.t .. (.ejpl fffw1fc. S3n3uU. U9MArsT rv. ,WEW(Wr &3B2S iawwnmjr'wiiMMJUM'MiiiwMM.T;yTl wHwm-nMmKHcmmniMiiM RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF L gmtrnmtmmwmfflttttmmmmmtt Why the Haynes develops more than its rated horsepower . 48 H. P. The Haynes motor is built in the Haynes factory. Elwood Haynes, President of the Company inventor, metallurgist passes on all metals used in itvconstruction. The crankshaft, camshaft, cylinders, and, in fact, all vital parts are made by Haynes experts; each part is sub jected to the most rigid test and inspection before being built into the car. All moving parts on the mi HSmBS dmtnea's First Cmr including the pistons, connecting rods, crankshafts and flywheel, are accurately balanced. The scleroscope is used to test all parts that have been heat-treated, to insure the proper degree of hardness and to detect defective material. Every magneto, every carburetor, every starting motor and lighting generator every unit of the car receives a careful, scrupulous test. The' transmission shafts are mounted on Timken bearings, which give a sturdy construction and reduce friction to the minimum. The axles likewise are designed to overcome friction without sacrificing strength. The design is so well balanced that the car weighs practically the same at each wheel. That's whf the Haynes develops more than its rated horsepower. That's why it has unusual hill-climbing ability. ' That's why the Haynes has enjoyed uninterrupted success for twenty-one years. TW KijMt "Fht." 48 fauNMler km, 118 iscs wWW'...$1785wl$1985 Ik Hirsts "Six." 65 'rusher krtepawer, 130 bd wWk...$2S00uf.2700 lb Htrasj "So," 65 iimwmHM strtrsmr, 136 feck itls-M...$25Uud278S . "The Complete Motorist" by Elwood Haynes, Father ot tbo American Automobile Industry, fully describing the Vulcan Electric Gear Shift, will be mailed upon receipt of ten cents In stamps. Write to THE HAYNES AUTOMOBILE COMPANY 35 Mala Street, Kokomo, Indiana Bmtdtn of America' Fint Car - ...TJ?e ,l",, fr li handled by the llaynra -Motor Salrs Co., 0M Farnani St., Omaha, Neb., The Mlaeonrl llajnei Motor Car Co., 1708 (Irand At., Kanaaa tity. Mo., and by dealer! throughout Ne braska, Mluourl, Knntaa and Iowa, na!r Tbt Harnea aetla readily because of It mechanical icmci. feature. Yon may be. in open territory tend for catalog-and fonr pasta of detailed apeeltUatlona, giving- oTir S00 Itcma which comprise tha Haynes. Write raa right new" THH HAYNES AUTOMOBILE CO., 35 Main St., Kokomo. Ind. ' Enclosed find 10 casta In stamp. Please eeod raa Elarood Harass' Book, Tae Complete Motorist' I expect to bay a ear aboat. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIII REDWOOD 35BIMlSrTRlRE jnilkiytoldef WHEAT on many farme ia Weetern Canada in vis, eome yiewe Arl'Til Paraara. As high UnUJfT1J aslOObuahelswere recorded .In eome dlstrlcta for oats. ao tea m la far Barley ana tram 10 te 10 mm. far flex. Ega I. Kara arrived In the country 5 years ago from I Denmark with very little I means. He bomeateaded, worked bird, ie now the owner of 320 ecree of land. In 1913 iM a rmn of 200 ecree. which will realize him I about 4,000. Hie wheat vel.hed M lha.tothetMiabal 1 and averaged over M heehile rv v Thouaanda of elmuar in. . m ! rm uiuu... un meiblcu ui .in k"H M.aa..Ka smI.!.. haIa.a nM t.A I - ------- -.- i nomeeteaaera in ivianuooa, oa-1 r Baxcnewan ana Aioena. Tha eron of 1913 waa an abtm. dent one everywhere In Weetern 1 Aak for deecrlotlre literature and reduced railway rates. Apply to Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or W. V. BENNETT, Bee Building Omaha, Nab, Canadian Government Agent DEFIANCE STARCH te constantly growing in favor because it Does Not Stick to the Iron DEFIANCE STARCH CO., Omaha, Nebraska DAISY FLY KILLER M Xl'lM ffi lit. Meat, cImo, or naneaUl.eonvMUiat, ebMp. taati all ami, a. Made ef D,UI,iaatiplllerU oteri wilt not loll or injure aaytBlaar. lUuarantMd effieUve. 1 AlldaalaraorlMat eipnu pete for SI M. aJtOLB I0KUI. IK BUalh Av., BrMklya. SI. V. uiuro nome. VbeaplnmberfurbomMj tfalr wife. HtpreifntatlTM wanted Trmltr VaUe? Land Co., Trlnltf, Tex. eome work at everrwaere. and it will not injure the finest fabric. For laundry purposes it has no equal. 