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ROYAL HOTEL AUC KLAND. JOHN MOHRIBON (Odo time of tho Grand and Metropolitan Hotela, Auckland, and Royal Hotel, Thames), DESIRES to inform bis Friends oml tho Public that ho has falcon over from MR PERCY ISAACS tho above | well-known Hotel. Aa horotoforo tho Honaa will bo found up-to-date in all lta appointments and thoroughly homely 0. EEHRIS, licensed i«T3UPaaTaa. NATIVE LAND AND COMMISSION AGENT OELiSL£0 E LiSL£ & LUTTHELL dr' swmb WMMM* PATENT PAINLESS BRANDING COMPOSITION, got Horaae Cattle, anil Sheep (faos DALGETY AND CO., Ltd, Gisborne Times FOB ALL DESCRIPTIONS OP Job Printing.

A CONVERSATION. Q. I have bean feeling very poorly lately, and luve j list been to'd by mj doctor that lam suffering from urio poisoning. I shall bo glad if you will tell me just wh it, uric poisoning means. Is it a serious matter? A. Urin poisoning is caused by the retention in the blood of various substances which should leave the body in solution. The retention of those substances is due to a diseased or inactive condition of the kidneys. When the kidneys arc. working perfectly, they filter and extract from the blood of the average individual about three pints of urine every day. In this quantity of urine should be dissolved various waste m iterial produced by the wear and tear of the tissues of the body. This is dead matter, and its presence in the blood is poisonous. The three pints of normal urine should contain about ten grains in weight of uric acid, an ounce of urea, together with other animal and mineral matter varying from a third of an ounce to nearly an ounce. Q. Then lam to understand that the substances you mention, when not olimi natod from the body in the natural manner, constitute what is known as uric poi fining. Wh.it are the usual symptoms by which the presence of these poisons is manifest ? A, Mow■ you are asking rather a large question. Many complaints which are commonly called diseases are not actually diseases in themselves. For instance. Kheumatisro, Gout, Neuralgia, .Lunrsbngo, Sciatica, Gravel, Stosia, and Slatldar l Troubles are all caused by uric poisons. Indigestion, Anaemia, Persistent Headache, and General Debility an often solely duo to the same cause. In fact, if the kidneys are doing their worl freely and thoroughly, none of the complaints mentioned could trouble us, as tin causative poisons would be absent. Q, I bad no idea that so much depended* upon the efficient action ot th kidneys I suppose that when anyone is suffering from Rheumatism, Gout Neuralgia, Lumbago, Sciatica, Gravel, Stone, Biarfdei Troubles, Anaemia, Debility, Persistent Headache, or indigestion, the scientific method of effecting a cure would bo to dire, tl * Ireat tin for-the kidneys? >!j ~ Exactly. In fact, that is the only way in which a radical as d perimuien' cu.-_ mu 1)3 effected. The kidneys must be restored to health and nct'vi.y, so that they may be enabled to remove the daily production of poisons in the baly, or the patient must continue to suffer. ...Q. I have always been under the impression that the liver had a great deal to do with the maintenance of our general health, but it seems that the kidneys are - .he chief cause of most of ihc disorders from which we suffer ? A. The work done by the liver is of the utmost importance, and it is closely associated with the work done by the kidneys. Indeed, when anything is tiro matter with the liver, the kidneys are almost always directly affected, and the contrary is likewise true. In the liver various substances are actually made from the blood. Two or three pounds of bile arc thus made every day. The liver takes sugar from the blood, ionverts it into another form, aud stores it up so as to be able again to supply it to the blood, gradually, as the latter requires enrichment. Tire liver changes uric acid, which is insoluble, into urea, which is complet-ly soluble ; and the liver also deals with the blood corpuscles which have lived their life and are useful no longer. Q, As the functions of the kidneys and l.vcr are so intimately related, I ga-lier that if there is reason to suspect that either organ is not doing its work efficiently, a curative agent should be employed which would ai t equally upon .lie kidneys and i-v r? A. Yes, that is the case, and it was the realisation of this, important fact whirl) led to the discovery of that invaluable medicine Wacnep's Safa Gui’e. About thirty years ago, certain medical men, knowing that, if they could find a medicine which would beneficially affect alike the kidneys and liver, they could control mo-t of the common disorders, devoted themselves to Ibe search for such a remedy. After many disappointments, their efforts wore rewarded, and a medicine now known as Warner’s Safe Cure was proved to possess the requir. d properties in the fullest degree. Warner's Safe Cure has a marvellously stimulating and.healing effect upon both the kidneys and liver, and, by restoring those vital organs to health and activity, it necessarily cures all disorders due to the retention in the biood of urinary and biliary poisons, such as Rheumatism Blood Disorders Gravel Gout. Anaemia . Stone Neuralgia Indigestion. Bladder Troubles Lumbago Biliousness General Debility Sciatica Jaundice Side Headache Even Bright’s Disease, probably the rnotf, fatal of all diseases, yields to treatment by g AFE G JJ RK A great feature, too, is that cures effected by Warner’s Safe Cure are permanent, simply because they nr* natural.

THE “ GLOBE ” CREAM SEPARATOR m i s ? II m iWA’fiy! ■ r ; .' . i'K H ■ The i( Globe ” Separator Is manufactured on an entirety different principle to all others, it being made on the Link Blade system, which means PERFECT SKIMMING. By this system the milk Is divided up by plates in thin layers so that each space between the plates ;.[acts J as an Individual separator. Instead of loose discs, the dink blades are hinged and joined to one singlegpart, thereby preventing the parts being|>ut together in wrong order. Easiest to Clean The Strongest The Cleanest Skimmer Admitted Iy Experts to be FAR THE BEST ON THE GLOBE, Prices and Particulars from LOCAL IHGIN MONGERS. And the Wholesale Agents. WINGATE & Co., Ironmongers, 33 and 35, Queen Street, Auckland.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GIST19061206.2.35.2

Bibliographic details

Gisborne Times, Volume XXIV, Issue 1951, 6 December 1906, Page 4

Word Count
1,056

Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Gisborne Times, Volume XXIV, Issue 1951, 6 December 1906, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Gisborne Times, Volume XXIV, Issue 1951, 6 December 1906, Page 4

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