A TREACHEROUS TROUBLE. Kidney diseases are very dangerous. They come on silently, gain ground rapidly, and cause thousands of deaths that could have been prevented by proper treatment in the beginning. Nature gives early warnings of kidney disease—backache, twinges of pain when stooping or lifting, headaches, urinary disorders. If theso symptoms are unheeded there is grave danger of fatal kidney disease. Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills have earned a reputation for their effectiveness in kidney troubles, and are known and recommended the world over: Mr D. Keilly, High Street, Karoro, (Jreymouth, says: “Many years ago, when I was mining T contracted a very had cold, which settled on my kidneys. For months afterwards 1 suffered agoll y from backache, the pain at times being almost unbearable. The kidney secretions were seriously affected, being thick and cloudy, and a had colour. My rest at night was disturbed and during the day I felt tired and depressed, having no energy for anything. I was really in a very poor state of health, but no remedy T used did me any good, and f was fast losing hope of a cure. One day Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills were recommended to mo and as a last resource I bought a bottle to try them. They proved to be the very tiling 1 wanted; a course of these famous pills curing mo completely. I cannot say enough in praise of Doan’s Pills and will always recommend them.” Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills are sold hv all chemists and storekeepers. Foster-McClellan Co.. Proprietors, 15 Hamilton Street, Sydney. But. he sure you get DOAN’S.
.MANNA FROM AMOVE. The dream ot' every hopeful puntei and of every needy niiiu was realised t< a certain extent on Norwich Quay Lyttelton, the other moraine. A shower of banknotes was waited down from heaven, and old and young, fast and slow, competed strenuously in till endeavour to catch a portion of a total sum of L'l'd that was raining about like manna. The licensee of one of the hotels had been counting some money at. an open second-storey window when a sudden oust of wind carried Ids notes into the air. Some ol the notes settled on the roof of a I a rue store on the opposite side of the quay, hut only lor a fleeting space. The notes rose in thy breeze and drifted across the railway yard. A ten-shilling noto that came to earth at the Lyttelton Harbour Hoard’s .cool storo is all that has been recovered so far.
fit J?;. /'«•! r>ls? I TVDN’T hesitate—order a pound of Nelson Moate’s Pure Tea from your grocer NOW. It« delicious fragrance and refreshing qualities are too good to mior. even for a day. Beside*, it goes further, so costs less. Always Ask for mm,w*bi if v< & i *p%mw. TE
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Hokitika Guardian, 31 March 1928, Page 1
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467Page 1 Advertisements Column 3 Hokitika Guardian, 31 March 1928, Page 1
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