DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD, DAKOTA CITY. NEBRASKA. W f "We '.' t iF BACK HURTS USE SALTS FOR KIDNEYS Eat less meat If Kidneys feel like lead or Bladder bothers. . .Ifntit s.1t.n S.n...nt 4t..l 4t. I.M. I A nival luino luigtl mill UIU hlUUUJTS, i' like the bowels, get sluggish and clogged and need a flushing occasion- f ally, else we have backache and dull misery In the kidney region, severe headaches, rheumatic twinges, torpid liver, acid stomach, sleeplessness and all sorts of bladder disorders. You simply must keep your kidneys active and clean, and the moment you feel an ache or pain In the kidney region, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any good drug store here, I tako a tnblcspoonful In a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act One. Tills famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon Juice, combined with llthla, and Is harmless to flush clogged '. kidneys and stimulates them to normal activity. It also neutralizes the adds In the urine so It no longer Irritates, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts Is harmless; Inexpensive; makes a delightful effervescent Hthlu water drink which everybody should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean, thus avoiding serious compli cations. A well-known local druggist says he Bells lots of Jad Salts to folks who believe In overcoming kidney trouble while It Is only trouble. Adv. i Overplay will sometimes break a man down as well as overwork. The Cuticura Toilet Trio Having cleared your skin keep It clear by ranking Cuticura your every-day toilet preparations. The soap to cleanse bnd purify, the Ointment to soothe and heal, the Talcum to powder and per fume. No toilet table is completo without them. 25c everywhere. Adv. The Almighty evidently didn't have much to do when he created some peoplp. pp i RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR. To half pint of water add 1 oz. Bay Rum, k small box of Barbo Compound, and or. of glycerine. Apply to the hair twice a week until it becomes the desired shade. Any druggist can put this up or you can mix it at homo at very little cost. It will gradually darken streaked, faded gray hair, and will make harsh hair soft and glossy. It will not co'or the scalp, is not sticky or greasy, and does not rub ott. Adv. The Kind. We had shortcake yesterday." "So hud we. It was so short It wouldn't go around." Jail Had No Terrors for Them. Life in jail at Port au Prince, Haiti, Is apparently so pleasant that It Is harder to keep the natives out than In. Li A recent roll call showed live more prisoners than had been committed. Ofllenrs nf tlm marine porns who Invos- I' flriititi1 41w. tnnitn. 4f,..,l tlnit- 1 1 r. Attn tliltll'il mu uiuiii:i luuuu 111414. inu ,!- v "extras," uttracted by three good uicnls a day and a comfortable cell to sleep In, had sneaked In with a returning road fjang. Now prisoners who work outside the walls are carefully counted before they are readmitted. Youth's Companion. Real Calamity. - -It was In' the Argonne. A regiment of colored pioneers from Dixie who had been Inducted Into the service had just received a batch of mall. But neither Jefferson Madison "Monroe nor, his particular side-kick, Washington . Jones, was manifesting any grent ela tion. In fact, they both looked de cidedly In the dumps. "Wash," mourned Jefferson, "I'se the hard luckin'est nigger what was ever. I done Jiist got a letter from muh gal and she's gone nud went and married unother." "Oh, man, man !" walled Wash. "You don't know what hard luck am. Me, I Just got a letter from the druf board what says I'm exempt!" ' Health and" Comfort Flavor and Economy POSTUM Cereal gives you every desirable Quality iri a table beverage and has none of the harm of coffee. Tliis AU-Americam table beverade must be boiled 20 minutes. Ibr children and grown-ups. "There's a JSteason" Two Sizes 25$ and 15$ All grocers. Made by Posturn Ccrea1. ,Co. Battle Creek, Mich. A WELL-KNOWN INSTITUTION. Probably no Institution In America Is more widely known than Doctor Pierce's Invalids' Hotel In Buffalo, N. Y. Although established