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it may not De gensrany Known tnas tno greatest candlemaking establishment in. the world is in England. It is that of Price's Patent Candle Company, Ltd, with two other large factories, one at Battersea on the Thames, and the other on the Mersey, near Birkenhead, covering together thirty acres, and giving employ - rnent to about 2,200 people. The leading position held by the company is shown not merely by their having received the large number of eighty-six awards at the principal International Exhibitions during the past half century, but especially by the unique fact that five of these aro Grand Pnx gained in the greatest candle-pro-ducing countries of the European continent —namely, in Antwerp in 1894, Amsterdam in 1896, Brussels in 1897, and Paris in 899 and 1900. Some of the company's =specialtief are: Gold Medal Palmitino, Grand Prize Parastrine Shade, and Best Stearine Candle: Childs', Royal Castle New Patent and Palmitine Star Nigh Lights; Eegina, Glycerin Cream, and Court Toilet Soaps. Gas Engine and there Lubricating Oils. Glycerin absolutely pure Price's Soaps and Candles are stocked by all Grocers and Storekeepers in theWa - arapa district. Tis the top of the laaaer, Ascended by rungs, That Barraclough's reached with BALSAM for lungs. A bottle just now, For the season's cold blast, Will cure you and strengthen Till winter is past. Sarraclough's Acacian Lung Balsam, 1/6

RATIONAL INDIGESTION CURE.

By "Sano."

' Food must be eaten in sntneieffit quantity, and must be digested, and be converted into blood. Nature make 6 this one of her most imperative laws of life. During the process of digestion food is entirely changed in composition by the action of the juices of the internal organs through which it passes. __ In the mouth it i? thoroughly mixed with the saliva. Then it is swallowed, and enters tihe stomach, where it is acted upon by the gastric juices, and becomes partly liquified. From the stomach it passes to the smaller intestine—which is about 18 feet in length—and there certain portions of the food are liquified by the bile and other juices, The food thus made fluid is in a condition to be absorbs into and become a constituent part of the blood. Tha indigestible portion of the food is discharged into the larger intestine, whence it is in turn expelled from the body together with other refuse matter.

•ary to life that food must be absorbed, so, likewise, is it essential that the blood must he in a condition, to absorb the food. Torpidity of the liver is the chief cause of nearly every case of indigestion, and when the liver is torpid the kidneys are generally sympathetically affected. The blood, which should be transformed, oleansed, and filtered by the kidneys and liver, then contains uric and biliary poisons, and is therefore a feeble absorbent of nutriment. This condition of the blood reacts upon the nerwuti system of the digestive.,organs, and prevents the How and alters the quality of the digestive juices. The entire nerve energy of a person sutfering from indigestion is weakened, owing to the colitamiaiated condition of the blood, 'and the ml feeling of mental and physical depression which is. experienced dining an attack of dyspepsia,, is due to this cause.

The blood must be continuously purified bj tike action of the liver mnd kidneys, or good digestion oannott be expected to occur. <?k ,j&Many sufferers from indigestion ob» „j,in temporary relief by eating precligested foods or taking medicines, such as pepsin, which act as digestives in the intestines. A course of such treatment merely encourages a slothful action of the digestive organs and causes them to become gradually weaker and less capable of performing their duty, just in the same way that a person who takes little or no exercise "becomes incapable of responding to any demand for exertion. Other suiterers irritate the digestive organs into temporary and abnormal activity by taking purgative medicines so frequently that presently the stomach and intestines refuse to act except under such irritating stimulation. The only rational and permanent cure for indigestion is to create such a condition of the blood that each corpuscle becomes hungry for food, and ready and eager to absorb it. The digestive secretions will then respond bo the. demands of tne blood, and the stomach and intestines will perform their work as a , matter of course. When the blood is laden with uric and biliary poisons it cannot adequately absorb food, and makes but a feeble attempt to do so.

Warner's Safe Cure is not a purgative medicine. It permanently cures iudigestion and dyspepsia, simply because it restores the liver and kidneys to health and activity, so that the blood naturally becomes free from uric and biliary poisons, and ravenous to absorb nutriment freely. Nutriment is then conveyed by the blood to the nerves throughout the body. The nerves of the digestive organs being properly nourished, the organs are in a condition to do their work efficiently. Nature is merely aided in her efforts to preserve a balance in the manifold and complex processes of waste and renewal by which life is maintained. In addition to the regular 5s and 2s 9d bottles of Warnex's Safe Cure, a concentrated form of the medicine is now issued, at 2s 6d per bottle. Warner's Safe Cure (Concentrated) is not compounded with alcohol,, and contains the same number of doses as the 5e bottle of Warner's ,'Sufe Cure. H. H. Warner and Co., Limited, Melbourne. Vic

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WAG19100620.2.42.3

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Age, Volume XXXII, Issue 10073, 20 June 1910, Page 6

Word count
Tapeke kupu
910

Page 6 Advertisements Column 3 Wairarapa Age, Volume XXXII, Issue 10073, 20 June 1910, Page 6

Page 6 Advertisements Column 3 Wairarapa Age, Volume XXXII, Issue 10073, 20 June 1910, Page 6

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