The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, April 07, 1921, Image 8

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1RVINO BACHEILER
ILLUSXHiVTIONS
"O
"ON WITH THE DANCE1"
Synopsis In the village of Blng
vlllo thirteen-year-old ltohcrt litn
mot Mornn, crippled sorT of n poor
widow, Is known as the Shepherd
of the Illrdfl. 1 1 In world Ih his
mother and friend, his little room,
the (lower Rnrdcn of Judge Crookcr,
and every flying thing ho seen from
lila window, Tho piilntlnc of pic
tures Is tilfl enjoyment, and llttlo
Pauline Baker, small daughter of
r nciRhhor, tho object of his boylah
nffcctlon. To him, J, Pattcrnon
BltiK, the first citizen of lilriKvllle,
In the Ideal of a really ureal man.
Tho vlllago becomes money mad,
rclloctlng the great world In Its
state of unrest. The Ulng family
Is a leader In the change To them
tho vlllago has hecomo "provin
cial." Tho butcher and baker and
candlestick-maker all raise their
prices. Even Mlrom Ulenklnsop,
the town drunknrd, worku hnrd for
a month. Tho Old Spirit of Ding
vlllo la summarily fired.
!
CHAPTER TWO Continued.
The notice had been Riven soon af
ter the new theater was opened In the
Kneed block, and the endless Hood of
moving lights nud shadows hegan to
fall on Its screen. The low-horn, pur
blind Intellects of Hohemlan New
York begun to pour their lewd fnncles
Into this great stream that (lowed
through every rlty, town and village
fn the land. They had no more com
punction In the matter than a rattle
Miako when It swallows n rabbit. To
them, there were only two great, hare
facta In life male and female. Tho
males, In their vulgar parlance, were
cither "wise guys" or "suckers I" The
females were nil "my dears."
Much of this mental sewage studied
to heaven. Hut It paid. It was cheap
find entertaining. It relieved tho te
dium of smnll-town life.
Judge Crookcr was In tho llttlo
theater that evening that tho Old
Spirit of Hlngvllle received notice to
quit. The sons and daughters and
even the young children of the best
families In the village wcro there.
Scenes from the shady sldo of the
great cities, bar-room adventures with
pugilists and porcelain-faced women,
the thin-Ice skating of Illicit love suc
ceeded ono another on the screen. Tho
tender souls of the young received
the Impression that life In the great
world was mostly drunkenness, vio
lence, lust, ntnl Great White Way
wardness of one kind or another.
Judge Crookcr shook his head and
ills fWt as ho went out and expressed
Ills view to Phyllis and her mother In
the lobby. (Jnlng home, they called
111 in an old prude. The knowledge that
every night this false Instruction was
going on In tho Sliced block filled tho
good man with sorrow and npprehen
Dion. Ilo complained to Mr. Leak, tho
manager, who said that he would like
to give clean shows, but that he had
to take what wns sent him.
Soon n curious thing happened to
the I'amlly of Mr. J. Patterson Blng.
!,iai
,
Mr. Blna Tried a Cigarette and Got
Along With It Very Well.
It acquired n new god one that be
gan, as the reader will have observed,
with a small "g. Ilo was a boneless,
India-rubber, obedient little god. Kor
years the need of one like that had
been growing In the Blng family. Since
He had become a millionaire, Mr. Hlug
Lad found It necessary to spend n
good deal of tlmifr and considerable
money In New York. Certain of his
banter friends In the metropolis had
Introduced him to the Joys of tho
Great White Way and the card room
of the Golden Ago club. Always he
tod been III mid disgruntled for u week
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BY IRWIK MYEIUU
nftcr Ills return to the homely mill tics
of Hlngvllle. Tho shrewd Intuitions
of Mrs. Blng nliirtned her. So Phyllis
rititl John were packed off to private
schools ho that the Rood woman would
ho free to look after the Imperiled
welfare of the hunh of her flock tho
Brait J. Patterson. She was really
worried ahotit hhn. After that, she til
ways wont with him to tho city. She
was pleased and delighted with tho
luxury of the great hotels, the cos
tunics, the dinner parties, tho thea
ters, the suppers, the caharet shows.
Tho latter shocked her n little nt first.
They went out to a great country
house, near the city, to spend a week
end. There was a dinner party on
Saturday night. One of the ladles got
very tipsy and was taken upstairs.