many years ago It Is today a modern sanitarium, having all the latest facilities for the correct diagnosis of diseases and their successful treatment through medicine or surgery. j It was Dr. Pierce, Us founder, who over CO years ago gave to the world that wonderful stomach tonic and blood purifier, "Golden Medical Discovery," and that famous non alcoholic medicine for women, "Fa vorite Prescription." In his early professional career, Dr. Pierce realized that every family, but especially those who live remote from a physician, should lmvo at hand an Instructive book that would teach them something about First Aid, Physi ology, Anatomy, Hygiene; how to rec ognize different diseases, how to care for the sick, what to do In case of ac cident or sudden sickness etc., so he published that great book, tho'"MedIcal Adviser," nn up-to-dato edition of which can be procured by sending CO cents to Doctor Pierce's Invalids' Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y. Later, Dr. Pierce added another link to his chain of good works by estab lishing n bureau of correspondence to which any one can write for medical advice, without any expense whatever, and If necessary, medicines especially prepared In Doctor Pierce's Laboratory will be sent 'by parcel post or express for use at home, at a reasonable cost. Thus those who have symptoms of dis ease need not suffer mental agony fear ing that they have some serious ail ment, but can have a diagnosis made free by n physician of high profes sional standing. Write to Dr. Pierce relating your symptoms If you need medical ndvice for any chronic disease. All letters regarded as confidential. FRECKLES POSITIVELV REMOVED fcr Or. BtrTT PTMkU OlDtaMiit Tar diiAlator mill. 5e. Vtm bok. Or. CM. rr C., 3 1 78 Michigan AvwuM, Chlcaso. ENTIRELY UNFITTED FOR IT Weighty Reasons Why Mr. J. Fuller Gloom Declined Nomination for the Legislature. "No!" a trifle grimly said J. Fuller Glom, in reply to the tender of the committee. "I am not now, have never been, and never shall be, a candidate for the legislature. At the age of twen-ty-flvo years palnfol experience caused mo to abandon the Idea that the world owed me a living, at thirty I lost my strut, at thirty-five I ceased to think I was smarter than my fellow men, at forty I gave up expecting something for nothing, nt forty-five I desisted from talking when I had noth ing to say, and nt fifty-five I became convinced that honesty was the best policy. I have never been a liar. My abdomen does not protrude. I have always been able to make n living and nt the same time hold the respect of tjiosc who knew me. On these ac counts and others I might name, I decline without thanks the Invitation to accept the nomination. Good af ternoon. Kansas City Star. Doughnuts Gone to the Dog. My most embarrassing moment came wh6n I looked back at a bride and groom, fell over a dog and spilled a dozen doughnuts all over the sidewalk. I know how Lot's wife must have felt. Chicago Tribune. It Isn't dlflicult to pose jis a finan cier If you have sufllclont money. , Belgium Sketches The htfugee By Katharine Egglestoa Robert! (Copyright. 1119, Western Nswspapsr Union) Mathilda van Straclen tucked the blanket about her three sleeping chil dren and, for a moment, regarded the touseled llttlo heads. JIaybo If the bedclothes had been clean, she" would have noticed how dirty the children's faces were and washed them. But she only pulled the soiled blanket up to the small, grimy chins and loft dirt, the harmotilzer of .all things, undis turbed. Across the room was another" cot, Us coverings heaped in the midst of It as they had been left la the morning. She started toward It, stopped halfway, then pushing some newspapers from n chnlr, sat down und dully regarded her husband. Ho was writing at a small table, the top of which -was clear save for a pile of neatly written pages. The flickering light from the lamp on tho cluttered dinner table near him emphasized the sharpness of his ascetic features and deepened the shndows under his eyes. Mathilda's gaze followed the move ment of the pen In ills long slender fingers. ' "I don't see why you