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REMEDY FOR POVERTY.

Philanthropic men and women are theorising, and trying to explain and modify the evils of povery: and yet, in spite of the almost miraculous increase of the “ loaves and fishes,” due to modern invention ; in spite of the advantages of education and advanced civilisation; poverty, as a pestering disease, as a threatening cloud, holds fast upon us. Why, with all our charity, with all our noble impulses, with all our mighty national progress, why should there be so many helpless—many even starving ? The cause of goneral poverty is not in that there is a deficiency, but because too large a percentage of the human race are over-burdened with care; bound and held down by infirmities and disease, rendering them unable to hold their own in the struggle for lifo and predominance. Thousands of poor mortals are suffering today because in younger days, or in the prime of life, they were handicapped by pain and disease. Little —seemingly harmless —symptoms neglected; occasional aches and pains, bilious attacks, or disturbance of the stomaoh after meals, were allowed to increase in frequency until they increased by their own momentum for habits of disease are creases in the body often made as thoughtlessly as a fold in a newspaper, easily smoothed and remedied at first; neglected, they rapidly develop from functional to organic disease, leaving the victim a “ hopeless invalid.” If your liver (by occasional giddiness, nausea, periodical headaches, or unnatural feelings of melancholy) tries plainly to tell you it is over-burdened, helpless, inactive and weak, listen to its warnings and enliven it to its normal activity by taking Warner’s Safe Cure, which for years has successfully stood the severest tests by those who have tried it for torpidity of the liver and the weaknesses developing therefrom. Mrs E. Hallowes, of Bourke, N.S.W., gives her experience with this medicine in these words : “ I have used Warner’s Safe Cure for liver troubles with good results. On one occasion my liver was very bad. I gave Warner’s Safe Cure a trial. It not only relieved me at once, but ultimately completely cured me, and I have not had the slightest bilious attack since.”

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZMAIL18961203.2.81

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Mail, 3 December 1896, Page 72

Word Count
360

REMEDY FOR POVERTY. New Zealand Mail, 3 December 1896, Page 72

REMEDY FOR POVERTY. New Zealand Mail, 3 December 1896, Page 72