Mr --- f v , A f 1 The Foolish Virgins. Bishop Potter is nmuslng his friends with tin account of a recent visit ho paid to n Sundrty school clasB presided over by ft staid young clergyman. Tho bishop was asked to question tho chil dren so that he might bo edified by their knowledge of matters Biblical. As a Btartef ho said to -a little girl whoso faco beamed with Intelligence: "Who nro tho foolish virgins, my dear?" "Them as didn't get married," was tho prompt and emphatic answer. dojtt sroir. VODIt OLOTnCS. Ura lied Cross Hull niua nnd keep them Whito as buow. All grocers. Co. n packago. No Room for Improvement. "Thero Ib ona branch of labor," said tho great Inventor, "that must always bo dono by hand." "What 1b that?" queried tho re porter. "Pockot picking," replied tho g. L with a ghoulish grin. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is a constitutional cure. Price, 75c Married Seven Times. William Hulbett of Buchnnan, Mich., lias Just been married to his seventh spouse, though ho is not yet CO years' 'old. Among tho seven were two sis ters from one family and two from anJ other. Death robbed him of thrco help mates and an equal number woro dl--vorccd. Tho seventh Mrs. Hulbett was won through tho medium of nn ndver-i tiBement In an Eastern paper. Hulbett is a stonemason and a man of any quantity of ncrvo. Storekeepers report that tho extra q'uantlty, together with tho suporlor quality of Defiance Starch makes It next to ImposBiblo to sell any other brand. Stops tho Cough nn(I ' Worko Off tho Cold Laxative Bromo Quia lno Tablets. Price 25c Reform is all right; it's tho reform ers who go wrong. PITS 5nnuinty eurec Jto flu or nrrrooinen art Tl I flrtt dr' dm of Dr. KUne'n OrM Nerra Il.tor r' S5.dI?r "EK S.00 trial bottle and treaUie. . U. H. Kims, Ut, Ml Arch BtrwU 1'Mladelshla. v Tho key of success Is within tho reach of everyone, but norao men aro too lazy to reach for It riso's Cure for Consumption Is an infallible medicine for coughs and colds. JJ. W. Samubi, Ocean Qroro, N. J., Feb. 17. 1800. A Youthful Bishop. Tho Rev. Dr. M. Edward Fawcett. tho newly elected Protestant EplBco pal bishop of Qulncy, is ono of tho youngest men ever elected to the epis copate In tho American church. Ho has been a priest of tho church only flvo and one-half years, having gone over from tho Methodist church. Dr. Fawcett was born In New Hartford, la., November 1, 18CG. He took a the ological course In tho Northwestern univorslty, nnd was ordained a minis ter In tho Methodist Episcopal church in 1885. Ho resigned his Methodist charge in 189G and was immediately appointed a lay reader of tho Episco pal Church of tho Redeemer at El ,gin, six months later a deacon, and jpno year later was ordained a priest land appointed rector of Uio sumo fchurcb. fr n' Wllhelm's Delicate Thounht. By tho kaiser's express orders a souvenir of tho empress' recent nccl .dent has Just been placed in tho Kal ;ser Wllhelm room of tho Hohcnzollern museum. In tho largo glass case, ly "Ing alongsldo of costly nrtlcles of sil ver nnd gold, Is a Blnglo strip of bark about half a yard lu length. Visitors nsk In surprlso what this rude scrap of forest tree has among so many val uable specimens of the wealth of Or muz and of Ind. But a label supplies ,an explanation to tho query, and rer.dis thus: "Tho bark with which his ma jesty tho kaiser in Grunewald on March 27, 1903, fastened tho first tem porary bandage on her majesty the kalserln's broken arm, until suglcal aid arrived." BRAIN BUILDING. How to Feed Nervous Cases. Hysteria sometimes leads to Insanity and should bo treated through feeding tho brain and nerves upon scientific ally selected food that restores the lost delicate gray matter. Proof of the power of tho brain food Grape-Nuts I? remarkably strong. "About eight years ago when work ing very hard as a cqurt stenographer t collapsed physically and then nerv. ously and was taken to tho Stato Hos pital for the Insane at Lincoln, Neb., a raving maniac. "They had to keep mo In a strait Jacket, and I was kopt In tho worst ward for three months. I was finally dismissed in tho following May, but did no brain work for years until last fall, when I was persuaded to take the testimony in two cases. One of these was a murder case, and tho strain upon my nervouB system was so great that I would have broken down again except for tho strength I had build up by tho use of Grape-Nuts. When I began to feel tho pressure of the work on, my brain and nerves I simply in creased the amount of Grape-Nuts, and used the food more regularly. "I now feel like my old self again