go on with thnt writing, Andre. You'll never get anywhere with It now. The war spoiled every chance nnybody had at everything." P"No, not everything." Then as he loolced up the light In his face cloud ed. "It spoiled just about everything, though," he admitted. "Mathilda, can't you clean things up a little around here? Somehow It wouldn't seem so crowded If everything weren't so strewn about, and dirty." Mathilda pushed her hair out of her eyes. "I s'poso I could, but "why bother? Cook, eat, sleep In one room anyway. It just gets .mussed up again. We used to be someone when you were lecturing in the college. Now the college Is gone, the town Is gone, you're just a refugee like u lot of other Belgluns, only you don't know how to dig so well. We used to have a nice house, 'now we have a shack, What's the use of trying to do any thing, anyway? I don't enre." Her Why1 Interest In Everything Had Been Lost. voice dragged through the sentences as she dragged through each day, in differently, without any particular feeling. ' "But It's our own shack at least we aren't living In a regular refugee's home. And as soon as the town builds up, It will need n school and maybe I can get the work I know how to do. Of course, there's Verbeek next door. He used to teach, too, but the people hero know me better than thoy fo him." He paused. "Dh-huh." .His wife shook out the bedclothes and crawled under them. Andre turned hack to his writing but the clear thoughts would not come. They wen; stained by the touch tMWh'j3'(3 m&mtz& sg Entrance to Their Home. of his surroundings. He put the pa pers In a flat box In the drawer of his table and sat looking Into spneo. No, he didn't Imagine, ho could ever do anything with his hook. That wasn't why he worked on It each eve ning. It wns only because there was cons)hitlon In filling the clean white pagv with thoughts he could no long er speak nloud. Only to Mathilda,' could he ever have told them and now t'o-.-u-VIMMIIIIII,. iv.a-:.4 ' r m ' HI ! ' i Ljrnwrjss:a well, she would Just look the other way and answer an uncomprehending "iili-huh" that stabbed him to si lence. What had hnpp;ncd to her? With their money, not only her self respect but her whole self had gone. Why couldn't sho keep their little house tidy? Why wouldn't she keep his children cleun? Leonlo was eight and the twins sir. They were old enough to know how to behave to people. Why wouldn't she tench them? Poor little youngsters hud dled together in that dirty bed 1 Ho roso and went to tho window. Thero wns a light In 'Vcrbcok's cot tnge. Suddenly his mind pictured the Interior. His home should be like thut They had exactly tho some things but their dishes shone on the cupboard shelves, their beds were al ways made when he called, and the children had excellent manners. They were well washed, too. They looked healthier and happier than his little ones. Was the difference his fault? Surely not he and Verbeek were In the same positions Uiey did tho same things. But Madame Verbeek did not say "why bother." It was true she worked all duy long to keep things going and muke ends meet. She did It because she had not lost her pride and It was the work that kept her from losing herself. Mathil da but he must not think that way. Ho began to prepare for bed. Though the lamp wns burning low, he could Btlll see his wife as she lay asleep. Sho had been pretty once, but now somehow her faco had changed, the skin wasVsallow, the expression different thnt was It the expression. She had not taken down her hair; wisps of It made a ragged fringe about her forehead and neck. Hnlrplns stuck out at grotesque nngles. Ho wished sho would brush It as she used to do. The bed he turned out the lamp and finished undressing In tho dark and took his place beside her. It was easier so. It was toword dusk one evening nfter he had come home from work that I.eonle answered n rnp at tho door. "Yes, he's here,1' she said, hold ing the door half shut. "Who Is it? Ask them In," com manded Andre, and hurried across the room. He gave the priest his chair. Ma thilda removed some dishes from the other one, wiped It with her apron, nnd gave