Hare you used the genuine and experienced the delight of immediate and permanent relief 7 Medical authorities all over the globe announce that the genuine SANDER AND SONS' EUCALYPTI IRAOT outdistances .*ll known remedies in colds, influenza, all fevers, diarrhoea, dysentery, rheumatism, etc. A local application will at once stop neuralgic pains, skin' diseases, wounds, ulcers; it heals without inflammation, Inhalations (5-8 drops to & cupful of boiling water) give certain _ relief in diphtheria, throat, and bronchial troubles, asthma, pneumonia, consumption, etc. Thirty years' use has proved the merits of SA*NDER AND SONS' EUCALYPTI EXTRACT. The ill-effects following the use of the common eucalyptus products need not be feared; .the cures are legion. Try it! But, to avoid disappointment, he sure and eel SANDER and SON'S PURE VOLATILE EUCALYPTI EXTRACT.—(Advt.)
' ; PROM A NEAR-8Y... TOWN. WHAT THEY SAY IN ASHBURTON IS THE SAME AS THEY SAY HEBE. _ There is something novel in reading incidents connected with the life of people in a neighbouring town. Even if these are of the most trivial nature the fact of them being near neighbours makes thein interesting. When they give vent to their feelings on a question that concerns both places, the incident is doubly interesting. Take the opinions on Doan's Backache Kidney Pills in this town and compare them ■with what follows from Ashburton. This .» only one example bnt it is sufficient to prove the truth of the assertion. • . Mrs Lockhard, Cox streoi, Ashburton, says;—"Doan's Backache Kidney Pills cured me two years ago of k|dney trouble and I 'ami still well to-aay. i?or years before I ; used this remedy I suffered severely with pains in the small of my back, giddiness and headaches. The pains were so bad that at times I could scarcely turn in bed, and when I moved the agony was so great that I could not resist crying out. I always felt worse when I laid down. The doctors said my trouble was caused by indigestion and I used to take purgative medicines but with no g'oo<i results. Two years ago last February I obtained a supply of Doan's Backni.i-c i\ 'dney Pills, and they me and as l have said abov« cured me for good. I have never suiiere backache, headache or giddiness since pills are splendid for such troubles, gatives weaken one and do not cure ache, but Doan's Pills act as a ton cure at the same time. Anyone, deranged kidneys shoold give this * trial." See that the word " backache " is name. You' want the medicine which cured Mrs Lockhard—Doan's Backache Kidney Pills. They are sold by all chemists and storekeepers at 5s per bos (six boxes 16s 6d), or will bo posted on receipt of price by Foster-lMcClellan Co., 76 Pitt street. Syd oey, N.S.W. . B-t be sure they are DOAN'S.
Church of England Temperance ;/ Column. • (From the " Christchurch Presf WELL SAID. THE late Dr J. G. Holland, poet, essayist, philanthropist, and editor of iScribner's Monthly," had very positive opinions and .consistent practice • touching strong, drink. He said-: " I neither drink wine nor give ,it to my guests. Strong drink, is - the curse of the country and. the age. Sixty thousand men in America every year lie down in. the grave of the drunkard. Brink has murdered my best friends, and I hate it. It burdens me with taxes, and I denounce it as a nuisance on which, every honest man should put his heel." , • _ DBI2*K AND MISSIONS. Let Christian men think of what has been dona by that burning water, as the North American Indians call it, that drink of death which the white man-has administered to his dark brethren, which has sowed the seed of discord and misery, and sent them, still further waudering from that God whom they might all have sought after and found.—Bishop Wilberforce. To vote. No License is better than to leave things, as they are, even though the change should be regarded as experimental.
A Church of England archbishop, as president of the World's Temperance Congress, held in London, has addressed the following' message to " all who are interested ..in. the work -of- promoting temperance. throughout the world."—'He- temperance cause is specially distinguished by the characteristic, that though it ha& moved, and. is--still moying, very slowly, ifc has -nevet -yefc gone back in - its steady progress. .'lt' has won its--way in science," in ;religion, in politics, in general" - ' public opinion. .. It. has not yet achieved a. final triumph,, but. it has. eilenced most of the objections 'which, long hindered its advance; it has made ridicule ridiculous; it has reversed jthe arguments founded on what is necessary; -for- health, for steady la--1 houri for-lot)g life; it has put an end «;the.chargfe,of ibeing an eccentricity, it compelled, ai; great trade to admit that the;:-frnit# of. that tradfe,"' as now carried on, are a'gigantic evil; and the one argument that still holds its ground, that the ua& of intoxicants contributes to human. enjoyment, is beginning to lose its forc& as we contrast the misery of the home _ of" the drunkard' with the happiness 1 of the home of the sober.. - The ■ Dean of Hereford bids temperance reformers to " beware of moral pub-lic-houses," and added, '' let not ministers become interested' in public-houses." The Irish. Presbyterian Assembly urges all pastors, elders, .teiacbers, and members, from infoiirants', and ha,ye no, fcdr^city. drink' traffic.' ' [".yA. j.C.hurch" tk j cei^ste tgkeooat #^igah.T<Hsn 1- 'a/Sunday,, 'Wemffig* »nt«?ing ! })lace^o'f'wor.i - ' Within ; orie iour ' - - * ; '>'*•'■■■' • .. ,"v,J)R BARNARDO'fe TESTIMONY. "In the. Wihfcer of *7l, at the request .of the. Earl of Shaftesbury, I carefully investigated my lists of rescued children, and tabulated in various columns the various , traceable causes, near or more remote, which led to their becoming candidates for the homes, and the astonishing fact emerged. that no less than 85 per cent, of the.chil-' dren who were admitted to the homes under my care owed their social ruin, to the drinking habits of their parents or grand-! parents or other relatives. . . . I would, not now hesitate to affirm that'of all my young .clients the . percentage who are stricken' down in life through the njiencv. of the drink curse is nearer the very figures given by the late Dr Guthrie fie.. 99 per cent. 1 (bar. the estimate I formed in 1871."
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THD19051127.2.33.3
Bibliographic details
Timaru Herald, Volume LXXXII, Issue 12842, 27 November 1905, Page 6
Word Count
1,039Page 6 Advertisements Column 3 Timaru Herald, Volume LXXXII, Issue 12842, 27 November 1905, Page 6
Using This Item
Stuff Ltd is the copyright owner for the Timaru Herald. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 3.0 New Zealand licence. This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Stuff Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.