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PEOPLE'S MISTAKES.

;- ; V' "Itis suiTirising what mistakes :>;.; world mako," • ; ■.'•./; • ■': ■ Tho speaker was one of tho great- ; ; est doctors 'tho world has ever •;;■:<•■'■ known.

.'i'; "Me, for example, one of the r;-! * most common things in the world, !■.'£' namely a cold. People speak of j>£; ; .'taking cold'; there is really no such i : g;' : thing. A cold is a sympton, an \i^ r ; effect, not a- cause.. Did yon over J';;, how an absolutely woll and healthy! 1%£. ,; - person who took cold? I never hare I under tho greatest exposure, a cold is asymptom not

looks of astonishment but they did not dispute the words of that learned man, ■

. ''Youmaybo surprised" he continued "when I. snail tell you Mint nine-tenths of all colds occurbeennso those gieat organs of the body, tho kidneys are out of order. More mon and women are troubled with impeifcct kidneys than with any other known form of disease. The unfortunate thing about it is thatthey do not know that this is their trouble, Why ? Becauso all .difficulty, delangoments, and diseases of the kidneys nroußually without pain, in fact without any symptoms whatever, and this proves just what I said at first namely, that 'a cold is a symptom'" The looks of amazement which new upon the faces of his hearers remained, while tho doctor contin-

BL ucd $$ "What I say is true. If you have ip*!,, ft cold m tho head, a cough, pain in W£p the muscles or joints, if you sneeze fflfc or wheeze, do not try to doctor these &|; symptoms; but 'go atonco to their ||jp- cause, which is invariably the kidIf neys/Use discovery of i| f of modern times fir ■these organs, jJ- • which is' Warner's Saw: Cure. Put I'? your kidneys in proper condition and %. any cold, however bad it may be, I f "Will disappear as if by magic. "Indeed," continued the doctor, most deliberately and earnestly," I assert \ that the .grip, which has been so disastrous, which lias brought so - much ti'oublo into tho world, would ■ nevei have had its run if the kidneys ,j pf thpse who had suffored from it £ had bun in perfect condition, These |-' great oigans, if unclogged, would ff' (iavo thrown the disease from tho I system so that the grip would have P been unknown," • Thp dootors wordß, startling as | they may sooin, wero time, and the l. lemedy of which he spoke the only jj ono known to tho world for regu--0 lating tho kidneys, No class of f peoplo know or rcnlizo this better pi than tho medical profession, but ifA t thousands of men and women have t fi learned it to their own great advantage. , ;■■■■■

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WDT18940623.2.15

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XV, Issue 4755, 23 June 1894, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
446

PEOPLE'S MISTAKES. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XV, Issue 4755, 23 June 1894, Page 3

PEOPLE'S MISTAKES. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume XV, Issue 4755, 23 June 1894, Page 3

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