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t&orftial Pairaiaaaters • ';■ v- 7 - E. HALL, OBDIAL, LI QUEUE. Seated "watef ma^ufactubes. . ;T , : . JFBIEKD OF ALL. Oi i 0 T'S PILLS. ' '"' -■ ■ Jmpuritfies of fAe Shod. Z7n£t7 these purifying Pill? have had a fair trial, let no one be longer oppressed with the notion that his malady is incurable. A. few doses will remove all disordered actions, rouse the torpid liver, relieve the obstructed kidneys, cleanse impure blood, and confer on every function 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. Remember when nausea, flatulency, or acidity on the, stomach warns us ..that digestion is wot proceeding properly, that, .Molloioay's Pills give strength to every organ, speedily remove all causes of indigestion, inspissated bile, and sick headache, and effect a permanent cure. , Weakness and Debility. ■■: : 2»: cases of debility , languor, and nervousness, generated by excess of any kind, wliether - mental or physical, the effects of these Pills are in the highest andre'stordtive. They drive from the system themorbid causes of disease, re-establish the digestion, strengthen the nervous system, raise the patient's spirits, and bring back the fram 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 Half an hour at bed-timt T as salt is forced into meat, it -will penetrate to the kidneys and cor preetany derangemenifyherein. Coughs and Colds. This purifying and regulating medicine, in .conjunction with Mollowaf s Ointment, is the .best.curefor hoarseness, sore throats, dipiheria, pleurisy, and asthma; and an infallible , remedy for" congestion, bronchitis, and inflam- .. viafion, indeed as a family 'medicine, iheu are i. fox subduing such ailments of young a ,. xd.ald.ofboi'h sexes. Jib ''lloway's P ills are the best remedy known xii '• the toorldjbr thefolloiving diseases: — Ague ' f Gout \S e eon d arg A sthn *« Jleadache symptoms Ague' G-out A,sthm *« Jleadacke Bilioui » (Com- Indigestion symptoms Tic Doloreux : plain <* 'Liner Com- Ulcers Bowel '.Cypt-. plawtts \jeneresdaffee- ' { plaints''■!'■ '.Lumbago tions Debility' : '• Pile* \ Worms of all 'Dropsy''- •'■'"' •Sheuviaoism \ kinds or\Weakn ess I laritiei? . ffing\*. JBvil \ from what- : fver causa, \ kinds- ; ■' ■ --: : p : \ sc.,sc. ■■'■ ' \ The:PUk'.Mn)^ i fessorMollowat/ ."* Establish. >ne*t, 533 C. street, London rlyevery respectable Vendor of M'oicine-thro ugtout the ChiU '.ised World. ~-' - • -..'■■■ , . - .•;■•', ; '". Pull printed ■dk-tXfp&i/are, ■„<#*«* *° each Pot, and, Box ,, and, & 'mfaJia& i; * anylanguage [even : [m "*°?» Persian, 'or.Chinese, .j.'.; >,> ■■u-'''-..--^'.- ;.■-; .-•■.-..; - \ "Is'th^re : nq.'hope?l'hesic7ima *said; '■''.. The silent,doctor,-sh'ook his he. ai -' , •■■■ ™W%ilei&&ei*jifeffe&sfiqp,-t Scried. \ ... -JEgroto; dum animas±*M, spes ei <• . i; L./JIM I . T &> . f.\ (The'only 'Ugally-Qu^ltgedi. m. " dical 1.. ~ ~;,-.; man advertising) " CONSULTS'— . - On all affections of the Nervous Bs3#mn t ; - > matterfrom what cause a/islxg-j.-. On all broken-down constitutions.' '-'. > " On all diseases arising from early ' tions. ~~ ■' "'"'' On Gout. On Rheumatism. ,-. L i , In these Colonies, those excesses,-: which tat* • have indulgedin " hot youth" tell uponusw.ify- • fearful interest. ..'"'' " x ' ■: \ Our regrets are useless, our repinings futile.'. The sole idea should be the chances toe possess* ' of 'remedying the ills we already have, or'cpm.- ■ [bating the effects likely to result. Hicteit&s he may, put on as good an exterior as he ca&\ ■ still is the victim conscious that lie is a living lie, and shat sooner or later his vices will disi cover him to the world. Our Faith, our obW-' ' ; gations to society at large, the welfare of our future offspring, and the duty we oaye to ourselves forbids procrastination, and points out to us, not to wait till the ravages break out tk our constitutions. Before negotiating with- a merchant, before engaging with a confidential clerk ,- before eniploying a barrister, a careful man makes enquiries as to their standing, their length of oc- ' cupancy or residence ; and, in the case of a legal adviser, both as to his legal qualifications and as to his capabilities of transacting the .individual business he consulss him' upon Strange to say, however, in th". selection of a medical man., the sufferer Jrecently omits these necessary precautions and without regara to tke fitness, qualification, experience and ability for the particular ailment r?qu-,hia .treatment,: he consults the nearest mxn, whose experience, and practice, .perhaps, lies iii, quite an opposite direction. ~:...■,*■■ ■■>•■. ; It is astonishing that so'many are' mad, are ruined in health, and are bankrupt 'in spirits, hope and money /, Move I not for years pointed out to (hem il ai'l, Dr L L Smith- Wn the only legally qualified 'medical ■man advertising in the Colonic'l not " also prosecuted, at my own expense, these veru quacks, and exposed the various tf * are selling,— such as Phospr w d V ne~~jiZJr"l?f Life, sc.—and had them a ,,- "fo-Zi them to consist of « Burnt Sugar and Lcorxngpatter and the certifies I have proved to be all forgery.' It * /or this rta £ 2 step out of the ethics of the profess** and advertise, to give those who rcqu.re tJie - e / vices of my branch an opportunity, of ; knowina . they can consult a legally one, moreover, who has made ,kts kh ™w study. ' '■'*■*-*<"' fied meaUeal man lahelt ftrssr "'-";«**£-*= Loss of Bower & Debility Syphilitic Affections J Want of Condition j <*out and Rheumatism. ter—Fee £l. Medicines forwarded & all the colonies. ■ ' b l>r.L. L. SMITff, l&J Collins st. EcsL - (LateiheßesidenoeoftheGovernorJ

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MIC18761020.2.18.7

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Mount Ida Chronicle, Volume VII, Issue 397, 20 October 1876, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
879

Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Mount Ida Chronicle, Volume VII, Issue 397, 20 October 1876, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Mount Ida Chronicle, Volume VII, Issue 397, 20 October 1876, Page 4

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