Loading...
Exeter Advocate, 1906-1-4, Page 9OE'S ONLY ONE OUT OF SCORES ;10 /11 DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS MADE II1l9I A NEW MAN. ,gticbard O ark Doctored for a Doz©n Years anti Thought His. Case ; Incur- able- •Dodd."s' Kidney hills' Cured Dim. Fortune harbor, Nfid., Jan. le-- (Speeiai).-3,cores of people in this .neighborhood aro living proofs. thttt Dodd's 1:iduey pins cure all Kidney ••ttilanents from Backache to Bright's Disease. Among the most remark .able cures : is that, of Mr. Richard •Quid:, and he gives the story of it to the public as follows: "I suffered for over twenty years frotu Lumbago and. Kidney Disease, and at intervals was totally unable ;to - work, after ten or twelve years rot doctor's treatment, sI, had made up 'my wind that my complaint was ineurable. Reading of cures by Dodd's Kidney Pills tempted nae to try thele. I (lies so with little faith,. -but to my great surprise I had not taken mote than half a box before T :Felt relief, and after the use of seveu or eight. boxes, I was fully cured and at now man. "Yes, Dodd's Kidney Pills cured my Lumbago and Kidney Disease, and the best of it is I; have stayed cur- �d. WAR PREVENTS NATION'S DECAY. The Changes in International Strategy Reviewed. Major-General R. S. Baden-Powell. -C.13„ presided recently at the Royal •'United Service Institution, London. when Dr. T. Miller Maguire delivered an address on "The Developments of Inter- national Strategy Since 1S"'1, and Its Present Conditions." Among those present were Admiral the lion. Sir E. Fremantle, Admiral Sir .I3. H. Harris, Colonel Sir T. H. Baillie Hamilton, .Judges I ntoul, and Lieutenant-Colonel 'T. II. laayile, K.C. Dr. Miller Maguire said that since. 1871 the frontiers of the British Empire, 'which -previously were practically con- terminous with no great States except '!the United States and a. few unimpor- tant spots in Africa, had become ny 'European expansion" conierrninous with Russia, France and Germany, as 'well as, China, Afghanistan, Abyssinia, Italy and Portugal. The whole system +of the European body politic had .,-changed as a result of the victories of 3566 and t870 -"rip and of the high slan- dard of military excellence since main- tained by Germany. After dealing with 'the expansion of Russia,Canada, and the United States h passedon 6to Ta tC n p , ,and compared the .Japanese in the east pot Asia in 1005 with the British in the . 'west of Europe in 1805. OUR CIVILIZATION PALTRY. Modern European civilization was pal- -try. The "sonts of 'nen" were ignored, en the hack streets and sweating . dens -of our largo cities, but to the Asiatic the soul and mind were all In all. if' the people of great Britain were to main- 'tarn the strategic . position their cry .should be "cherish our bodies. cultivate our .minds, anti give us back our souls." War was not a disease, but a preven- tive of decay; nations had perished by -cultivating the arts of peace. but no nation had over decayed from cultivat- ing the arts of war. The only true foundation of the "greatness of king - Adonis and estates" was a race of well- trained military men, fit to fight by land and sea. These views were exemplified in LWo recent books, "The Risen Sun,' by Baron Suzematsu, 'and "The War .n 'the Far East," by the military corres- pondent of the Times, which latter book the lecturer described as • most admir- able. :