sbuerligjtmtKto. CUSS FOB ALL. TIOLLO WA TS OINTMENT. Bronchitis, Diptheria, Colds, Coughs, and, Derangement* of the Throat and.Chtnf,;) , AU sufferers from coughs,. colds, brwohUU. asthma, and irregular action of the heart are earnestly recommended to rub JloUoway't searching Ointment wellover the throat, breast, and back, as the mute may re t uire, twice a doiu 27/i.t Ointment is the most efficacious remedy j all internal and external ailments of Uwtkrnn, Bad Legs, Bad Breasts Ulcers, Abscesses f iVounds, and Sores, of all kinds May be thoroughly healed by the application & this Ointment to the parts affected, aW Jiavebeen duly fomented with warm water. & 11 ' der the action of this powerful Ointment, Med by the Pills, all depraved humors will be quick ly removed from the body; even scrofulou vers and foul sores, however old or inveterate can thus be cured. In Gout, Rheumatism, and Neuralgic paint This Ointment never fails to give relief, Jfo very jlrst application lessens the injlamniation and diminishes both heat and pain. In seve, t and chronic cases the Pills should always betaken, as their purifying, alterative,' and resttor' alive qualities plat, ■'he who la mass of solid andjluids in a wholeswi* noiidt'i *j, ' The Mother's Friend—ln, wUlt ' 'iseases Scaldheads, itch, croup, hlolchu on the scrofulous sores, and such like affections vie to the mighty power of this fine Q inlm*** ' ' short time, provided it be well rvbbed round theaffectedparts two or three times a daij. Piles, FisMas, and Internal Inflammation, Persons afflicted with these distress,m' cowplaints tvilljlnd n this wonderful Ointment instant means of ease and ability to effect their own cure without explaining their infirmity to anyone. The Pills, in, small doses, greatly ay *"1;7 f«* they purify the &lood> i egutate the stomach, and cool the system,
Both the Ointment and Bills should be used i» •> ttejolUming Complaints)— Bad Legs Bad Breasts Burns Chilblains L happed hands Contracted cS" Stiff Joints Fistulas ' Qout G la ndular dwellings Lumbago, Biles Rheumatism Sor<* Nipplea Sore Throat' akin Pixeatt Scurvy Rumors ' Ulcer* Wound* Oi n f meu t' a > l d Bills are sold at Brofessvr Hollowag s Establishment, 533 Oxford-street,, London } also bg nearly eurg respectable dor of Medicine throughout the (Jioilked World• » _ Ey.llprinted directions .are affixed to eioif I ot and Box, and can be.hfid inanu lauguaje ewW ri?. Armenian, Persian.' or Chinese, " Lives of great wen all remind ft, Ws can make our lives lublime; And, osparthig, leave behind u* Footprints on the sands of time," rjlliE above is read with great in teresby thousands of young men, It inspire 0 them with Jiopr, jor in the bright lexicon of youth there is no swh word as fail, Alas t sag many, this is correct,~~ia true with regard to the youth who has never abused his strength —and to the man who has not been "passion' slave," ' But 1o that youth—to that man, who ha* wastfd his vigor, who has yielded himself up to the temporary sioeet allurements of vice who has given unbridled license to hit passion* t to him the above lines are but as a reproach. What Hope can he have ? What aspirationst What chance of leaving his footpri»ts on the and* of time 1 For him, alas / t/ier& is nought tit dark despair and self-reproach for a lost ife, FOl a man to leave his' footprints on thi ands of time, ht must be enootoed with a trong brain and nervous power, lie mus possess a sound, vigorous, healthy mind,> in t healthy body—the power to conceive—tht energy to execute ! But look at our Australian' youth! Seethe emaciated form, the vacant Look, the listless hesitating manner, the nervous distrust, th senselsss, almost idiotic expression, Note Ms demeanour and conver sation, and then sag ; Is that a man to leap his footprints on the sand* of time, JJo parents, medical nun and educators of' f oulh pay sufficient attention to this subject T I>o they ever ascertain the cause of thi» decay j and having' done so, do thai/ fas itstrict sense of duty demands) seek tlie skilled advice of the wdical man, who has mide this branch of his profession his particular 0 speciality, whose Ufi has been devoted to th treatment of these cases i Jieader, what tV your ainwtr U Ltt each one anmverfor hint self Parens see their progeny fading' gradually before their sight, av e them become emaciate I old yovng men, broken down in health, enfeebled, unfilled for the battle of life get one word might save them, one sound and vigorous health-giving tetter from a medicalman, habituated to the treatment and continuous supervision of suoh cases, would, in most ii stances, succeed in wirdfog off the mpending doom of a miserable and gloomy future, and by appropriate treatmeut restore • the enerva'ed St stem to its natural vigor, and ensure a joyous and happy life;
Dr. L. L. RMI.TJI, of Melbourne, has made the diseases of youth and those arising theref rom hie peculiar study, Jl>a whole pro• fessional life, has been en pi daily denoted to the treatment of Nervous Affections and the Diseases incidental to Married Life, JJ it skill is available to alt—no matter how many hundreds or thousands of vvles distant, Jlis system of co?-respu>idenci by letter it vow s*> •well organistd and known, that comment would be > uperjluous— (by this means many thousands of patients have b*en mired, whom ,he hat never seen and never hnownj > and it is carried on with such judicious supervision that thouuh he has been practising this branch of his pro• fession for iweiity-iix years in these colonies no single instance of accidental discovert/ ha ever yet happened. When Medicines are required, these are forwarded in the same careful manner without a pos*ibititv of tt» eon tents of the parcels being discovered. Plain and otmr directions aoaompany these latter and a cure w effected without tv'tn the physician knowing who is hi" patient.
. To Mm and Women with Jirokrn down Constitutions, the Neroou*. the Debilitated and ft MHffimM from any Disease whatever j 7?' Mlf'll h p/an of Irenln mU 00)1%. mend* tUelf, anoidini/, as it does,tM i<i now. eemence and uxpen.se of a porno,%,d vtiit Address— Dr, L. L. SMITH, 182 Colli** 9t . Ba*t M XIiDOUUN JS. CLat* the r**idcnee of th* &ovm-n*>+j Consultation Fee by Letter, £l.
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Bibliographic details
Mount Ida Chronicle, Volume XI, Issue 613, 30 June 1881, Page 4
Word Count
1,055Page 4 Advertisements Column 7 Mount Ida Chronicle, Volume XI, Issue 613, 30 June 1881, Page 4
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