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LIVER PILLS FOR INDIA AND THE COLONIES •■"'•' ! DRi KmG'S DandeU-in and Qu%ine ! Liver j Pills (witnolfe mercury) : atre the'-hest' remedy i for.Bile, Wind, Indigestion, Sick Headache, I Spwtolj Giddiness/ Heartburn, Ner^ofisness, I Qoiif, and aU" disorders of the Stomach* and f LlterJ. ; They combine mildnesa in operation I -with r; the most admirable effects, and as an | aperient, cannot be surpassed; : '" * .- ' * i Mahafactured •'by r 'JAMES RORKE,^47, • Md*^m^Btre6t; v Lo l ndob, W., and 1 sold -ill , over the World by most Chemists 0 and Me<H--cine-veadora, at ls. ljd., 2a. 9d.i 4a. S : * and lis 499 : t),t SE N T _2 R Y,. -C H O l ¥4 A FEVER, AG tJE, COtJGHS, COLDS, &c. ; 7*l layt J, COLLIS BROTOE'S JLj/ . (Ex Army Medical Staff)" .' ; '■' ' % : ■'■ C HLOR O D Y^N ii •■ ' •> ,- .*j , . , i Is the Original and only Genuine. * " " CAUT_QN.*--Vice-Chancelloi; Sir, W. P. Wood stated that Dr. Collis'Brr>wrie was undoubtedly the Inventor of CHORODYNE; that the story of the defendant, Freeman, being the inventor, was deliberately uatrue, which be regretted had been sworn to Eminent Hospital Physicians of London Stated that Dr. J. Collis Browne waa the , discoverer of , ; Chibrodyae ; . that" they, prescribed 7'it largely, a'nd mean ho other tban Dr. Browne's. — $-«i* Ttm'e* of July 12, 186C ; ; ' ' / The' Public, ther-efdre, are cautioned againtt using any other than 7 ' ';- Da. J. COiMS B-ao^nlß's CHLORODYNE • l , *aESf_Di_t, nsss _sn Acriowi nu-n. •This 1 INVALIQA ( 6^ REMEDY prodttces quiet/ refreshing sleep,* relieves -pain, calms the system, restores the deranged'-- functions, and )iti.m.uJates.;he9}lhy.ac.Uon of* tha^ecreUona.oi .the body, "without creatiag., any of those unpleasant feaults anendVng''*ihe"'*a|e of opium. Oid r and young ■ may Sitfe r it at all hours and times when, requisite/^Thousands of.rpersons testify to .its marvellous good eSe'cts and Wonderful Cures, w^iile, "Medical tnea extol its Virtues most extensively^ .using. it in great 'quantities in the -tollbwing *_Hseages.— v " ' "'" '''' v *'" e : ** . I .*; -;:..r.;i \h Diseases in which it is found eminently useful':— Cholera, /-Diarrhoea, j Colics^ Coughs, Asthma, Rheumatism, j Neuralgia, Whooping Cougb; ' CrsSmp, Hysteria, &c j [Estract^ IrpjED Medical Opinions.*] The Right Hon. Earl Russell communicated to theCollegoof Physiefans, and J. T. Davenporti;that he had received information to the i effect tbat fche only remedy of any service in Cholera .was Chlorodyne.— See lancet, Dec. | 31,i8tj4, ..o ..-,;;- 1 «:...:. . . . ,* ...... I From A, _rbntgomery,.Eßq., late Inspector 0,: Hospitals, Bombty :— "Chlorodyne ds a most valuable ***3medy in Neuralgia, Asthma, and Pysenter-f^-. To lt 1 fairly "owe my restoration to health, after eighteen montha' of severe suffering, and yrhen all other remedies had failed." .... „.' „' * ..*-*' "*"* Df. Lovtre, Medical Missionary in India, reports (December, 1865)..— "That in nearly every case of Choleifa in which Dr. 1 J.' Collis Browne's Chlorodyne was administered, the patient recovered.'*' 7 <.. 1 Extract frotn the Medical Times,. January lath, •1866V—'* Chlorodyne is prescribed by) scores of orthodo_ -Medical PracUtiOners.' f-6i' course it would noCthus be singularly popuar, did it not 'supply a want and*-' fill' a place.!-" ; .. „.- -,_-_.„..,- j BEWARE of Bpuriou^aacl dangerouc compounds sold as OHLQRODYISE, irom which frequent fatal results, have followed. ■" 7 I „ O .„' XAA -LL.Jy \7j7'JX..77y CAUTION.— None Genuine without the words, •*■* Db; J. €oi<i<is Browns", oa tha Gsl*" vernment ; fjtat^p.' '■ ;pvgr*#h^niiagp |Msdic|l;j testimony*|at^**B'panie*'!ea'*3b ! j^ c'j **7> ! s B&Q |^arlii^c4twneii,,(_:: forgqryL'of _ 6 vera ment- Stamp .having - come to the knowledge ot. the Boacd of inland Seven lie. -"7 7* ■* .7 "'. Sole Manufacturer" i—j. T. DAVEMPbftT; 33; Great Russell-street; Bloomsbury, '■.-■__; ' ■. j , /London.- _. 7- '' "„ Sold in Bottiea, 1/1 j, 2/9,- and 4/6i Wholesale Agents for New Zealand:— ' ! ! Messrs. K__^THORB(E ! ._-RGSslß.':_l-'Co. r ; { _. Dunedin w 864 — 26

