The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, May 08, 1913, Image 11

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    C.-H. CIAUDY
NE hundred and twenty
miles an hour actually
recorded then the Instru
ments went out of com
mission ' nnd no one
knows whether tho tear
ing air reached a greater
speed thereafter. The
r
United States weather
bureau pronounced this particular
West Indian hurricane "tho most so
vero In the history of Hatteras."
Hut whatever tho speed may have
been, It was enough to bent tho sea
Into submission, to ralso It In tho air
and carry It completely over tho nar
row neck of barren sand whlcii sen
arates Pamlico sound from tho At-
lantlc ocean, and amplo enough to
a l f rt!....l ltn nut rt '
swoop ino onrKciiuiie i-uun,
Baltimore for Itlo. with a general
cargo, far out of tho gulf stream. Into
the "saw teeth" of Hatteras and to
ward tho lnhospltablo Bhoro.
A Helpless Bit of Wood.
On tho lGth of August, 1S99, tho
pnlo, not yet at Its height, became so
violent that Captain Springsteen furl
ed his spanker and upper topsail, nut
this was of little nvall. Tho foresail
waB hauled up and furled, two reefs
put with infinite dlfllculty In tho main
sail and tho lower topsail clewed up,
only to be torn bodily from Its spars.
Next tho mainsail ripped away, a
flying blotch of dirty white in a dead
ly smother of grayish spume; a few
minutes later and tho malnstaysall
followed suit.
Then tho Priscllla hove to under
bare poles, helpless and strengthless,
unablo to put forth" the smallest rag
which might lend steerage-way sum
clent to clear Cape Hatteras. Jutting
out thero to the west and south, un
seen, but terribly well known and
feared.
Thursday, tho 17th, camo. It could
not be said to dawn, for tho Increase
In tho light was small. Sky thero waB
none, clouds there woro none, sea
there was none to tho eye. A drend
ful dirty gray encompassed nil. Where
air left off and water began was not
to be told by looking, and so full was
tho air of spray and spume nnd froth
and water that breathing Itself was
difficult
Ilut now nnd then a holo, torn In
tho flying spindrift by an eddy In tho
blast, showed water water discol
ored, a sickly green with yellow
splotches of stirred up snnd. Instead
of tho deep emerald black of tho
ocean, tolling tho master, the eleven
men of his crow, nnd oven his wife
nnd Httlo son. that they were out of
the gulf stream and oyer thu shoals
which make tho "graveyard of tho
Atlantic." tho spot where moro ships
have gone to their last rostlng-placo
tlmn on any other threo.
Tho lead was cast at ono hour In
tervals. Thirty fathoms at flvo In tho
morning, twciily-flvo fathoms at six,
twenty fathoms at eight so It went
all day until nt eight bells twenty
fathoms showed.
"Then," said tho master, "I did not
pound any moro. I know wo were go
ing forward for all hands to preparo
to go each man for himself."
It was but a llttlo later that tho
Priscllla struck, bounded off, tossed a
llttlo while on seas mountain high,
climbing, a dead weight, ono minute
to coast down a torrlblo slldo tho
next then struck ngaln with a ter
rific Impact, breaking all glass ports
and flooding tho cabin. Tho port rin
ging wbb cut away to let tho masts
go. They fell Instantly with a crash,
heard even nhovo tho roar of tho
hundred-mllo galo. Instnntly tho seas
began to sweep tho doomed vessel,
breaking twenty, thirty feet nhovo tho
stumps of her masts.
Mrs. Springsteen wns swept ovor
board first, her cry cut short by a
breaking wave. Tho llttlo boy went
next literally torn from his father's
arms, ny ono of those freaks of tho
sea which aro beyond explaining, ho
was swept far overboard nnd back
again tho next minute, nnd Into tho
cabin, from whenco his lifeless body
Inter ramo ashorn. Tho ship's boy
was tho next and laRt to go. Tho
men, with their greater strength, were
ahlo to hold on or tto thomsolvos
down, nnd tho writhing sea had to re-'
sort to other means to got tho rest of
its victims
Nor nad tho despairing sailors long
to wait. No stiucturo of wood, ho It
ever so stanch, could long resist the
heavy bombardment of tons of water
and being picked up and dashed down
on tho sandy shoals beneath. Less
than half an hour later tho hull broko
In two, tho bow to disintegrate and
disappear almost Instantly, tho after
half, on which tho ten survivors were
congregated, to dash on toward tho
unseen shoro. For more than flvo
hours this situation continued, tho
captain, grief-stricken at his Iosb, and
tho crew, resigned to their fate, cling
ing to tho wreck.
