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PARALLEL LINES.

Every atudent knows that in close reasoning parallel lines of thought are laid down and deductions educed.

It is not our purpose at this time to enter into a learned discussion, and we have drawn the above visible lines simply to bring them prominently before your eye, and ask what they represent to you. A railroad man lo whom we showed them said, “To me those four lines represent a double-track railway.” A doctor replied to the same interrogatory, “The lines are to me the large arteries and veins lying alongside each other in the human body.” As will be observed the samo lines to either gentlemen suggested different lines of thought, as both looked at them through eyr-s accustomed to see only that which for the most pait occupied thoir attention. To the writer both answers put an old truth in a fresh and original light: As nvery intelligent man or woman knows, the blood of every living person flows-vith almost railroad speed through the arteries, forced by that wonderful engine, the heart. From the arteries it is sidetracked through the capillaries and veins, and every drop of h ood goes through the kidneys for purification no less than 2500 times every 24 hours. If the kidneys be diseased -the impurities of the blood containing the worn-out tissues and deleterious acids are not drawn out or execreied as nature intended, but continually pass and ropass through every fibre of the system, carrying death and decay with every pulsation. Dn’.asa remedied the heart becomes weakened, the lungs trying to do double work bre-k down, the liver becomes congested, the stomach refuses to digest food, and tho result is a general break down.

Why? Because the kidneys, the sewers of tho system, are foul and slopped up, and tbe entire blood becomes nothing more or less than sewage. Now is it not criminal, nay, suicidal, to allow such a state of things to continue when a simple remedy is within your reach, known for a certainty to do «s represented, which will open the closed pipes of the kidneys, allow the effete matter to escape, relieve the overworked heart, lun«a, and liver, cause a healthy appetite, puUbe bloom of health in your cheeks, the dove of hope In your breast, and the light of life in your eye f You have already divined the remedy we have reference to ; its praise is universal, its influence world-wide. Do not allow prejudice to blind you to your best interests, but to-day procure Warner’s safe cure and be put on the straight road to rude health and correct living.

Our parallel and closing lines to you are, take our advice and your experience will justify you in thanking us for bringing under your notice r. remedy without a parallel.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TEML18890706.2.6

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Temuka Leader, Issue 1913, 6 July 1889, Page 1

Word count
Tapeke kupu
467

PARALLEL LINES. Temuka Leader, Issue 1913, 6 July 1889, Page 1

PARALLEL LINES. Temuka Leader, Issue 1913, 6 July 1889, Page 1

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