The others repaired to the music room
to drink Ihclr coffee and smoke. Mrs.
Blng tried a cigarette and got along
wllh It very well. Then there was tin
hour of heart to heart, central Euro
pean dancing while tho older men sat
down for a night of bridge In the li
brary. Sunday morning, the young
pontile rode to hounds across country
while the bridge party continued Its
session In tho library. It was not ex
actly n restful week-end. J. Patterson
nntl his wife went to bed as soon as
their grips were unpacked on their re
turn to tho city and spent tho day
there with nchlng beads.
While they were eating dinner that
night, the cocktail remarker'CMh tho
lips of Mrs. Ulng: "I'm getting tired of
Blngvllle."
"Oh, of course, It's a plcayuno
place," said J. Patterson.
"It's so provlnclall" tho lady ex
claimed. Soon, tho oysters nnd tho entree
having subdued the cocktail, she ven
tured: "Hut It docs seem to me that
New York Is an awfully wicked
place."
"What do you mean?" he asked.
"Godless," she answered. "The drink
ing nnd gambling and those dances."
"That's because you've been brought
up In a seven-by-nlne Puritan village,"
J. Patterson growled very decisively.
"Why shouldn't people enjoy them
selves? We huve trouble enough nt
best. God gave us bodies to get what
enjoyment we could out of them. It's
about the only thing we'ro sure of,
anyhow."
It was a principle of Mrs. Ding to
agree with .7. Patterson. And why not?
He was a great man. She knew It ns
well as he did and that was knowing
It very well Indeed. Ills Judgment
bad been right triumphantly and
overwhelmingly right. Besides, It was
the only comfortable thing to do. She
bad been the type of womnn who reads
those weird articles written by grass
widows on "How to Keep the Love of
a Husband."
So It happened that the Kings be
gan to construct a little god to suit
their own tastes and habits one
nbout as tractable as a toy dog. They
withdrew from tho Congregntlonal
church and had house parties for sun
dry visitors from New York und Hn
zelmoad every week-end.
Phyllis returned from school In May
with n spirit quite In harmony with
that of her parents. She had spent
the holldavs at the home of a friend
hi New York and had learned to love
the new dances and to smoke, although
that was a matter to be mentioned
only In a whisper and not In the pres
ence of her parents. She was a tall,
handsome girl with blue eyes, blonde
hair, perfect teeth and complexion,
and nlmost n perfect figure. Here
she was, nt last, brought up to the
point of a coming-out party.
It had been n curious and rattier
unfortunate bringing up that the girl
bad suffered. She had been the pride
of n mother's heart and the occupier
of that position Is apt to achieve great
success In supplying n mother's friends
with topics of conversation, Phyllis
had been flattered nnd Indulged. Mrs.
Ulng was entitled to much credit, hnv
Ins been born of poor nnd Illiterate
parents In a small village on the Hud
sou a little south of the capital. She
was pretty and grew up with n longing
for better things. J. Patterson Rot
her at a bargain In an Albany depart
ment store where sho stood all day
behind the notion counter. "At a bar
gain," It must be said, because, on
tho whole, there wcro higher values
In her personality than In his. Sho
hnd acquired that common Uertha
Clay habit of associating with noble
lords who lived In cheap romances
and had a tuste for poor but hone.rt
girls. The practical J. Patterson hated
that kind of thing. Hut his wife kept
a supply of these highly flavored nov
els hidden In the llttlo flat and spent
her leisure reading them.
One of tho earliest recollections of
Phyllis wns the caution, "Don't tell
father 1" received on the hiding of a
book. Mrs. Ulng hnd bought. In those
weak, pinching times of poverty, ex
travagaut things for herself nnd the
girl and gone In dcH for them. Col
lectors had come at times to get their
money with Impatient demands.
The Dings were living In n city
those days. Phyllis had been n wit
ness of many Interviews of the kind.
All along the way of life, she had
heard tho oft-repeated Injunction,
"Don't tell father 1" Sho came to re
Kard men as creatures who were not
to bo told. When Phyllis got IntQ a
scrape at school, on account of n llt
tlo lllrtntlon, and Mrs. Ulng went to
sco about It, the two agreed on keep
ing the salient facts from father.
A dressmaker came after Phyllis
arrived to get her ready for tho party.
