RED OLOUD, NEBRASKA, SCHIEP Qaoooi)09$tooooooooeoooo SIANUSUhFALOTOF DOCTOR BILLS Recommends Pe-ru-na for Catarrh of (be Stomach, w coins mo 6rip : "I havo wed Pa-ru-na for never! years and can heartily recommend for catarrh of thn etomach or entire aystom. I always Ket tenant from It for colds and grip. It atamla oft lota of doctor bills and makes one feel llko a new person." II. P. 8UTTLE3, 1U F. V. No. 3. Uox 61, Waynesburs, Kentucky. It is wise to keep a botllo of I'e-ru-na In tho houso for emergencies. Coughs nnd colds may usually bo relloved by n. few doses of I'o-ru-na Ukcn In Umo. Nasal catarrh, IndlRcatlon, con I s stipation, diarrhoea, rhcumatlani or other troubles duo to a catarrhal condition of tho mucous mctnbrnnes nil call for Pe-ru-na ns tho successful treatment. Tho health build incf, strength restoring qualities of this well known romeily nro especially marked after a protracted sickness, tho crip or Spanish Flu. PE-UU-NA Is Justly proud of Its record of fifty years ao health protector for tho wholt family. TABLETS OR LIQUID SOLD EVERYWHERE 9oooeorX!ftoeaMo0oooooee ManMillnM nff fni WmmtMm Y.-N -M 'J I iHiUriilv i;, w? I KlcknflrW das. F-- 1, U ) ''HEARS THE EAST A-CALLING" Marine's Reasons for Seeking Transfer t6 the Orient Prove Truth of Kipling's Statement Who says that Kipling didn't speak the mind of the enlisted limn when he wrote: "Ship me somewhere oust of Suez?" A innrlnu, wlio put in n long tour of duty In tho Orient, re cently wrote the editor of this column that he had requested to he transferred out there again. Ills letter was poet I Mil, hut sincere, lie wrote In part: "I can see In my mind's eye that old recruiting slogan, 'See the World.' nnd as riiear in my imagination the booming of the surf on those oriental shores and scent tho odor of the Celes tial heathen, methlnks I should like once again to brush elbows with those slant-eyed sons of Confucius." From the Leatherneck. Red Cross Ball Blue Is tho finest product of its kind In tho world. Ev ery woman wtio has used it knows this statement to bo true. Advertisement. Good Officers. "A good otllcer," said General Per ching at a dinner, "turns even adver sity to advantage. Like the young -rtig clerk, you know. "young man,' n lady snid to this Jiinp, 'I want about a piut of glycerin, please. " 'Yes, madam,' bald the drug clerk. That will he 55 cents BO cents for the glycerin nnd n nickel for the bottle.' "'Hut n month ago,' the lady oh Jected, 'I got some glycerin here, and you didn't charge anything for the bottle.' "yes, mndnm,' said tho drug clerk promptly. 'Then that will be GO cents.' " Some horses can go pretty fast, but a broken $10 bill goes faster. Strength isn't one 'of tho necessary qualifications of n shoplifter. Find the Cause! It isn't right to drag along feel ing miserable half sick. Find out what is making you feel bo badly and-try to correctit. Perhaps your kidneys aro causing that throbbing backache o,r those sharp, stabbing tains. You may havo -morning ameness, too, headaches, dizzy Bpells and irregular kidney action. Uso Doan's Kidney rills. They havo helped thousands of ailing folks. Ask your neighbor! A Nebraska Case iwynctfft isurr Mrs. Fred Dcd 1 o w, Crclghton, Ncbr., says: "I had a weak Uack nnd couldn't et Into any position that relieved my back. I had dlr.zy spoils with colored specks Moating before mo. My kidneys acted too ofton. After using three or four boxes or uoan s Kidney Pills I wns (riven prompt relief so that I haven't had kidney trouble since." Get Doan's at Any Store, 60c a Box DOAN'S "VKLV FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. Vsa,tu TOO LATE Death only a matter of short time. Don't wait until pains and aches become incurable diseases. Avoid painful consequences by taking COLD MEDAL The world's standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles the National Remedy of Holland since 1698. Three sizes, all druggists. Look for tho nam Gold Medal on arety tog and accept no imitation Shave "With Cuticura Soap The New Way Without Mug