Medical : ' ■ ,j^^oM^S^-, s '.■..-.., Impurities of the Blood. Until those purifying Pills havcliad a fair trial, let no one be longer oppressed with tho notion that his malady is incurable. A few doses will remove all disordored actions, rouso tho torpid liver, relieve tho obstructed kidneys, cleanso impure blood, and confer on every function health. ■ fill vigour. They work a thorough puriacation ' throughout the wholo system, without disorder. tog the natural action ot any organ. Indigestion, Bilious Complaints, and Sick Headache. No organ In the human body 1b bo liablo to dis. J order as t,ho liver. Remember when nausea, fla. tolenoy, or acidity on tlio stomach warns us t.bat v digestion is not procserting properly, that JJoilo. way's Pills give strength to every organ, spocclily remove all causea of Indigestion," inspissated bilo, and sick headache, and cilect a permanent cure. Weakness' and Debility. j In cases of debility, languor, and nervousness, generated by excess of any kind, whether mental or physical, tho effocts of theso Villa are in. tho highest dogreo bracing, renovating 1, and restorative. They drivo from tho system the morbid cauees of disease, re-establish tbo digeßtion, etrongthen the nervous system, rniso tho pa. tiont's spirits, and bring back tho framo to its pristine health and vigoiir. The Kidneys—Their Derangement and Cure. • ' If those Pills bo'ustxi according to tho printed directions, and tho Oiutinunti. rubbed over tho region of tho kidneys for at least half an bour at bed-time, as salt ia forced into meat, it-will pone. ■ trato to the kiduoyaand covrcct any derangemoat therein. , Coughs and Colds. This purifying and regulating medicine, in con. junction with Holloway's Ointnumt, is the best cure for hoarseness, soro throats, diptheria, plou. risy, and asthma; and an infallible remedy for congestion, bronchitis, and inflammation, indeot! as a family modicmo, they are invaluable for oub. fluing such ailments of young and old of lx)th eases. • ■ Hollow ail 1 s Pills are the host remedy known in the world for the following discuses :— Ague Gout . Secondary Asthma Headache , Sjinptoma BiUoiis Com. Indigestion Tic-Dolorcux, " plaints . Liver Com- Ulcers Bovrel Com- plaints Venereal jUfrcplaints Lumbago tions Dobjlity Piles Worms of all Dropsy Rheumatism kinds Femalo Irrogu- Scrofula, or Weakness, from , -larltiee .King's Kvil ] whatever ■■ Fetors all kinds fioro Throata j cause, ' &o. I The Pills and Ointment ar" Manufactured only at , j 78NewOsford St. (late 533 Oxford St.) London; And arc sold by all Vendors of Medicines throughout, the Civilized World: with directions for use in almost every language. I *»TPurchasers should look to the Label on the Pots and Boxhs. If the address is not 533, Oxford Street, London, they are spurious. Diseased Nature oftentimes breaks forth in Btrange eruptions."—Act iii, Scene 1. TO THE PUBLIC. SOME patients suffering from nervous affections are afraid from sheer bashfulness ancl modesty to pebsokaxit consult a medical man—other patients have not the self-pos«ession and coolness when in the con* suiting room, to accurately describe their ovmptoms —their . babite of life, and the nature of tho disease they suffer from. Let Mich persons (he or she) sit quietly down in fche privacy of their own apartments, and «ilh calm minds describe clearly, each | symptom of their case, a clear statement thus written, and laid before me is, far preferable in ztbrvous diseases to a personal consultation. Where, however, a disease is of a peculiar and exceptional character, a personal consultation may become necsssary ; but my success in correspondence is so great, tbat of the thousands upon thousands whom T bare treated by letter during the last 32 years, not a single mistake Las ever occurred, not a case has ever been made public—in fact the very simplicity of my system of correspondence preventb publicity. At the same time medicines are sent to my patients in such a form as to defy detection. How many thousan'dj have I not brought joy to? How many hare' been enabled to enter into the marriage state through consulting me? How many after marriage have privately consulted me and been blessed and their married lives made fruitful and happy. How many wasted ruined youths of both sexes have also been restored to health, and thanked their manhood, for having consulted me by letter. How many questions arise where the family physician in unable to unravel the case and where often the patient lingers on, not J cforing to toll his family medical adyieer tho nature of his complaint, until consumption wasting, or mental discuses, set in and the sufferer gets beyond the euriablo etage, and is left a hopeless wreck. A letter written in. tho prir*oy of tho room and dropped in the post box roaches me quietly ; the answer is returned us quietly and unostentatious, and the patient, without stepping from his chamber, except to pest his letter, is by return of pjasfc put in full possession of the nature of his case. Hie hopes are rritsod his doubts removed, and he is comparatively a new man; in fuct, in many cases, • new being altogether. The only addition to the ordinary written letter is the age occupation, habito and «ytnp< toms, nothing more. The usual consultation fee of £1 (one pound) must be enclosed, otherwise no answer will be returned. There are thousands of cases in daily life where a consultation with one at a distance will remove by a single letter a great fear, a great care, and it often solves what appears as an impenetrable mystery. Many a sad heart has been made joyful on receipt of an explanatory letter from me. To those who are about to marry, I would say consult me before doing so, and thus prevent many after troubles,- and remove many unnecessary fears and prejudices; to those, more especially, who have suffered in early years front disease, or who have yielded to their passion*. To these I say, at once, consult with me, do lipt tarry, delays are dangerous, and as an expert, myitiinc may not be always at your service, you can, by iemply enclosing one pound, have the benefit of my experience in the same manner as if I lived in your town, and with the additional advantage of thorough privacy.—Yours, truly, LOUIS L. SMITH. Address— DEL. L. SMITH. 182 COLLINS STREET EAST Melbourne. CONSULTATION FEE BY LETTER, £1. Fee for personal Consultation, £1 1. The latter is inclusive of Medicine. Medicines forwarded, well-packed, to all tb* Colonies, India and Europs. ,18*. Oosunrp itbbsi Babt, M,wk>vmxm,
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THS18850218.2.22.5
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Thames Star, Volume XVI, Issue 5024, 18 February 1885, Page 4
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1,073Page 4 Advertisements Column 5 Thames Star, Volume XVI, Issue 5024, 18 February 1885, Page 4
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