A GREAT LEGACY.
What it is; and what it has accomDlishea. "Sire,/ exclaimed a man in the homely garb of a mechanic to Richelieu, Prime Minister of France, as he was entering his Palace— 11 Sire, I have made a discovory which shall make rich and great the nation which shall develop it. Sire, will you give me an audience?" Richelieu, constantly importuned, ordered the "madman"imprisoned. Even in gaol he did not desist from declaring his " delusion," which one day attracted the attention of a British nobleman who heard De Cause's story, and developed his discovery of steam power. : • All great discoveries are at first derided. Nine years ago, a man, yet under middle age, enriched by a business which covered the United States, found himself. suddenly stricken dottu. When his physicians was impossible he used anwv discovery, which, liko all advances in science, had been opposed . bitterly by the schoolmen. Nevertheless, it cured him, and out of gratitude therefore ho consecrated a part of. his wealth to tho spreading of its merits betore the work SSuch in brief is the history of " Warner's Safe Cure," which has won, according to the testimony of eminent persons, the most deserved reputation ever accorded to any known'compound, and which is finally winning on its merits alone the approval of the conservative practitioners. It cures ijseaso by removing the cause, j&ansing tho fountains, and enriching the blood. It gives strength and vigour to the digestive and muscular system. Ninety three per cent of all disease which afflicts humanity arise from disordered kidneys. This is shown by medical authorities, " Warner's safe Cure " lias a direct action on the kidneys. It is a food as well as a medicine for tbgft; it is restorative; it is healing; aiW Nature, will cure nearly all disrase if the organs named are intact. " Warner's Safe Cure " euros congestion of tlio kidneys, backache, and all bladder and urinary difficulties. It prevents stone, removes dropsy, and is absolutely the only remedy that dissolves and expels from the system uric acid, of which there is a quantity secreted each day from tho wasto and debris of muscular activity, sufficient, if retained in the blood, to poison six men. To its presence in tho blood can be attributed all those sudden deaths which are set down as heart ttsoase, apoplexy, and paralysis.
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Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume X, Issue 3261, 20 July 1889, Page 3
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390A GREAT LEGACY. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume X, Issue 3261, 20 July 1889, Page 3
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