NOTICE OF REMOVAL, r-r HENRY CHATTERIS, VETERINARY SURGEON, r _as, RBMOYED from Newton"* Livety S6»blesr HardV-stceet. to TWIST & GAY'B Livery Stables, Trafel-ar-sSreet.*- *'■ '■ 'Ao ) *-• * :^. r Xo'; It-E-iRMARx for Lamb Horses al tbe Stables. 1235 ■ ■ ■ , ■ ■" A ■•■"■. J NOW PUBLISHED. TVTE;W- ZMALAJS7D TURF X 1 REGISTER FOR 1875—8, with a variety bf ueefal and interesting matter-to Sportsmen? BY THS LATE 0. ELLIOXS. Price Six Shillings. BOOKS BOUND in any 1 ' R. LUCAS & SON. • 'Is there no hope ? ' . the sick man said ; The silent doctor shook his head. " While there is life there's hope/ he cried.'. " JEgroto, dum animas eat, tpes est." DB. L. IT SMITH (The only legally-qualified Medical man advertising), consults--. On all affections of the Nervoas System (no matter' from what cause arista-**') ; on all broken-down Constitutions ; bn aU DUeases arising from early Indiscretions j on Gout ; . on Rheumatism. * - * {. .* „i* IN these Colonies, those excesses which we have iodulgfed in "hot youth" tell upon us with fearful interest. Our regrets are melme, bur repinings futile. The aola idea should fee thd. chsncei we possess of remedying the ills va already have, or combating the effects likely to result. Hide it as he may—put on as . good an v ex*** ! terior as he can--still is the victim oonscioas that he is a living lie, and that sdoaeroVlater his vices will discover. him to the **rorid. Our Faith— our obligations, to society st laege--the welfare of our future offppring^-aod-the duty'we owe to ourselv-jsr-fbr bids *p'roctasti j nation, and points out- tb us not to wait till the ravages break ouc in our constitutions. [ .Before negotiating with a merchant, before engaging with a confidential cleriEj hefore employing a barrister?-a careful mah makes inquiries aa to their ""statfding ; and, in the case of a legal adviser, ; both as to his legal qualifications and as to his capabilities: of transacting the individual business he consults him upon, btrange tb say, however, in the selection of a medical man, the sufferer fre- | quently' omits theso necessary precautions, and without regard to the fitness, qualiflca--1 tion, experience, and ability for the particular ailment requiring treatment, . he consulta ! the nearest man, whose experience and practice, perhaps, lies in quite mn opposite disacI tion. Is it astonishing that so many are. driven mad, are ruined in health, and are' bankrupt in spirits, hope, and money? Have I not, lor years, pointed out to them that I, Dr. L. L. Smith, dm the only legally-qualified medical matt advertising ia the Colonies ? Have I not also prosecuted, at my own espense, these very quacks, and exposed the various nostrums they are selling— auch aa Phosphodyne, Essence of Life, &c— and had them analysed, and found them to oonsist of *' Burnt sugar and flavoring matter," and the certificates I have PBOVED to be all forgeries It if for this reason that I step out ofthe ethics oil the profession and advertise, to give those who requrie the services of my branch an 'opportunity of knowing they can consult a L legally qualified man, aud one moreover who haa made this his especial study. Dr L L. Smith is the only legally qualified medical man advertising, and he haa been in Melbourne 24 years in full practice on Nervous Disease* Losa of Power and Debility -{"Syphilitic' Affections Condition Goat raid Rheumatism. *""" '~" "' ' " """' E ""*' Dr. L. L. SMITH can beconsulted by letter— Fee £\. Medicines forwarded to all the colonies. De. L. L. SMITH, 182 CoUins at. -East. iXLate the Residence of the Governor), MBLBOUBNB. 2*o

MNfIMR BIMCEMT raEpONS*7 .„ •••_ ' v -jr* Blkßbr'a~• : th■anttiar'■■EJ^v^stiHt•■ a . _«AWI jj . j Citrate of Magnesia is not -merely a -G** •---*■.•**!■■/_>•■ pleasant drink, but is also one. of the I most valuable aids to health in ekist. i 0 x^^V^JVrL ce ", Ifc baj^be^ chosen by the ■ ► rrS\ *? *- J i? ubl^ approved byihe profession, j EEatered at l/Ok 1 atatt«ner---__l.j j Xi . *?■-- *i*L.P° w PJ!6Bcn.bal_ regular^, hy /»^2f_»-k- X, - XJusVr -•n - o '-_ak % thousands ot physicuns throughout VJ Pti & !_»•■«— «*_i*W_^\_l the world as the besUysafe'st, and -«i IBM 'PUnewS ra !_.«« I IM-I*^ pleasantest regular aperient for per**"*4 J Mir* Hi n 11 1*** 1 * • 80n8 oi al^ B S eB and* conditions; — " **■ ,M T'**.T.T. I -- --TMrfut that the General MedtealA '* „_ ■ ''7 7; ■-'■'■j i , Cdiitfeti has introduced ; tfn Initiation The Effervescent Propertiea. of thia llghft anar -Jtegant of'BieHOp's 'Granular Effervescerir Preparation are retained in theni-rheatdeSiw.throdr**'- ita r< . . fiCi w .'r jf „?."? ' &ran„iarform,pr(*ucm ga^ Citrate of Magnesia into the British and preserving the flavour as apalatable laline Draught.,! *. rharmicop(B;a t ;is a remarkabte and Ji7L ver y., val uaWe to Travellera, eaptcially in troprcal most infliential testimony to the''hvai- : ;*mate^ , J^ .of on^ a/ .^£ J , ; . piaECTkpws^Xw.o.. ltniwqnfSiß % more, put tiatu „ into a tumbler half full of water, and drank during effer- Lemon Juice, from which one of - ! JSEtotoi I l ilft?, ve «„\ mil^ : t m9 * , **■ chief ingredients is obtained, has small tea-spoonful, taken in a Wine-eltssral of'watei*. will. i J'*:U«„ i?^j^u^ *i. r'.t . . 1' "? . act as a valuable atf-acid cooling dnmgST when fS .A loD -? -^^ '? cqpW P a9 ! th F most Ct rt,,in deliciously cooling and refreshing beverage mav also be made preventive • of -scutty, J and*' indeed * ISA'S *°.a tumW, : rful tfcoid wr&'-sriw-sfer (pre-fiourtjr - thetßr.tishiGoycmment insiet*r/on!_r : sweetened with aqga r t ) . Bma ii qganti ty of the Citrate, gupply. of this substance .on every ihthodtjcei/ ahb raJwAwtß st | " ' -"migrant Ship: Inthespe'caicomAIiPRED BISHOP, jaanufecrttrinn ©nimtet. S ati ° n ».™«™~V^*.*S®-**SgA?SE': ■ ajwi^-t. ;. , , £j eg - j.g e Lgfuon juj ce ; arg eom r Thisßottle ahouldbe kept weU'eorkea,atta'*taadw*o_M». bined th a m^' l *V&&Tit.:y iX 7 7 , r , "^Pf 8 "--, J. , The Mineral Salts (Seltzer, . j? „ -.__.„„„•,„ Vichy,' Carlsbad", &c") are excellent F ?¥lJ?£l a ?£ S - Lkel > arti * " t0 M™*™™* Mie sale of WUHUUI which NONE (• Genuwe. them is repidly increasing. |MINERAL WATSS SALTS. .7 :.■_■' CIO :.30 For the preparation of artiflciabwatera, these >< Grinuhr Effervescent" .S'alta are especially * suitable. They give the refreshing draught, anjd may be relied on as presenting at the game time the chemical ingredients ..of the natural waters. It is -Jbvious that in this form the •nfi!** nUlar efferves2Bn t" preparation^ present many advantages oyer, the, waters themselves. While all the constituents ofthe natural spribgs are exactly producad, the "Salts are extremely portable, more eronomical, and with them a sparkling refreshing draught is procurable in any quantity at any time. 1 : : — I- — — T_-STI_C.Q-TT_V.I_S..- * „'.', .-*. ' Dr. Redwood, Professor of Chemistry at tlie Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain, thus writes :— " I have examined a great many samples of Mr; B_*Hq.*e**j. granulated:prepar*i- " tions, obtained at various timea and from different auiircaa, and hive raaad theai tobe.very -. uniform in character, fully charged with Carbonic Acid, ahd obviously made with greit care v and accuracy." „■.**;*.'' A provincial firm writes :— "We hava much pleasure to inform you that your jMaguesia is much appreaiated in our connection. We have sold bther makers' liTf or mer years,' but how" we shall never sell any but Bishop's Out cistotners have som-jtimes cumplWihed of*the ' Citrate of Magnesia, and we hava told them they will never be disappointed if they always ask for Bishop'o, and see that they,get it." - .- - LABOR AT OB|Y AND OFFICE.S: 777 SPECK'S FIELDS, MILE END NEW TpWN, Londo^E, HOLD by _CEMPT_lb_lNi_, PEQ^SEE, & CO., Donbpw, '/ 'V-r Atl^Chemiets, Merchaota, Shipper!, and tho OrigWal ATafeer*^ '"pt(B iii r-twnVenfe-ta^ea^ror^ Foreign'use 1661—26

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NEM18770626.2.16.2

Bibliographic details

Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XII, Issue 149, 26 June 1877, Page 4

Word Count
1,787

Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XII, Issue 149, 26 June 1877, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XII, Issue 149, 26 June 1877, Page 4

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