HUMAN RECKLESSNESS.
A singular featuip in the make up of mankind is the recklessness of life, which at times becomes epidemic. Some foolhardy man sets the example as did Webb in his attempt to swim tho rapids of Niagara Falls, and immediately he has followers the world over who attempt dangerous feats from which no benefit, pecuniary or otherwise, can ensue. But recklessness of life is not confined alone to this class of people. We all of us daily encounter a danger of far greater magnitude, which concealment for a time robs of its terror. It is so insidious in its approach, fastening itself with a deadly grip on the body before any palpable exhibited that the vitality is snapped our consitutions undermined, aud wo are made wrecks, physically and mentally, before we have been J& alarmed. Wo refer to tho diseasoifV ' of the kidneys, those subtlo organs- ' placed in our body to purify outf blood, and in connection with our bowels to eliminate all the waste material which tho system is dailythrowing off. Dr Dawson Williams says urinary diseases are becoming year by year more common, and another eminent authority says that deranged kidney action is the causo of 93 per cent of all the diseases which afflict mankind. Dr Ealfe makes a still more astonishing statement, to tho effect that if the water of people who suffer from general disease was examined 27 per cent would be found to contain albumen. This is a startling statement, and confirms tho fact that nearly every disease takes its'origin kora derangement ot tho kidneys. That tli p disease is and has been on tho increa'M ' S«Wthe time of Bright cannot bT doubted, but that it has become as, prevalent as those statements lead % to believe soems almost impossible, and the assertions might well be doubted did they not come from sucb high authority. Tho moral is a plain one, and is simpiy tins > To have uninterrupted health and Ions; life H e must keep the kidneys in stick a condition that iby can perform the labonqp, function nature designed to ft. tho_m. Howtodothisisa question. W which for years we have looked in vain i■: ftpm physicians to answer. Their endeavours to discover a medicine
which should have a controlliiiß iiiiluenco to prevent these disastrous results been fruitless. But there is iv remedy, purely vegetable, which i 8 almost specific in its power over the kidneys, liver, and urinary organs. This remedy is Warner's safo euro. It has a record with which no other medicine can compare, and its marpower over disease is confirmed by a mass of evidence given daily by the colonial press,
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Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume X, Issue 3345, 26 October 1889, Page 2
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443HUMAN RECKLESSNESS. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume X, Issue 3345, 26 October 1889, Page 2
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