THE PENALTY FOR OVERWORK. ■ -o —- Many People are Beginning to feel the Strain. The heavy tax of overwork—the extra strain so necessary to many trades and occupations is hard on the kidneys. The kidneys begin to fail in their work, and the poisonous matter collects in the system. If your work seems hard for you, if you have a lame, weak, or aching back, if you seem tired and listless, if you notice sediment in the urine, unnatural colour, or irregular passages, and seem to be running down without apparent cause, begin at' once with Doan*» Backache' Ividney Pills, the remedy that has proved so beneficial to your neighbours. It has brought strength to the backs of -thousands of working men and women. Read this proof: Mr. Joseph Jessop, 15 Warkick St, Feilding, says:, — “I consider Doan’s Backache Kidriey Pills the finest remedy known for backache and kidney trouble, and I do not speak from hearsay, but from personal experience. Before I took these Pills I was laid up for days, and when I did manage to get about, i t was impossible for me to stand up straight. I could not turn in bed and my rest at night was very disturbed. The' kidney secretions were also affected, being thick and cloudy, and containing a red sediment. I was really very ill, and badly in need of a medicine that would restore me to goo health, and although I tried a good many remedies, I derived no permanent relief from any of them. After taking a course of Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills,, however, I felt a different man, being free of every ache and pain.” Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills are sold by all chemists and storekeepers at 3/- per bottle (six bottles 16/6), or will be posted on receipt of price by Foster-McClellan Co., 76 Pitt Street, Sydney. But be sure you get Doan’s.
I The proposed A nglican Cathedral I I P'/;’ as--m, lira® WM M MS R Ktf IKL-i - / A-' 77js Trials of W ar 77se Triumphs of Victory— The Blessings of Peace Years hence when the greatest war of history is but a memory and the trials of war and the triumphs of victory are recounted to the children of future generations, the Wellington Anglican Cathedral will be pointed to as having been built by a grateful people as a thankoffering for the blessings of peace. il Great memorial To-day it is your opportunity to express in practical form your thankfulness to God and your gratitude to those who have won for you the blessings of a victorious peace. Ox Rem Anglican CalWral will be a building of National interest—a Church the doors of which will always be open, wherein the public will have access to any seat, and no pew rents will be charged—a Church suitable for the conducting of dignified services on occasions of National rejoicing or mourning. All who are desirous of contributing to this Great Thankoffering and Memorial are requested to communicate at once with the Hon. Organising Secretary, Rev. C. F. Askew, St. Mark’s Vicarage, Wellington. Contributions or promises may be spread over a period of five years. Government Stock and War Bonds will be accepted. Legacies also may be made payable to the Wellington Anglican Cathedral Trustees.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TAIDT19190118.2.32.3
Bibliographic details
Taihape Daily Times, 18 January 1919, Page 6
Word Count
547Page 6 Advertisements Column 3 Taihape Daily Times, 18 January 1919, Page 6
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