A FAIR WARNING. Frequently the first sign of kidney trouble is a slight ache or pain ’in the loins. Neglect of this warning makes the way easy for more serious trouble —gravel, serious kidney disease. ’Tis well to pay attention to the first sign. Weak kidneys generally grow weakei’ and delay is often dangerous. Residents of this locality place reliance in Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills. This tested remedy has been used in kidney trouble for years, and is recommended all over the civilised world. Read the following: — Mr F. W. Gardes, late of the Family Hotel, Foxton, and who is now keeping an hotel at Pukekohe, •near Auckland, syas: “As the result of a strain caused through heavy lifting, I suffered a lot from pains in my back. At times I was in agony; and could not move without enduring torture, and it was impossible for me to stand up straight. I tried almost every remedy known for my complaint but it was not until I had taken a few doses of Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills Vhich were recommended as a reliable medicine, that I felt I was at last getting better. I continued using the Pills until I was quite well again, taking five bottles in all. I feel splendid in health now, and I am very grateful to Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills for the good they have done me.” Six years later, Mr Gardes says: “I am still well, and have had no return of my old complaint since Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills cured me six years ago.” Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills are sold by all chemists and storekeepers at 3/- per bottle, or will be posted on receipt of price by Fos-ter-McClellan Co., 15 Hamilton St., —Advt. 5
A writer in the Bulletin states that sharp juveniles do not always fulfil the promise of their youth. ‘•Brown and Smith were two of my boyhood friends. Their respective fathers were the local bank manager and the local doctor. A grant had been made available in our village, the centre of a large fruitgrowing district, for the purpose of exterminating flying foxes, and the production of a pair of their feet at the bank entitled the bearer to a bonus of three-pence. After business hours the manager would bury the smellful takings of the day in his garden. His son always noted the spot, exhumed, the paws each night, and. sorted out the best preserved, and handed the same to young Smith, who. rolled'up next morning : with his trophies and made hefty gaps in the funds. As he possessed an old muzzle loader, the little game was never exposed, but by the time the.grant ran out the pair had cut up £2O between them. No doubt these boys should have become Sussex Street egg manipulators. or ended in gaol, but both are toiling hard at the singularly un,remunerative .job of preaching the gospel.”
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Manawatu Herald, Volume XLV, Issue 2601, 3 July 1923, Page 4
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484Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 Manawatu Herald, Volume XLV, Issue 2601, 3 July 1923, Page 4
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