At last tho wreck struck for tho
last time, the grinding nnd the smash
ing stopped, and thoso on board know
that somowhero ahead of them, could
thoy but seo It, was tho shoro.
But they never hoped to reach It.
mv
A TRUE- STORY"
OFAttEROIC
CO
For tho breakers lay between them
and tho safety they could not see, nnd
tho night of terror nnd struggle hnd
sapped their strength. Threo were
so badly cut and bruised with flying
wreckage that they could not Btnnd:
tho rest, all but naked, were cold nnd
weak. Hoats they had none, ropes
they had but few; to make a raft was
as linpo8Rlblo as to fly. They could
but wait tho end.
The Queries of Rasmus Mldgett.
Meanwhllu the life-savors on shore
were having a tltno of great anxiety
over tho amount of territory they
must rover nnd the dlfllculty In cover-
IllC ntlV lit nil. Tn innhn linmtu-nv nn
or ,Jown n ,,,avy m,..cl. ,.. ...,, , ls
har(, n, (Jm ,)lU w,R,n u Bnr,nU.
.
lg nr rnrrJt,H ,nost of (no ,R,acn w!,n
It, nnd tho sea breaks waist high
over tho sand, It Is nlmost Impossi
ble Kasmus S. Mldgett, of tho Hull
Shoal station, started on his patrol
south, on horseback, at threu in thu
morning. He had to trust to his
horse for direction, for the darkness
of the night was impenetrable, and tho
feeble glow of his lantern would havo
revealed nothing but tho violent wa
ter through which his animal strug
gled, could he havo kept It lit. Hut
as ho made his slow progress enough
light filtered through the clouds to
let him discover boxes and barrels
nnd wrockngo coming ashore. Ho
know that meant a wreck somowhero
in tho neighborhood. The question
"Whore?" could bo solved only by
pushing nhead.
It was two miles farther on, nfter
an hour and a half's struggle on tho
part of his horse, that ho finally
c ught tho Found of voices, borne In
to him by tho wind. Ho could seo
nothing of tho wreck.
A little later ho mannged to mako
out tho outline of the half of tho hull
nnd saw some black dots moving on
It. A hundred yards from tho bank of
snnd on which ho stood, water-swept
and Insecure, the piece of a hull loom
ed shadowy and indistinct. And Ras
GREAT MEN IN
Models by C. A. BEATY
CHARLES
A captain he of finance, with magic Midas touch, that mudo tho golden
bullion nud multiplied It much, of scientific banking tho tricks and twists he
know, to forco trom each slmoleon a thousand bucks or two. 'Twns then ho
gayly saunteied upon his wealthy way. till on his uncle's bunion ho chanced
to tread ono day; that unclu was a terror a real old fighting ram tho undo
of all uncles vindictive Uncle Sam. Tho latter grahbud poor Charllo nnd
trun him Into Jail, to wonder what had struck him and Incidentally wall,
It was a most surprising and unexpected coup, Ko-Morso almost choked
Charles while floundering In tho soup. Then straightway to the White House
thero camo a doleful talo that Charllo In his dungeon waB waxing thin nnd
palo; tuborculosls had him, his heart was on tho hum, tho crstwhllo healthy
banker was booked for Kingdom Come. Hill Tnft ho heard tho story and
ehed n Bllent tear, and said: "This courso of treatment Is really too eovero;
a presidential pardon I'll glvo that hapless bloke, enabling his loved ones to
take him homo to croak." nut, lo, the air of freedom upon this human wreck,
achieved a euro In JIg-tlmo, n thrilling change, by heck, for Chnrlos stoppod
his coughing and put on fat galoro, all 111b departed from him nnd troubled
him no moro. He's back again In Gotham and making money fast, he's piling
up a fortune that's guaranteod to last, but not ngaln whllo raking and garner
ing tho dough will Charllo's hoof be planted upon his Uncle's too.
(Copyright, 1912, by Universal Prcsi Syndicate.)
mus Mldgett had to face nlono an op
portunity and a question, such as uro
given to few men to solvo
Should ho try to savo those black
dots alone, nnd run the risk of losing
his llfo and nil chanco that they
might bo saved? Or should ho return
to tho station, call ou tho rest of tho
crew and do what would then bo ensy
with Lylo gun nnd breeches buoy
easy If the wind would let a shot
enrry?
