THE GOLD MEDAL FOR PIANOS, 1878. J. & J. HOPKINSON, Having been awarded by the Musical Jurors at the THE ONLY GOLD MEDAL FOR GREAT BRITAIN (The Highest Award for Pianofortes), Caution the Public against any representation leading to a contrary conclusion. Their Pianos have also been awarded First Class Medals at every Great International Exhibition in which they have appeared, viz. : The Prize Medal of the Great Exhibition in London, 1851, The Prize Medal of the Great Exhibition in London, 1862, for "Great Excellence of Tone." The Gold Medal and Diploma of Honour, South African International Exhibition, 1877. The Only Gold Medal for Great Britain, Paris International Exhibition, 1878, for "Pianos of Various Models - Good Quality and Improved Mechanism." For Sale, Hire, or on the Three Years' System. DR. J. COLLIS BROWNE'S CHLORODYNE. THE ORIGINAL AND ONLY GENUINE. This wonderful remedy was discovered by DR. J. COLLIS BROWNE, and the word CHLORODYNE coined by him expressly to designate it. There never has been a remedy so vastly beneficial to suffering humanity, and it is a subject of deep concern to the public that they should not be mposed upon by having imitations pressed upon them on account of cheapness, and as being the same thing. DR. J. COLLIS BROWNE'S CHLORODYNE is a totally distinct thing from the spurious compounds called Chlorodyne, the use of which only ends in disappointment and failure. Remedial Uses and Action. This invaluable remedy produces quiet, refreshing sleep, relieves pain, calms the system, restores the deranged functions, and stimulates healthy action of the secretions of the body, without creating any of those unpleasant results attending the use of opium. Old and young may take it at all hours and times when requisite. Thousands of persons testify to ts marvellous good effects and wonderful cures, while medical men extol ts virtues most extensively. BRONCHITIS, AS effectually checks and arrests those too id often fatal diseases known as DIPHTHERIA, FEVER, CROUP, Ague. aerobno mi oils the best BROWSTHMA, CHORODNE acts like a charm in DIARRHEA, and is o only specific in CHOLERA and DYSENTERY. Tr8oitidina Ieroider effectually cuts short all attacks of EPILEPSY, HYSTERIA, PALPITATION, and to SPASMS. 101 818 noiidid is the only palliative in NEURALGIA, RHEUMATISM, GOUT, CANCER, TOOTHACHE, MENINGITIS. The Right Hon. EARL RUSSELL has graciously favoured J. T. DAVENPORT with the following: "Earl Russell communicated to the College of Physicians that he received a despatch from Her Majesty's Consul at Manilla, to the effect that Cholera had been raging fearfully, and that the ONLY remedy of any service was CHLORODYNE."See Lancet, December 1st, 1864. We have made pretty extensive use of Chlorodyne in our practice lately, and look upon it as an excellent direct Sedative and Anti-spasmodic. It seems to allay pain and irritation in whatever organ, and of whatever cause. It induces a feeling of comfort and quietude not obtainable by any other remedy, and it seems to possess this great advantage over all other Sedatives, that it leaves no unpleasant after-effects. CAUTION.-The extraordinary medical reports of the efficacy of Chlorodyne render it of vital importance that the public should obtain the genuine, which bears the words, "Dr. J. Collis Browne's Chlorodyne." Vice-Chancellor WooD stated that Dr. J. COLLIS BROWNE was undoubtedly the Inventor of CHLORODYNE; that the whole story of the defendant, Freeman, was deliberately untrue. Sold in Bottles at 1s. 1d., 2s. 9d., and 4s. 6d., by all Chemists. SOLE MANUFACTURER: J. T. DAVENPORT, Great Russell Street, London, W.C. IMPORTANT FAMILY MEDICINE. TRADE NORTON'S MARK. CAMOMILE PILLS, THE MOST CERTAIN PRESERVER OF HEALTH, A MILD, YET SPEEDY, SAFE, AND EFFECTUAL AID IN CASES OF INDIGESTION, AND ALL STOMACH COMPLAINTS, AND, AS A NATURAL CONSEQUENCE, A PURIFIER OF THE BLOOD & A SWEETENER OF THE WHOLE SYSTEM. INDIGESTION is a weakness or want of power of the digestive juices in the stomach to convert what we eat and drink into healthy matter, for the proper nourishment of the whole system. It is caused by everything which weakens the system in general, or the stomach in particular. From it proceed nearly all the diseases to which we are liable; for it is very certain that if we could always keep the stomach right we should only die by old age or accident. Indigestion produces a great variety of unpleasant sensations; amongst the most prominent of its miserable effects are a want of, or an inordinate appetite, sometimes attended with a constant craving for drink, a distension or feeling of enlargement of the stomach, flatulency, heartburn, pain in the stomach, acidity, unpleasant taste in the mouth, perhaps sickness, rumbling noise in the bowels; in some cases of depraved digestion there is nearly a complete disrelish for food, but still the appetite is not greatly impaired, as at the stated period of meals persons so afflicted can eat heartily, although without much gratification; a long train of nervous symptoms are also frequent attendants, general debility, great languidness, and incapacity for exertion. The minds of persons so afflicted frequently become irritable and desponding, and great anxiety is observable in the countenance, they appear thoughtful, melancholy, and dejected, under great apprehension of some imaginary danger, will start at any unexpected noise or occurrence, and become so agitated that they require some time to calm and collect themselves; yet for all this the mind is exhilarated without much difficulty; pleasing events, society, will for a time dissipate all appearance of disease; but the excitement produced by an agreeable change vanishes soon after the cause has gone by. Other symptoms are, violent palpitations, restlessness, the sleep disturbed by frightful dreams and startings, and affording little or no refreshment; occasionally there is much moaning, with a sense of weight and oppression upon the chest, nightmare, &c. It is almost impossible to enumerate all the symptoms of this first invader upon the constitution, as in a hundred cases of Indigestion there will probably be something peculiar to each; but be they what they may, they are all occasioned by the food becoming a burden rather than a support to the stomach; and in all its stages the medicine most wanted that is |