Bill Mathison, Bow Magic and the Muse PA ? ? Bill Mathison stood In the cabin doorway malevolently regarding the huddle of many-poled lodges across tho river. Shrill yelps roan In a chorus ns a copper colored crono is sued from a lodge nnd hurled male dictions and pieces of firewood at a pack of thieving mongrel dogs. On Xho flat lieyohd the tepees, a bunch of ponies, a thousand head or more, of mingled breeds and many colors, were jbelng held togotherln a compact mass by mounted Indians, while scores on foot prowled through the circling ;lierd, catching trim little ponies and ler.ding them to their tepees. "Blast 'em!" growled mil. "If they stay another week, antelope '11 be line mair plentlfu' than water on the Mohave; an' there'll no bo grass 'i:u.i" on yon bottom tao feed a licalthy pruirlo dog, mair less a bunch o' calves." "If we was In Rod's country now," Hio;:.-:icd Todd Wayne, as he wiped the Inst of the breakfast dishes, "an' s:c:i doiu's was takln' place, there'd be a bunch u'.i Injuns hnt-fcolin' it for the i-eaervaiion, with sartaln repre tantatlves uh Unr'.o Sammy glvin' 'cm a touch uh hii:h i;ro on the rear. Thcsj hi ro Canadians is more d?libur i:!e. " "Oh, ay! they'll he nronnd." IUU caiisla a whiff of the rank odor that baiiKs lik3 a balo about an Indian camp. Ho slammed the door vicious Jy, and sat down with his feet cocked ftip on the stove front. "But the red ileevils '11 hae a' the hides an' jerked ,jnc:at they'll want by that time. It's a cryin' shame tae see (he puir boastles laurdared by the hoondred." "It shore is," Todd agreed, "but I don't Beo that wo got any license f enforce the game laws them bucks is .eomewhat numerous for two white iiiien." Over in the Blackfoot camp the Jiunters mounted and rode north; fourscore greasy, bead-bedecked abor igines, wrapped In the many-hued blankets furnished by a benevolent Indian Department, their po3t-trader rifles looped to their saddle horns. Ten miles north of tho Red Deer no coit breathed chlnookhad touched the Jillls since tho first fall of snow. Bliz zards, bearing tho chill of the ice pack and ever-lying snows, swept up from tho north and tore across the wilderness that lies between the North Saskatchewan and the Red Derr, driv ing the antelope farther and farther couth; for when the snow covers the grass on the hills, and buries the sagebrush in tho hollows, the prong horns must seek fresh grazing grounds. That was why the Black feet under Medicine Child jumped the reservation and hunted in the Red Doer country. Their method was simple and, un der the conditions, eminently success ful. Then they rode In a body until they came to the deep snow. Then they scattered east and west until therewas a crescent-shaped line'of braves, five mlle3 from end to cud. In this formation' they combed the uminB mousancis or ante lope before them to a bend In the riv er, across which, because of the glassy ice, the prong-hortn could not go when tho frightened wild things surged to and fro, seeking to break through the ever-tightening lines, the Indians cast off their mask ot stolid ity and fell to slaughtering, with flashing eyes and shrill whooping, un til the last antelope had broken des perately through the line of barking gnns or lay unheeding in the tram pled snow. The popping of guns down the riv er and the sight of the squaws hasten ing away with skinning knives and pack ponies to carry tho meat, pro voked Bill Mathison to tho utterance of profane sentiments. A3 he and Todd Wayne surveyed the killing from the roof of the calf shed, and speculated on the length of time it would take to wipe out the antelope on the Red Doer at that rate, there came. a Jangle of bells; and a single torse sleigh slipped out of the mouth of the coulee down which ran the home ranch trail. "Good enough! That's the wise gent thai teaches school at Beaver Crossin'," Todd exclaimed. "I'm shore glad somebody's come along. Yuh're good company, Scotty, but yuh've got f broodin' over this Injun proposition, and It's gettiu' monoto nous." " vAv;rnisht'yer ful talk," com manded Bill. Then he shouted hos pitably to the newcomer, "Pit yer nag I' the stable an" gae rlcht in. We'll be wi' you as soon as we feed these blattin' beasts o' calves." When Bill and Todd finished taking care of their stock they hastened to the cabin. The schoolteacher had built a roaring fire, and was interest edly watching the Indian camp through a space he had thawed on the frosted window pane. A box, about two feet square, stood in the centre of the floor. The lid was thrown back, exposing a queer looking thing .that immediately attracted the in quisitive Todd. "Say, now, Howell," he quirled, "what breed uh machine is this! Looks like a cross between a railway engine an" a blacksmith bellows." "That?" laughed Howell. "That's a magic lantern. I'm going down to the Forks to give a little entertain ment.. Pictures, you know, and a tableau or two witha little red Are." "I never like f monkey with ma chinery unless I know it'i out nil gear Medicine-Man. f Befooled the BUickftet. & j?'u J". st. j: 1! S 3 S 2 ft ? ? ? ? ? an' hnrraless," Todd commented, joc ularly, as he deposited it In a corner. "A mngeek lantern, eh?" observed Bill. And he viewed tho box with a great deal of lntorest. During the preparation of supper Hill nnd Todd explained to Howell what fashion of folk were the dwell ers In the lodge across the river, and dwelt with much emphasis on the fact thnt they were undesirable. "It's no richt for tho Government tae allow the red duevils tae squat In a body's dooryard, as ye might say," Rill concluded, angrily; "tae say nae thln' o' their kilMti' tho puir antedope, till there'll no be anithcr bunch come tae tho Rod D.er for ton year." "Bill has been a-wishln' he wl3 a 'heap big medicine man,' " