| GBATEFUL—COMFORTING. BEEAKFAST. Ep FFB ' B pOOOA By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of well-selected cocoa, Mr Epps has provided our breakfast tables with a delicately, flavoured beverage which may save us many heavy doctors-bfll*. It is by ' the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradmaUy built w» until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack'wherever ■ there is a weak point. 1' We may esoapekany a fatal ■haft by keepingoureelves well fortified , with pure blood and a properly neuriihed frame.*—See artiole in the CfoU Service . Qtuttte. ' •.-•• -.:■,/; \ fi-i Sold in packets labelled— JAMES EPPS AND CO., HOMOEOPATHIC CHEMISTS, LONDON. ; »247 "Is there no hope f the rick man said ' The silent doctor shook his head!." " While there is life there's hope, he said, " JEgroto, dtm ammo* ett, epet ett." . DB L. ~ & M I T K£ (The only legally-qualified medical man advertising),., . C O H S,W t^B—''" On all affections of the Nervous System) ■• matter from what cause arising). ' ) ' On all broken-down constitutions. 4 On all diseases arising from: early inditere> tions. ' ' ■ t :', J ■ On Gout. :< ; On Rheumatism." . In these colonies those excesses which we have indulged in " hot youth " tell upon o* with fearful interest. *;,;••.•<■ Our regrets are useless, bur repining* futile. The sole idea should be the efaanoes we possess of remedying 1 the ills we already have, for combatting the effects likely to result. Hide it as he may, put on at good an exterior as he can, still is the victim conscious Jihat he . is a living lie, and that sooner or later hit vices >iIT discover him to the world. Our Faith, our obligations to society at large, the welfare of ear future offspring, and the duty, we owe to ourselves forbids procrastination, . and points out to vs r not to wait till the ravages break out in our constitutions. Before negotiating with a merchant, before engaging with a confidential clerk; before employing a barrister, a oanful man makes enquiries as their standing, their length of occupancy or residence; and, in the-ceefrof a legal adviser, both at to his legal.qualifloations and at to hit capabilities of transacting the individual business he consult* him, upon. Strange to say, however, in the selection of a medical, man,, the sufferer frequently omit* these necessary precautions and without regard to the fitness, qualification, experience and ability for the particular ailment requiring treatment, he consult* the nearest mant whose experience and practice, perhaps, lie* in quite an opposite direction. 5' - . I* it astonishing that to many are driven mad, are ruined in health/ and are bankrupt in spirits, hope and money f Have I not for years pointed out to them that I, tir L. L. Smith, am the only hgally guUJUd mtiiodl man advertiring in the Colonies t ' Have I not also proteouted, at my own expense, these very quacks, and exposed the. various not* trumt they are selling,—snob, at Phntphodyne Bttenoe.of Life, Ac—and had thewlnalyted and found them to consist of "Bant- Sugar and flavoring matter," and the certificate* I have raovw) to be all forgeries. It is for this reason that I step out of the ethics oi the profession and advertise, to give those who require the tervioe* of my branch an opportunity of knowing they can, tfrasult a legally qualified man, and one, moreover, who. has made this his especial study. ","',, ' ~ Dr L. L. Smith is the only legally qualified medical man, advertising, and he hit hesn in Melbourne 24 yean, in full practice on NEBVOUS DISEASES LOSS OF POWER AND DEBILITY SYPHILITIC AfVEOTIONS WANT OF OOBbmON GOUT AND RHEUMATISM. Ds L. L. SMITH can be ootuulted by letter—Fee, £1. Medicines forwarded to all the colonies. Db L. L. SMITH, 182 Collins street. Bast (Lat the Besidenee of the Oovemdi) . Mauooin. , ' '" < 617
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Thames Star, Issue 3715, 20 November 1880, Page 4
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661Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Thames Star, Issue 3715, 20 November 1880, Page 4
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