Democratic Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 40, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 November 1886 — DANGEROUS DRUGS. [ARTICLE]

DANGEROUS DRUGS.

How to Control Effectually All Such Horrible Habits. Rochester (N. Y.) Post-Express. A gentleman who baa spent tue summer abroad said to our reporter that the thing that impressed him most of all was the numoer of ho.idaya one encounters abroad, and the little anxiety the people display in the conduct of business affairs. “Men boast here,” he said, “that they work for years without a day off; in Europe that would be considered a crime. ” Mr. HI H. Warner, who was present at the time, said: “This is the first summer in years that I have not spent on the water. Been too busy.” ‘ Then I suppose you have been advertising "extensively?” “Not at all. We have always heretofore closed our laboratory during July, August, and September, but thus summer we have kept it running day and night to supply the demand, which has been three times greater than ever before in our history at this season.” “How do you account for this?” “The increase has come from the universal recognition of the excellence of our preparations. We have been nearly ten years before the public, and the sales are constantly increasing while our newspaper advertising is constantly diminishing. Why, high scientific and me.lical authorities now publicly concede that our "Warner’s safe cure is the only scientific specific for kidney and liver diseases, and for all the many diseases caused by them.” “Have you evidence of this?” “Abundance! Only a few weeks ago Dr. J. lx Stephens, of Lebanon, Ohio, a specialist for the cure of narcotic, etc., habits told me that a number of eminent scientific medical men had been experimenting for Wars, testing and analyzing all known remedies for the kidneys and liver, for as you may be aware, the excessive use of all narcotics and stimulants destroys those organs, and until they can be restored to health the habits cannot be broken up! Among the investigators were such men as J. M. Hall, M. D., President of the State Board of Health of lowa, and Alexander Neil, M. D., Professor of Surgery in the College of Physicians and Surgeons, and President of the Academy of Medicine at Columbus, who, after exhaustive inquiry, reported that there was no remedy unown to schools or to scientific inquiry equal to Warner’s safe cure!” “Are many persons addicted to the use of deadly drugs?” “There are forty millions of people in the world who use opium alono, and there are many hundreds of thousands in this country who are victims of morphine, opium, quinine, and cocaine. They think they have no such habit about them—so many people are unconscious victims of these habits. They have pains and symptoms of what they call malaria and other diseases, when in reality it is the demand in the system for these terrible drugs, a demand that is caused largely by physicians’ prescriptions which contain so many dangerous drugs, and strong spirits, and one that must be answered or silenced in the kidnevs and liver by what Dr. Stephens says is tlie only kidney and liver specific. He also says that moderate opium and other drug eaters.'if they sustain the kidney and liver vigor with that great remedy, can keep up these habits in moderation.” “Well, does not this discovery give you a new revelation of the power of safe cure?” “No, sir; for years I have tried to convince the public that nearly all the diseases of the human system originate in some disorder of the kidneys or liver, and hones I have logically declared that if our specific were used, over ninety per cent, of these ailments would disappear. The liver and kidneys seem to absorb these poisons from the blood and become depraved and diseased.” “When these eminent authorities thus publicly admit that there is no remedy like ours to enable the kidnoys and liver to throw off tho frightful effocts of all deadly drugs and excessive use of stimulants, it is an admission of its power as great as any one could desire; for if through its influence alone the opium, morphine, quinine, cocaine, and liquor habits can De overcome, what higher testimonial of its specific power could be asked for?” “You really believe, then, Mr. Warner, that the majority of diseases come from kidney and liver complaints?” “Ido! When you see a person moping and groveling about, naif dead and half alive, year after years, you may surely put him down as having somo kidney and liver trouble. ” “The other day I was talking with Dr. Fowler, the eminent oculist of this city, who said that half the patients who came to him for eye treatment were affected by advanced kidney disease. Now, many people wonder why, in m ddle life, their eye-siglit becomes so poor. A thorough course of treatment with Warner’s safe cure is what they need more than a pair of eye-glasses. The kidney poison in the blood always attacks the weakest part of the. body; with some it affects the eyes; with others the head; With others the stomach or the lungs, or rheumatic disorder follows and neuralgia tears thelu to pieces, or they lose the pouters of taste, smell, or become impotent in other functions of the body. AVhat man would not give his all to have tho vigor of youth at command?” “The intelligent phys’eian knows that these complaints arc but xymptoms ; they are not tho disorder, and they are symptoms not of disease of tho head, the eye, or stomach, or of virility, necessarily, but of the kidney poison in the blood, and they may prevail and no pain occur in tne kidqeys.” It is not strange that the enthusiasm which Mr. Warner displays in his appreciation of his own remedy, whicb restored him to health when the doctors said he could not live six months, should become infectious, and that the entire world should pay tribute to its power. For, as Mr. Warner says, the sales are constantly increasing, while the newspaper advertising is constantly dimin shiug. This speaks volumes in praise of the extraordinary merits of his preparations.