IN THE LONG RUN.
In one of her earlier poems' Ella Wheeler Wilcox says: —Tu the long rub fame finds deserving men.” It ia true, and equally true that time is the final test by which men and their work are measured. It approves or disproves of .ideas, inventions and methods. Fraud and chicanery may flourish for a day, but true merit endures, _ and ever-widen-ing blessings follow in its train. This line of thought is suggested in calling to, mind the discovery in 1878, after long months of experimontingj of a scientific treatment, for Bright’s of the kidneys : Previous to thiA.’tim© . the world’s, greatest physicians and scientists had publicly stated thaT there wan . ■* no known cure for Bright’® Disease, but ‘ torday, thanks to Warner’s Safe' 1 Cure, add greater.' liberty? Ipfu i>hpught and treatment, Bright’s Disease in its first and second stages is no longer considered incurable. Warner’s Safe Cure ha found its way around the globe, and can be foimd m every civilised country. Think you. .if it hadmot possessed exceptional y merits; it have stood the test? Call ■ td mind the ‘medicines in vogue a < a u art Or -of a century ago,* and how * few remain,- 1 Warner’s Safe Cure has been weighed in the balance of public opinion and found exactly as represented, and this slight testimonial to its worth is gladly and freely given. Mr John Meyer®, bridge carpenter, of. the Ayr tramway, North Queensland, says: “I was suffering for a long .time, from kidney 'trouble* and cramp :ih: the .T stomach. I could get no relief from.any. x medicine until I gave Wamer’Af Safe to Cure"- « trial. I got great relief from the, v first bottle. X , only used _ five bottles .0 altogether, and am cured. Li; : feel a> different man*.' T may state that • i toy uncle was cured of dropsy; by 't&k_ intr Warner’s Safe Cure, after the; doctors gave him up and said he must diel”' ' . t . i .* ,v r.- ....
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New Zealand Mail, Issue 1514, 7 March 1901, Page 65
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329IN THE LONG RUN. New Zealand Mail, Issue 1514, 7 March 1901, Page 65
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