16 rji. package 10c 1-3 more starch for same money. BjBjBjBjBjBjBjBjBjBjBjBjkaaoie iBwU, ao .aBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBF! "1 Balog ,aBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBSU'.0,'eai9' .SBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBnBBBBV allformaof dl .amiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMJBii ne .BBBBBBBBBSBBBBBBBBBBJaBBBBW iKOdOMno .BaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaBnvaBaBaan una ooiue ia .WBeBBPWE SOHsl HSDvCAL OOHwfciiwSliili liliat lit OssSiSW. SWbbj W. B, srai SIX 65 H. P. BBS?" TANKS LIST A LIFETIME CANT RUST OR ROTNO KNOTS "We manufacture tha celebrated Call fornla Redwood tank. They neither ehrlnlc nor awell and cannot rot. Our tonka are held In perfect ahape by a patented appliance, not found In any other tank made. Redwood tanka have been known to atand 68 year without decay. Coat no more than othera. Send for price Hit and men tion alee of tank wanted. ATLAS Umpire C0..218 W.Q.W. Bldo..0maha Glad to 8ee Them Go? Patience I see a London railroad station has been equipped with pen-ny-ln-the-alot macblnes for the sale of tickets to persons who wish to ac company friends to the train plat form's. Patrice That' too cheap. I know I'd give more than a penny to see some of my friends leave the town. Wheel Talk. Wayside Walter and Tired Tommie met for the first time in eeveral months. "Been across the country," Wayside Walter explained. "Traveling incog?" asked Tommie. "Nope," replied Walter, "in the axle." Youngstown Telegram. Most of us can eee a sorrow twice as far away as a blessing. SPECIAL TO WOMEN The most economical, cleansing and germicidal of all antiseptics Is A soluble Antiseptic Powder to be dissolved in water as needed. As a medicinal antiseptic for douches in treating catarrh, Inflammation or ulceration of nose, throat, and that caused by feminine ills it has no equal. For ten years the Lydla E. Piukham Medicine Co. has recommended Paxtlna In their private correspondence with women, which proves its superiority. Women who have been cured say It is "worth its weight In gold." At druggists. 60c. large box, or by mall. The Paxton Toilet Ccs, Boston, lisas. rURKIIt'i HAIR BALSAM V tolUt prnwnttan ef nerit, lilM to mrmdilemlM duulra,. L FerReateriagColeeajU Beauty to Cray or Faded HaJrJ mxu mna ,i.w AJruayiaie. W. N. U., LINCOLN, NO. 23-1014. n COLT DISTEMPER TtiBrtnaTirimrtl nilBllnstis ! i fsjBxi. Acta ok tti blood tut) otMlsi nnM ssar. sscai iBMiwij Tr buwwb jot nimrBi w u iTji- .-.-.- .- : -. .r'r- '.- - -v -""--- BSBBAAdBlSa BWtttlAt tMtpneaOn t rtow, bow to poslUo, ttinta. d a uruaBBg ! bbj bu&u BAniaBBBi uaaatan. aw aaaaaa nrmew ; NEBRASKANS ABOARD DOOMED STEAMER WENT DOWN IN EMPRESS OF IRE LAND DISASTER. WERE TO SAIL ON EMPRESS Party of Nebraaka Tourlata Booked to Ball from Quebec June 26 Lays Blame on Collier Captain. Western Newspaper Union News Service. Omaha. Two Omaha meu and one from O'Neill, Nob., wore passengers on the Empress of Ireland. John Hen rlckson, local ngent of the Canadian Pacific Steamship Co., reports having booked tho following for passage on the doomed liner: NoIb Larson, formerly employed at the Alfred Bloom Sash & Fixture Co., roomed near Nineteenth and Cass streets. ' Carl Sainuelson, Omaha, occupation unknown. Roomed with Larson, It is supposed. B. A. Vlqulst, laborer, O'Neill, Neb. The namo of C. Samuelson appears among tho list cf steorugo passengers rescued. Tho other names do not ap pear, nnd both men aro supposed to. have porli ncd'. Those three men bought third cabin passages on tho Empress of Ireland, and told Mr. Henrlckson that they were gojng to Gutenberg, Sweden, to visit their old homos. It is not known whether they have families here, as Mr. Uonrlckson keeps no detailed record of third cnbln passengers. Tho lists thus far published by tho Canadian Pacific Co. do not Include the third class passengers. Places Blame on Collier Captain. Rimouskl, Quo. Responsibility for the deaths of nearly 1,000 persons, who perished when tho collier Storstad rammed and sank tho great Canndlan Pacific liner, Empress of Ireland, was placed hero' squarely on Captain Thomus Anderson, of the collier, by Captain H. O. Kendnll, of tho lost ves sel. Captain Kendall, testifying beforo a ooronor'B Jury, detailed at length the story of the