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Medical rvtruboxo< olabkee p* U ranted to our* all dlaohargee frote wJM. lurv OMsn.. In either MX. aogWlMl « 6??™?' jad 00, ■treat) London) s, EBMj-JtS’nSUra^sSSss S for How PBOBBBB, * 00. »* mont9» Bnrerorne/ ftrMt. London, H OLLEE’fI OOD only Gold Medal awarded to Ood Lirer Oi »t the Parfa Exhibition.^.--; MOLLBE'S COD. LIVES ■ptt'ttjjf •M*f£22 pMdnood from tfa *!*”Bg hiSSTfimuMmt in other •ortaubnt zffif &ti}JSSsA^ ttona entertng Peter MBU<» now MOLME’B to - The" Daily Hewn 1 " Correspondent »t the Pan* Exhibition. 1978, write* to that journal of Bopt. u, 1978. in reference to the several exhibitor* of. Cod Liter Oil. “At the heed of the Exhibitor* of this e‘ tot i* Peter M«ller,j>r Chrte- , London and Mew York. Hi* factory a in the Lofoten Isle*. AU the yoar round he employ* there 30 men and 80 women, and in the flahing ; aeaaon from 800 to 400 extra hand*. : Thia benefactor of oonaxnnptiTe in. valid* and pnny <Mldren h*e a special 1 method tor darifying the oil taken from the ood** liver whilei It la fresh. , ■What was freshly opened had so taste THE GOLD anSjnaLldhe only one awarded in hi* blaae-Huakea the POUETEEHTH PEIZB which ha* been gained by ■ *■;; VOLLBB'B OQD LIVES OIL Binoe the London Exhibition. 1398, la preference toall , other maiere greM and emau throughout the wh, •/ world,** all the principal International Exhibitions. HOLLEB'S OOD LIVES OIL is the onlyone that will rotaln lteTirtae ia 'tronieri ollma.t«e,on account of ita axaaptkmal parity. Dr Pearson, of Umb»Ua,write* - "Itirtho onlyoUthat will remain good for aivlmmeria India, whilein thenpentioaf valtteyonr'oil excel* al othen with whloh 1 am acquainted.” HeadOfßoee i .<v OHBIBTIAHIA, KOBWAT Branch Offloee i OXTOBD STBEBT, Lv.*lX)H, W.C. PaotociMi ' Btamfona and Kabelvaag, LofotenMand*.