The afternoon of the event, J. Patter
son brought the young people of the
best families of Hnzolmend by special
train to Hlngvllle. The Crookers, the
Wltherllls, the Ameses, the- Itcnfrews
nnd n number of the most populnr stu
dents In the Normal school were also
Invited. They had the famous string
band from HnKclmenil to furnish mu
sic, nnd Smith an Impressive young
Kngllsh butler whom they had brought
from New York on their last return.
Phyllis wore a gown which Judge
Crookcr described ns "the limit." He
snld to his wife nfter they had gone
home: "Why, there was nothing on
her back but n pair of velvet gal
lowses and when I stood In front of
her my eyes were scared."
"Mrs. Ulng calls It high art," snld
the Judge's wife.
"I call It down pretty close to see
level," said the Judge. "When she
clinched with those young fellers and
went wrestling around the room she
reminded mo of a grnpcvlno growing
on n tree."
The renctlon on the Intellect of the
Judge quite satisfies the need of the
historian. Again the Old Spirit of
Hlngvllle hnd received notice. It Is
only necessary to add thut the punch
"Don't Tell Fatherl"
wns strong nnd the house party over
the week-end made a good deal of talk
by fust driving around the country In
motorcars on Sunduy nnd by loud
singing In boats on the river nnd
noisy piny on tho tennis courts. That
kind of thing wns new to Hlngvllle.
When It wns nil over, Phyllis told
her mother that Gordon King one of
the young men had Insulted her
when they hnd been out In a bont to
gether on Sunday. Mrs. Hlug wns
f-hocked. They hnd a talk about It up
In Phyllis' bedroom nt the end of
which Mrs. Ulng delivered an Injunc
tion, "Don't tell father I"
It was soon nfter the party that Mr.
J. Patterson Ulng sent for William
Snodgrass, the carpenter. He wanted
an extension built on his house con
taining new bedrooms nnd baths and
a large sun parlor. The estimate of.
Snodgrass was unexpectedly large. In
explanation of the fact the latter snld:
"We work only eight hours a day now.
The men demnnd it and they must be
taken to and from their work. They
can get all they wnnt to do on thdso
terms." .
"And they demnnd seven dollars nnd
a hnlf a day at that? It's big pny for
an ordlnnry mechanic," euld J. Patter
son. "There's plenty of work to do,"
Snodgrass answered. "I don't care tho
snap o' my finger whether I get your
Job or not. I'm forty thousand abend
o' tho game nnd I feel llko layln' off
fo the summer nnd tnkln' n rest."
"I suppose I could get you to work
overtime nnd hurry the Job through If
I'm willing to pny for It?" tho million
aire Inquired.
"The rate would he time an' n half
for work done nftcr the eight hours
are up, but It's hard to get anyone to
work overtime those days."
"Well, go ahead and get nil the work
you can out of these plutocrats of the
saw and hammer. I'll pny the bills,"
said J. Patterson.
The terms created n record In Blng
vlllo. Hut.-ns Mr. Ulng had agreed to
them, In his hnste, they were estab
lished. Pauline Baker Elopes.
(TO UK CONTINUED.
True Forgiveness.
Love is generous. Doing once Is not
enough. Heal forgiveness must reach
Mm seventy times seven mark aud
kindness be repeated lndellnltuy.
Never use hard words especially
If nu uro utiablu to pronounce ihein.
whs bi
rMTiovzo umroiH inteihational
sjwsqtool
Lesson
Uy IIBV. V. 11. KITZWATKK. D. D..
Teacher ot Englliih lllblo In Ih Uocily
llllile Institute of Chicago,)
((c). 182 1, Weetern Newspaper Union.)
LESSON FOR APRIL 10
QIBLti TEACHINGS ABOUT THE
CHRISTIAN'S BODY (HEALTH).
LKKSON TKXT-I Cor. 6: 19, 20; 9:24-27;
On.1. 6:7, 8.
UOLDLiN TEXT-Evcry man that strlv
eth for tho mastery Is tempcrato In all
things. I Cor. T..
IlEFKUKNCE MATEIUALr-rrov. 23:
29-35; lsa. 2SU-8; Gal. CM9-2I.
I'UIMAUY TOI'IC-Tuklnj; Cure of Our
Hod leu,
JUNIOIt TOI'IC-Qrowlns Strom?.
INTERMEDIATE AND BKNIUlt TOPIC
-The Value of Ilcultb.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC
-Public Health Problems.