disaster. Failure of the Storstad's captain, he said, to observe whistled signals caused the collision. Neglect to hold the nose ot the Stor stad in the hole in the Empress' side killed the last hope of rescue. J. T. LEE8 KNEW 8HIP WELL. Was Booked to Ball on Empress of Ireland June 26. Lincoln. Dr. J. T. Lees of the state university, who annually heads par ties of tourists in Europe, was booked for passage on the Empress ot Ireland, which was sunk in tho St. Lawrence. The Lees party was to leave Quebec on June 2G. Dr. Lees does not now know how his party will sail. The arrangement will be left to tho steamship company which has contracted ,to carry them. The only live interest tho conductor of tho party can take In It is to know that the arrangements made are sat isfactory. Dr. Lees say8 the company operates other boats, but these two, the Empress of Ireland and the Em press of Britain, aro tho only ones on which ho would caro to take his party. Master of Collier Denies 8tory. Montreal. The other side of the story of tho collision in the St. Law rence river last Friday morning be tween the Canadian Pacific liner Em press ot Ireland and the Norwegian collier Storstad which resulted in the Binklng of the llnor with the loss of more than nine hundred lives, has been told here, and the master of the Storstad denies the charge that he was responsible for the disaster and says he old all In his power to aid. Red Cross WIN Aid. Washington. While aid has not been asked by Canadian and British organizations in bohalf of survivors of the steamer Empress of Ireland and those dependent upon victims of the disaster, the American nntlonal Red Cross society his announced it would forward to tho proper authorities any contributions sent to it for that pur pose by Americans. Bringing' Back the Bodies, Queboc. Tho Canadian government steamer Lady Grey brought from Rimouskl Sunday 1S8 bodies recovered from tho wreck of tho Empress of Ire land. The historic heights overlook ing the St. Iawronce were black with spectators as the funeral ship moved slowly up the river. The coffins were carried ashore and tho mournful work of identification began without delay, The Lady Grey waB escorted by his majesty's ship Essex, and fifty sailors from tho warship with bared heads. Big Fire Loss at Nebraska City. Nebraska City, Neb. Fire, starting from an unknown cause, destroyed tho building occupied by the Bradley Catron company, one ot tho largest wholesale grocers in this section, caus ing a loss or $100,000, fully covered by Insurance. The fire was spectacular In tho extreme, starting in tho fourth or top story of the building and send ing forth great clouds of amoko, which mad tho work of, tho volunteer de partment extremely hazardous and re sulting In several firemen being overcome HOG CHOLERA CURE WARNING. Government Has Not Approved Any Treatment Except Serum. Washington. Evidence of what ap poais to bo n well organlzod campaign to deludo farmers throughout tho country Into buying nn nllcged ouro for hog cholera, under tho Impression that this has been investigated nnd ap proved by tho United States govern ment has reached the department ol agriculture. Articles praising this mcdlcino aro being sent out wide spread to newspapers. Theso articles aro bo worded that it appears as if ths department of agriculture had received reports from tho state of Minnesota showing that tho modlclno had proved most beneficial. As a matter of fact tho ono report received by tho depart ment was an unofficial and unsolicited statement sent presumably from the promoters themselves. The depart ment attaches no Importance whatso ever to this statement. It has no rea son to bellovo In the efficiency of any proprietary cure for hog cholera and docs not rocommond nny. Under cer tain condltlotiB It urges farmers to protect their stock with anti-bog chol era Berum, but that Is all. Two Brothers Electrocuted. Chicago. Hugh and August C. Becker, brothers, wore electrocuted n they stepped from n florist's, where they had purchased flowers for tho funeral of their younger brothor, An drew, who was killed In a motorcyclo collision. The brothers, with their arms filled with wreaths slopped to the edge of the sldowalk. An elec tric light wiro foil and curled about the nock of