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Carter's Little Liver Pills

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An early 20th-century advertisement for Carter's Little Liver Pills

Carter's Little Liver Pills (Carter's Little Pills after 1959) were formulated as a patent medicine by Samuel J. Carter of Erie, Pennsylvania, in 1868.[1][2]

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Transcription

Ingredients

The active ingredient was changed when the product was renamed in 1959, to be the laxative bisacodyl; the original active ingredients were purported to be 14 grain (16 mg) of aloe and 0.062 grains (4.0 mg) podophyllum resin.[3]

History

Carter's trademark was a black crow. By 1880 the business was incorporated as Carter Products. The pills were touted to cure headache, constipation, dyspepsia, and biliousness.[4] In the late 19th century, they were marketed in the UK by American businessman John Morgan Richards.[5]

Carter's Little Liver Pills predated the other available forms of bisacodyl and was a very popular and heavily advertised patent medicine up until the 1960s, spawning a common saying (with variants) in the first half of the 20th century: "He/She has more _________ than Carter has Little Liver Pills". In 1951 the Federal Trade Commission required the company to change the name to "Carter's Little Pills", since "liver" in the name was deceptive.[2]

Legacy

The senator Robert Byrd, after winning re-election in 2000, is quoted as saying, "West Virginia has always had four friends, God Almighty, Sears Roebuck, Carter's Liver Pills and Robert C. Byrd."[6]

A Carter's Little Liver Pills ad was featured in Joe Dante's 1968 collage parody film The Movie Orgy.[7]

References

  1. ^ "Henry Hoyt, 96, Dies; Headed Drug Company". The New York Times. November 7, 1990. Retrieved September 24, 2011. Perhaps the company's best-known product was Carter's Little Liver Pills, which had been developed in the 1870s by Dr. Samuel J. Carter, a druggist in Erie, Pa. Mr. Hoyt changed the name to Carter's Little Pills in 1959 after the Federal Trade Commission objected to advertising claims that the pills increase the flow of bile from the liver, and the United States Supreme Court refused to intervene.
  2. ^ a b "Cut Out the Liver". Time. April 16, 1951. Archived from the original on November 8, 2007. Retrieved September 24, 2011. One of the most familiar of all trade names was booked for a major operation last week. The Federal Trade Commission told the manufacturers of Carter's Little Liver Pills to cut the word "liver" out of the product name. ...
  3. ^ Ivy, Andrew C.; Roback, Robert A.; Stein, I.F. (Winter 1942). "Do the ingredients of Carter's little liver pills cause the gall bladder to contract, and stimulate the flow of bile by the liver?". Quarterly Bulletin of the Northwestern University Medical School. 16 (4): 298–301. PMC 3802406.
  4. ^ "Carter's Little Liver Pills". Lowcountry Digital Library. Archived from the original on September 3, 2014. Retrieved September 1, 2014.
  5. ^ Loeb, Lori (Spring 1999). "George Fulford and Victorian Patent Medicine Men: Quack Mercenaries or Smilesian Entrepreneurs?". Canadian Bulletin of Medical History. University of Toronto Press. 16 (1): 125–45. doi:10.3138/cbmh.16.1.125. ISSN 0823-2105. PMID 14531402.
  6. ^ Welna, David (June 28, 2010). "Robert Byrd, Longest-Serving U.S. Senator, Dies At 92". NPR News. Retrieved December 4, 2021.
  7. ^ "TFH Exclusive: A Clip from THE MOVIE ORGY", Trailers From Hell.
This page was last edited on 11 May 2023, at 11:00
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