Show LOST IN THE STORM one of our local editors clipped from 6 leading magazine extracts from a vivid description of a western blizzard which we have taken the liberty to publish and at the same time suggest to H H warner co the proprietors of the celebrated warners sale cure the feasibility of taking an extract for the introduction of one of their telling advertisements ti tha following is the description at the close of a dark day in january a solitary horseman bends wends his way across the open prairie in one of our western territories he passes at long intervals the lone cabin of the hardy frontiersman awo or three old settlers of whom he has inquired the way have warned him that a storm is approaching and one of them with true western hospitality urges him to find shelter in his cabin for the night but he declines the proffered kindness and urges his tired horse forward the sky grows suddenly dark he decides to seek shelter the storm increases in its fury the rider dismounts to warm bis fast chuling limbs can scarcely breathe blindness comes on drowsiness steals over him the end ial near he is lost in the blizzard there ia no doubt that the terror which seizes the bewildered traveler is similar to that which overcomes one when he learns that he is buffering from an advanced kidney disease and is informed that he is in ane last stages of brighta tB disease at first he is informed that he has a slight kidney affection later he begins to feel tired slight headache fickle appetite failure of tho eyesight cramp in the calf of the legs wakefulness distressing nervousness rheumatic and neuralgic pains occasionally sio nally pain in the back scanty dark colored fluids with scalding sensation gradual failure of strength any of the above symptoms signify sidney affection but he is told that he ia all right his physician treats him for symptoms and calls it disease when in reality it is but a symptom of kidney trouble he may be treated for rheumatic or neuralgic pains heart affection or any other disease which he is most susceptible to finally the patient has puffing under the eyes slight bloating of ahe ankles and legs his physician may inform him that it is but the accumulation of blood in his ankles for want of proper exercise the bloat continues and reaches his body then he is informed he has troubles and ia tapped once or twice he notices it ia difficult to breathe owing to irregular action of the heart and finally is informed that he has a slight attack of brights disease soon his friends are notified that bis is an advanced case of brights disease and that he can live but a short time his honorable and dignified phy asician for counsel it is too late still he sticks to the old family physician and the physician knows and has known from the beginning that the patient has been stricken with death for months for he knows full well eliat the profession acknowledge they have no remedies for the cure of kidney disease at last the patient suffocates is smothered and dies from tro ible or perhaps the disease may not take the form of a tendency and the patient dies from apoplexy paralysis pneumonia or heart trouble or it may take the form of blood poisoning in each form the end is the same and yet he and his friends were warned by the proprietors of the celebrated remedy known as warners safe cure of the lurking dangers of a slight kidney affection the newspapers have published the dangers columns of facts have been printed of men dying from advanced kidney disease or brights disease his friends and physician look around with horror and regret for seeming neglect but he is lost he did not heed the warning that a storm was approaching he declined the proffered hospitality and recklessly went forward into danger he struggled manfully for a time but his strength failed he grew gradually weaker and he was lost to the world not in a blizzard but from the terrible malady which is almost daily occurring in every community and which is doctored as a symptom instead of what it is a mortal disease unless properly treated |