lIOLLOWAY'S I'IU/3.—Tlio Liver, the Stomach, and thoir ailments.—Alternations of - teinpcraturo, muggy weather, a troubled mind, sedentary habits, excesses of the table, and a gay reckless mode of life exert the riiost deleterious influeuco over the liver and stomach. When once thoso organs are fairly jont of order, f^reat inroads are quickly made on the general state ot the health : the constitution, which has been deprived of two of its noblest organs, soon gives" way, and diseases quickly follow, from which, if neglected, the worst consequences will inevitably result. If a course of Holloway's celebrated Pills be persevered in, all will be well again, as they are the finest and noblest correctives of the blood ever known, and a certain cure or nil disorders of the liver and stomach,
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Thames Star, Volume VII, Issue 2518, 31 January 1877, Page 2
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128Page 2 Advertisements Column 3 Thames Star, Volume VII, Issue 2518, 31 January 1877, Page 2
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