It to Monsieur Itnnicau. The third man sat gingerly upon the edge of the bed. "We've come to ask you to ask " his gazed roamed about the littered room and he paused. The priest's kindly Voice began, "Yes we've come a school Is to he established here. Some one must take charge of It. Wo thought you might. We're going to get several candidates and one will be selected." '"Yes, yes, that Is it." Monsieur Ha meau took up the speech. "We thought you might like to be a candidate." Andre van Strnelen, thanking them, had assured them that he was anxious to be considered, and they had care fully made their way to the door. Out In the road they stopped to talk. One of them Indicated the neighboring house. Tho others nodded slowly and they went to call on Karel Verbeek. It wns then thnt Andre realized, Their hesitation after they had entered his house, their stammering embar rassment nnd exchange of glances, their Indecision and their consultation In the road after they had left all meant one thing. There had been no Idea of candidates; they had Intended to give him tho position till they saw how he lived, how his house was kept. Then they had takeu the kindest way out of the situation. Ho was not surprised to, henr the next day thut Verbeek wus appointed, but, for a long time, he could not mnko himself go home. When he finally did open his door It wus very late. Ma thilda was asleep. Ho awakened her, Verbeek was elected." "Uh-huli." She closed her eyes again, apparently uninterested. "Do you know why?" demanded Andre almost fiercely. "It was be cause " But sho had gone back to sleep she had not cared. He stood stiffly, staring down nt her, fils fists clenched till the knuckles were white, his teeth set. Ho hated tho Injustice of clrcunniunco; he hated this squalid room; ho hated his Then something In him let go and, Instead, of hate, u wave of pity and tenderness for her as she used to bo swept through him. He relaxed nnd, as ho sat down at bin ttihlo and took out tho clean, Ahlte sheets of paper, he looked oveir at his wlfu Ills dark eyes wero full of compassion "After all," he thought, "sho Isn't to blame and It must bo dreadful, terri ble, to have lost pne's self." And hu began to write. BACK ACHING? Thnt "bnd buck" is probably due to wcalt kidney, n trouble thnt often fol lows grip, cold, or overwork. It shows in constant, dull, throbbing backache, or sharp twinges when stooping or lift inc. 'ion have headaches, too. dizzy ppcll. a tired, nervous feeling nnd irreg ular kidney action. Don't neglect It. Uhc Doan'a Kidney Pill. Thousand! have saved themselves ccrioun kidney ills by timely ne of Doan's. Aik your neighbor! A South Dakota Case i. l. coifmnn, fanner. Wapner, 8. I)rk., says: "I find bnckncha and could hardly get up or down because of tlio sharp pains through the small of my hack. The. kldnoy secretions paBsod too fre quently and mado me Ret up often at night. The kidney secretions wore scanty ana Mirn- lntr, too. I was confused and annoyed by black spotn floating before my eyes. 1 read about Donn's Kidney Pills and decided to try them. Three boxes of Donn's put my kidneys In good condi tion and curei the other troubles," Cat Doan's at A ay Slort, 60c a lox FOSTER -MILPURN CO., BUFFALO. N. V. HEARTBURN Caused by Acid-Stomach That bitter heartburn, belchlne, food repeating. Indication, bloat alter eatlne, all . cauted by acid tomc!i, But they" are aiy lint tyniptmna danger elenal to wnrn you of awful trouble If not atopped. Headache, blllouancu, rheumatlem, aclatlca, that tired, llatleya feoltnc. lack of energy, dlrilnew. Insomnia, even cancer and ulcera of the intestines und ninny other ailments are traceable to ACID-BTOMACH. Thouaanil yei, millions of people who ought to bo vroll and strong are mere weak lings becauie .of acid-stomach. They really starve In the midst of plenty because they do not Ret enough strength and vitality from the food they eat. ' ' Take BATONia and dire your stomach a chance to do Its work rlKht. Make It strotur cool, sweet and comfortable. BATON 10 brlnsrs quick relief for heartburn, belching, Indigestion and other stomach mtsarlea. lm proyes digestion