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9 Nine-tenths of the ills which humanity endures, with more or less pattience, are unnecessary ills. For instance: — BHEUCATISM BLOOD DISOBDEBS GB AXJ L GOUT ANAEMIA moATTTjTrc: MEUBALGIA INDIGESTION BLADDER LUMBAGO BILIOUSNESS GENERAL DEBILITY SCIATICA JAUNDICE SICK HEADACHE BRIGHT’S DISEASE are readily curable. One and all arise from the failure of the KIDNEYS AND LIVER. to efficiently perform their functions. These important organs, when acting healthily, deal with and remove from the system the poisonous matter which causes the disorders. The Kidneys filter and extract from the blood about three pints of urine every day. In this quantity of urine are dissolved about an ounce, of urea, ten to twelve grains in weight of uric acid, together with other animal ana mineral matter varying from a third of an ounce to nearly an ounce. When the kidneys are in health, all this solid matter is in solution and is invisible. Directly the kidneys, through either weakness or disease, become unfit to do their duty properly, a proportion of this solid matter remains in the blood, becomes actively poisonous and causes us to suffer from uric disorders such as Rheumatism. Gout. Neuralgia, Lumbago, Backache, Sciatica, Gravel, Stone, Bladder Troubles, and Bright’s Disease. A simple test ’to make as to the condition of the kidneys is to place some urine, passed the first thing in the morning, in a covered glass, and let it stand until next morning. If it is then cloudy, or there is a brick-dust like sediment, or if particles float about in it, or it is of a nunnatural colour, the kidneys are not healthy, ana no time must be lost in adopting remedial measures, or Bright’s Disease, Diabetes, or some less serious but more painful illness will result. The Liver-—ln the liver various substances are actually made from the blood. Two or three pounds of bile are thus made from the blood every day. The liver takes sugar fro mthe blood, converts it into another form, and stores it up so as to be able to again supply it to the blood, gradually, as the latter requires enrichment. The liver changes uric acid, which is insoluble, into urea, which is completely soluble, and the liver also deals with blood corpuscles which have lived their life and are useful no longer. When the liver is inactive or diseased we suffer from Indigestion, Biliousness, Anaemia, Sick Headache, and Blood Disorders. The health of the liver and of the kidneys is so closely connected that it is almost impossible for the kidneys to be affected, and the liver to remain healthy, or vice versa. It is nearly thirty years since scientific research directed specially to diseases of the Kidneys and Liver was rewarded by the discovery of the medicine now known throughout the world aS Warner’s Safe Cure. It was realised, at the outset of the investigation, that it was necessary to find a curative agent which would act equally upon the kidneys and upon the liver these organs being so immediately associated in the work of dealing with’ the body’s waste material ,and after many disappointments, the medinine which possessed the require daction in the fullest degree was at length discovered Warner’s Safe Cure cures all diseases of the kidneys and liver, and by restoring their activity, these vital organs are enabeld to rid the bodv through the natural channels, of the urinary and biliary poisons, the nrSnee of which, in the system, are the cause of Rheumatism, Gout, Lum-Sap-n Backache Sciatica, Blood Disorders, Anaemia, Indigestion, Biliousness, Jaundice Headache, Gravel, Stone, Bladder Troubles and General Debility. Werner’s Safe Cure cures all these disorders simply by removing the cause of the disorder. This the reason why cures effected by Warner’s Safe Cure are permanent cures.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZISDR19061011.2.37.1

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review, Volume XV, Issue 866, 11 October 1906, Page 22

Word Count
625

Page 22 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review, Volume XV, Issue 866, 11 October 1906, Page 22

Page 22 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review, Volume XV, Issue 866, 11 October 1906, Page 22

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