The teachings of this lesson have an
Important bearing upon physical
health, but thu primary reference Is
moral. The sin with which Paul was
dealing was fornication, not matters of
hygiene. That physical health may be
Included wo do not question, but sad
and serious will bc-lhu blunder If that
only Is taught.
I. Glorifying God In Your Body (1
Cor. 0:10, 1!0.
It should be noted that .the -Inst
clause of verse 20 Is omitted In the Itu
vised Version nnd the best manu
scripts. The conclusion of Paul's argu
ment Is, "therefore glorify God in youi
body."
1. The Christian's body Is the temple
of the Holy Ghost (v. 10). God'a
dwelling place on earth Is flow the re
deemed human body Instead of the
temple nt Jerusalem. If tho sinless
Spirit Is to dwell In the body It must
be kept clean. To defile or abuse the
body In any way Is to Insult the Spirit
und commit the most awful sacrilege.
This truth apprehended solves forever
the problem of licentiousness, gluttony,
use of tobacco, the abuse or neglect ot
the body In any wuy- whatsoever.
i!. The Christian's body Is God'a
property (v. 10). Being God's temple,
the proprietary right Is in God and not
man. Being tho property of the Lord,
the Christian's motto Is, "Whether
therefore ye eat or drink, or whatso
ever ye do, do all to the glory of God
(I Cor. 10:31). "Holiness unto the
Lord" ought to be written over our
bodies.
3. The Chrlstlnn'a body has been
bought (v. 20). The price paid to re
deem the body was the precious blood
of ChrlBt (I Peter 1 : 18, 10). We esti
mate things by what they cost. When
we estimate our bodies In that light
we will be very Jealous ot their purity.
Guarding our health Is part of our re
ligion. II. Keeping the Body Under Con.
trol (I Cor. 0: 24-27).
Thu Christian's life Is more than
mere existence, there Is something to
do to be accomplished.
1. It Is a nice (vv. 24. 25). In order
to win a prize there must be self-denial
und definite exertion. The Chris
tian obtains life by contact with Jesut
Christ through faith (John 3:10; 3:30;
5:24). This lie possesses before he can
begin the race. While he gets salva
tion (life) at the beginning, God places
before him definite rewards as incent
ives to exertion. The Clirlstlnu be
lieves to get life, but works for re
wards. In the Olympian games only
one could hope to get the prize, but In
the Chiistlun race there Is u reward
watting for every one who disciplines
himself and rims. As the racer In these
games mustered his desires and ah
stained from everything which might
hinder him to win the prize, so the
Christian will make any sacrifice to
win. The prize In the Grecian games
was corruptible, but the prize of the
Christian is Incorruptible. If the
heathen would practice such self-denial
regardless of Its pain for a gar
land of pine leuves, shall not the Chris
tian turn from bodily Indulgences of
every Hnd so ns to obtain the crown
of righteousness which fndcth not
nway?
2. It Is a fight (vv. 20, 27). The
Christian's efforts are not mere beat
ings of the nlr. He has n real antag
onist. Ills fight Is not a sham conlllct.
He should exert himself with nil his
energy, nnd strike to hit his enemy. In
order to win success the body must be
kept under. In this case the-antagonlst
Is the body.
It should be so dealt
with ns to bring It under subjection.
All the evil propensities of his nature
should bo brought under control.
III. Reaping What You Sow (Gnl.
0:7, 8).
God hns established a Inw In the
world thut whatsoever a man bowb that
shall he also reap. To go on sowing
wllh the expectation of not reaping la
to mock God. The world Is full of ex
tuuples of those who thus mocked Him.
This text hns primary reference to
giving to the support of ministers of
the gospel ; Its reul bearing Is upon the
believer for his stinginess rather than
upon the sinner for his meanness, but
It has a bearing on all tfct wo do.
Very Sun of God.
Tho shepherds und the Wise Men
came away from Bethlehem very sure
of God. They had uot been unbeliev
ers or atheists, but the sight of the
little Jesus brought to them a fresh
and mighty consciousness of God's
continual presence. Kven the antici
pation of God's coming In Jceub put a
new song on tho lips of Znchnrlah and
Mnry. and one sight of the Child was
enough to open nil the fountains of
gratitude In the henrt of the aged
Simeon. Congi-esatlonnllBt and ' Ad
v.ince.
TWO FAMOUS YANKEE SHIPS
Old Gunboat Marblehead and Cutter
Bear, in Humble Service, Still
Are "Making Good."