helps you get full strength from your food. Thousands say I2ATONIO I the most wonderful stomach remedy In the world. Drought them relief when every, thing else failed. Our beet testimonial la what EATONIO will do for you. So get a big eftc box of BATONIC today from your druggist, use It Bv days if you're not pleased, return It and get your money back. E ATONIC ( TOR YOUR acto-stomachD Ladies Let Cuticura Keep Your Skin Fresh and Young Soap 25c, Oialment 25 and 50c, Talcum 25c. rV. N. U., SIOUX CITY, NO. 12--1920. Reliable All American women know of the great success ol Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound in restor ing to health women who suffered from ailments pe culiar to their scx,yet thcreare some who are skeptical and do not realize that all that is claimed for it is absolutely true if they did, our laboratory would not be half large enough to supply the demand, though today it is the largest in the country used for the manufacture of one particular medicine. Tho Facts contained In tho following two letters should prove or ueueut Buffalo. N. Y. "I Buffered with organic iullauimntlon and dUplaco moat. 'Wliou lifting I hud bucH pain and bcurlujr down that I was not able toHtuml up, and it hurt mo to w&lkorgoup or down stairs. I wns golni; to a, doctor without any re cults and ho said tho safest thing would ho to havo an operation. I met a lady who told mo alio had thrco operations and was not well until elm took LydU 12. i'lnkham's Vegotablo Compound. 1 folt rollof after taking two bottles of Voidable Coin pound and I kept on with It until I was curod. I al ways uno Lydia IS. I'lnkhata's J.lvor rilla and thoy aro fine. Every thing used to turn Hour on my stomach and thelilver Pllla relieved that." Mrs. A. ltoaKas, BUJ Ifargo Avonue. Buffalo, N. Y. Tho fact Is, tho Best lvqia tt.QiNKHftw mcpicimi; co.."iyNn, MASS. LIFT OFF CORNS! Apply few drops then lift iorc , touchy corns off with fingers . , Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop little Freezonc on nn aching corn, Instantly that corn stops hurting, then yon lift it right out Yes, muglcl A tiny bottle of Frccrone costs bnt n few cents at any drug store, bat to milllelent to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the tocu, nnd the calluses, without soreness or Irritation. Freezono Is the sensational dl covery of a Cincinnati genius. It to wonderful. Adv. Tho miintlo of chnrlty protects a multltttdo of amateur theatrical per formances. BOSCHEE'S SYRUP. A cold Is probably the most com mon .of all disorders and when neglect ed Is apt to bo most dangerous. Sta tistics show thnt nidro than three times as many people died from ln fluenzn last year, as wero killed 1b tho greatest war the world has over known. For the Inst fifty-three yean Doschcc's Syrup has been used for coughs, bronchitis, colds, throat Ir ritation nntl especially lung trouble. It gives the' patient a good nlghfi rest, free from coughing, with easy expectoration In the morning. Made In America nntl used In the homes of thousands of families all over the civilized world. Sold everywhoro. Adr. One-sixth of the world's supply ! quinine Is consumed In India. ' Red Cross Ball Blue should be used In every home. It makes clothes white' as Bnow nnd never Injures tho fabric All good grocers, Cc. Sliver Is the earliest currency men 1 tloncd in tho Scriptures. Information to many women t fiacramonto, Calif. "I bad or ganlo trouble and had such terxlblo pain and swelling in the lower part of my slilo that Icould not stand oq my feet or evon let tho bed clothes touch my side. I gave up my work thinking I would not bo ablo to co back for months. My mother ad--rlBed ma to takoLydlaK. I'lnkham's Vegetable Compound as It had saved hor life at one time, and it put mo in a wonderful condition In a couple of weeks, so I can keep on working. I work In a dopartmont store and have to stand on my foot all day and I do not havo any more pains. I surely recommend your Vegetable Compound to all my friends and you may uao thesa facts as a testimon ial' Bkrtua J. Pakujui, S320 M St.. Sacramento, Calif. Medicine for Women, is 1 ''I ( ! 1 vll