COCKLE'S ANTIBILIOUP PILLS These Pills consist of a careful and peculiar admixture of the best and mildest vegetable aperients, with the pure extract of ,he flowers of the camomile. They will be onnd almost efficacious remedy for derange* nent of the digestive organs, and for torpid •ction of the liver and bowels, which proluce indigestion and the several varieties of )ilious and liver complaints. They speedily •emove the irritation and feverish state of ;he stomach, allays spasms, correct the norbid condition of the liver and organs tubservient to digestion, promote a due and wealthy secretion of bile, and relieve the sonstitution of all gouty matter and other impurities, which, by circulating in the blood, must injuriously affect the action of the kidneys; thus, by removing the causes productive of so much discomfort, they restore the energies both of body and mind. To thoße who indulge in the luxuries of the table these pills will prove highly useful, occasioning no pain in their action, unless they meet with an unusual quantity of acrid bile and acid matter in the stomach and bowels. To Europeans on their arrival in India and China they are recommended as a preservative against the fatal disorders peculiar to tropical climates. Their occasional use, if combined with the strictest attention to diet, will bo frequently found to remove at once, by their influence over the secretions, that congestive and unhealthy condition of the liver which is to often the earliest antecedent of severe febrile and con. stitutional disturbance. It must be understood that these pills are not recommended as containing any new or dangerously active i_*rredients; on the contrary, they are cba--racterised by a remarkable simplicity of combination, and whatever merit they may be found to possess depends as much upon the selection of pure drugs, and the unnsnal labour and attention bestowed upon their subsequent preparation, as upon the acknowledged peculiarity of their competition. They are not recommended as a panacea, nor are they adapted to all complaints ; bnt as a mild and efficacious aperient and tonic in the various forms of indigestion, it will not, perhaps, be an exaggeration to state that they have been resorted to under all systems - of diet, changes of climate, or atmospheric alternations with an extraordinary degree of success for upwards of seventy-eight years. This celebrated Family Aperient may be had throughout the United Kingdom ia boxes at Is ljd, 2s 9d, 4s 6d. and lis, as well as in India, China, New Zealand, and tfe6 Australian Colonies. COCKLE'S ANTIBILIOUS PILLS.. J In use by all classes fceventy-eight Years. 18, New Ormond street, London, iOCSLE'B ANTIBILIOUS PILLS. J THE OLDEST PATENT MEDICINE. In boxes at Is 1 -id, 2s 3d, 4s 6d, and lis. COCKLE'S ANTIBILIOUB PILLS. / In use for the last seventy-eight years for Liver Complaints. In boxes at Is ljd, 2s 9d, 4s 6d, and 11a CIOCKLE'S ANTIBILIOUB PILLS. J In use the last seventy-eight years for indigestion. In boxes at Is 1 Jd, 2s 9d, 4s 6d, and lis. COCKLE'S ANTIBILTOUB PILLS. **<J In use the last seventy-eight years for Bilious Affections. In boxes at Is lid, 2s 9d, 4s 6d, and lis. "CAPTAIN BUBNABY, in his Bide to _> Khiva, says (page 13) : "Two pairs of boots lined with fur were also taken, and for physic—with which it is as well to be supplied when travelling in out-of-the-way places some quinine and Cockle's Pills; the latter a most invaluable medicine, and one which I have used on the natives of Central Africa with the greatest possible success. In fact, the marvellous effects produced upon the mind and body of an Arab Sheik, who was impervious to all native medicines, when I administered to him five COCKLE'S PILLS, Will never fade from my memory; and a friend of mine, who passed through the same district many months afterwards, informed me that my frame of a < medicine man ' had not died out, but that the marvellous cure was even then a theme of conversation in the bazaar." •EATING'S INSECT POWDER. Used . by Her Majesty's Government. This Powder is unrivalled in destroying all insects, although perfectly harmless in domestic animals. It preserves from moth. All woollens and furs should be well sprinkled with the powder before placing away. At the seaside it is invaluable for preserving from domestic worries. Kills bugs, fleas, beetles, moths. The increasing demand for this celebrated preparation has caused imitations, which are noxious in their effects; purchasers are, therefore, particulary requested to obtain Keating's Powder. Sold in tins, Is and 2s 6d each, by all druggists, or by post, 14 and 86 stamps, from T. Keating, St. Churchyard, London. BMY AND NAVY MIXTURE, for the Cure of Contagious Disease. Agent, METHUEN (late Bowker and Methuen), chemist, 332, Deansgate, Manchester 2s Cd per bottle to any address GAS BEYOND THE REACH OF GAS MAINS. CHIS Lamp is complete in itself, makes gas from benzoline at a farthing per hour. Perfectly safe, cheap, and easily managed. Especially adapted for villages, carriage drives, Sea. Apply to SUN AUTO PNEUMATIC LIGHTING AND HEATING CO., 115 Southwark street, B,E. Manufacturers of the celebrated " Sun" machine for lighting mansions, &c., without the trouble, expense, and dirt of coal gas. References to many of the nobility and gentry. FBETWORK AND CARVING AND MECHANICAL TOOLS. MACHINES, Tools, and Materials of all descriptions for amateurs Everything of best quality at moderate prices. Tool chest for household use from 12a ach. Catalogues and price lists sent free on application to MOSELEY AND SIMPSON, Tool and Cutlery Manufacturers, 17 and 18 King street, Covent Garden, London, W.C IMPORTANT Notice to the Importers from England. All engaged in trade with Great Britain and Ireland will do well
to subscribe to the " British Trade Journal and Export Prices Current," as it gives the most complete and exact information of every branch of trade, and so renders it unnecessary to read each departmental publication. It is a comprehensive monthly resume of all items of interest to traders resident out of England, the shipping as well as the markets and other commercial news being written and compiled expressly for the merchant, planter, exporter and importer abroad. The " British Trade Journal " was established in January, 1863, ana enjoys the support of the general commercial public in every part of the world. It is published on the Ist of every mouth, and iB regularly supplied direct from the office to its subscribern. The subscription is 6s sterling per annum, payable in advance, free by post to any part of the globe, ihe amount can be remitted by post-office order, cash, or stamps, or any mode that may suggest itself. An equivalent amount in the currency of the country remitting will be accepted. Form of Subscription Order : Please send to me, until further notice, " The British Trade Journal and Kxpo;-f Prices Current," addressed as under : Name Address Payment by To the publishers of " The British Trade Journal," 24 Canon streft, London C.H.
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Bibliographic details
Globe, Volume XXIII, Issue 2222, 11 April 1881, Page 4
Word Count
1,158Page 4 Advertisements Column 5 Globe, Volume XXIII, Issue 2222, 11 April 1881, Page 4
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