Trading along the west Mexican
coast carrying pnnochn, hides, bees
wax und other freight Is the fntc of
the once proud American gunboat Mar
blehead. Tho vessel has been sold to Joso
Dclnllave, n Mnzathin ship operator,
by tho United States government for
a few thousand Mexican dollars. Dcl
nllave has renamed thu Murblchcud
tho Agun Prlela.
Thus passes tho old "pepperbox,"
Capt. Bowman II. VcCnlla's ship of
Spanish war fame, with a proud record
of achievement right up to the days of
tho last Victory loan drive, when tho
Marbtchend left Sail Francisco as thu
navy's "victory ship," remarks Our
Navy.
Tho announcement of coast gunrd
authorities that the U. S. ' G. cutter
Bear probably never will sail Into tho
North tigaln marks a sharp turn In
the history of one of thu most famous
adventure ships Hying thu American
Aug.
After more than two-score years of
battling with Ice Hoes and urctlc gales,
thu Hear Is under orders to make San
Diego her base nnd serve ns a training
ship for const guard recruits.
Since the Benr, In charge of Com
modore Schley, later admiral, rescued
the seven survivors of the Greeley urc
tlc expedition In 1884 jdie has been
devoted to service In the northern
sens with tho navy, the frontier rev
enue service nnd In recent yenrs ns
part of the coast guard licet. She was
built In Scotland In 1874 as a whaler
nnd sealer. -
Tho full Btory of her career would
constitute u library of stirring tales.
Among her mnny duties bIic has kept
wntch and ward over the Eskimos, car
ried tho Inw to the shores where Kin
ling snld no law extended, protected
the fur-senl herd from poachers of tho
"Sea Wolf" type, nnd given the sanc
tion of the white man's standards to
marriages beyond the arctic circle.
Natives, teachers, missionaries,
traders and marines in the North hnvo
for a generation regarded Uie annual
cruise of the Bear as a routine part
of their existence.
Not a season hns pnssed Including
tho present one that the Bear has not
saved lives by Imperative operations
performed In her sick bny, by the res
cue of mnrooned or shipwrecked crews
or by Inndlng provisions to Uie Inhab
itants of Isolated shores.
Reforesting the Plains.
tn tho state of Nebraska there are
twenty thousand square miles of coun
try that Is absolutely treeless. The
soil Is nothing but sand on which no
plant grows except a long grass that
Is good for grazing.
Anciently, perhaps seven million
years ago, the area In question wns
pnrt of the floor of a sen. Hence, of
course, the snnd. But within compara
tively recent times the region must
have been forested, for here nnd there
are discovered stumps of trees as
much as .two feet In dlnmcter.
Discovery of these old stumps led
the United States forest service to be
lieve that trees might be mndo to
grow thero ngnln. Accordingly, the
experiment wns begun nbout eighteen
yenrs ago, nnd, ns a result, about five
thousand acres of young forest hnvo
been successfully established. Some
of the trees today nre ns much as
twenty-five feet high.
The trees planted In this nrea ore
all of them of coniferous varieties
Jack pine, Norway pine nnd yellow
pine. At Halsey, Neb., Is mnlntnliicd
n nursery, which produces two million
of these little trees ench year.
For planting them, a novel method
Is adopted. Instead of setting each
llttlo tree In a hole by Itself, a plow
Is run along through the sand, and
the hnby trees nre planted In a row
In the furrow.
Record of Sunshine.
J. B. Klncer of the weather bureau
has Just published In the Monthly
Wenther Review n valuable analysis of
the available sunshine records of this
country. He presents chnrts nnd
graphs showing for all parts of the
United States the mean solar time of
sunrise nnd sunset, tho nverngo length
of the day, sunrise to sunset, for differ
ent sensons of tho yenr; tho average
ft r each month In the yenr, of the dally
mnounts of sunshine, In hours; the sea
sonal nnd annual amounts In percent
age of tho maximum possible; the
yearly percentage of clear, partly
cloudy nnd cloudy dnys. Data of this
character Is comparatively scarce, for
the reason that tho Instruments re
quired to make these records nre very
delicate nnd require expert nttentlon.
A grent deal of meteorological observa
tion work Is done by nmnteurs or vol
unteers who nre not equipped with the
iierceniv nppnratus for accurately re
cording the periods of sunshine.