and am healthy and happy. I am suro that if I had known of Grape-Nuts when I had my trouble eight years ago I would never have collapsed and this dark spot In my life would never havo happened. Grape-Nuts' power as a brain food is simply wonderful, and I do not believe any stomach is so weak that it cannot digest this wonderful food. I feel a delicacy about having my name appear in public, but if you think It would help any poor suflerer you can use it." Name given by Pos tum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. There are desserts and desserts. The delicious, health-giving kind aro told about In the little recipe book found in ech package of Grape-Nuts. THE ALLIANCE HERALD T. J. O'Keefe, Publisher. ALLIANCE, NEBRASKA. :-:KiM--H:MhH! MS. $ BRIEF TELEGRAMS kHM4K4-w Tho moat powerful automobile over built Is tho Gobron-Brlllo racing car, having 120 horso power. In Scotland in 1893 thero wero 204 insano persons in each 100,000 popula :lon; thero nre now 250. Tho poatofllce department announces Hint July 4 noxt will bo a complete holiday for all tho rural freo delivery carriers In tho country. Lioutonant H. L. Roosevelt, pro moted to bo captain and aslsstant .luartcrmaster In tho raarino corps, is u cousin of tho president. General Kuropactkln, tho Russian minister of war, arrived at Toklo and Is tho guest of tho emperor. Tho prcsB augurs well of his visit Tho horso presented to tho president by tho cltlzonB of DouglaB, Wyo ar rived In Washington and has been In stalled In tho White Houso stables. Tho number of young men leaving Austria and Hungary Is so great that the government of both countries aro making strenuous efforts to stop it. The largest and best stocked ma rlno aquarium In tho world is In the old moat of the abandoned Fort Jef ferson on Groden Key, Dry Tortugas. Tho ambassador of Italy has Inform ed tho Btato department that tho date fixed for tho meeting of tho sanitary conference In Paris Is October 10 next Tho differences between tho Kan Baa City Southern railroad and its mechanics have been adjusted nnd tho strike has ofllcially been declared off. Tho rato of suicides per million In London is 95; In Brussels, Berlin, Stockholm nnd 3t. Petersburg, 300, nnd In Paris and Vlenun 400 per mil lion. Work on tho French national pavil Ion, a reproduction of tho grand trf anon at Versailles, France, will bo begun soon at tho World's fair. St Louis. Tho Now York Central and Pennsyl vania railroads each cstlmato their respectlvo receipts from summer va cation travel at moro than $1,000,000 a season. Several conflicts havo recently oc curred In Macedonia botween Insur gent 'bonds and Turkish troops. Some thirty Bulgarians havo been killed and many wounded. The Wisconsin Central road an nounced a one-way rato of $8 to Chi cago. This is a cut of $3.50 over the usual faro, and was dono to meet tho cut In tlmo made by competing lines. General Baldwin has Informed the war department that tho governor of Arizona says United States troops are no longor needed at Morcncl and they havo been ordered back to their sta tions. Former President Cleveland has been offered tho presidency of tho University of Virglnln. When seen Mr. Clovelnnd said: "I should bo ut terly unublo to accept such a propo sition." Among the passengers who arrived by tho steamer Augusto Victoria, from Hamburg, wero Catherina Fleischer Edal, Wllhelm Barrew Kov'cn and Mnx Lahflng, singers for tho musical festival at St. Louis. Tho doctors who performed an au topsy on King Alexander report that tho king's brain was not developed, and showed weakness. Alexander left $300,000, of which $100,000 was de rosltcd nt Brussells. Members of the law and order league of Nebraska City, which was organiz ed sovernl years ago, havo notified tho management that they will allow no moro Sunday games and that In tho future no moro games may Be played In that city unless tho play ers desire to pay a heavy fine. Tho secretary of the Interior has or dered tho withdrawal from entry of 800,000 acres of public land in Idaho In connection with tho Blackfoot irri gation project, and 500,000 acres in Nevada In connection with the Rock Creek, the Humbodlt river. North Humboldt and South HUmboldt pro jects. Fifty Iowa city physicians met in Des Moines for tho purpose of form ing a Btate organization. Among tho papers read was one by Dr. Louis A.' ThomaB of Red Oak, in which ho urg ed the establishment of bath rooms In connection with school houses and that pupils bo required to batho regu larly. It is officially stated that there Is no truth In the report circulated In America