SWEET HOME.
"There is no plnce like home" iudb the old song, and we know how true it is. Go whore we will—ouoouuter meu in whatever circumstances we may—we shall be apt to find that a referouco to their homes will immediately neoure their attention, and will give you favor in their eyes. The impressions made in the home avo lasting. A mother's words never pass from the mind. A father's counsel remains fresh us long as lifo laßte, The last benediction of parental lovo and solicitude—with what tonasity it clings to the memory when almost ail else has gone.. How important therefore, that the home be maintained intact as long as possiblo-a haven of loving counsel, of peaco and joy to the growing children. How sail when death iuvades, when the fire goea out on the hearthstone, and the family is scattered. What the children lose by the death of a parent only those realise who have grown up without that love and advice which a parent alone can bestow. No doubt, tens of thousands of parents have found premature graves, who might bavo lived years of usefulness, had they but known what was sapping their strength, and slowly but surely pushing them into the grave.
There are teas of - thousands of parents to-day in agony of mind through fear of death from kidney disease, who do not Imow they are doctering only symptoms—such as wakefulness, nervousness, a splendid feeling one day aud an all-gone one another, dropsy, weak heart action, pneumonia, neuralgia, fickle appetite, etc., while the real cause is poisoned blood caused by diseased kidneys, Unless purified with Warner's Safe Cure thoy will just as surely die as though poisoned with arsenic.
If you are suffering as described, and have been for any length of time you are, unless you get relief right speedily, striken you with death whether you know it or not. Doctors publicly admit that they cannot cure advanced kidney disease; thoy!are too conservative to use Warner's Safe Cure bocaiiso it is an advertised remody; consequently, unless you use your own good judgment, secure aud use Warner's' - Safe Cure, a specific, which has proved itself in tens of thousands of cases to bo all it is represented, your home will bo broken up, and your loved ones deprived of that which money cannot purchase, or friends supply, Already too many loving parents, noble, kind, and true, havo gone down to premature graves through ignorance of their condition. It is time to cry a halt and we beg of you for the lovo you bear your homo and the duty you owe yourself, to give this matter your careful and conscientious consideration,
Hamlet: "The air ljitca shrewdly." ' ■ Horatio, "Itis a nipping ami an eager air, ■ ray Lord." Had the philosophic Bono lived in our day and city, he would, with thousand of other intelligent citizens, have sought and obtained, the truo Safeguard, eood, honest, Flannel, at Te Aro House, Wellington, ■'The wind that blows" and "the air" that "tiles shrewdly" would hiwe been successfully defied by selecting from tho many excellent mate ol Flannel that are to had at Te Aro Houbo, Wellington.
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Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume X, Issue 3237, 22 June 1889, Page 3
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528SWEET HOME. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume X, Issue 3237, 22 June 1889, Page 3
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