Big Men for a Little Job.
Tho doorkeeper of the Europcnn
hotel Is generally n big man who will
becomingly fill a gorgeous livery and
In addition to this requirement, he
must bo of more thnn ordinary Intel
ligence, for ho Is called upon fre
quently to meet tho guests of tha
houso nnd to ndvlso and direct them.
This Important post at tho front door
of a largo Vlcnnn hotel was recently
vacated, nnd nmong tho applicants
were a mnjor general, three majors
and twelve captains.
The Conspicuous Result.
"Is bolshovlBm constructive?"
"Only In one way," replied Miss
Cayenne. "It makes a grent deal ot
conversation."
WOMEN WHO
CANNOT WORK
Read Mrs. Cor ley's Letter and
Benefit by Her Experience
Edmund, S.C. "I was rundown with
nervousness and female trouble and Buf
fered every month.
I was not able to ao
any work nnd tried a
lot of medicine, but
got no relief. I saw
your medicine adver
tised in a little book
that was thrown in
my door, and I had
not taken two bottles
of Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable
Compound before 1
could seo it was hclr
tng o. l am keeping houso now ana
am aolo to do all of my work. I cannot
Bay enough for your medicine. It has
done more for mo than any doctor. I
have not paper enough to tell you how
much it has done for mo and for my
friends. You may print this letter if
you wish." Elizabeth C. Cokley,
care of A. P. Corley, Edmund, S. C.
Ability to stand tho Btrain of work ia
the privilege of tho strong nnd healthy,
but how our hoarta ache for the weak
and sickly women struggling with their
daily rounds of household duties, with
backaches, headaches, nervousness nnd
almost every movement brings a new
pain. Why will not tho mass of letters
from yomen all over thi3 country, which
we htfvo been publishing, convince such
women that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege
table Compound will help them just as
surely as it did Mrs. Corley?
GENUINE
fcfe
BULL
DURHAM
tobacco makes 50
good cigarettes for
10c
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmim
DuyFairy Sodas packed iniin
to Keep Trie aamty Tresnneisin
II FAIRY SODA
itENBSIco:
i SHOlrf nnut datvuiies
uiirKH-imuwnAi.1 1 rufww
"73
CRACKERS AND CHEESE
always acceptable .for lunches
nnd nre especially good when the
crackers nre Iten's Fairy Sodus.
Just try cratlnr some cream cheque oa
ltrn's l'alry Soda Crackers, mrlnl;llnr
little paprika or cayenne, or ailillni; a llttll
prepared muntard, and then heating untH
the cheee Juat melta.
A can of Fairy Boclnn In the pantry help
fotve the dally food qucntlon In a latlifae-
tory and economical way.
Ak your croccr for I-TDN'3 FAIRY SODAS
and be sure you Ret the Renulne. 4
Near Bait.
Knlcker "Does Smith still enjoy
fishing?" Bocker "Yes; he has built
n pond In his cellar."
No ugly, grimy strenks on the
clothes when Bed Cross Ball Blue Is
used. Good bluing gets good results.
All grocers carry It Oc.
Love mny laugh nt locksmiths, but
It never giggles at the plumber.
Feel All Worn Out?
Has a. cold, grip, or other infectious
disease napped your strength? Do you
suffer backache, lack atabuicn, feel dull
and depressed? Look to your kidneys!
rbysiciaus agree that kidney trouble
often results from infectious disease.
Too often the kidneys ore neglected be
cause the sufferer doesn't realize they
have broken down under the strain of
tiltering disease created poisons from
tue bloou. it your uacn is uuu. your
kidneys act irregularly, and you feel all
run rtown, use Doan't Kidney FttU.
Uoan's have helped thousands. Ask
your neighbor!
A Nebraska Case
I. H. Scott, prop,
blacksmith shop,
Crelgtiton, Nobr.,
says: "My work Is
more or less of a
strain on my .kid
neys. I naa snari
pains In the email
of mv back anti
kidneys hurting; mc
badly wuen i wouiu
benu over or mi
nnvthlntr. The se-
tilnns nrApa Vnrlfi
colored and passed too often, both day
and .night, (loan's Kidney Pills cured
me so I have not hod kidney trouble
for tho last three years."
Cat Doan's at Any Stora, 60c Bos
DOAN'S",,?,",V
FOSTER .M1LBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
W. N.-U., LINCOLN, NO. 14-1021.
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