THE UNEEASINESS OF THE WOULD.
Probably within the last two years more than during any previous period the sense of impending evil has more or less appealed to the minds of all men. Financial institutions have disappeared by the score—usually peaceful little Republics have been .agitated to their very vitals by the slaughter attendant upon civil war — Anarchism is rampant— labour troubles are constantly recurring the notable { lives of well-known men seemingly so strong, though so old that their admirers said to themselves " These will outlive our lives," have gone out in the space of a thought. Everything appears ephemeral, life of all kinds, even the material earth itself. This feeling of apprehension may be traced partly to the fact that the world is experiencing a season of commercial depression and social upheaval which makes the outlook gloomy, ami partly to the heavy list of sudden deaths caused by the peculiar epidemics of the time, accentuating in the minds: of the survivors the truth thai nothing i 3 certain in life but death. In very many cases the cause of this deep depression arises from that terrible lassitude which precedes fully 75 per cent, of the mortality list. This is but the danger signal of that mortal foe —kidney disease —the flag hung out to warn the unhappy patient of the implacable Nemesis on his track. The truth is that mental worry is certain to tell upon some vital organ in the human system, and no portions of that organisation are so susceptible hh those of the kidneys, and sympathetically; the liver. Hence the blood becomes contaminated with uric acid poison, and eudle&s troublesome symptoms follow; but the tired feeling is the most prominent, and general debility is the result. The only specific is undoubtedly Warner's Safe Cure. It searches out the cause and complete restoration ensues, even in the worst forms of Bright's disease.
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Temuka Leader, Issue 2362, 28 May 1892, Page 4
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315THE UNEEASINESS OF THE WOULD. Temuka Leader, Issue 2362, 28 May 1892, Page 4
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