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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1908-11-05, Page 6Loaececeaseo.oesostaoceceocesacesa _ ALIKE THORNs le YOUNG FOLKS IN THE FLESH - J a oo:›000000Ire the Sharp Twinges and Ter - WHY THE TOADS MOVED. Mr. A. \\-erten Toad did nut feel loal,py. He was reacting a pice in the Toach•ille Bugle -Ebro, the local Puller. It said that toadstools were Puller. eaten by human beings. The twinges and the tortures of "1 declare," said Mr. Toad, "1 rheumatism are n •t due to cold. shave heard of people who were so damp weather as se many people shiftless they ate up their property. imagine. Rheumatism corers from But I never heard of people eating poisonous acid in the blood. The furniture. We stall have to pains may he started by cold wea- move." I they, damp weather or by keen The Toad house was neat and minds. There is only one way to cozy; it had thre • rooms -the big cure rheumatism. It must be treat - toad -room, the little toad -room and rd through the blood. All the lie►i- the Mush-reom, or dining -room, &lents and rubbing. and so-called Where the family ate their mush electrical treatment in the %toric! three tittles u day. I will not cure rheumatism. The Heid The mush -room was furnished in • that causes the disease roust be rsilnple style. There was a piece of duvet' out of the blood and the bare ground for table. And there blood enriched and purified. It is were seven din;ng-room chairs, or because Dr. 1Villiains' Pink Pills mush -stools, froth which the Toads remake new, red blood that they have could comfortably reach down toi cured thousands of cases of rheu- the table without bending their fore matisnl after all other treatment legs. At ono side of the house was bad failed. As a proof of what Dr. the mush -room -room, where odd 11 i11ialns' Pink Pills will do even furniture, very odd furniture, was, in the most severe cases of rheuma- etoed. In many respects it was! tism, the case of Mr. David Car- a very unusual house. I rol, a well known furniture dealer The Toads had been happy in 1 Pieton, N. S., may he cited. Mr. their small house. Now Father Carroll says: -"I have been a most Toad was sad. It boort hire to think revere sufferer from rheumatism, that humin beings had taken ti end in the hope that some other eating chairs, lounges, hassock) poor sufferer may find relief from and sofas. I n13. experience 1 gladly write you "There is no help for it," he ( f the benefit I have received from said, gulping. "We must move in-; Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. The to the cave. If we do not have trouble settled in my shoulders and ,tools, what can we sit on to reach down my sides and at times I was down to the table from f" quite unable to raise my arm. 1 Mrs. 'Toad smiled. She bad a was attended by a doctor, but as i re ugh but kindly face. slid not appear to be getting any "There will be plenty of stools better I sent for a so-called elec- for a long tinge," she said. "T,r uric belt for which I paid $40.00. It be sure, tools are a slow crop. it diel not do Inc any good and then I takes all night for one to grow. and tried another rernedy, but without all day for it to stool out. Bui; all any better results. A friend asked the country round here is so well lire to try 1)r. 1VI.tianis' Pink Pills, ',tooled that the big people (night end I got three boxes, -by the time tures of Rheumatism ---Dr. William' Fink Fills a Certain lura. Tl,I I.t\fl IJ it.IthI•li \lt►tt1:•'WHAT NEGLECT 1%aal Uolur Life as 11 (►btai.l. in Other Countries. One of the most difficult questions which will have to be solved by new Turkey is that of the future of Tur- kish woolen. It has already given rise to considerable discussion, and will sooner or later become a na- tional question. For many years among the better classes there has been a steady movement toward emancipation, and the old Turkish life has prac- tically disappeared in all the houses of the educated people. The change carne with education, as the daugh- ters of the hceuse here trained by foreign governesses. They began to read foreign literature and pap. el•s, and brought up their children better than themselves, with the re- sult that no family of any conse- quence keeps up the old Turkish customs in their