STONE. GRAVEL, AND BLADDER TROUBLES.
So many people, especially &= the} advance in years, surfer from stone, •’ravel and bridder tiotibies, that the Followin'- letter will prove interesting; t< those of our readers who are thus af dieted :—“For some years I was a great j sufferer from catarrh of the bladder. I I had great difficulty in urinating. There i was a dull, adiiag pain in the lower part ! jf the body and intense inflammation, of ! the kidneys. The d:.*-harge of unnf I was verv scanty and of a bioed-red col- ■ our. my bwds .serried to swell anc ■ wrie verv much bloated at t::n.s. I ! spent many pound.* m medi*hut ! ~-oukl get : <>thit.o s-ut“d to my rem j plaint. I the.; <taking War ■ uer’s Safe Cur-> and d vivcl Lrvnt ben? |lt from thr fir:-t b-Htk-. Continuing t< ' lake t’.i - w.edi' ine I found ni; self ini orovitm ah ti:e ti.r.-j. The p:.i:i« grade •liv I mv nn'ie ba-sme rleai nd was vo : ded without distress. In : i'vw rm nths 1 had quite recovered Since that tim- 1 have enjoyed ver; <;r >1 healr.ii u I - I r.r. I ran honestly re -ommr-ud Warner's .'••ate Cure to t- nyotr • ufiering in the’snne way.” Th:* 'er was receiver! from ?dr. Vdi'anni 5 i< or Wdiiint*. of 59. B ; t. :i io. \ i.-toria. Similar let'.ers i ■ir..s.ratm; he effect of Warner’s fertfe Cure i' ases o’ stone, gravel, and bladder troi rles wiil be found in a pamphlet, issuer jy H. ii. Wurtier anti Co.. bt«l.. Aur .ral.'.siin Branch. Melbourne, v.hidiwiii ■’ ""nt post fiee on receipt of request bj them.
A Gore resident who recently visited the scene of the wreck of the iUfateds.6. Tanarua, which went ashore at Waipapapa Point in April, 1881, states that not a vestige of the wreck remains visible, although the boilers, which were washed ashore, are still to be seen at low tide. Some years ago, it will be remembered, the cemetery containing the graves of about 80 of the victims, whose bodies were unclaimed or unrecognisable, and were interred in trenches in the vicinity, was in a deplorably unkempt state, and at the time this neglect was referred to as nothing short of sacrilege by those sufficiently far removed from the neighborhood as to free them of responsibility in the matter. Now, however (says the Ensign), the “Tarartua acre” presents an improved appearance, the fences having been painted and the scrub removed from what was the final scene of one of the most dreadful calamaties in the history of New Zealand.
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Bibliographic details
Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume I, Issue 52, 11 February 1911, Page 11
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426STONE. GRAVEL, AND BLADDER TROUBLES. Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume I, Issue 52, 11 February 1911, Page 11
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