And He Probably Did. He wns eight years old, cleanly nnd neatly dressed. "Say," ho said, boldly to a tnnn he approached at Market nnd Pennsyl vania streets, "can you tell ine where Bellefontnlno street is?" "Why, that's n long way from here. What number do you want?" "I don't know the number, but it's n big double white bouse and I would know It If I saw it." "I believe you aro lost. You better see a policeman." "I'll try to figure It out myself for n while tirst." he said. And he started off toward Massa chusetts avenue to find tho "big double white house." Indianapolis News. ASPIRIN Name "Bayer" on Genuine Tako Aspirin only us told la oach package of genuine Bnycr Tablets of Aspirin. Then you will bo following the directions and dosage worked out by physicians during 21 years, and proved safe by millions. Tako no chances with substitutes. If you see tbo Bayer Cross on tablets, you can take them without fear for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Aspirin is the trade maik of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlcacldestcr of Sallcyllcacid. Advertisement. Japan's Highest Court. The Japanese Supreme court the Dnlshon-In consists of seven Judges, the chief Judge being appointed for life, or until removed to a higher po sition. Lust Juno the lute chief Judge, Baron Kunloml Yokota, was given an other berth "nearer tho emperor," and Dr. Shotnro Tomlyn was put In his place. Doctor Tomlyn Is n graduate of tho Imperial university of Tokyo und Is ono of tho best liked Jurists In the empire. Tho Japanese code of pro cedure Is patterned nfter tho best in tho American. English nnd Trench codes. New York Tribune. BEATS GASOLINE AT 10 CENTS A GALLON New Invention Makes Fords Run 34 Miles on Gallon of Gasoline and Start Easy in Coldest Weather Other Cars Show Proportionate Savings. A new carburetor which cuts"Bown gas ollne consumption of any motor, Including- tho Ford, and reduces gasoline bills from one-third to one-half Is tho achieve ment of the Air Friction Carburetor Com pany, 300S Madison St., Dayton, Ohio. This Invention not only Increases the power of nil motors from 30 to CO per cent, but enables ono to run slow on high gear. It also makes it caey to Btart a. Ford or any other car In the coldest weather without previously warmltlg the motor. With It you can use tho very cheapest grade of gasollno or half gaso line and half kerosene and still get more power nnd more mileage than you now get from tho best gasoline. Many Ford owners s,ay they get ns high as 35 to 40 miles to a gallon of gasoline. Tho manu facturers offer to send It on 30 days' trial to any car owner. It can bo put on or taken off in a few minutes by anyone. All who want to try It should, send their name, address and make of car to thi manufacturers ut once. Thoy also want local agents to, whom thoy offer excep tionally largo profits. Wrlto them today. Advertisement. lnriini 1 W0,'J0"';-'"lri.r:ACH.ii.n... $79 A WEEK GUARANTEED far elllns 4 average Cresco nalncont a day. Outfit TORE. We Deliver and Collect. Improved Mfr. Co., Dept. 101, Athland, O, , W. N. U., LINCOLN, NO. 36-1021. The Medium's Friend. Publisher Georgo Dornu of New York was laughing about Conun Doyle's rampant belief In spirltunl Ism. "Doyle's friends poke fun at hltn," ho said, "but ho takes It all in good part. At n dinner in Golder's Green, the Greenwich village of London, Doyle's host said to him ono eve ning: "'How will you linvo your roast beef, Sir Arthur? Underdone or' "But hero tho hostess Interrupted: " 'It takes no Sherlock Holmes,' she said, 'to tell how he'll havo his beef. Ho'U havo It "medium" of course.' " Question Flattered Her. Edith Jack asked Miss Vasselgb last night how old sho wns. Ethel Did sho got ungry? Edith No, sho was llnttercd. You sec, sho felt Hint she must look young or ho'd never havo dared. w ill i n rfrif I ill m m r a . - -n . r r- '- i iiiiiir-- -v jw -n mxr , . - - - - r KaaBaM(a lllilfppgg- NHvasaawwaiBBBi D If every mnn bos his price, a' felloii naturally feels cheap when ho glvcti