that Queeu Wllhelmlna has shown symptoms of a tuberculosis na ture, or that she has any intention of colug to Madeira or Cairo on account of her health. Sir Frederick Pollock, the famous English lawyer and law writer of Lon don, has cabled his acceptance to an Invitation to read a paper before the annual meeting of the American Bar association, which will be held at Hot SpringB, Va., August 2G to 29. THE LION'S WHELP A Story of Cromwell's Time BY AMELIA E. BARR. Author of "Ths Bow of Oranf Ribbon." "I, Thou and tho Oth.r On,B "Th Maid of Maiden Lane." Etc. (Copyright 1901, by Dodd, Mead & Company. All rights reserved.) CHAPTER XVI. Continued. For Matilda had concealed every fault and every unhlndncss by her prompt action In tho matter of Lord Novllle, and Jane had been loving and praising her for It, until tho sweet ness of their first affection was be tween them. And Matilda enjoyed praise; sho liked the appreciation of her kind deed, and was not therefore disposed to mako light or Httlo of what she had done, or of Its reBults. "And, pray, how comes my lord on towardB recovery?" "Slowly. Life was nearly gone; body and mind wero at death's door; but ho can walk a little now, and In two or threo weeks wo nro going away,- far away, we nro going to my brothers lu the Massachusetts col ony." "You will come back?" "I think It is unlikely. Father feels a chango approaching. Tho Protestor's health Ib falling rapidly; ho Ib dying, Matilda." "If ho dies? " "Father will leave England ns Boon as Cromwell is in his grave. Cymlln will keep old Swaffham fair, for Cym lln will never leavo England while you aro In it" "And you can bear to talk of leav ing England in that calm way, with out tears and without regrets. Jane, it Is shameful; it is really wicked." "Dear Matilda, do not be angry at me because I had to do what I had to do. I was married to Cluny three days after he camo home. Wo all thought ho waB going to die, and he wlBhed mo to be his wife. Now did I not do right to marry him when and how, he wished?" "Yes," she answered, but her face and voice showed her to be painfully affected. "Jane, I cannot bear to lose Jane k,new haw to you. I shall have no one to love me, no one to quarrel with," she added. "You will have Cymlln," "Cymlin is Cymlln; he is not you. I will say no more. When a woman Is married, all Is over." Then Jano rose to go, and Matilda tied hor bonnet strings and straighten ed out her ribbons and her gloves, doing these trifling services with a long-absent tenderness that filled Jane's heart with pleasure. "Good bye, dear!" sho said with a kiss; "I will coma as often as I can." "Very kind of you. Lady Neville," answered Matilda with a curtsy and a tearful mockery; "very kind Indeed 1 But will your ladyship consider " then sho broke down and threw her arms round Jane, and called hor "a dear, sweet, llttlo Baggage" and bade her give Cluny some messages of hopo and congratulation, nnd so part ed with her in a strange access of af fection. But true frlendsnip has these moods of tho individual and would not be true without them. Jano walked homo through tho city, and Its busy turmoil struck her aB never before. What a vain show It was! A passing show, constantly changing. And suddenly thero was the galloping of horsemen, and the crowd stood still, and drew a llttlo aside, whllo Cromwell, at tho head of his guards, rodo at an easy canter down tho street Every man bared his head as the grand, soldierly figure passed by. He saw Jane, and a swift smile chased away for a moment the sorrowful gravity of his face. But he left behind him a penetrating atmos phero of coming calamity. His glori ous life was closing like a brilliant sun setting in a stormy sky. Tho fifteenth of May had been set for his assassination. Cromwell knew all tho secret plans of this conspiracy; knew every member of It; and on the afternoon when Jane Swaffham saw him passing up London streets, so stern and scornful, he had Just order ed tho arrest of one hundred of them. Jane heard constantly of these events, but her heart had closer Inter ests. The ship which was to carry Cluny and herself to America was lying at tho wharf nearly ready for sea. There were to be no other pas sengers; Cluny and Jane alone were to find In Its black-ribbed cabin their homo for many weeks, perhaps months. A recent experience had proven tho necessity for this exclus ion of strango elements. Early in June, Israel had taken Cluny to bid farewell to his old General, nnd the meeting had tried both men soverely. At Its close Cromwell went to a desk and wroto a few lines to the officials