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A CURE FOR MIDDLE AGE.

, (By "Old Boy.") It always comes as a shock to a man or a woman to hear that they arc being classed as middle-aged' people. Youth merges so gradually into age that one is npt to consider oneself young for years ! after those who are really young hive placed us upon the shelf of age. In all i ; but a small minority of cases, hqw.eyer, j when a person gets to 1)0 over forty, a !! .subtle diminution, of energy 1 maltcs itself ; fetf. Perhaps, if we are lucky, we have nothing special in the/ way of "pnin to growl about, but, even iii such cases, there is an indefinable something which insistently brings to our knowledge the faot that youth has fled. In a larger proportion of instances the advance of middle age is heralded in a more emphatic "manner. The joints become stiff, twinges of" gout are felt, rheumatic' and 'neuralgic' pains begin to trouble, there is a' shafp" 'prim 'in' tho -batk When rising from a stooping -posture; a good meal is eaten with' a miscrablo consciousness that presently we shall regret the eating, and numerous weaknesses, net! aches all tend to advise us that we must begin to take more care^ of ourscivesr Although there is, unfortunately, no nißans'of provgiitfrig'tlfd advance of age, it is possible to ward off fts effects for an indefinite period -if adequate care' is taken to see that the eliminating- organs, the kidneys and liver, are in good working order, because the •encroachments, of age arc j ever gradual and painless when the kidneys and liver arc properly performing (heir functions. 1 The' kidneys of the averago' person filter and extract from "the blood about three pints of urine everyday. In this quantity of urine should be dissolved about an ounce of urea, ten or twelve grains in weight of uric acid, and other animal mid mineral matter varying from a third of an ounce to lica'rly an ounce. If the kidneys are working freely and $11 this solid/matter, loaves; the :wdy ..dissolved in the iinr.e, but., .if through weakness or .disease the kidneys tre unable to! do their work propoily, a quantity of these urinary "siibsiatices'reniairis' in the Llood and flows Ihrough the , vcijis, contnmi'natirig the whole sys'.era. '■'Tho!V J \vG suffer from soipe form'of iric poisonhifr; such as Rhcuniatisni, ; "rout, linnibago, Backache, Sciatica, 1 Persistent Headache, Neuralgia, Gravel, Stone, and IJladdrr Troubles. A simple vast to make as to whether the kidnoys vrc healthy is to place some urine, passed the first thing in the morning,-, in a oovcred glass, and let it stand, until i ioxt mpruii'.cj. If it is thpu cloudy, ' ihows a sediment like "brick-dust, is of ■ n unuaturaj colour, or has particles loating aboat in it, the kidneys are weak <r diseased, and stops must, immediately ■• be takbri to restore their, vigour, or Briglit's Disease, £)iabe'tes, or some of the many manifestations of uric poisoning will result. \ The Li\i)r is an automatic chemical ' laboratory. In the liver various sub- ; stances are actually made from the blood. • Two or three pounds 'of bile are* thus j made by the liver every day. The liver La'cos sugar from the blood, converts it • '\to another form, and, stpres- it up so : is to be able to again, supply, it to the ; )lood, as the latter may require, enrich- ' •tout. .The liver, changes uric acid, i vliii.li is insoluhTo, into # ure.a, which is ' oinpTetely soluble, arid tjie liver also! leals with the ijlood' corpuscles which j have lived their' life and 'are useful ho ■ ' longer. When the liver' is inactive'orfliseased 'we stifFe'r "from soirie form of ( jiliary poisoning sncli 1 " as Inttigesfioni I Bilionsiicss, AiUemiay Jaundice, Sick • Headache, General Debility, and Blood ! Disorders. • ] . So intimate isHbc delation between the { work don© by the kidneys, <ftnd that done ? ,by the liver, that where there' is, any } failure on the part : of, the kiditeys the '. liver becomes affected in, sypipathy and viee "yersal It was the realisation, of ''the • ( imp"ort^ce of this close union of the " labour 'of those .vittil' organs Avhich. re- ' 1 wttecl' in the'discoyeiy' of thW m^icine ■ now known t hVoii'gtlorit the . world "as J Warner's •Safe Cure l^ Certain * medical ! nien, : knowing' what a booii'it wbuld li be ■ to humanity J if some 1 medicine coiiM 'bo • -found- ■yhich would" act ' specifically 'oil j both tho kidneys^ and liver," ■ devoted ' themselves to an- exhaustive Bei>r'ch'.f6r ! : arich A medium, arid .their devotion^ was i oventu.ajly rewarded by< tb^ir success ; in 'j , compounding a medicine which possesses ■) the required quality r in' the, fullest : do- ; gree. Warner's Safe _ Cure ; exhibits^ a ] marvellous healing, action in all casos nf •• functional" or chronic .disease of the kidneys and liy^r, and restoring thorn, as i it is al)le to dp, to hehlth and activity, ! it, of necessity, cure* all complaints due ! to the retention in the system of urinary ; and -biliary poisons. A -vigorous action , of' the' kidnoys and liver naturally elimi- ' nates the poisons, and 1 troubles' duo to ■ the. presence pt;tho : poisons i cease. Cures ' effected ., by , VVarper- s Safe Gure are per \ manent simply because, they are nature!. '

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ST19041126.2.75.8

Bibliographic details

Southland Times, Issue 19471, 26 November 1904, Page 1 (Supplement)

Word Count
863

A CURE FOR MIDDLE AGE. Southland Times, Issue 19471, 26 November 1904, Page 1 (Supplement)

A CURE FOR MIDDLE AGE. Southland Times, Issue 19471, 26 November 1904, Page 1 (Supplement)