August. Ho wob enveloped In b.uuo nnd died Instantly. Ills brother Hugh grasped tho wlro to un coil it nnd met a similar fate. ' Congress Buckles Down. Washington. Ostensibly congross has settled down to tho stendy grind of turning out of the legislative hop per the bills thnt President WIlBon has Insisted must pass before adjourn ment. Tho hotiso has bcon talking against tho thirty-two hours time al lotted to tho discussion of tho Inter state trades commission bill, the anti trust bill nnd the measure to rcgulato tho issuance- of railroad stocks nnd bonds. Tho senato has been wearily approaching the end of talk on tho tolls question, and preparing to get busy with trust measures. Exceeded the 8peed Limit. Washington. A Whlto houso auto mobile in which Miss Margaret Wil son, tho president's daughter, and two friends were riding, was held up for exceeding the twelve-mile speed limit Saturday by county officers in Hyatts vllle, Md. When the chauffeur told who his passengers were he was al lowed to proceed. The officers claim the car was running twenty miles an hour and referred the case to the stats commissioner. Public 8ervlce Plants Sold. Norfolk, Neb. Plants of the Iowa Nebraska Public Service company were sold here Friday by Henry B. Maxwell of Omaha, the federal court receiver. Bondholders are understood to bo the purchasers. The plants Bold for $5,250. subject to the trust deed securing the Issue of $490,000 of bonds nnd a mortgage. Present values of tho plants are $410,745. Tho indebted ness Is approximately $500,000. .Getting Ready for Newspaper Men. Lincoln. Neb. Iocnl committeemen of the Stato Press association have be gun to lay out tho Epworth park grounds for the annual meeting In Juno. Tenting spaces are being platted and the grounds aro being cleared In order that everything will be in readiness to receive tho mem bers a day ortwo before tho formal opening. June 18, Back to the Oil Country. Galveston, Tex. Two hundrod and Blxty Amorlcans brought from Tamp! co on April 21 returned to the Mexi can oil country Saturday on tho United States naval transport Hancock. The refugees were warned that they re turned to Mexico at their own risk. Most of them nro oil operators and oil field workers. Seattle. L. H. Darwin, stato gnme wnrden, has asked the United States govornmont to take back tho hord of mountain elk liberated in Snohomish county, tho animals having become a nuisance, bocauso of their dopreda tlons on farms. Tho federal authori ties will Bhlp tho herd to Oregon if tho beasts can bo corralled. Falrbury, Neb. Boys bjUhlng In the Blue river near here found a mall pouch containing dozonn of bundles ot letters. Tho sack was stolen from the Rocky Mountain limited, on route from Donvor to Chicago at Falrbury about April 2C. Tho boyB did not re alize tho importance of their discov ery and tore opon a number of letters, tossing them over tho mill dam. Sev eral men nearby saw what tho boys were doing and rescued tho remain der of the letters. A draft for $50 was found in one of the envelopes which had been torn open. Want Armory Decision Reversed. Lincoln, Neb. That tho Nebraska supreme court reverse tho decision of tho Lancastor county district court in tho Nebraska City armory case is asked in a brief filed hero. The lower court decided that tho matter of tho appropriation of $20,000 by tho legis lature for a nntlonal guard armory at Nebraska City should bo referred to a vote of tho people of the.stato, under a referendum petition filed with tho secretary of stato. Tho case will be heard by the supremo courtd uring the first week In June, MAY JOIN IN MEDIATION PACT DOORS OPENED TO EMISSARY FROM CARRANZA. TAKE MONTHS TO SETTLE IT No Half Way Measures Will be Tole ratedWill Take Time to Work Out the Entire Solu tion. Weetern Newspaper Union Ncwi Service, Washington. Mexican mediation was a subject of discussion at a cabi net mooting hore, and tho administra tion took a positive position thnt tho communication forwarded to tho medi ators at Niagara Falls by General Car ranzn, chief ot tho constttutlonnllBt's forces, Bhould bo received. President Wilson announced to tho cabinet that Gonernl Carranza had addrosscd a note to tho mediation conference seek ing representation. Details of the Carranza message wore not