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Medical.

Bit A X D R E T II ' S PILLS. Entirely Vegetable and Innocent, "What has been longest known has been most considered, and what has been most considered is Irrt understood.' 1 "The hfo of the flesh is iii ift blood " Lev. xvii., 11 It is luutful to H > \m in Pleurisy, Dizziness, or other InlUmmat"> l i (don 1 ; Purging with Brandicth's Pills is i i to rure. Pleurisy um.illy in from twelve to > -four hours A poplexy c in alw ,i> s be prevunted ' i'i thesi Pills aic the best remedy known both for Apoplexy and .Sunstroke when attacked The l.iws of life arc written upon tho face of nnture The tempest, whirlwinds, and thunderstorms bring health fiom tho solitudes of God. Tlio tides are the daily agitators and purifiers of the mighty world o waters. What the e o providential means are as purifiers of nature, BRANDRETH'S PILLS are to man Bcciusc their use produces an activity in the circulation which occasions the blood to throw offvh.it is hurtful, and thoir good cflects aro not counterbalanced by any inconvenience Being composed entirely of herbs, they do not expo«e those who use them to any danger ; their effects nr<> as certain as they are salutary They aro daily and safely administered in infancy, youth, manhood, old ag^, and to i women in tho roost critical and delicate circumstances th»y do not disturb or shock the animal functions, but restoro their order and re establish their health ' Those who are sick and use a few boxes hardly know themselves afterward From being dull, they are lively fiom foeint? sallow their complexions are eleir from having no appetite thoy long for the dinner i houi And after their use, all the functions of nature goon with regulinty. If the bowels wero costno, they are so no more . if the sleep w is disturbed, lti s now sound and refreshing if there were pains or local affections, they aro now gone Dr Lull, a distinguished physician of Potsdam, N Y , who has used them in his piactice for thirtj years, says "They arc a vegetable compound , they invigorate, purify, and cleanse the blood, correct and regulate all the secretions, and, by purgition", discharge the wholo mass of morbid umttei from tlio body without reducing the strength." THE FOOD AND THE BODY'S WASTEThe food is intended to repair tho body s «ast<* it is recei\ed into the stomach, afterwards into the intestines, in which organs it undergoes a change, namely, digestion If this is well done, good nourishment is supplied to repair the loss our fluids and tho vanous organs of the body have sustained. If, from over-work, anxiety, bad food, impure air or water, contagion, checked perspiration, or other causes, the digestion has not been perfectly performed, there results bad, poisonous nutritive materials, which breeddisease by changing the blood and loading it with impurities. G E N E R E A L DIRECTION S.— BRANDRETH'8 PILLS are intended, by thoir purgative qualities, to remove from tho blood corrupt humours which are in reality the occasion of all the aches and pains to wind, a human body is exposed The general rule is, to have the medicine operate copiously by the bowels 1 his will in cases give relief, and often permanently cures at once But if the pains or aches continue, the Pil Is must be repeated for a few nights in succession There is no ache or pain that will not yield to their astonishing influence The ordinary dose is from two to four Pills, but in bilious colic, and in all cases whero violent pain is experienced of tho bowels or otl.or parts of the body, the dose should be eight or ten Pills, and repeated if necessary. When they operate fully tho pain will cease, often before After large doses, take two or three pills daily until the health is fully restored. TO BE REMEMP.ERE D.— BRANDRETH'S PILLS expel the poisons or kumours which cause us to bo sick Every time one is purged by this remedy he has less poison in his system, and relatively more life. Persons of spare habit and delicate organisationga in flesh and vigour while using them As a rale, the pings tion should bo continued for three or four deys in succession ; then there may bo a greater or loss interval of rest. But in tho commencement of this trcitment, in cises that hnvo been of long standing, it is of great importance that we purge several clajs in succession, so that wo expel more cot nipt humours than can be formed in the samo time Every tnuo we rest a few days or weeks from tho purgation, we make now fluids from our food, which replace tho unsound ones that the Pills have caused to be evacu ited Eacli time we repeat this process, we expel further quintities of impurities, which are again replaced by fluids less and less impure, so that in a short time by continuing this treatment we bring back the whole mass of iluids or humours to hat state of purity which constitutes health In many cases whero the dreadful ravages of ulceration have laid bare ligament and bone, and where, to all appearance, no human nieaus could save life, patients, by the uso of these Pills, have been restored to gond health. As Brandreth's Tills curescurvy, costiveness, and its consequences, sea faring men, and all travellers to foreign countries, should not be without them, in order to resort to them promptly on the first appeirance of sickness. LIFE IS THE GIFT OF GOD.