Tho final outcome Is proof enough
thnt It was no selfish fear of his own
llfo that caused him to hesltato rath
er was It a nice balancing of possibil
ities. If he lost his own llfo in trying
to nld single-handed nnd alone, ho lost
also nil chance of tho llfo crew's
knowing of tho wreck In tlmo. If ho
returned to tho Btntton to bring help,
it must bo threo hours before nn at
tempt nt rescue could be made and
would tho wreck last three hours?
A problem, truly, nnd ono to bo
solved with nil tho force of the worst
storm on record breaking and smash
ing nhout him, with thoso chokod-off
cries for nld In his ears, and only tho
small and pitiful chanco of ono mnn's
strength against tho strength of tho
sen and wind before his eyes.
Hut Kasmus Mldgett was not a
member of tho dull Shonl station ono
of tho famous crews of a famous
service for nothing. It took him but
a few minutes to realize that there
was not ono hour of life, let nlono
three, left In that swiftly dismantling
hull. Kvcn ns ho looked, twenty feet
of it disappeared, nnd another cry of
despair told him there wns no tlmo
to waste.
One at a Time Through a Hurricane.
Hu stripped half his clothes from
him to ho unimpeded. Then, watch
ing his chance, ho followed a breaker
to Its home, shouting as ho ran.
"Next time ono man Jump! I'll
take care of you!" ho shrilled his
powerful voice Into tho teeth of tho
gale.
"Ono man only one!" ho cautioned.
Then ho turned and ran for It with
all his strength, for If tho breaker
caught him It would be tho end of his
chances and theirs. Regaining tho
wave-swept beach and standing in tho
breaking water, ho waited for his op
portunity. And on tho heelB of a big
ger breaker than tho rest, Mldgett
ran down Into tho hell of water near
tho vessel, keeping his feet by n mlr
nele, to catch and support the hurt
ling form of n naked man, IiIb clothes
long since taken by tho wind which
plucked them strip by strip from his
shivering body.
Somehow, somo way, ho outfought
tho wavo which caught him hnlf-way
to safety. Somehow, somo way, tho
two helpless victim nnd strong, reso
luto life-saver fighting a grim and
single-handed battlo alono with all tho
COMMON CLAY
Words by GENE MORGAN
MORSE.
force of loyalty to his salt which the
government nud sixty dollars n mouth
nnd tho wonderful personality of Su
perintendent Klmtmll bus bred In
these men somehow they gained tho
bank.
And without waiting oven for a
brenth, Mldgett plunged bnck again to
tho wreck. Twice ho lost his footing
and was swept head over heels. Twice
ho camo up spluttering and choking
with Band and water, but ho struggled
on until near enough to catch nnd
hold tho second man who took what
was left of his llfo and with It Jumped
Into tho Binother of dirty wntcr. And
once moro the light was taken up nnd
once moro Mldgett nnd his prlzo won
through to victory. Once moro? Aye,
once more, and ngaln once moro, nnd
again nnd ngaln nnd ngaln, until sev
en men were tnken from tho Jnws of
death, from tho wry pit nnd rim of
Hell, and clustered, huddled, exhaust
ed in mind nnd body. In the shallows
on tho spit
Three More Trips.
Hut there wero still threo left. And
these threo could not do ns hnd tholr
mates they could neither Jump to
Mldgott's arms nor help him with
even feeble strength In tho fight for
llfo. For thoso were tho wounded
three the captain with a Jugged holo
In his chest where a splintered spar
had struck, two others bo bruised, cut
nnd exhausted they could but wavo
shivering hands to him, as If begging
thnt they he not forgotten.
Put Mldgett hnd no Intention of for
getting them Ho was blind with un
reasoning rago now. furious with tho
Ben and wind His blood was up, nnd
not tho worst sen that over broke, nor
nil tho winds that ever blew, could
havo kept him from doing the utterly
foolhardy, erazlly daring thing he did.
not once, but threo times'
Down ho went right to tho vessel,
caught a rope and swung himself
aboard what was left, grasped a flguro
In his arms, then plunged himself
overboard on tho back of a breaker
and took his chanco of glory or tho
grave as many nnnther man has dono.
Hut never another man In tho an
nate of tho service did It threo times
and won out! For thnt Is what Mld
gett did. Hattled with by mountnln
ous waves, crippled by boards and
boxes and spars which beat and toro
nt him In both tho wnter nnd tho
driving nlr, harried by a wind thnt
wnB like n wall against him, nnd ex
hnustcd by his seven previous trips.
