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A BUSHMAN'S TIME. • It is an idea prevailing in cities that no one has more time to think than people who live in the bush. It is said that many a bushman in solitude threshes out all the problems of existence, and that some original and curious theories are thus developed. It would be more practical if more prosaic were the bushman to devote some of his time to considering the marvellous mechanism of his body. How wonderful it is that, with each breath we draw and each movement we make, atoms of our living tissue are consumed and turned into waste matter. Continuously, night and day, the food we eat, the water we drink, and the air we breathe are being converted into our flesh, blood and bone. Each nourishing atom conveyed by the blood replaces an atom which is worn out and useless. Waste matter is thus always being made within us, which, it is the province of the kidneys and other eliminating organs- to remove. If the organs are acting inefficiently this waste matter accumulates in the system and becomes actively poisonous. Th«n we suffer from rheumatism, gout, lumbago, sciatica, backache, blood disorders, anaemia, indigestion, biliousness, jaundice, sick-head-ache, general debility, gi-avel, stone, and bladder troubles. Then is the time to take Warner's Safe Cure, because Warner's Safe Cure exercises a stimulating and healing action on the kidneys and liver and enables them to cope with and expel from the system the accumulation of waste matter consisting of uric and biliary refuse. The cause of the suffering being remoi'ed, pain necessarily ceases. Warner's Safe Cure is sold by chemists and storekeepers everywhere, both in original form and in the cheaper "Concentrated" noa-alcoholio form,— Adyi. '

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19110128.2.161.2

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume LXXXI, Issue 23, 28 January 1911, Page 20

Word Count
286

Page 20 Advertisements Column 2 Evening Post, Volume LXXXI, Issue 23, 28 January 1911, Page 20

Page 20 Advertisements Column 2 Evening Post, Volume LXXXI, Issue 23, 28 January 1911, Page 20

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