himself away. By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN. ON ALU 15. MAOIILLAN is off for ISallin Land Just u'bout now he Is saying good-by to civilization awuy up on the coast of Labrador. And what does the veteran explorer expect to tlndV Probably he himself doesn't know. But P.nflln Land offers that Mningeht of lures tho luro of tho unknown. And if MncMillan reaches Its Interior or Its west coast and gels back to tell the tale, two or three years from now we may he hearing something new and seeing It, for be In tends to bring back moving pictures. Anyway, he and his schooner, the Iiouuoln, are off for Italllu Land. The truth is that Batlln Lnnd Is an undiscov ered country. It was "discovered" away back In tbo Seventeenth- century (1581-1022) by William Bailln that is, that hardy English explorer dis covered and charted Batlln bay, which lies be tween Greenland and Balllu Land. Ko he neces sarily discovered the east coast of Bailln Land. , But no man has ever sailed around Balllu Land. And no white man has ever penetrated to Its In terior. MncMillan therefore does not know what's allead of him. But the Eskimo who live on the big island have told him wondrous tales of tower ing mountains with great glaciers; vast lakes; birds new to science and of great size; beautiful (lowers; herds of reindeer. Tho Island, It Is es timated, Is about 1,XH miles from north to south from Lancaster sound to the Gulf of Boothia. It Is anywhere from 200 to fiOO miles wide east to West. Its east const line Is mi Ice-capped plateau with an altitude of from 5,000 to 8,000 feet. Tho Interior Is supposed to he largely of rock, covered with Ice. The western coast, vaguely Indlcatett on the maps, Is drawn from statements made by Eskimo. This western coast, according to stories told MncMillan by Eskimo, Is Inhabited by people who hnve never seen n white man. So, one of the re sults of the expedition may be moving pictures of a primitive people untouched by civilization. MacMlllan thinks there Is coal, oil and mineral wealth of various kinds on the Island. Then there Is terrestrial magnetism to be .studied from observations taken near the magnetic pole. Also the uuroru borcnlis is to be photographed. MacMlllan Is a veteran in Arctic exploration. Ho was born in Provlncetown, Mass., In 1871, and wus n '08 track and gridiron star at Bowiloln. In early life he taught the young Idea how to shoot. He was In the Peary Arctic Club North Polar Expedition of I'.XIS-OO; frozen feet put lilin out of consideration for Peary's final dash to the pole, lie was a member of the Calnl Labrador party in 1010 and did ethnological work among the Eskimo of Labrador In 1011 and 1012. He headed the Crocker Laifd exploring expedition In 1013. After four years during which time two re lief parties were dispatched In search of hhn and a third was formed, word chum through that the llttlo party was safe at Etah, Greenland. He had learped that Crocker Land was largely u myth. The Batlln Land Arctic Exploration tho otllclal title of the little company that MacMlllan will commnnd Is being llnanceQ by a group of Bowdoln men. Tho plans provldo for an ab sence of two years. The plans do not provide for n relief expedition. If tho Bowdoln Is crushed In the Ire, the party will retreat by sledge to Fort Churchill, the trading post at tho foot of Hudson bay, and return to civilization by way of North ern Canada. MacMlllan has carefully solected his compan ions. The members of the expedition, In most Instances, ho has knowiTfor years nnd several of them hnve been his shipmates on previous voy ages. His mute Is Jonathan Small ("Jot") of Provlncetown, Mass., who wns with him for four years on the Crocker Land expedition and whom tho explorer describes ns "througlwuubthrough sailor, and tho best story teller I over met." An other former shipmate Is Thomas McCue of Brl gus, Newfoundland, lho cook', who was with tho explorer on u trip through Hudson laiy Inst year. Harold Whltohouse of Boothlmy harbor, another experienced snllor, Is