of tho Massachusetts Colony; In them, commending Lord Neville to their kindness and care. His hands trem bled thoso large, strong hands trem bled aB ho gave tho letter to Cluny. Then ho kissed him once more, and with a "Farewell" that was a blessing, ho turned away, weeping. "It Is another friend gone," ho said mournfully to his own heart; "lover and friend are put far from me and mine acquaintance into darkness." Cluny was so much troubled and affected by this visit that Israel thought It well to take him to seo the ship which was to carry him to the solitudes of tho great waters and the safety of the New Yorld. He was Im patient to bo gone, but thero were yet n number of small interests to be attended to; for they were to carry J wun mem a great aeai oi material nec essary to tftc building and furnishing ot their future home. Every day re vealed somo new want not before thought of, so that It was nearlng tho end of June when at last all was de clared finished and ready. Then Jane hastened home, re solving to see Matilda on the follow ing day. But when sho reached Sandy's House, Mrs. Swaffham met her with a letter In her hand "Lady Jevery asks you to come to Matilda, who is In great trouble,' sho said. So Jano went to her friend. With her, also, she found tho grief death brings. comfort Matilda. "Stephen is slain!" were her first words. She could hardly utter them. But Jano knew how to comfqrt Ma tilda; she could talk to her as she could not to the ladles of Cromwell's household. "How was Stephen slain?" sho nsled. "In a duel?" "No, thank God! He fell, ns he him self could havo wished, fighting the enemies of his king. He was with Condo nnd the Dukes of York nnd Gloucester before Dunkirk,, and was killed while meeting the rush of thoso terrible Ironsides. Camay wrote me that ho said 'Mother!' Joyfully, with his last breath." "Poor Stephen!" "Oh, Indeed 'tis very well to cry, 'poor Stephen,' when ho is beyond your pity. You might have pitied him when ho was alive, that would have been something to tho purpose. All his Bhort, unhappy life has been one constant battle with Puritans and pov erty. Oh, how I hate thoso Stuarts! I am thankful to see you can weep for him, Jane. I thluk you ought. God knows ho loved you well, and most thanklessly. And he Is the last, the last de Wick. Root and branch, tho do Wick tree has perished. I wish I could die also." "And Cymlln, Matilda?" "I shall marry Cymlln at tho prop er time." "You may have sons and daughters." "I hopo not. I pray not. I have had sorrow enough. My father and his three sons are a good ending for the house. It wnB built with the sword, and It has been destroyed by tho sword. No, Jane, the line of do Wick Is finished, Cymlln and I will be tho last Earl and Countess de Wick." "And Prince Rupert?" "Is a dream from which I have awakened." "But ho may stil be breaming." "Rupert has many faults, but ho is a man of honor. My marriage to Cymlin will be a harrier sacred to both of us. Our friendship can hold Itself above endeannontB. You need not fear for Cymlin; Matilda de Wick will honor her husband, whether sho obeys him or not. Cymlln Is- formed for power and splendor, and he will stand near the throne." "If thero be a throne." m "Of that, who now doubts? Crom well is falling sick, and you may feel 'God save tho King' in tho air. If you had married Stephen, he would have been alive to Join In tho cry. I could weep at your obstinacy, Jano." "Let it pass, dear. I was suckled on Puritan milk. Stephen and I . never could havo been one. My fate wag to go to tho New World. Stephen 1ms escaped this Borrowrul world and" "Oh, then, I would he wero here! This sorrowful world with Stephen In It was a better world than It is with out him. Jane, Jane, how he loved you!" "And I loved him, as a companion, friend, brother, If you will. When you lay his body In do Wick, cast a tear and a flower on his coffin for mo. God give him peace!" At length their "farewell" enmo. Tho last words between them were soft and whispered, and only those Bad, loving monosyllables which are moro eloquent than the most fervid protestations. And so they parted, forever In this life. Tho next afternoon Jane and Cluny rodo through London streets for tho last time. On the ship they found Jane's father, Doctor Verity and Sir Thomas Jevery. There were no tears at this parting; nor any signs of sor row; every ono seemed resolved to regard It as a happy and hopeful event. For, though not spoken of, there was a firm belief and promise of a meeting again in the future not very far off. Israel held his .little daughter