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Drains Working Badly.

♦— s — The writer of the letter to which 1 am about to ask your attention lives m Cork, Ireland. If. the next time he visits Dublin, he will lean over the balustrade of any of the bridges that cross the Liffey, hie i now wiU inform him that a very foul stream runs beneath. In other words, the 4 river is a sort of open drain to the city, and contains what we might expect. The Thames in Londm is not much better, although no longer used directly for sewage purposes. The point I want to emphasise is this : thftt all animal life produces waste matter which, as fliush, U dangerous to health, and as possible, That is why all well-regulated *- cities have elaborate and effioient systems ° l VeS ai weii". 80 much is plain. Now, the human body has such a system too; and poisonous stuff (more or less of it) remains in the body and arts going a lot of mSchief. If yon don't think so, it is because jou haven't studied the subject or observed the operations of your own ~ nhysical machinery. Once upon a time something went wrong with this important apparatus in Mr Oadden's body, and it lead to an experience on hia part which he had no wish to have "^For over ten years," he goes on to say, •• I suffered from disease of the kidneys. I had excruciating pain in th« back and the Jawer part of my body." course; because the kidneys are .ituated in the loins, the best place for the So* they have to do. There are two of 3£L connected together, shaped like a +22 and about four inches long by three inches broad. There they lie, imbedded in lat" and their condition is an important index to the health of the owoer. They are full of nerves also, and when diseased are sure to oause the keen pain Mr Cadden BP "*The secretion," he con inues, " was '"**• v«r» scant, and I suffered ureat pain in vo'dinK it, sometimes blood coming away I sot into a low and depressed conditioa as Jew after year pasaed by and I found myself growing worss and worse. What I JuffeSit if impossible to deenbe, and I never look d for being well again in tbtf W °four' friend's fears we well foundedroaoh better than he realised, probably. M«0%5« of that complaint almost like XemurVn. and even s*kil!ed doctors are " St nf tftkinß charge of a bad case of it.] 8h ?: From time to time." Mr Cadden says. •« I was obliged to leave my work as the JJKL pa* was more than I could bear. f^Tdoctor after doctor, and went into the hospital, but none of the medicines 1894, I read about Mother Atad* Cnrafi' 6 Kjfup.;^ahd got a botfle 7 B in. Drua Stores, Pembroke Btreet, 2ffrfSl-SSg5 was so much better £.t I felt quite another man. I continued with thia medicine and all the pain SSJlyleftme. Whw I had taken

truly grateful for what Mother Seige 's 'Syrop haa done for me from a life of misery. You can publish this statement, and refer any oqe to me. (Signed) .T. Cadden, 2, Buckingham Place, Cork, Ireland, August, 18th, 1896 " It is the busin ss of the kidneys to take certain waste and worn-out matters from the blood, and expel them from the body through the b adder, Ac. They are a vital pan of the drainage sys'em I spoke of. In Mr Cadden's case, as in so many others, they partially failed, and retained poisons producing his suffering. / Still (and please get a good hold of this point), kidney complaint is only one of a verics of organic disorders, all of which arise from chronic dyspepsia. It is so in this instance. The digestive trouble haviug been set right by Mother Seigel's the kidneys soon became healthy. One — and only one — of the, peculiar virtues of this famed preparation ia its power to maintain is good working order the delicate and very important excretory, or drainage system of the body.

When you have a bad cold Dr IncUna tion would recommend Chamberlains's Cough Remedy because it is pleasant and safe to take. Dr Experience would recommend it because" it never fai s to effect a speedy and permanent cure. Dr Reason wou'd recmin nd it because it is prepared on scientific principles, and acts on nature's plan in relieving the lungs, opening the secretions and restoring the syßtun to a natural and healthy condition. For sale by/W. Hamer, Chemist, Foxton. 0 d fashions in dress may be revived, but no old-fashioned medicine can re- ! place Chamberlain's Colic, Cho'era and Diarrhoea Remedy. For sale by W. Hamer, Chemist, Foxton,

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH19000403.2.16

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Manawatu Herald, 3 April 1900, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
790

Drains Working Badly. Manawatu Herald, 3 April 1900, Page 3

Drains Working Badly. Manawatu Herald, 3 April 1900, Page 3

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