Mldgett nevertheless won through,
nnd when ho finished, saw ten wrecks
of whnt once wero men. stnndlng nnd
lying in tho seml-dnrknoss on tho
wlrid nnd wave-swept beach.
Even as he turned, perhnps In numb
wonder nt whnt ho had dono. tho half
of tho Priscllla groaned, crashed once
or twlco nnd wns gono.
"For Extraordinary Heroism."
Tho keeper of tho station would
hardly believe hlB talo when Mldgett
rodo his horso back to tho station for
help. It did not seem hellevnblo. nut
thero wero tho rescued to toll the
amazing story over ngaln, when, nfter
a dny nnd night of tender nursing nt
tho station, onco moro clothed, fed
and warmed, thoy woro ahlo to speak.
Tho life-saving servlco report of tho
following year contains this succinct
mention in tho "Medals Awarded"
columns:
"To Kasmus S. Mldgett, Surfman,
Oull Shoal Station. For extraordi
nary heroism In rescuing, single-handed,
ten men from tho wreclc of tho
barkentlno Priscllla, three miles
south of Gull Shonl station, August
18, isnn, Gold Medal. The repnuo was
effected at night nnd during the
height of n disastrous storm which
Inundated tho wholo coast In that vi
cinity." Tho records of tho life-saving serv
lco will parallel tho records of any
army or navy with deeds of daring
nnd heroism, of bravery and courago
nnd willingness to die for tho sako of
tho duty that lies beforo Its crews,
nufln nil Its annals of forty-ono yenrs
of existence, during which tlmo 1R2,
0.18 persons havo been saved from
22,711 wrecks, It has nothing to com
pnro with this roscuo. It hns plenty
of deeds ns daring nnd as courageous
to keep nllvo In Its reports, hut no
other Instance whero ono man. single
handed nnd nlono, defied such a storm
ns this, and rescued ten men without
other means than tho strength of his
body nnd tho flno courago of hli
heart.
(Copyright, by nliUwnv Co )
SEE THAT THE FRUIT IS RIPE
Bananas and Apples Especially Are
Unfit to Eat If They Have Least
Suspicion of Greenness.
A fnct of special Interest nt this
tlmo of year Is thnt somo of tho com
monest fruits contain starch Instead
of sugar until they Iinvo fully ripened.
Knw stnrch Is very Indigestible, which
explnlns tho frequent necessity for
"green-upplo medliino."
Most conspicuous In respect to their
stnrch content nro bananas and ap
ples. Reports from tho Natlonnl Hu
rcatt of Chemistry show that Haldwin
npples examined contained moro than
4 per cent, of stnrch whllo green, less
than ono-quartor of 1 per cent, when
rlpo, nnd nono nt all when overripe
Tho porcontugo of sugar, on tho othor
hand, hnd Increased moro than four
times, showing that all tho starch had
been converted Into sugnr during the
ripening process, Bananas show simi
lar changes ns thoy ripen.
Theso facts teach us that only thor
oughly rlpo fruits aro most suitable
for eating raw; that scarcoly rlpezaa
apples and bananas, like gooseberries
nnd currants, aro best adapted to cook
ing; and that all persons who cat raw
fruits should chow them thoroughly
on account of tho starch they are lia
ble to contain.
L
OAIRY POSSIBILITIES OF STATE
OF NEBRASKA.
GOSSIP FROM STATE CAPITAL
Items of Interest Gathered from Re
liable Sources and Presented In
Condensed Form to Our
Readers.
Matters of merit affecting tho wel
faro of tho farmer received favorable
consideration at tho hands of tho 1913
session of tho Nebraska legislature.
