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IN THE GOOD OLD TIMES.

(By "Youth.'')

Did the good old tnees, which wc sc often hear the praxes, i,i in,in out elder]', relatives and irieud.-, ever tealiv exi>t"? Perhaps the jihJlji:iciit. of th--.,- eu thusiasts is obscured by the niamuui always lent- by distant. iVriiap.., too, tht,ir pulses are so .niickeiKd by recollections of their early youth, wle n the world was new to ilit.-iu and all things seemed (jood, that I hey fur-el all but the roseate streaks and omit" to [emember the .-shadows. I 'lu us, who lead deter!j>[ions of tuo kind of life endured by people, not only in Australasia, but in the old world, fifty or seventy years aj;o, it see in.; incredible that anyone can call ihu.-e times "good," so void we-ie. they of things which we now look upon as necessities. Fancy, lor instance, crtUm; up on a cold inorninc and tumbling about with a flint, steel, and tinder before a fire could be stalled. VYbv. {].<■

very thought make* uim's spiim 1 reep '. Of the use of steam p.,.>pK- km-..- but lillk\ ;iiid electrii iiy was merely a t,,y of the chemist. Th'.' uvlu! appin.alioi's of science, whiVli aie now so (.minion that we take Lfnin for -r.uit. =1, un. unknown. Surgical operation- *..,'.;•<• attended by enoiinous rusk, and mtdical comfoits and eiliemnt mirsin-. u , u \ so easily obtainable, were almost unprocurable. Education was a lu.vurv available only to a .small iniuniity of'people, ;md the means of disseminating knowled go and mfoniiaiion were p.'slnclc-d Even in these present days, wlvn i: so easy for anyone to become enhejitened on almost'any subject, Midi complaints as rheumatism, -out, neuralgia, lumbago, sciatica, blood disorders! amwinin, indigestion, b.diousncss. jaundice, Mck headache, general d, bililv. gravel, stone and bladder troubles, are apt to be treated as specific, diseases instead of as disorders caused, in most cases, by the retention in the system of uric acid and other urinary and biliary poisons which would have been duly removed from the body by natural channels if (ho kidneys aiid liver had been acting actively and efficiently. © * The kidneys of i),<. accraue. person filter and extract from the blood about three pints of urine every day. In (his quantity of urine should bo' dissolved almnt an ounce of urea, ten or twelve grams in weight of uric acid, and other annual and mineral matter varying from

a third of an ounce to marly 'an ounce If the kidneys are woiking' fr.viv and healthily all this solid matter lea vis (he body dissolved in the mine, but if, through weakness or disease, th,. kidnevs! aro unable to do thvir woi k pioper]y,"a quantity of these urinary substances' 'remains in the blood and flows through the veins contaminating the whole system. Then we stiller from some 'form of uric poisoning, such as Mheumatisin, Ooul., Lumbago. Backache, Sciatica, Per' Rifife.nt Headache. Neuralgia, (iravd, Stone, and Bladder Troubles. Tho Liver is an automatic chemical laboratory. In the liver vaiious substances are actually made from the blood Two or three pounds of bilo thus nude by the Liver everv day. Th» liver takes sugar from the

blood, converts it into another form, and stores ji up so a.- \,> he ;,[,\q t," again supply it (o the blood as the latt«r may require onric-JmuMit. The liver chunks uric arid, which j s insoluble, into urea, which is completely soluble! and the liver also deal? with 'the blood corpuscles which have, lived their life and are useful no loiter. When the liver is inactive or diseased we Mil'ler from sonic form of biliary poisonim;. such as Indigestion, Biliousness Anaemia, Jaun dice, Sick Headache, General Debility, and Blood Disorders. c, So intimate is the relation between the work done by the kidney* and that done by the liver, that whore there is any failure on Ihe pait of the kidneys the liver frequently becomes aflVctcd in sympathy and vice versa. It was Iho realisation of the importance of this close union of (he labour of these vital organs which resulted in tl )/: discovery of the medicine now known throughout the world as Warner's Safe Cure. " Certain scientists, knowing what a boon it ' would be to humanity* if some medicine '

could bo found which would act specifically on both the kidneys and liver, devoted th«nis«lves to an exhaustive search for such a medium, and their devotion was eventually rewarded by their success in compounding a medicine which possesses the required qualify. This medicine is now known as Warner's Safe Cure. War- | ner's Safe Cure exhibits a marvellous healing action in all cases of functional or chronic disease of tho kidneys and liver, and restoring them, as it u able to do, to health and activity, it of necessity cures all complaints due to the retention in Lhe system of urinary and biliary poisons. A vigorous action of the kidneys and liver naturally eliminates the poisons, and troubles due to the presence of tho poisons coase. Cures I effected by Warner's Safe Cure are permanent, simply because they are natural. Warner's Safe Cure is sold by ckemwts and storekeepers everywhere, both in the original (ss) bottles, and* in the cheaper (2s 6d) "CongAalrfited," aon-alooholic fozm.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HC19130519.2.31

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Horowhenua Chronicle, 19 May 1913, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
863

IN THE GOOD OLD TIMES. Horowhenua Chronicle, 19 May 1913, Page 4

IN THE GOOD OLD TIMES. Horowhenua Chronicle, 19 May 1913, Page 4

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