to- his heart, and then laid her hand In Cluny's without a word; the charge was understood. When tho last few minutes came, and tho men were trooping to the anchor, Doc tor Verity raised his hands, and the three or four In tho dim, small cabin knelt around him, and so their fare well was a prayer and their parting a blessing. Israel and Doctor Verity walked away together, and for a mile neither of them spoke a word. As they camo near to Sandy's, however, Israel said: "It Is a short farewell, John. It wll bo my turn next." "I shall go when you go." "To tho Massachusetts Colony?" "Yes. I am ready to go when tho time comes." "It is not far off." "A few months at the longest." "He is very 111?" "The foundations of his life are shaken, for he lives not In his power or his fnme, or even In the- work set him to do. No, no, Oliver lives In his feelings. They aro at the bottom of IiIb nature; all else Is superstruc ture. And Fairfax, as well as Lambert and others, think they can fill great Oliver's place! no man can." "For that very reason, when he de ports, I will away Irom' England. I havo no heart for another civil wnr. I will draw sword under no less a gen eral than Oliver." "Good night, John." "Good night, Israel. Have you told Martha?" "Not yet. Sho will fret every day till the change comes, Why should wo have a hundred frets when a dozen may do?" But when Israel went Into Martha'B presence something made him change his mind. "The mother had been weep ing, and began to weep afresh when sho saw her husband. Ho anticipated her sorrowful questions, and with an assumption of cheerfulness, told her how happy and hopeful Jano and Cluny seemed to be. "It did not feel like a parting at all, Martha," ho said, "and Indeed there was no need for any such feeling. Wo are going ourselves very soon now." The words were spoken and could not be recalled, and he stood, In a moment, ready to face tho storm they might raise. Martha looked at her husband with speechless wonder and distress, and ho was more moved by this attitude than by her usual garru lous anger. He sat down by her side and took her hand, saying: (To be continued.) DUKE OF YORK SNUBBED. Mounted Police Had Good Idea of Their Dignity. Listening to the conversation of the Canadian mounted police, as one en counters them everywhere in the Northwest, it is distinctly evident that they are men of a different stripe from the Tommy Atkins of the British regu lars, says Leslie's Monthly. The mounted policeman is a head, not an automaton nor a flunky. This was curiously Illustrated during the visit of tho duke of York to the territories last year. Asthe royal train came Into ono of the frontier towns two liveried outrunners dashed breathless ly to the platform, shouting excitedly for the police to "get out the royal horses!" The troopers of the uni versity typo smiled and said nothing; but ono of tho frontiersmen In khaki frowned and took a bite of chewing to bacco. The two llttlo men In royal livery became apoplectic. "Don't you men hear? Get' out the horses! Who's going to get out tho horses?" Tho trooper In kha'kl again calmly took consolation for the Insult from his tobacco. "Have some? No? Horses? Did you say horses? -Well, don't burst your buttons. What do you think you are for? Get 'em out yourself!" To Enlarge Washington University. Samuel Cupples, the St. Louis mil lionaire, who has Just sailed for Eu rope, states that upon his return he Intends to enlarge the Washington university and make it the largest school of engineering and technologj In the world. World's Largest Spider. The largest spider In the world has been found in Sumatra. Its body is nine inches in circumference and Its legs spread seventeen inches. town Farms $4 Per Acre Coah, tlnce M crop till paid. MttLII ALL. Slonx City, 1 She Saw Aaron Burr. Mrs. Henry Chad wick of Brooklyn, who is 84 years old, tells of seeing Aaron Burr. She is the granddnughter of Benjamin Botts, who defended Burr In his trial for treason at Richmond In 1807. Her father owned a farm near Jnmalca, L. I., adjoining ono owned by Burr. When sho saw Col onel Burr he wns 77 years old, with ered and bent, but his famous eyes were still black and piercing. Burr died In 1836. Mrs. Chadwlck also knew Chief Justice Marshall well. KEELEY INSTITUTE FOR NE BRASKA. The Great Work It Has Dono In the Past Twenty Years. Moro than twenty years ago, Dr. Leslie E. Keeley made the announce ment that "Drunkenness is a dlseasc nnd can be cured," and this state ment haB been verified by the fact that" the Keeley treatment of tho Liquor and Drug habits has restored