entirety. Thus terry few modern Turks havo more than one wife, the life in their houses is quite European, includ- ing their dress, mode of living, foots. etc. Only out, -of -doors do they wear the veil as before. But the %yeomen want more; they want to institute honkie life, and many have done so already. They also desire to receive visitors with - cut restriction, and adopt more be- coming dress in public. The edu- cated Turks have no objection to this, provided the change is not too quick, as they also have mixed in foreign society and feel the want of ladies in Turkish society. If it remained with this class alone the change would conte rapidly, but there are the common classes and the country people, who cannot un- derstand it, and can never imagine any change by which their women folk should be anything else than what they have been for centuries. And it is noteworthy that in the DID FOR IIIM JAS. E. BRANT SUFFERED RED TORI. MI•:N'TS FR011 KIDNEY 1)1SEA.S S. Then Ile Used I)odd's Kidney Pills and 110(•rulte a )%e11 Mau - 11 is 1•:xperieuce a Leeson for You. Athabasca Lauding, Altu., Oct. (Special). -That Kidney Disease, regleeted in its earlier stages, leads t • the most terrible suffering, if not death itself. and that the one sure cure for it in all stages is reeld's Kidney l'ills, is the experi- ence of Mr. James E. Brant, a farmer residing near here. Mr. Brant. contracted Kidney Dis- ease, when a young Ulan, from a strain, and like hosts of others, neglected it, expecting it to go away itself. But it. kept gradually growing war -e, till after thirty years of in- creasing suffering the climax cause, and lie found himself 50 crippled that at times he could not turn in !,cel, and for two weeks at a time it was impossible fur him to rise from a chair without putting his hands on his knees. Ho could not button his clothes. He was troubled with Lumbago, Gravel and Backache, and tried medicines for each and all of thele without getting relief, till good luck turned hire to Dodd's Kidney Pills. Dudd's Kidney Pills started at the cause of his troubles and cured his Kidneys. With cured Kidneys bole other troubles speedily disap- 11 I \'I 1 \ (: 11 I1.1) HORSES. Favorite Sport In New South Wales - Breaking the Animals. Whether '•Itrulnby" is a surtivai of the aboriginal name for u wild horse or a corruption of "unbrand- ed" appears to be a question which philuhtgists have left undecided, Litt bruwby hunting is still a favor- ite sport in New South Wales, says the London Standard. Districts like the Clarence and Stephens and Manning River water- shed are still the home of rimer - tars droves of brunbies, and hunt- ing them is declared to be a very exhilarating pastime. The first step taken is to stake out a corral and make. all secure except a nar- row entrance, which can subse- (mer 1iv be gated. On either side :,f the entrance and projecting from it funnclwise a "booby fence" is prepared. To the simple minded brungby it presumably looks like a stockade, and pieces of fluttering cot ton make it look impregnable. %%lien this is ready the young bloods, well mount- ed, gallop out and round up the wild horses, driving them with shouts and much loud snapping of stock whips toward the mouth of the funnel. In a group of hrumhies there is always a loader, and when once the hunters have gut the leader for the corral they are pretty certain of the rest of the drove. The fluttering cotton rags of the sham fence are sufficient to deter the brumbies from breaking through the flimsy barriers, and in toss time than it takes to tell the wild horses are safely corralled and the big gate peered, and to -day lie is a weli shut on them. man. Then they are left for four and If yon cure your Kidneys with twenty hears without food and provinces that whenever reaction- Dodd's Kidney Pills you will never water to reflect on the situation, axles have tried to start a movement havo Lumbago, lolieurnatisnl, Heart and after that they can be broken against the constitution they have Disease, Dropsy or Bright's Dm- ;:, without muco: diilieulty. always declared that one of the first case• beejthlf of the constitution would M1'itIEREl) `20 \PIPES. A II.1(oiIS'I'It:1TI INVESTIGATES the complete emancipation of the eat. a good deal of furniture, and i had used them all 1 found tl: