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Determine tlie Value of an | $ OveriandCarbyComparh.cn I j Don’t rush into buying a Car becar.S'j it looks He. I I If you are thinking of purchasing a motor make a II thorough investigation into the claims m.ide by | g various makers. I | Then compare pbri-’ormaxce with prick and you will | S certainly come to the conclusion that the I I Overland I | Is far and away Tie best value in automobiles on lhe | i market. * 3 1 Thousands of shrewd business men and exp rt | S motorists have proved this—why don’t you? | P The Overland Car is Inexpensive, Powerful, Silent, | | Comfortable and above all things reliable. A § | Prices range from £275 to £4BO and lhe Car comes 0 | COMPLETE. § g Write us for further details ! | Zl. Matnick & Co., Ltd. | WANGANUI. I Sole Agents for North Fsland J Bay. Cotik-s s Estate (' * Oftl *■ y‘i <<-)] Wairswa. Agents W al - \\\ a. OVESIAwD MODEL ’X."- Tx min /cat CU2J4

j IS LIFE WOIJTfI LIVING? (By “Philo.”) ■ *>o aimost everyone there occur times ! when the question whether life is j worth living thrusts itself upon them, I but there are. fortunately, very few who come to a negative conclusion and decide to anticipate nature by hurry ing "behind»the veil.” To those in the possession of buoyant health the question occurs but seldom, but there are so many people who are never in thorough health, and others who suffer irorn pain and sick ness, that to them —the’fai larger class —the vital question is apt to intrude itself with persistent-v. It is remarkable how many people suffer from pain and sickness winch they could readily be cured of if they were aware <>t the cause of tlieir trouble. Of course there are diseases which cannot be cured, but such dis orders as rheumatism, gout, i.i-uialgia, lumbago, haikache, sciatica, blood disorders. anaemia. indigestion, biliousness. jaundice, sick headache, qeneriti debility. gravel, stone and bladder troubles, aiisrng. as they do so frequently. from a diseased or inactive condition of the kidneys ami liver, are amenable to piopei- treatment. When the kidneys and liver are working ac tively and in harmony, mic ami biliarypoisons are thrown off from the sys tem in a natural manner, and. as it is the presence of these musons in the blood which causes the suffering entail ed by any of the complaints mentioned, the removal of the poisons means the consequent, cessation of pain and suffering. The kidneys of tht average .person filter and extract from the bleed about j three pints of urine every dav. Jn this quantity of urine should be dis solved about an ounce of urea, ten or twelve grains in weight of uric acid, and other animal and mineral matter varying from a third of an ounce to nearly an ounce. If the kidneys are working freely and healthily all this solid matter leaves the body "dissolved in the urine, but if tbiough weakness or disease the kidneys are unable to do their work properly, a. quantity of these urinarv substances remains in the blood and flows through the veins con laminating the whole system. Then we suffer from some form of uric poisoning, such as Rheumatism, Gout. Lumbago. Backache. Sciatica, Persistent Headache. Neuralgia. Gravel. Stone, and Bladder Troubles. The liver is an automatic chemical laboratory. In the liver various substances are actually made from the blood. Two or three pounds of bile are thus made by the. liver every dav. The liver takes sugar from the blood, converts it into another form, and

stores it up so as to be able to again supply it to the blood, as the latter may require enrichment. The liver changes uric acid, which is insoluble, into urea, which is completely soluble, and the liver also deals with the blood corpuscles which have lived their life and are useful no longer. When the liver is inactive or diseased we suffer from some form of biliary poisoning, such as Indigestion, Biliousness, Anae mia, Jaundice, Sick Headache, General Debility, and Blood Disorders. So intimate is the relation between the woik done by the kidneys and that done by the liver, that where there is any failure on the part of the kidneys the liver is apt to become affected in sympathy, and vice versa. It was the realisation of ths importance of this close union of the labour of these vital organs which resulted in the discovery of the medicine now known through out the world as Warner’s Safe Cure. Certain investigators, knowing what a boon it would be to humanity if some medicine could be found which would act specifically cn both the kidneys ‘ and liver, devoted themselves to an exi haustive search for such a medrum, and I their devotion was eventually rewarded by their success in compounding a medicine which possesses the required quality. Varner’s Safe Cure exhibits a marvellens healing action in cases of functional or chronic disease of the kidneys and liver, and restoring them, as. generally, it is able to do, to health and activity, it. of necessity cures com plaints due to the retention in the system of urinary and biliary poisons. A vigorous action of the kidneys and liver naturally eliminates the poisons, and troubles due to the presence of the poisons cease. Cures effected by Warner’s Safe Cure are permanent simply because they are natural. Diseases, diagnosed as Bright’s disease, have often yielded to treatment by Warner’s Safe Cure. Warner’s Safe Cure is sold by chemist, and storekeepers sverywhere, both in the original (ss) bottles and in ths cheaper (2s fid) non alcchclic (Concentrated) form. a ‘ TjgBBL r pHII let it fade or fall out, when you can preserve its own natural olour and prevent it falling out by i«ng BATES’ HAIR RESTORER, rbich costs but 2/-. THE HASTINGS. ’ ( ILtOR PRINTING of best quality and at shortest notice, ring np 335, or : 1 call at office in Queen street (opposite i • Post Office), Hastings. | i

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HBTRIB19120928.2.76.3

Bibliographic details

Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume II, Issue 253, 28 September 1912, Page 7

Word Count
990

Page 7 Advertisements Column 3 Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume II, Issue 253, 28 September 1912, Page 7

Page 7 Advertisements Column 3 Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume II, Issue 253, 28 September 1912, Page 7

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