DE • jQ E Ji ONG H’ S (mnaHx ot thh obdbb bi ‘ lbopoud Biiannf, SdriSHT 07 THB mSQIOH 07 H0K07B) Jy I GET. JJI BOWK C b D JQ I v 'lli' 0 IL. proved by nearly SO yews’ medical experience to be , the only cod lives oil which produces the fall curative effect* in CONSUMPTION AND DISEASES OF. THE - : - CHEST, THEOAT AFFECTIONS, OENEEAL DEBILITY. WASTING DISEASES -OFiOHILDBENi ,: EICKETB, AND ALL BCEOFDLODB DISOEDEES. 8 ELECT MEDICAL OPINIONS. 818 9, DUNCAN Physician to the Westminster Hospital. HHE value of DB DE JONGH’S LIGHTt BEOWN COD LIVEB OIL &8 a therapentio Kent in n number ol diseases, chiefly of ah exhaustive oharaotor, has been admitted by the world of medicine; but, in addition, ! have found it a remedy of Treat power in the treatment of many .. Affections of the ’Thibet and Larynx, especially in Consumption of the latter, where it wQI sustain fife when everything else fails." DB SINCLAIB COQHHiL, Physician Boy. Nat. Hasp. ; for Consumption, Ventnor, " convinced myself that in TuberI onlar and the various forms of Strumous * Disease. DB DE JONQH’S LIGHTBBOWN COD LIVEB OIL possesses greater therapentio efficacy than any other Cod; Liver Oil with which I am acquainted; It was especially noted in a large number of cases in which the patients protested they had never been able to retain or digest other Cod Liver Oil, that DB DE JONGH’S OIL was not only tolerated, bat taken readily, and with marked benefit.” JOSEPH J. POPE.Esq., M.8.C.5., Late Staff Sozg. Army, Prof, of Hygiene, Birkbeok ~ , 1 Inst. . ' J ‘ I POUND during my Indian experience that the worth and Character of DE DE JONGH’S LXGHT-BBOWN COD LIVEE OIL remained unchanged by tropical heat or foreign climate,and it, was, from its uniformity of " Character, particularly adapted for long-continued administration.: The value of * hydro-carbons’in all debilitated states of the system Is now , becoming thoroughly recognised ; and it is, without doubt/from the animal oils' and fat, rather than from their vegetable substitutes, that we may hope to derive the shreSt benefit. The- Oil of DB DE JONGH places in everyone’s reach a reliable and valuable remedy, one that cannot bo too widely recognised." DEE. 0. CEOFT, Author of ’’ Handbook for the Nursery.” D B DE JONGH'S LXGHT-BBOWN COD LIVES OIL is almost a speoiflo in many of the Diseases peculiar to Infancy and Childhood, and I have seen marked benefit produced by , its. use. Patients prefer it to the Pale Oils; and age able to retain it mere Comfortably." DB DB JONGH’S LiGHT-BBOWN COD LIVEB 'OIL is sold only in capsuled'-IHPiniAL Half-pints, " - *-“ a *■- by all respectable the World* r, STBAND, 1333^2 uuj is oOiii oifiiX in wiwuivu j.ar*iu :2s 6d: Pints, 4s 9d j quarts, 9sj by [Chemists and Druggists throughout t ' i SOLS OONtttONXaS, t Wfl aT» TT A YST7I/\T>TV t. '/in 99 ANSAE, HAEEOED A GO., ! LONDON, " Lives of great men til remind us. We can make onrlives sublime ] And, departing, leave behind ns Footprints on the sands of Time." above, is Vead with. great interest by thousands of young men. It inspires them Hopeiforln the bright lexicon of youth there _no such word as fail. Alasl say many, thisis correct,—ia true with regard to the youth who has never abused his strength—and to thaman who has sot been u pusion’s slsvo.”- [ But to that youth—to that man who has wasted his vigoui, who has yielded himself up to the temporary sweet allurements of vice, who has given unbridled Homs* to his passions, to him the above lines are but ts a reproach. What Hope can he pave f t What aspirations? What chance of leaving his footprints on the sands of.time f For him alas! there is nought but dark despair andsolf-reproach for a lost life! | For a man to leave his footprints on the sands of time, he must be endowed with a strong brain and aerTOus powor. Hemust poeseaaa sound, vigourpus, healthy mind, in a healthy body—the power to oonoeive-rtM energy to execute) But look at our Australian youth 1 See the femaoiated form, the Vacant; look, the listless hesitating manner, the nervous distrust, the senseless, almost idiotic expression; .'Note his demeanour and conversation, and then say. Is that a nan to leave bis footprints mndsoltiiacy , . „> I Do parents, medical men, and educators of youth pay sufficient Attention to this subject P Do they ever ascertain theoanse of this deoay; and having done sp, do they (as a strict sense of duty demands) Seek teesklUed ad vice of the medical man, who has this branch of his profession his particular Speciality, Whose life has been devoted to the treatment of these cases P Eeader, what fa your answer P Let each one answer for himself. Parents see .their progeny* fading gradually before their sight, sea them become emaciated old-young men, broken down in health, enfeebled, unfitted for the battle of life j yet one word might save them, one Sound and vigorous hetith-gfving letter from a medical man, Habituated to the treatment 'and ing doom of a miserable and gloomy future, and by appropriate treatment restore the enervated system tolts natural vigour, and ensure a Joyous and happy life*" ‘ i Dr L. L, Smith, of Melbourne, has madotho diseases of youth and those arising therefrom hto peculiar study. His whole professional life has been ospeoiall? devoted to the treatment ex Nervous Attentions and the Diseases Incidental to Harried Life. Bis skill fa available to all—no ihatter how many hundreds or thousand* of miles distant. His system of corawpondenoe byletter fa now so well organised and. known,.that comment would be superfluous (by this means many thouwmds of patient* have been cured whom he has nereVseenand never known) j and it fa oarrladon twenty-six years in these .Colonies, no single inpossibility ol the, contents of the paroels being diacovered- Plain and desr directions accompany, these latter,’ahd a. cure fa effected without even the •sa* ! toMoa and Women with broken-down Coastlta-' ticca the Nervous, the Debilitated, and til. *>»««*• ing mom any Disease whatever ,D L .L iSHitH a plan of treatment oommenl, iltssff a voiding as it the Inoonvenienoasud expense of a personal Addnes— ■ ■- DE L. L. SMITH, 182 Collins street Oast, Melbourne. Late the Boridenoe of the Governor.) Ooasnltetioß Fee by Letter, SI, 6057-133

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Lyttelton Times, Volume LIII, Issue 5953, 25 March 1880, Page 2

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1,327

Page 2 Advertisements Column 5 Lyttelton Times, Volume LIII, Issue 5953, 25 March 1880, Page 2

Page 2 Advertisements Column 5 Lyttelton Times, Volume LIII, Issue 5953, 25 March 1880, Page 2