Impurities of the Blood. TTntfl these purifying Pills have had a fair trial» let no one be longer oppressed with the notion, that his malady is incurable., A few doses will remov9 all disordered actions, rouse the torpid liver, relieve the obstructed kidneys, cleanse impure blood, and confer on every function healthful vigour. They work a thorough purification throughout the whole system, without disorder* ing the natural action 01 any organ. Indigestion, Bilious Complaints, and Sick Headache. No organ fa the human body is so liable to dl». order as the liver. Kemember when nausea! fla. tulenoy, or acidity on the stomach warns us that digestion is not proceeding properly, that Hollo. way'B Pills give strength to overy organ, speedily remove all causes of indigestion, inspissated bile, ana eiclc headache, and effect a permanent cure. Weakness and Debility. In cases of debility, languor, and nervousness, generated by excess of any kind, whether mental or physical, the effects of these Pills are in tho ' Tiighcst degree bracing, ronovating, and restora- • .tiro. They drivo.from tho system ,the morbid causes of disease, re-establish the digestion, strengthen ,tho nervous system, raise tho jratient's spirits, and bring back the frame to its pristine health and vigour. - . The Kidneys—Their Derangement and Cure. \ If theso Pills be used according to the printed directions, and tho Ointment rubbed over. tho region of the kidneys for at least half an hour at bed-time, as salt is forced into meat, it will pene. trate to the kidnoysand correct any derangement therein. • Coughs and Colds. This purifying and regulating medicine, in con. junction with Kolloway's Ointment, Is the'best cure for hoarseness, spro throats, diptheria, pleu. risy, and asthnfa; and. an infallible remedy for congestion, bronchitis, and inflammation, indeed ,- as a family medicine, they are invaluable for sub. duing such ailments of young and old of both 60X03. "■"• '-;■■-' ' : ,'; Hollowai/s Pills are the best remedy knoicri'inthe world for the following diseases i—. Ague Gout Secondary Asthma Headache Symptoms Bilious Com. Indigestion ■ Tic-Doloreux >. plaints Liver Com. Ulcers : Bowel Com. plaints Venereal Affec. plaints <■ Lumbago tions Debility Piles .Worms of all Dropsy J Bheumatism kinds Female Irrogu. Scrofula, or Weakness, from larities King's Evil whatever Fevers all kinds Eore Throats . oaußo,&c. The Pills and Ointment are Manufactured only at 78 JTewOxford St. (late 533 Oxford St.) London; And are sold by all Vendors of Medicines | throughout the Civilized Woild; with directions for use in almost every language. / «S* Purchasers should look to the label on the Pots and Boxes. If the address is not 533, Oxford Street, London, they are spurioui. SPECIALITY I SPECIALISTS! Draw on Naticver-slie compels you to honour the acceptance^ mHIRTY years since, when Db Smith first X commenced practice here,- it wes thought by medical men, that to be a Specialist was derogatory to the professional man, -bat this, like most other innovations in scientific and lay matters, was found rather to aid than to be " infra dig " to that profession, wherein the speciality was practised. Lallemand; and Bicord, in France, and Aoton, in England, •were for years cried down by their medical brethren. Now and for many past years they have been looked up to, and, quoted, by every j man who pretends to hare any knowledge of the particular branch of the profession which these gentlemen specially devoted themselTes to. It was the same with Erasmus Wilson, the " Skin Doctor," recently knighted by Her Majesty. Years since, it was the same with Dr. L. L. Smith, of Melbourne, who practised (as did Lallemand and Bicord) as a specialist. • In all cases of diseases and habits which produce symptoms of.Nervouß Affections, of Skin Eruptions, of Prostration, aud make human beings invirile, or which unfit them to carry on the purposes of their being, or which demonstrates itself, on the other hand, in Eruptive Diseases and Secondary Forms of Affections. In all of these cases how necessary it is to hare the Specialist who has devoted his whole', lifetime to the studying aid practising in this one branch of his pro* feseion ? Hence, now, after so many years, all minutiae are familiar to him, and symptoms which (it is not unreasonable to suppose) may r,ot strike the General Practitioner at once, now from constant practice and observation made Dr. L. L. Smith master of the subject. . : The medical profession—that is, the more liberal-minded of them—have likewise recognised this fact, and Specialists now in every branch—oculists; aurists, syphilic, mental diseases, chest diseases, and in fact every portion of the human frame, has now some member of the profession who devotes his time to that, and. to none other. For instance,. the "chest doctor" would on no account attend an accouc' ement, and the oculist would not think of setting a broken leg; but each would advise his patient to go to that doctor who is most famed for treating.the disease requiring special skill. DbL. L. Smith asks those who^Require treatment for Weakness, Prostration, barrenness, and Sterility, who?e frames and whose constitutions are shattered, to consult him as an expert—thirty (30) years practice in thi» colony, with a practice extending throughout not only the Colonies but in ludia, China, Fiji, and even in England, he claims ought to be sufficient to cause every man or Woman requiring such skill as is alluded to above, to consult him either personally or by letter. As a Syphilographer no other medical man has been able to have auoh large experience as he poesesses, and for other allied affections such as Nervous disease—no one in the profession has enjoyed so much public confidence. , DRL.L. SMITH. CONSULTATION FEE BY LETTER, £1. Medicine appropriately packed and forwarded all over the civilised globe. DRL.ITiMITH, 182, CoiiUNS STBBET EAST, MbIBOXTBHE. BINTIN& executed in any Color, and '■■ the best designs, at the Stab Officeilbert street Samples to be »ee n on the premises. %
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THS18840222.2.19.6
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Thames Star, Volume XV, Issue 4720, 22 February 1884, Page 4
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971Page 4 Advertisements Column 6 Thames Star, Volume XV, Issue 4720, 22 February 1884, Page 4
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