Among tho laws finally passed are: A
non-salaried live stock sanitary com
mission; a non-salaried good roads
commission; a new stallion registra
tion law; Important amendments to
tho Irrigation laws; strengthening of
tho antidiscrimination law; a "blue
sky" law which will censor tho of
fering of shady Investments; a pro
posed nmondiueni to tho constitution
for a new system of revenue nnd tax
ation with a tax commission to report
to tho next legislature; a complete
new Insurance code conducted by nn
Insurance commission; a county tele
phono law; a building for agriculture
and horticulture on tho state fair
grounds. Tho appropriations carried
In tho general maintenance bill nro:
Throe-fourths mill levy for university
extension, one-third of which Is for
state farm use In case removal falls;
f37.r.00 at North l'latto experiment
station; ff.,000 nt Scottsbluff ; $12,G0U
at Valentino; $10,000 nt Culbertson;
$fi0,000 nt Curtis; $10,000 nt North
IMatto for dairy equipment; $30,000
for state llvo stock sanitary board;
?4,000 for stato board of agriculture;
$1,000 for Stato Poultry association;
$5,000 for Stato Horticultural society;
$2,000 Tor Stato Corn Improvers' as
sociation; $2,000 for Llvo Stock nso
clatlon; $3,000 for Stato Dairymen's
nssoclntion; $15,000 for school of ng
rlculturo nnd homo economics; $5,000
for entomologist; $12,000 for Nebras
ka conservation nnd soil survey; $3,
000 for state agricultural boanlcal
works; $15,000 for hog cholera scrum
production; $15,000 for hog cholera
Berum subsidy fund.
Nebraska a Dairy State.
A bulletin from tho university, pro
pared by Prof. J. II. Frnndsen of tho
dairy husbandry department, reads:
Conditions In Nebraska aro remark
ably favorable for dairying nnd in
tlmo we may expect to seo this ono
of tho loading dairy states in tho
union; but tho Industry hero is ns yet
In its Infancy; many years will bo
required beforo It hns renched Its full
"safe and sano" development. There
Is money In tho creamory business,
but It Is not n venturo to bo rushed
Into blindly without a thorough knowl
edge of tho subject nnd local condi
tions. Thero nro mnny pnrts of
sparsely settled Nebraska and tho dis
tricts of tho stato whero tho pcoplo
nro moro or less Indifferent to dairy
ing, whero tho centralized creamery,
with Its cream stations nnd cream
routes, fill n nlcho nnd opens up a
mnrkot that could not, for n tlmo nt
least, bo hnd tn any other way. Under
these conditions tho scattered farm
ers, Interested In cream production,
will gcnorally find it moro profitable
to tako cream to tho most rcllablo ex
isting creamery than to go to tho ex
pense of maintaining n new ono.
Will Test the Law.
Citizens of Wymoro nnd vicinity
who wnnt to go fishing on tho Sabbath
day aro preparing to test tho law
which prohibits that sport on tho first
dny of tho wook, according to letters
received by Governor Morohcad. Thoy
mako tho contention thnt It Is dis
criminatory to prohibit this form of
sport and to nllow certain other forms
of activity to bo Indulged in by pcoplo
of tho state. A decision of tho Btato
Buprcmo court says that tho law Is
good with regard to somo forms of
amusement.
Survoyors have begun tho work at
tendant upon tho lnylng out of the
now agricultural nnd horticultural
hnll nt the stato fnlr grounds. Tho
building, which Is to cost $100,000, Is
to bo pushed to completion so thnt It
can bo utilized at tho coming state
fair.
"Beer Bottle Corner" Case.
Letters aro still coming In to tho
nttornoy genernl's office regarding the
recent supremo court decision In tho
"beer hottlo corner" caso from Cherry
county. Tho decision of tho court,
validating Into fedornl government
surveys loses nhout 30,000 ncros of
school lnnd to the stato and makes
it subject to homestead entry under
tho federal land Inws, An effort Is to
bo mndo to securo a rehearing of tho
rnso, and It Is not Improbablo that
tho high bench will Incline Its ear
to tho legal department's petition
Preparations nro being mndo to
spend $04,000 In Improving thostato
capltol building nnd In malting room
for somo of tho now ovorcrowded de
partments. '
Bread delivered to housewives of
Omahn, Lincoln nnd other cities of
tho stato must hereafter ho wrapped
beforo being plnced In tho wngons
which nro to dlstrlbuto it. Such Is
tho substnnco of nn order Issued by
Food Commissioner Hnrmnn. Tho
step follows nn Investigation conduct
ed bv tho food department.
MEASURES
HUSBAND NAILED
RUBBER ON GATES
Wife to Weak and Nervous
Could Not Stand Least
NoUa How Cured
Ifunford, Ala. "I was so weak wdl
bervoua while passing through its
Chance or tare mat
I could hardly lira.
My husband had to
nail rubber on all th
gates for I could not
stand It to bar
gate slam.
"I also had back
ache and a fullatM
in my stomach. I
noUced that Lydia
RPInkham's Vege
table Compound was
advertised for such cases and I sent and
got a bottle. It did me so much good
that I kept on taking It and found it to
be all you claim. I recommend your
Compound to all women afflicted as I
was. "-Mrs. F. P. Mullendorb, Mob
ford, Alabama.
