(t orfiial gtXaiuifatlttr£rs E. HALL, ~1 O liD I AL, LJQUEUI \ " / AND : SEATED WATEB MAJfUFACT UEJS&. NASEBT gibu£ras£iiuids. ; IEIEND OF.ALL. ff 0 L Z 0 W A y' SPILLS. Impurities of the Blood. - Until these.■purifying Pills have had a fair trial, let no one be longer oppressed with the notion that his malady is incurable. A. ftw doses will remove all disordered actions, rouSe: the torpid liver, relieve the obstructed kidneys, cleanse impure blood,, and confer on ever.yfunction healthful vigor. They work a thorough •purification,..throughout the whole system, without disordering the natural action of any organ. Indigestion, Bilious Complaints, and'.Sick -Headache, . No organ in the human body is. so - liable to disorder as the liver. JLemember when nausea, flatulency, or acidity on the stomach warns us thai digestion is nobproceeding properly, that, Ilolloway's Pills give strength to.every organ y remove all.causes of indigestion, inspissated bile, and sick headache, and effect a permanent cure. ; I Weakness and, Debility; . ; In cases of debility {languor, arid nervousness, generated by excess of any Jcind, whether mental or physical, the effects of these Pills art in the highest degreebracing,renovating, and restorative. They drive from the system the morbid causes of disease, re-establish the-di-gestion, strengthen the nervous system, 'raise the patient's spirits, and bring back the f ram to its pristine health and vigor. ' The Kidneys—Their Derangement and Cure. If these Pills be used according to the printed' directions, and the Ointment rubbed over the region of the kidneys for at least haij • an'hour at bed-time, ; as-salt is forced into meat, .it will penetrate to the kidneys and cor red any derangement'Jherein. . " Coughs and Colds. - This purifying and' regulating medicine, in conjunction, with Hollowaif's Ointment, in the best curefor hoarseness, y sore throats I ;dlpiier-.a, pleurisy,and astlinia,• arid'•'ah, iiifaUivw re-,iiedg_for congestion,'bronc/iitis; and injlam;map.bn', mde&d as a family mediciiie, tlteq are subduing such ailm&iii; of young and old of both sexes. - " '.• : Holtbwdy's l Pills are the best-remedy known 'in the'yforldfor thefollowing diseases,:?— Ague ' Gout" . ■ S-e'con dd ry - , 'Jd.sthm'&- : ' i"*'j Headache ■■ > symptoms* Bilious i Comr ,Indigestion Tic Dplqreux plaints _ Liver Com- Ulcers Bowel (J til- plaints Ifenerealccjlcplaints Lumbago ' ' iions - Debility, _ , r Piles Worms of-all r Dropsy\ ' ' Rlteumaiism' : kinds Femaleirregu- fecrdfiila or' JPeak'n ess grilles iKing's'JEvU from what- . Fevers, of'att Sore Throats fvei ■ caims.y kinds sc:,sc: The' Pills uhd Ointment are sold at P'ofessor Holloway's Establishment; 53-j O.iford- ■ street. f- London also bj "iisarcy every able Vendor, of Medicine throughout Ike Cn>disedijfiorld. *•?' -Fullprinted' directions are'yffixed io each ."Pot; and Box;and can.be had itt any language even in 'Turkish, Arabic, Anneinau, Persian, or Chinese. ' " " Is there no hbpe-l the sick man said; ! > The silent doctor shook his head.". - _ ■ - W liilefhere is lifetheie 'shope, he.cried/ 3 '? 3Sgroto, dwin animas est, spesest." Hi BL. L . 8 AL I T IT. (The only . leg ally qualified sneaical man adve. libi.igj . . • CONSULT#— On'all affections of the JServofs'SysCem (nomatter from what cau-4e arising//On all broken-down constitutionsH • On all diseases arising from early indiscre- . iions. ; a On Gout. ; On Rheumatism. 7 ' In these Colonies, tJiase excesses, 'which %os have indulged in i £ hot youth 1 tsll upon us id if* fearful interest. ' Our regrets are useless, oiir repir.higs futile. The sole idea! should be the chances ' use possess of remedying the ills we already have, or combating the effects likely to result: - Hide it as he mag, put on as'good an exterior as he can, still is t/ie victim conscious that he is a living lie, and shat sooner or later Ms vices'will discover him to the world. Our Faith, oar obligatioiis to society at large, the welfare of our fiitui e offspring, and the duty we owe to ourselves fdi bids procrastination, and poiii'-s o:ii io us, not to wait till the ravages break out in our constitutions. , Before nenociating with a merchant, before engaging with a confidential, clerk; before employing a barrister, a careful man makes enquiries as to their standing, their length of os-cupa-.icy or reshienee; and, in the case of a legal adviser, both as to his legal qnatijicaliom "t to ¥ s ca P a W:fies of trarsac-ii-ig ike individual business he eonsulss h>m . { »m Strange to say, however, in th'. selection 0 f a meukCal ma-., the sufferer J request v civ, ttiese necessarypreeaucions and ivithoui regret ' i - experience "an d al) tidy Jor the particular ailment renvirina treatment r tite .nearest ma»~ t*ho*e experience. aud-praotice, perhaps, iies in mule an ojiposite direction. ' • • »» " M is astonishing that so many are driven mad, are ruined in health, ana krd m spirits, hope and money ! Mavs 1 1 uoi for years■ pointed- out to ih*m that I, Dr. L. i,. SnJ it*?, ant.the. only legally q t;a l fied m-'dioa' n,a„ adverting in the Colo.ues I Havel not aiso prosecuted, at my own expense, ine:e vcr.'i quacks, and exposed the various nostrums Ikw arc sdliv.gr—such as PAcsphodyne, JZss*nee of •~y*> 4' b -~ had theiu analysed an 4 found iJiem to consist of " Burnt,vSil/ar and fcrortng matter,'' a ,id the certtfcaies J have p.-oved to be all forgoes. It ,sfor this rtaJi- thai Js, cp o:U oj ,'he ethics of the profess. o,i and advertise, io give' those who f/. e ser , vices of my branch an opportunity of 'knoicing thai can consult a legally qkatijioa ma;tt anc i ose.wortfotw, tcho kits mass(Ais hit especial Dr. L. .1* Sm&k is the only legally qualified- -medical ■ «ia»,• advertising,- and he has ''®f* injnltpwiice e» A\>ri'ous JJ;tsar's l*>ss t$- Fo»er Debility Syphilitic Jflvctio.is Ikant vfUokdition .. out and Ji'h^umatistn. Dr. L. L. HM'lTflcan.le'bonsidied by h - ttr—* ea, ±,l. Miuiieities farioarited io ail lAcolonies, - Dr D. Z. SmTif, IS2 Collins st. Hast, (Date the j&gsid*ttce of the MEiB6Ok»E. ■ •' '
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MIC18760922.2.19.7
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Mount Ida Chronicle, Volume VII, Issue 393, 22 September 1876, Page 4
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940Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Mount Ida Chronicle, Volume VII, Issue 393, 22 September 1876, Page 4
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