Medical, TJOL LOW/AY'S OINTMENT Bad Legs, Bad Breasts, Wouvds. and Ulcerations of all kinds.— -There no medica. 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 aboit the part affected enters the pores as salt per* meates meat. It quickly penetrates to the source ef the evil and drives it from the system. ' : { Bronchitis, uiptlueria, Golds, Cough, Soie Throats, and Shortness of 'Breath— Rekasd and congested throats, elongated fffSb^> *+ 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 oured by rubbing this healing Ointment over the chest and back for at least half an hour twice 1 a Hay, accompanied by appropriate ioses of olloway's Pills. • : r ■ .>; DiFor Glandular Swellings, Stiff Joints and iorseases of the Skin.— There is no preparation for salutary effects comparable to this remedy It" 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 congestion and promoting a free and copiouscirculation in the parts affected; then speedily and effectually it ensures a cure. ' . Gout and RJieumatißm.—i!laa invaluable unguent has greater power over gout arid 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.—Tke cure which this Ointment, effects in healing piles and_ fistulas of long standing, after they lave 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 Gravel. — The Ointment is a sovereign remedy if it be well rubbed twice a day into the small of the back, ever tha-region of the kidneys, into which it will gradually penetrate, and in almost every case give, immediate 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 usto, in the foUovoiivg cases : — Bad Legs Fistulas Sore Thraata ' Bad Breasts Gout Skin Diseases Burns Glandular . Scurvy Bunions Swellings Sore Heads Chilblains Lumbago Tumours > Chapp'd hands Piles Ulcers , - ■ • . , Corns (soft) Rheumatism Woundc Contract'dand Sore Nipples &c. &c,: Stiff Joints. Scalds ■.•/;• The Pills and Ointment are sold a.t Profea* sor HoLLOWAY.'a Es.tablißhmentj 538, Oxford street, London; also by nearly every respectable Vendor of Medicine throughout the civilised world, in boxes and pots, at Is l£d, 2s 9d, 4s 6d, 115, 225, and 33s each The 2s 9d size contains tnree, the 4s 6d sizt six, the lls size sixteen, the 22s size thirty* three, and the 33s size fifty-two times the quantity of a Is l£d box or pot. The smallest box of Pills contains' four dozen ' and the smallest pot of Ointment one ounce. Full printed directions are affixed te eagh box and pot, and can be b,ad in. any langaage, even in Turkish, Arab, Armenian, Persian, or Chinese. E R V O U S N E S' S , Debility, Loss of Power, ; ; Spermatorrhoea, Indiscretions of Early Youth Syphilitic Diseases, In all the above cases, akisinqbbobj ebrq* AND THE YIELDING TO THE PASSION, no tim should be lost to at once arrest the progress of the disease. ■■■•■;■ > ; -.-• ■, . DR L. L. S'M IT H. Has devoted himself for twenty years in the colony to the practice of this branch of bis profession, while previously in England he was the pnpil of, and practised with,* the celebrated Dr Culverwell, the only medical practitioner who ever exclusively, adopted this as the sole branch of his profession. Dr L. L. Siprg hereby informs the public that HE IS THE . ONLY LEOALLY-QITALISTJEL MEDICAL MAN IN THIS SPECIALITY OF HIS PRO . fession; that others advertising are uh< qualified, and that, therefore, in. pretending to be qualified are obtaining money under false.pretences . . . ': : Dr L. L. Smith also warna the public against the quackeries advertising. If the taker of any of these advertised nostrums escape with his life, or his system bo not thoroughly and irreparably .undermined by them, he may look upon himself as the most fortunate mortal . ' Dr L. L. Smith has been applied to by so' many unfortunate broken-down young-old-men, utterly crushed in spirit, ruined in body, and filched in pocket, that he deems it a duty to publish this to the world., 1 Those men and women who have been the victims of unprincipled charlatans frequently seek that recovery which is often beyond Dr Smith's control When will the public " understand that it is to their interest to con* I 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 pockets and " health? ' .' ! Dr L. L. Smi^h has always stated that to warn the public of these quicksands is bis chief reason for advertising. ■ .•' . ,•' * In all cases of nervous debility,- lowness k spirits, loss of power, pimples on the fpre- ,, head, lassitude, inaptitude for business, itn- ,. potency, drainage from the system; and the .[ various effects of errors of youth and blood* '* poisoning from diseasesprevidusly contracted, Dr L. 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 arid ex-/ traordinary experience which he has had* Therefore those who really deure $o b^t treated by pne who is at thread qf his' prp^ fession in this branch of medical' pra^t^^^ ' should lose ho time in seeking his>aidvice^B Nor should anyoie marry without first cod] suiting him. • ■ ' . : The Consulting Rooms are at }82 . COLLINS STREET EAST, MELBOUKNE c Opposite the Melbourne Club, . (Late the residence of the Governor.) Private entrance is in Stephen street south,. I CONSULTING FEE ' (BY LBTTEE), £1 Medicines forwarded to all the olon es. r so packed to avoid observation. Bookß published by the Dr, can be h d on j ■ appliicatpn to him. '
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Bibliographic details
Grey River Argus, Volume XV, Issue 1829, 16 June 1874, Page 4
Word Count
1,098Page 4 Advertisements Column 6 Grey River Argus, Volume XV, Issue 1829, 16 June 1874, Page 4
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