An Honest Dependable Medietas)
is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound. A Root and I lerb medicine orig
inated nearly forty years ago by Lydia
E. Plnkhum of Lynn, Mass., for con
trolling female Ills.
Its wonderful success in this line has
mndo It the safest and most dependable
medicine of the ago for women and no
-woman Buffering from female Ills doea
herself justice who doea not give It a
trial.
If yon have the nllghf eat doubt
tliut I,ylla 13. lMnkhum's Vegeta
ble Compound will help you, wrlta
toLydlaE.PInkhamMcdiclneCo.
(confidential) Lynn,Mans.,forad
vice. Your letter will bo opened
read and answered by a woman
ana ueia in strict couuuenca.
CANADA'S OFFERING
TO THE SETTLER
THE AMERICAN RUSH TO
WESTERN CANADA
IS INCREASINI
Fr Homaitoads
In the new Witricis of
Mnnluba, Saskatche
wan and Alberta there
are thousands of t'na
Homesteads left, which
to Urn man making entry
In 8 yrare time will b
worth from r)J to CM per
era. Thee Unda aro
wait adanted tn train
growing and cattlo railing.
BllKUUT RilLWal riCIUTIBB
In manr caacs tha railways tn
Canada naya been bolli lo ad
vane nt settlement, and In a
ehort tltna there will not ba a
settler wbo need ba mora than
ten or twelve mllee from a Una
of railway, Hallway Kates aro
regulated try Uuvernment Com
mutton. Hoctal Conditions
Tha American Rottlerlaathom
In Western Canada, llelanota
at runger In a strange land, bar-
tht nitarl a. million nf hla own
people already settled there. If
Sou dcslralo know whytbeoon
lllon of thaCiinadlanHettlarU
prosperous write and tana for
literature, rata, eio.( to
ww. w. DB.nnw.1
Baa Building, Omaha, Neb.
Canndlan OoTernment Agent, or
aimrt'M Miporiiiiinirnv pi
lIuinlKrntlon, uituwa(taeeaa.
Widow's Ways.
"Mamma, why did you tell Mrs. La
modo thnt I wao only eighteen when I
am really twenty-four?"
Widow Bccnuue eighteen Is six
years under twenty-four, my dear.
Daughter Yes, I know; but surely
I don't need tho benefit of those six
years nt my ago, do I?
Widow Not nt all, my child; but 1
do. London Tlt-nits.
Rainy Spell.
Dcautlful tho rain is, cheering to
tho cropo; umbrella men, golosh men,
hail thoso gracious drops. DIest pre
clpltatlon, early, latter, fall; but
kindly plpo nnd smoke it you've been
ruining baseball !
Kill the Files Now and Prevent
disease. A DAISY FLY KILLER will do It,
Kills thousands. Lasts all season. All dealers
or air sent express paid for 11. II. SOMERfl,
IK) Do Kalb Ave., Ilrooklyn, N. Y. Adv.
An Exception.
"I don't want anybody to mine
matters about this house."
"Out, dear, how about the pies?"
Mr, Wtnalowa Boothing- Byrnp for CblMrea
teething-, softeua the gtima, redueea Innaaimar
Uou.ollay a paln.curaw wind ooltcSa a bottlaJst
Virtue is not only its own reward,
but Bin is its own gravedlggor.
PAINFUL, TRYING
TIMES
Housework is
hard enough for
a healthy wom
an. The wife
who baB a bad
back, who Is
weak or tired
nil the tlmo,
finds her duties
a heavy burden.
Thousands of
norvous, dis
couraged, sick
ly women havo
traced their
"VvrVPtciuT,lt3 trouoics 10 SICK
stoiy" ktdnoys have
found quick and thorough rellof
through using Donn's Kidney Pills.
Tho painful, trying times of
woman's llfo nro much easier to
boar if tho kldnoys aro well.
An Iowa Case
Mrs. J. Hunt, ICrt B. 6th HU, Fairfield. la., sarsi
"for thirty years I stitteredfromklilnrytrotibla.
I had severe backache, headaches ana aliif
imlli, and my llmba swelled so I couldnt walk.
1 Man's Kidney rills cured me when Terytblna
cite failed. I cannot pralsa them too highly."
Cat Doaa'a at Anjr Star. We a Box
DOAN'STOV
FOSTER nULBURN CO., BUFFALO, N.Y.
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