engineer. Itulph P. Itohlnson of llaverlrlll, Maas., will bo the explorer's general assistant during tho expe dition. Ho was a pui.il of Uoctor MacMlllan at Worcester academy rind later was assocluted with him us director of summer cumps In .Maine. He served in France during tho war us a lieutenant of Infantry, and since ids return hud been physical director in the Haverhill pub lic schools until he gave his resignation In Juno to Join the expedition. Dawson Howell of Boston represents tho Cur iickIo Institute on the expedition as magnetic ob server and will also serve as radio operator. Ho is the son of a Pittsburgh lawyer und is a former Trinity college football captain. Itlchard II. God dard of Wlnthrop, a member of this yenr'u grad uating class at Dartmouth, where he was promi nent in athletics, will liu Howell's assistant. The Bowdoln Is small Just about the slzo of the Discovery, Baflln's ship which, In 1010 wus the first to reach Batlln bay. But she has been specially constructed for tho expedition, and Is legarded as tpiite up-to-date for Ice work. Sho Is b'O feet 10 Inches in length, of 115 tons dis placement, 10 feet 7 Inches beam and 0 feet 0 Inches depth. Site is of the knockabout auxiliary typo, equipped with a -15-horse power crude oil burning engine that will drive her eight and a half knots an hour. Tests of the engine with va rious kinds of fuel havo convinced MacMlllan that oil obtained from the Arctic whole can be utilized. Though she had on hoard 2.S00 gallons of fuel, the sails will be used as much ns possible, and the motor he saved for emergencies among tho Ice floes. The Bowdoln's egg-shaped hull offers nothing to which Ice may cling. Under sufficient pressure from Ice floes, Instead of being crushed, tho Bow doln should be lifted out and bo carried with the pack. Her construction Is very strong. The frame of the hull Is planked with Si-Inch white oak, to which lias been added ut the water lino n 5-foot belt of greenhenrt or Ironwood. Tills armor Is said to be capable of withstanding tho grinding action of Ice bettor than steel or any other material. Twelve tons of cement ballast has been so placed ns to eliminate any danger of Ice punchjng through engine room nnd tanks. Her bow Is sheathed by heavy steel plates. She earrles a spare rudder nnd propeller. It Is be lieved that her slight draft of ',& feet will make It possible to drydock her on a beach at low tide so that repairs can be made. The forecastle Is of great importance" to a ship's company In Arctic temperatures. Tho Bowdoln's Ik huge and has been laid out with special thought for the comfort of the explorers, who will spend much of their time there during the long winter months. There Is it thick air space between tho outer and Inner skins of tho hull for Insulation against tho cold and moisture. When winter sets in a :i-foot covering of ice nnd snow will bo placed over the entire schooner, with snow houses, nfter the fashion of Eskimo igloos, to cover tlie hatch ways. For heating purposes the vessel Is equipped with oil heaters and kerosene for them. Cooking will bo done In a range with coal. When tho Bowdoln left Wlscasset, Me., sho was, hock-u-block with a wonderful conglomeration of articles. Tlu explorers have ninny, friends, nnd gifts of all kinds hud been showered upon them. In that packed cargo, were tobacco and matches sufllclent to last two years 2,800 gallons of oil, 14 tons of nut coal, enough to keep tho galley range hot for two years, flour enough for it llko period, 100 gallons of gasollno for lighting, 500 pounds of butter, 500 pounds or coffee, 1U cases of tea, 100 pounds of lard, a barrel of molasses, ten limns, four strips of bacon, six cases of corned beef and corned beef hash, HO cuses of other canned goods, 210 pounds of assorted Jellies and Jams, bags of beans, cases of rnacnronl, cases of cranberries, puddings, cheeses, cereal, dried fruits, nuts and .candy, a case of flavoring extracts, spices, dates and prunes, drugs, medicines and a quantity of dehydrated vegetables onions, pota