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Mcdioa t Own box of olabkot bm m ajitfeßff . JSS2& Pains IN I|M MV—m ucunu AUtt fHW SM wm boxes 4* «d each, by aTl>Ch«nlst» das V«ndOK. Bom - Apothecari-o' Hall Bystreet, London. BarolayJWd BoWr Bj> g 7--•treet, Loadon. Sanger «M S<pA| OmM London. And all ths -Lwitoo id. Aswnts for ” Now’ ~ssl*ud ~ PBOBBBB, k 00. Doucdfoand "OLLEE'S COD LIVES 01* revived th* iUt ooly Gold Medal awarded to OOdldver 01 at the PwMi Exhibition, 1878. . . *,.... MOLLBB'fI COD LIVES’ OtLfoto.aimw special process produced from tne frenk aver* Srooess produced rronrrpv am uw» i exceptional purity, fxoo from the temgeetfoWfste inherent la other sorts t but otborwis© in Its nsttml conditions* S ln ,tbi* *UTloi* : fleh, no chemical., but only mechanical opora--tlonaloptoring, into Peter Holler's ,tym. . MbLLBE'B^ODDT^E - ' OIL, --The Dally News' *” Correspondent at the Paris Exhibition. 1878, Writes to that journal of Sept. 12) 1876, Inreferenoe to the seyorw . exhibitors of Cod Liver Oil, ' "At the head of the Exhibitors of this product is Peter MSUer, otChrlatiaqia, London ' and HeW York. His factory la in the Lofoten Isles. AH the year round ha employs there' 80 men and 20 women, and in the flehing eeaeoc from SOO to . 100 extra hands, ->■. ,Thla benefactor of consumptive In. valid* sod puny children has a special method for clarifying the oil taken , from the rood’s liver while it .is treeh. ! ' What was freshly opened had no taste of anyeort." THE SOLD MMAIr-ths his class—makss the FOUETEENTH PEIZE which has been gained HOLLEB’B b COD LIVES OIL sinoa the London Exhibition. 1992, in preference to ail other " tankers —■ great and small ■ throughout the wh world, at all the ’ principal International Exhibitions. MOLLEE'H COD LIVEE OIL la the only one that will retain its virtue in tropical olimatea. os aoconnt of its exceptions! ’ purity. Dr Feareon.-ol Umballa.writea "It is the, only oil that will remain , good for' any time in India, while in ■ therapeutical value you* oil excels al ' ' others with wbicb l am aootaaintied.” ’ Head Office* i ; OHEISTIAKIA, NOEWAT Branch Office# i -■ OXFOEDBTEEET, i Factories i Btamsund and Kabelvasg. Lofoten Islands, ■ Norway. ■ . , JUH-te D 1 B ONO H ’ 8 (SNIGIHX OP XHB OBDBB OP LEOPOLD OP BiLonrijt,, ■ KNIGHT OP XHB LKOIdN OP HONOPB) <r/*r . I oht. TD BOWN : If l *>• Jj- 1 GHTproved by nearly SO years' medioal experience to be f :j which produce* 'the full curative effects in, CONSUMPTION*AND DISEASES OP THE : OffifeSTr 1 THEOAT AFFECTIONS, GENE EAL DEBILITY, i WASTING DISEASES OP CHILDBEN, i BICKETS, AHD ALL SOBOFULbUS DISOEDEES. SELECT MEDICAL OPINIONS. SIS a. DUNOAN GIBB, Bart;. M.D.. S ■!-!-- . Physician to the Westminster Hospital. «• nriHE value of DB i DE JONGU’S LIGHTJL BEOWN COD, ; LIVES OIL as a / therapentio agent in a nnmber.of diseases, ' obiefly of an exbaustive oharactcr, has . been admitted : by. the world of medicine; i . but, in addition,! have fonndit a remedy of great power in the treatment of many else fails. DE SINCLAIB COGHH.L, Physician Boy• Nat. Hoap, for Consumption, I*HAYE convinced myself , that in Tnber- ’ onlar ‘and tha varions forms of • Stromous Disease, DB DE JUNGH’S LIGHT. ! BEOWN- GOD LIVES 'OlL’possesses . greater therapentio f fficaey than any ■ other' Cod' Liver'Oil'with Which lam I acquainted. It was especially noted in a large number of oases in which the patients protested they, had never been Oil, that DE JONGE’S OIL was not V only tolerated,'bat taken readily, and with marked benefit." JOSEPH J. POPE, Esq., M.E.C.S., Late Staff Burg. Army, Prof, of Hygiene, Birkbeok Inst. I FOUND daring my Indian experience that - the worth and character of DE DE JONGH’S LTGHT-BEOWN COD LTVEE , OIL remained unchanged by tropical-heat .or foreign climate, and it was, from its uniformity of character, particularly adapted for ; loag-oontinned administza* tion. Tho value of * hydro-carbons* in all debilitated states of the system Is now - becoming thoroughly recognised i and it . i is,without doubtjttom 'the animal oils and fat. rather thin from their vegetable substitutes .that we may hope toderive. : the Barest benefit. The Oil of DE DE " JONGH -plaoee in .everyone's reach - a reliable and valuable remedy, one that cannot be too widely roobgnised," D DB B. 0. CEOFT, Author of" Handbook,for the Nursery." DB JONGH'S . LIGHT-BBOWN COD LIVBE OIL; is almost a specific in many of the Diseases