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RHEUMATISM GOUT NEURALGIA. BAOKAOHE SOIATICA INDIGESTION AN/EMIA BLOOD DISORDERS BIUOUBNEBB JAUNDICE GRAVEL STONE BLADDER TROUBLES GENERAL DEBILITY SICK HEADAOHE. All these complaints are caused by the presence in the body of urinary and biliary poisons, due to ineffective action of the kidneys and liver. A renlisatioa of the work performed by these vital organs enables us to understand why, when they fail, we necessaiily suffer. THE KIDNEYS. By a process akin to filtering, the kidneys remove the excess of water from the blood in the form of urine. _ The kidneys of the average man filter and extract about three pints of urine, every day. In this qua jity of urine are dissolved about an ounce of urea, 10 to 12 grains in weight of uric acid, and other Hnimal and mineral muttrr yuryici? from a third of an ounce to nearly an ounce. Now all these are solid matter, which, when the kidneys are working healthily, is dissolved jn the urine, and leaves the body in complete solution. When the kidneys fail, a proportion of tho solid matter remains in the blood, and, becoming actively poisonous, produces tho various disorders due to urinary poisoning, such as RHEUMATISM, QOUT, NEURALGIA, BAOKAOHE, 80IATI0A, QRAVEL, STONE and BLADDER TROUBLES. SICK HEADACHE and AN/EMIA are also generally attributable to the same cause. THE LIVER. • The health of the liver and of the kidneys is closely related. It is almost impossible for the kidneys to to affected and for the liver to remain healthy, raid vice versa. In the liver various substances are actually made from the blood. Two or three pounds of bile are thus inndo from thu blood daily. The liver takes sugar from the blond, converts it into another form, and stores it up so as to babble to supply itagain to the blood as the latter requires enrichment. The liver changes uric acid, which is insoluble, into urea, which is completely soluble j arid 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, the blood becomes Men with biliary and urinary poisons to such an extent that it is not in n position to take up nutriment from the food we oat, red corpusclo3 are no longer formed, and it is these red corpuscles which nourish tho nerves. In other words, the blood is vitiated and starved, and wo are bound to suffer ill consequence. INDIQESTION, BILIOUBNESB, NEURALQIA, AN/EMIA, BIOK HEADACHE, and BLOOD DIBORDERB are but Nature's signs that the liver is not doing its duty. riser's Safe Cure. It is nearly 30 years since scientific research, directed specially to diseases of the kidneys «nd liver, was rewarded by the discovery of the medicine now known throughout the world as Warner's Safo Cure. At the outset of the investigation it was realised that it was necessary to find a curative agentwhich would act equally upon the kidneys and upon the liver, these two organs being so intimately associated in removing the waste products of the body. Warner's Safe Cure possesses .the desired property in its fullest degree. It acts beneficially alike upon the kidneys and, the liver, restoring them to their original activity, and enabling them to rid tho body, by natural means, of all urinary and biliary poisons. That is the reason why there is no necessity for anyone to suffer from RHEUMATISM, QOUT, BACKACHE, LUMBAGO, SCIATICA, PERSISTENT HEADACHE, NEURALGIA, QRAVEL, STONE, BLADDER TROUBLES, AN/EMIA, DEBILITY, INDIQESTION, or TORPID LIVER provided Warner's Safe Cure is taken as directed. Even BRIQHT'B DISEASE yields to treatment by Warner's Safe Cure. A SIMPLE TEST to make is to place some urine, passed the first thing in the morning, in a covered gloss, and let it stand until the next morning. If it is then cloudy, shows a brick dust like sediment, if particles float about in it, or it is of an unnatural colour, tho kidneys art unhealthy, and no time must be lost in taking Warner's Safe Cure, or BRIQHT'S DISEASE DIABETES, or some less serious but more painful manifestation of their inactivity will result.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ODT19070223.2.10.1

Bibliographic details

Otago Daily Times, Issue 13835, 23 February 1907, Page 8

Word Count
689

Page 8 Advertisements Column 1 Otago Daily Times, Issue 13835, 23 February 1907, Page 8

Page 8 Advertisements Column 1 Otago Daily Times, Issue 13835, 23 February 1907, Page 8