toes, carrots, cabbages, cranberries, etc. from which tho molsturo has been extracted and which ' will return to their natural state upon being soaked In water. Somebody had given u number of old automobile, tires, to bo lowered over tho Bides as Ico buffers. Tho Bowdoln carries u wireless telegraph out fit. Sho has also a complete apparatus for her scientific work. Two motion picture cameras and four miles of 111m, with which Doctor MacMlllan plans to record the events of the trip, as well us the anlihnl und bird life, form an important part of the expedition's equipment. The explorer also expects to be able to uso the cameriiH, which aro furnished with special high-speed "lenses, In mak ing photographs of the aurora borealls, and ho will attempt, through photographs taken at dif ferent points, to measure the height of the north ern lights. And here's something clever. There's n motion picture machine nnd several reels of film for tho benefit of the natives. These reels Include films which MacMlllan made on a previous trip to tho North. So, when tho Eskimo see themselves pro jected against the side of an Iceberg, they will bo more likely to bellevo what the films show them of the white man's country. And maybe they will not consider MacMlllan a magician 1 Tho explorers carry 20 rifles and shotguns nnd 10,000 rounds of ammunition. These, of course, uro for the securing of specimen animals and for the killing of game. These firearms may also save their lles, since If they have to desert tho Bowdoln and mako their wuy to civilization on foot, they will have to livo olT tho country. This can be done, ns Stefunson, Amundsen nnd others havo proved to the world. Sir John Franklin's two crews perished to a man on such a retreat to the North after an attempt to conquer tho North west passage. Tim men wen; brave, hut appar ently Inadaptable. They perished In the midst of plenty. Of course the MacMlllan party havo no expec tations of footing it home across the Ice. They hope to navigate tho Bowdoln clear around Bailln Laud. "One hundred years ago Parry left Englnnd on tbo Fury and the Hecla to negotiate a Northwest passage," said MacMlllan. "Ho went Into Hudson buy south of Southampton Island and followed tho mainland of Canada northward till ho readied Fury and Hecla straits. Here ho. stayed tw? years nnd found ho was balked by Ico and a strong, rapid southward current. As fast as ho sailed up ho was driven back and ho became dis couraged and quit. Never since has a ship at tempted this trip. That's why I had thu llttlo schooner Bowdoln built. Experience hns shown that the small, hardy craft with a smnll crew works better than a Marge vessel anil an exten sive expedition. The Bowdoln's 45-horscpower oil engine should give us a cruising radius of near ly 4,000 relies Just with tli fuel In our tanks, to say nothing of whale oil. Wo also can depend on our sails. I sco no reason why we can't get home nil right." Incidentally, ns may be Imagined, Wlscasset had the time of Its wholo existence In the de parture of the Bowdoln. The event brought nn Influx of visitors such ns tho town has never seen before. The entire local population, together with summer residents from surrounding resorts, nnd relatives and friends of tho crow, thronged the whnrves along tho water front. Mingled with their cheers was tho .screech of whistles on harbor craft, the bellow of the flro siren and tho peal of eliureh bells. Tho harbor was dotted with launches, dories und other pleua uro craft, To this spontaneous demonstration on the part of tho populace was added tho oillclal valedictory of tho state, pronounced by Gov. Perclvnl P. Bax ter, a personal friend of tho explorer, Just before tho schooner left lho dock. Under her full speed of eight and a hnlf knots nn hour, tho schooner, for tho benefit of tho spec tators, made n complete circle around tho harbor before heading down Sheopscot buy. Tho crowd remained on tho docks and watched her until sho passed Davis island and finally disappeared around Wostport point.