— When we aro sick this life is obscured, under a cloud, oppressed with humours Experience has taught us certain means which never fail for their removal Shall we not avail ourselves of theso means, and thus restoro our health, our life '' This course seems to be our duty. The child receives with his life the seeds of his death. It may take one, or ono hundred years, before the seeds bear their sad fruit, but just as sure as the reeds of death ripon, life ceases Purging is the grand safeguard, because then what fosters the seeds of death are taken away, expelled from tho body The most celebrated purgative is BBANDHETH'S PILLS, which aro unerring Their widespread reputation proves intrinsic merit. Nothing but good qualities have placed them in the position they occupy in public estimation When all hope is is gone, their use has given blessed health Let the sick again feel the pleasure of a «ound body by their aid Millions bless the day they became acquainted with Brandreth's Tills, which cleanso the blood from impurities. What a meaning and application tl.at fact carries. Tho liver, the spleen, the kidneys, and tho heart arc brought into harmonious action , health, long hfo, and vigour of mind and body are the solid gains DYSENTERY, DIARRHfEA, AND CHOLERA MORBUS —In the3e cases give the Pills every six or twelve hours in doses of from four to eight Pills. The diet should be the " Sheep's Head Broth," or light soup or gruel. For too much eating and drinking the cure is effected by from four to six Pills. In costiveness, headache, bilious attacks, liver affections, cold*, influenza, rheumatism, gout, and as an aperient or to purge, take from two to six or eight Pills. Should they not operate easily and freely, the next dose may be increased one, two, three, or more Pills. When tho bowels are desired to be moved with moro than ordinary vigour, and indeed in all cases whero there is an obstinate costiveness prevailing, break tho Pills in small pieces and mix with molasses, and give in portions of about four Pills overy four hours until the bowels are thoroughly cleansed Though no especial caro or attention is needed, yet it is always of great advantage to have a cup of tea and toast, or a basin of gruel or broth ready, noon after they have commence'] to operate The patient's strength is thus sustained, and the medicino sooner cures by this timely assistance In veterato sickness of the stomach is usually occasioned by matters which produce fevers, or are the consequence of contagion, or a pressure upon the brain, either from local injury or from fullness of blood vessels of the head Therefore, purging with Brandrcth's Pills is thi one iinnt neckssItj. Ono or two days' vigorous enforcement of this practice will savo days, peihaps months of sickness . nay, often life is saved by this simple method To allay the sickr.oss of stomach, pUce a mustard plaster over the upper part of the bowels. IN VIOLENT DISEASES GEN F.R ALLY, take six or eight, night and morning, and increase the quantity until relief is experienced, when the number may be gradually decreased, according to tho symptoms and feelings of tho patient The pains which sometimes anse shortly before and in the commencement of the operation are owing to tho biting acrimony of tho humours, not from the Pills, for after some doses you havo no pain, which proves it was the acrid humours, and not the medicine, which pained you You should bo thankful that .some death principle has left you. These griping pains do not last long, and aro always an assuiance that the humours have acquired a dangerous acidity, and that life itself requires their speedy removal. Whatever colour the discharges may be, so long as your symptoms do not mend, or when there is much mucus in tho stools, go on with sufficient doses every or every other day, according as you can bear the effect, to produce a free purgation When the discharges aro very fetid, it is absolute ly neewsary to continue tho Pills, and sometimes increase tho quantity per dose, until the odonr and colour shall have become moro natural E»t stale bread, toisted black, in ell cases whero the discharges havo a bad smell A large dose in the beginning of sickness is often life-saving. By small eloses we sometimes lo«e valuable tirao, and tho strength of tin patient is wmted, and ho may bo lost, when sir. eight, or ten Pills given at onco, would certainly have saved him. REV. THOMAS BONSALL, M.A., on the Qualities and Reputation of Brandrcth's Pills and Allcock's Plasters II. D. Brandreth, Esq, I lverpool. Wissett VicaraRe, near Halesworth, Suffolk, July 20, 1872 lly Dear Sir, — Tlea»o fornard me somo Hrandreth's Pills and Porous Plasters to amount of enclosure. I may hero state I havo been in tho habit, for tbe last thirty -seven years, of administering theso remedies to the sick with great success. I have beon well acquainted with Dr B Urundreth, of New fork, for nearly forty years, and can certify that ho gives constant employment to upwards of ono hundred persons preparing theso commodities alone. Brandreth's Pi. Is and Allcock's Porous Plasters are tho household romedies of nearly every family in the United States and throughout South America Wo all know that many poisons tike medicino when they do not need it. It is, therefore, of 'inportanea that the medicine should be incapable of hurting Now I know Brandeth's Pills to be perfectly harmless, from long esperiencc of their ellects Yet when the boweU or the blood need clemsinp, they aro a thorcughly energetic medicine, arou'ing all tho interior orpans to healthy action. In co'ds, cuhes, and costiveness, they give relief immediately, and tlnso who uso them will find them a safe and most reliable remedy —lam, yours truly, Thomas ISovsall Lute Curate of Linstead M«gna and Parva Suffolk. ' ALLCOCK'S POROUS PLASTERS are sold by all Druggist', with full directions for use, or in any si7u to suit Tho yard Plaster is speciall recommended for families and physicians. One yard equals 18 Plaster* Pmviirii. Adsvev for Grfat Biutum and hie Colomfs, tVholcsale and Retail : 67, GREAT CHARLOTTE STREET, LIVERPOOL All Litieus Mitst he AnpitLssm to HhNItY D BRVNDRTH, 6 7, OltlAT CnAKLOTTKSIUEfcT Liverpool, England. KEMPTrlORNE, PKOSSSER, &CO., WH0Ii:S\LE DRUGGISTS, 'Auckland and Dunedin.

SILK Coats, Crapo Coats, Alpaca Coats, Russell Cord Coats, Drill Coats, Holland Coatii ho City Clothing Mart. SAMUEL COOMBES,

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Bibliographic details

Daily Southern Cross, Volume XXX, Issue 5123, 23 January 1874, Page 4

Word Count
2,031

Page 4 Advertisements Column 6 Daily Southern Cross, Volume XXX, Issue 5123, 23 January 1874, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 6 Daily Southern Cross, Volume XXX, Issue 5123, 23 January 1874, Page 4