peculiar to Infancy and Childhood, and I have seen marked benefit produced by Patientsprefer it to tha Pale OUs. and are able to retain it more comfortably." ' DB DB JONGH'S LIGHT-BBOWN COD LIVES OIL is Bold OBtv In capsuled Xkfkbiai. Halt-pints, 2s 6d ; Pints, 4s 9d ; quarts,. by all respectable Chemists and Druggists throughout tho World. solb conaio»Eß, i ansab; haefokd * co.. 77. stband, LONDON. — 1 LflU, 1333^2 “Lives of great men all remind.ns, , We can make our Uvea sublime; And, departing, leave behind ua , Footprints on the sands of Time." fTjHE above is read with great interest by JL thousands of young men. It inspires them with Hope, for in the bright lexicon of youth there Is ho such word as fall. - Alas I say many, this is correct,—is brae with regard to the youth who has Bever abnaed his strength—and to the man who has hot bean "passion's.slave." Bnt to that youth—to that man who has wasted hU vigour,'who has yielded himself np to the temporary sweet allurements of vice, who has riven unbridled license to bla .passions, to'him the above lilies are but as a reproach. What' Hope can he have f What aspirations ? What bhanoa of leaving his footprints on the sands of time f For him alts I there is nought but dark dospoir and self-reproach (or a lost life I For a man to leave his tootprints on the sands of thho, he most be endowed with strong brain and nervous power. He must possess a sound, vigour--ons, healthy in a healthy body—the power to conceive—the energy to execute I But look at our Australian youth! See the emadated -fora), the. vacant look, the listless- hesitating manner, the nervous distrust, the senseless,- almost idiotic expression. : Note his demeanour and conversation, and then say, la t£at a man to leave his footprints on the asnds of tiaof Do parents, medloal men, and eduoators of youth pay sufficient attention to this subject P Do they ever ascertain the oanse of this: decay} and having done so, do they fas a strict senfo of duty demands! seek the skilled advice of the’ medical man, who has mide this branch of his profession hia particular ' spooiaUty, whose life has been devoted to the treatment of these oasea P Header, what is your ■answer ? Let eenh one answet for himself. Pewnte boo their progeny gradually: before their sight, see them become mandated old-young men, broken down in heilth. enfeebled, unfitted for the battlo of lUe j yot one word 'snjght save them, one sound and* vigorpus 1 letter from a i&odioal mu, aabitnated tot tho treatsieot juid continuous: supervision ,of such oases, would, in appropriste treatment reetore Ihe enervated system tolts natural rigour, and ensure a Joyous and nappy Dr li. L. Stars, of Helboufno, has made tho diseaaeaot youth and those arising therefrom his peculiar'study. His whole professional life has been especially devoted to the treatment ef Nervous Afleotions' and the Diseases inddentil to Married Life. Hie skill Is available to all—no. matter how many hundreds or thousands of milea distant. Bis system of correspondence by letter la now so well organised' and , know*, that comment would'-be superfluous (by this means many thou., sand# Of pstisnta havs been oared whom he has never seen and never known) j and it is carried on with snoh Judicious supervision that though ha has .been practising this branch of his pcofceelon for twenty-six years hi these Colbnies, tto tlngle inforwarded in the some careful manner without a possibility of the oontente ofthe paroels being discovered. Plain and clear direotlona accompany these latter, and a cure it effected without even the phystoiaa knowing who is hle patient. , To Men and Women with broken-down Constltutlons. the Nervous, the Debilitated, and all suffw. fog from any Disease whatever ,D L.L .SsirriaPlan of treat mentoommeul titjerf ,*wid(agaeit does, the fooonvenlenoe and expease of .’ a personal ■it, ‘ ■ Address- 1 - l ” f ' s DE L. L. SMITH, . 182 Collfoa street sett, - 1 < Melbourne, Lsfothe Be si donee of ConiuUaUon Feo by Leri*, «. 9057-193

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/LT18800317.2.3.5

Bibliographic details

Lyttelton Times, Volume LIII, Issue 5946, 17 March 1880, Page 2

Word Count
1,379

Page 2 Advertisements Column 5 Lyttelton Times, Volume LIII, Issue 5946, 17 March 1880, Page 2

Page 2 Advertisements Column 5 Lyttelton Times, Volume LIII, Issue 5946, 17 March 1880, Page 2

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