discussed by tho cabinet, but it later was de clared that tho administration took tho view that tho constitutional chief should, not bo ignored. Whlto tho cabinet was in session, word camo from Niagara Falls that thero was doubt whether Juan Urquldl, agent of Carranza, would borccelved by tho South American medlntors. letter It wob learned that tho administration had directed tho American representa tives at the peace conference to urgo thnt the message- from Carranza bo ac cepted. Lasting Peace la Main Object. Washington. Every Indication In Washington points to prolongation ot tho Mcxlran mediation negotiations at Niagara Falls. That tho Washington government desires tho Mexican con stitutionalist's represented in tho pro ceedings tending for peace Is un doubted. Tho view of tho administra tion Is said to bo that terms of peace for Mexico which will not bo perma nent peaco aro useless. Administra tion leaders, cognizant of this view, reiterated thcljr oft-oxprossdd confi dence that the mediation conference would not adjourn until tho pathway to an adjustment of tho differences between Huorta and the United States and the internal conflict in Mexico had been cleared. In circles close toi the administration it was declared the American representatives at Niagara Falls conference had been instructed to urge upon the South American mediators the necessity of giving' recognition to the constitutionalist foroes in framing a plan to compos the turbulence of Mexico. Mentha Required for Settlement. Washington. Although the Niagara Falls mediators are confident they will be able to reconcile all Mexican factions it was said hero thnt it will take months to work out the entire .solution. Even though all factions can reach an agreement on a now pro visional government thero aro many problems that aro certain to cause trouble, according to tho vlow of thoso hero who aro In touch with the solution. Chief of thcBo are claims for damages and reparation for foreigners slain. Great Britain, it is admitted, has not dropped the Benton case and there aro a number of other Instances where foreigners were killed In which responsibility has not yet boon fixed. China, Japan, England, Germany and France aro already pro pared to file enormous claims or dam age to property of their subjects and the question of whether tho proposed new government will assume responsi bility will result In lengthy dlplomatio correspondence. The state depart ment is withholding information re garding tho position taken by the con stitutionalists on mediation. It Is like ly, however, that an announcement will be made on this point from tho mediators themselves in tho nenr future. Tho Carranzlstas have ad mitted thoy would not oppose the name of certain individuals to conduct a temporary government at Mexico City. Therefore officials hero aro anxiously awaiting an expected an nouncement from tho Mexican capital naming by Huorta a minister of foreign affairs. If a strong Individual of neutral bollofs Is named It will be accepted Immediately as forecasting tho elimination of Huorta, Niagara Falls, Ont. Tho actual terms and details of a plan for the pacification of Mexico aro now under discussion by tho mediation confer once, according to an announcement by Justice Lamar. An early agrcemont Is now anticipated. The turn in the proceedings from a point whero it eomed as If tho land problem might cause serious embarrassment to an understanding ns to the treatment of some of the delicate issues involved, came aftor a conference between the mediators and the American delegates. Mexico City. Extreme optimism is manifested in official circles over tho final outcome ot the peace conference at Niagara Falls on tbo basis ot tbo preliminary negotiations. The foreign office in particular was greatly pleased and confldenco was expressed that tho difficulty between tho United Stntes and Mexico would bo satisfactorily ar ranged. A high official said that President Huerta, actuated by tho highest patriotic motives, was willing to Hocrlflco himself for tho good of tho country, and a sottloment ot the difficulty was now believed to bo less MRS. LYON'S ACHES AND PAINS Have All Gone Since Taking Lydia E. Pinkh&m'a Veg- cUblc Compound. Terre Hill, Pa. "Kindly permit me to give you my