more1 than 300,000 men and women to their families and friends and brought hope?1 nnd sunshine Into that number of? blighted lives. The keeley Institute; for the state of Nebraska Is located: at Omaha, corner-of Leavenworth and, 19th streets. It Is operated under the authority of The Leslie E. Keeley; Company, with a member of the com pany'B medical staff as Us resident1 physician, nnd Its remedies, methods and rules nre thoso prescribed, by .he orlglntor, Leslie E. Keeley, M. D. LL. D., and In use for nearly a quarter of n century. Tho Omaha Keeley Institute occu pies one of the highest points in the city, only seven blocks from tho cen ter. The Institute Is a very large resi dence building, thoroughly modern, large verandas and beautiful grounds. In fact there is everything hero that those wishing to take the Keeley treat ment could desire, and this is the only Keeley Institute in the state of Nebraska. Any additional Informa tion can be had by addressing the Keeley Institute Company, corner of 19th and Leavenworth streets, Omaha, Nebraska. In Poland tho standard bearer must be a flag-Pole. GHBATLY REDUCED nATES tin AVAUASII RAILROAD. Below Is a partial list of tho many half rates offered via tho Wabash Rail road. Atlanta, Ga., and return $32.10 Sold July 0th, 6th nnd 7th. Indianapolis, Ind., and return.. .$19,401 Bold Juno 7th, 8th, 9th, 13th and 14th. St. Louis, Mo., and return $13. GO Sold Juno lGth and 17th. Boston, Mass., and return $31. 76 Bold Juno 24th, 25th nnd 2Cth. Boston, Mass., nnd return $33.75 Sold Juno 30th to July 4th. Saratoga, N. Y and return $32.20 Sold July 4th and 0th. Detroit. Slleh.. and return $21.00 Sold July 14th and 15th. Baltimore, Mil,, and return $32.2S Sold July 17th nr.d 18th. Baltimore, Md and return $32.25 Sold Sept. 17th, 18th nnd 19th. All tickets rending: over the "Wabash are good on steamers In either direc tion between Detroit and Buffalo without extra, charge, except meals and berths. Long limits and stop overs allowed. Remember this is "Tho World's Fair Line." do this route and view tho grounds. For folder and all information, ad dress HARRY E. MOORES. G. A. P. D.t Omaha, Neb. The Real Cause of the Trouble. A negro preacher down south ,has discovered the real cause of the re cent volcanic disasters. He says: "Do earf, my frlen!s, resolves on axles, as we all know. Somefln Is needed to keep the axles greased; so when de earf was made, petrlyum was put in side for dat purpose. De Standard Oil comp'ny comes along an' strax dat petrolyum by borln' holes In de earf. Do earf stlx on Its axles an' won't go round no more; den dere is a hot box. just us of de earf wuz a big railway train and den, my frien', dere Is trouble." His Heart Out of Place. With a heart displacement of four inches downward and ono Inch to the left Thomns Hoben, aged 45, of In dianapolis, still lives, but his death may result at any time. Hoben was examined by members of the faculty of the medical college of Indiana, who term his ailment aortic regurgitation. The normal position of the human heart Is ono Inch to the right of tho fifth Intercostal space. Hoben's heart shows by examination that the apex, beat Is four Inches below nnd one inch to the left. It Ib believed this pecu liar ailment is the result of overwork in a rolling mill. A severe shock at any time would undoubtedly produce Instant death. Medical experts say that there aro a few cases of heart displacement ot such extent as thr case of Hoben. A Cure for Dropsy. Sedgwick, Ark., Juno 22d. Mr. W. S. Taylor of this place says: "My llttlo boy had Dropsy. Two doctors tho best in this part of the country told me ho would never get better, and to havo seen him anyone else would havo said they were right. His feet and limbs wero swollen so that ho could not walk nor put on his shoes. "Vnen the doctors told mo he would surely die, I stopped giving him their mediclno and began giving nlm Dodd's Kidney Pills. I gave him three pills a day and at the end of eight days tho swelling was all gone, but as I wanted to bo sure, I kept on with the pills for somo time, gradu ally reducing the quantity, till finally I stopped altogether. "Dodd's Kidney PHIb certainly saved my child's life. Beforo using them ho was a helpless invalid in his mother's arms from morning till night. Now he is a healthy, happy child, running and dancing and singing. I can never express our gratitude. "Dodd's Kidney Pills entirely cured our boy after everybody, doctors and all, had given him up to die." An Irish physician says that a man nover begins to take care of his health until after he loses It