DUNEDIN ACCOUNTS
Accounts of far-off happenings may vary, but tho accounts appearing week by week" of good that is happening in Dunedin never vary. Tho Dunedin men and women who have cause to praise Doan’s Pills do so whole-heartedly and in complete agreement. Hero is a case in point; Mrs r \V. Robertson, 3 Macandrew road, South Dunedin, says; “A member of my family suffered agony from backache and kidney trouble for some time, but until I got Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills nothing seemed to do her any good. This remedy was recommended to me by a friend, so I bought a bottle at once, and .she used them with very pleasing results. 'There was a marked improvement in her general health, and the pain in her back was easier. Thus encouraged, I got some more, and I am pleased lo say live bottles effected a complete and lasting euro. Before she took Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills she suffered terriblv. There was a constant ache in the middle of the back which hampered all her movements, and there was puffinesa under the eyes, besides dropsical swellings on the legs,' ankles, and hands. 'The kidney secretions were thick and cloudy, and her rest at night was very disturbed. Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills, however, drove all those distressing symptoms away, and there has been no return since iho euro was effected 12 months ago.” Six years later Mrs Robertson saya: “ The cure referred to has proved permanent. I need say no more; tho facts speak for themselves.” Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills are sold by all chemists and storekeepers at 3s per bottle, or will bo posted on receipt of price by Foster-M’Clellan Co., 15 Hamilton street, Sydney. But, be sure you get DUAN’S.—[Advt.]
A correspondent writing to tho Christchurch 1 Sun ’ gives an account of a rather queer matrimonial venture. Ho writes: “I can inform you of a case in a small township not quite- 100 miles from Christchurch where a father and daughter married a sister and brother. As tho man is tho father of eleven ' children by bis first marriage, and his wife is one of a family of aboht ten, you can imagine that in a country town where families marry and intermarry this causes endless complications in relationships -and .connections. The man’s son-in-law is also his brother-in-law, and ho is uncle to his own grandchildren.. The. more you study it put the more of ja ypu^find
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Bibliographic details
Evening Star, Issue 17925, 22 March 1922, Page 2
Word Count
408Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 Evening Star, Issue 17925, 22 March 1922, Page 2
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