: . made this his sole study,- rather than apply to a number of ignorant impostors,- who merely harp and prey upon their 1 Dockets and ,' health? . . : . ; ' Dr L. L. Smith has always stated that to ; warn the public of these quicksands ia bin chief reason for advertising. . ' '■■'• r; :> ■> In all cases of nervous debility, lowness ■ > spirits, loss of power, pimples on the fore** ' ■ head, lassitude, inaptitude for business, im< potency, drainage from the system, and the ■ various effects of errors of youth and, blood* Stoning from diseaseapreviously contracted, rL. L. Smith invites sufferers to consult. : him, as he has no hesitation in stating that no medical man, either here or in England, . has had the opportunities of practice and ex- v traordinary experience which he has had.' : Therefore those who really i desiro to be treated by one who 1b at the head of his pro. fession in this branch of medical practice : should lose no time itf seeking his advice. -, Nor shonld anyone marry without first con ' . suiting him.: : ; ■;.-.■ . . .* The Consulting Rooms are at 182 | COLLINS STREET EAST,.MELBOURNE Opposite the Melbourne Club, :.■■,. ,.-!' (Late the residence of the Governor.) Private entrance ia in Stephen street south. CONSULTING FEE (BY LETTER), £1 Medicines forwarded to all the ©lon cc, so packed to avoid observation. Bookß published by the Dr, can be h don appliicaton to him. i
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Bibliographic details
Grey River Argus, Volume XV, Issue 1823, 10 June 1874, Page 4
Word Count
1,106Page 4 Advertisements Column 6 Grey River Argus, Volume XV, Issue 1823, 10 June 1874, Page 4
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