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BANNED, NOT BOUGHT. HI'CH IS THE REPUTATION OF THE 44 LITTLE CONQUEROR " IN NEW PLYMOUTH. How hard it is to fain a good reputation, and how easy it is to lose one. As with a man's reputat'on, so it is with other tilings. f?oiiic tilings achieve a reputation which stays with them, They are founded on intrinsic value. They face the juil'ii: backed up by honesty, ami work ilu ir way quietly but thoroughly. New IJ\ jiiuuij*i jacjph' want no belter proof of metil than is contained in the following experience of a ciih.en A lady resident o Vogeltown, near New Plymouth, sa\.-:~Koia number (if years 1 have been .-ittiictrd with kidney trouble, in fa t these oijjaus were so disordered that I wasrpiilea martyr In pain. 1 used a h<( of remedies, but tin; only thing tha'i ever relieved mc wis Dunn's Baekaeh'e Kidney Pills, which 1 got from the Cooperative stejv ,-onte months ago. Since isingthrsfi 1 ills, 1 have been perfectly free of li e jain and 1 am now pleased to recommend this remedy to all sulFering with bad ael.e cr any other symptom of disordered kidneys.'" Take no substitute. You want the remedy which cured this lady, therefore ask for Doan's Bueknehe Kidney Pills, and see hat the W >r<l "Backache"'is in the name. Doan's Backache Kidney Plils are sold by all chemists and utoiekeepers at 3s per box (six boxes 16s fid) or will be posted on receipt of price by Foster-MeCl ellan Co. 76 PiU-strcet, Sydney. N.S W. But be sure they are DOAN'S.

Mr CI. liussi'U, of llio " M-.iiuvutu Daily Times" stall', lias lio.-u ji^nioiiiUil 111 surrcril Mr Alex Burns, nliu lias rexijjnnl liis |n»ilit.ii «n tin l .I'itss Ansociiilion al Wnlini'ualiii. Id liilir up t lie Mili-i'itilnriiil <lnlios i'ii tin' Clirisli-liui'i li " l'ir.ss."- A ssi.i'iillinn li'li'2X;llll,

Minn' n (( u'J o ,H;STIC The acknowledged good qualities anp >k,tiss of Saxdkh ami Sons' Ecvai.yiti XTllAl'T have I I'm "lit many imitations, and one case was .i' ,s| 1 i'i<^l in 'ln* ,Supr''a,o l' t'f Victoria, belMe his Honor Clik'f Jiinti'-e Kir.) Madden, K.C.M.0., etc. Ilis lienor, in giving juil^inciit, said tlifit whenever mi article is commended t the public by reason l>f its good quality, etc., it is not permissive to imitate any uf its features. 'Ucstraining (lie imitators perpetually from doing so, lie ordered them to ) ay all easts. We publish this to all'onl the people an opportunity of protecting themselves, and of securing what is proved beyond all doubt by skilled witnesses at tlie tfuprcmc Courl of Victoria, and by many authorities during the last lil years to be preparation of genuine merit, viz. Tut: Gkxci.nb Saxj>kr & Su.ns' I'l'ju; Voi.ATii.K KrcAi.vm Exthaci'.

'Hio middle-class voter, il lie rallies his children's chances in life, will henceforth have a keen eye on tlic Board ot Education, lioth on the distinguished men who represent it in tho. Houses of Parliament and at public functions and on the permanent secretary who pulls the strings. . ■ . The one definite achievement of the Hoard of Education since it has been under the Presidency of Lord 'Londonderry lias been to get rid of the one meinlxT of its staff who was universally admitted to he master of the subject.— 1 11 Morning Post." Nothing is so demoralising to sound Army administrators ;\s these recurrent panic*. Tliey are suddenly called upon, as Mr Brodrick and Lord Huberts were e:\lJetl upon, to complete in a few months what should Ik', the deliberate \»i>rk of years. Necessarily, the task is incompletely done, and the critic* tear it to pieces. Morci.v<>r, them* alarms, justitiul as they may be, are extremely expensive. Haste means -waste, in war as well as in business. And if war is to be sueeessfully conducted it inns! lie conducted as business, not by a series of emotional spa-un* (its of pervousnei-s alternating with a false sense of security. —" Standard." After a courtship oi more than lo years, the marriage was celebrated recently at Constance oi a Swiss named Herzfokl, aged Cili years, and M lie. Stemdelfc, who is U5. The couplo became engaged before they were 20, and soon after young Herzfeld left for America, telling his fiancee that ho would not return without £20,000, and asking her to wait, for him. During the, -lo years tho lovers exchanged nearly 3000 let-toi s and 50 photographs, and they recognised each other without difficulty on meeting again. Tho newly married pair will livo at Chicago, where .Mr licr/.feld lias a largo Iwsinnss. Tho U,S. War Department proposes asking Congress to increase the American standing army to 250,000. Tbu strength of tho forces is now 00,000 men, with an extremo war footing of 100,000. Tlic new plan contemplates the establishment of a "regular reserve" of 40,000, each man of which will received as wages 12s a mouth while following his regular occupation. The regular rcsrve will bo subjeet to instant, inarching orders Tho scheme incudes the formation of a second line, to consist of 100,000 men, called the national reserve. They will bo paid 8s a year. The balance of the required men, it is recommended, should be regularly enlisted.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TDN19060123.2.13.1

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Taranaki Daily News, Volume XLVII, Issue 8035, 23 January 1906, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
859

Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Taranaki Daily News, Volume XLVII, Issue 8035, 23 January 1906, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Taranaki Daily News, Volume XLVII, Issue 8035, 23 January 1906, Page 3

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