testimonial in favor of Lydla E. rinkham'a Vegetablo Com pound. When I first began taking it I was suffering from female troubles for some time and had almost all kinds of aches pains In low er part of back and in sides, and press ing down pains. I could not sleep and had no appetite. Since I have taken Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Com pound the aches and "pains are all gone and I fool liko a new woman. I cannot praise your medicine too highly. ' 'Mrs. Augustus Lyon, Terre Hill, Pa. It Is true that nature and a woman's wonc das produced tho grandest remedy for woman's Ills that the world has ever known. From tho roots and herbs of tho field, Lydia E. Pinkham, forty years ago, gavo to womankind a remedy for their peculiar ills which has proved more efficacious than any other combination of drugs ever com pounded, and today Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound Is recognized from coast to coast as the standard remedy for woman's ills. In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., are files containing hundreds of thousands of letters from women seek lng health many of them openly state over their own signatures that they have regained their health by taking Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound; and In some cases that it has saved then from surgical operations. Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief Permanent Cure CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never fall. Purely vegeta ble act surely out genuy on the liver. Stop after dinner distress-cure IndiffestionJ improve the complexion, brighten the eyes BIAlXPlIX,SlUXrX)SilXPRlCa'. irenuine must bear Signature Dog Mothers Kittens. "Mike," a rat terrier owned by Wtt. Ham Bailey ot Georgetown, was db. covered yesterday mothering a pair of kittens he bad stolen from the home of a neighbor. "Mike" had gone to the house, picked the kittens up by the neck, and carried them to his owa home, where he was discovered play ing with them and making thein. com fortable in every way. When the twe kittens were returned to thler mother "Mlko" was inconsolable, and has slnco refused to eat. Oeorgotowa (Dol.) Ditspatch to the Philadelphia Inquirer, Bxasalae carefully every battle of OASTORIA, a safe aad sure remedy far Infants and children, and see that li Dears the Tsy r ?? Signature of Cjtjjrytgtfffifa In Use For Over 80 Tears. Caildrtn Ory for Fleteb.ers futealsi A Big Man. "He seems to feel rather Important" "Well, yes. He thinks tobacco stocks ought to slump a bit whenever be swears oft smoking." .. LADIES CAN WEAR SHOES Onaauaamatlaraturnaina Allant Toov-Bu. tae Anilaapllo powder to baataakan Into tha aboat. U nakaallgbtornswaboaafeat caay. Joatthe tblae (or dancing. Ittfuit $ubHtuUt. for CRIB trial paokaea.addraatAllanaoimatad.LaBor.M.r. A4. Of Course. She Why does a hen cackle whea she lays an egg? He Because the egg can't. I guess. Attaint aned KM. Parma tor aale od arop pajfc menu. J. Mnlhall, Boo Cltr, bw-Adr. Somo folkB get what they want by pretending not to want it Good Cause for Alarm Deaths from kidney dlaeanea bare la oreated T8 la twenty yeara. People over do nowaday s la ao many wari that the oon ataut filtering of poisoned blood weakeas the kidneys. Beware of faul Brigbt's disease. When backache or urinary ills tureen weak kldueye, Me Doau'a Kidney Fills, drink water freely and reduce the diet. Avoid eoSee, tea and liquor. Doea'a Kidney Pills eommataA eoaft denoe, for no other remedy Is so widely used or so generally suooeeafaL ANahtajfcaCass "Sararal yaara ao. X waa afflloteA with kidney trouble aaa Atovr," ears Q. X. Booth, pelater, Slam dolpn. Neb. "Mr back aefced severely an4 sharp, AartlBjr p a I a s went all tnrouaa any boar. Mr limbs as4 body swelled. J ka4 to Siva up work tor a month and waa all doubled up. Thel kidney accretions' war la awful shan. When X bad almoat rven up In despair, heard ot Doan'e Kidney Pllla. Four boxes restored ma ta srood health and X have aaver eince." Oet Deaa'a at Atajr . SO a Bea DOAN'SWAV rOATaXMLriUKW CO. aWtTALTX M. V. wnw .eteeMnaDTFDX .itaBBH MMTTI r llVER itasW ILLS. &s00i!Zzg 1 T fJM f'A ,5 1: i M j ! a JS i u ( , i m 'n a& ' 'JIB.. i is . JJ K'1 ' I -" si i I ftQK ms K i 't -l 1 I 7 1 U 'Ml m ,'vf m fai$kM$SMt& I J r i-lnM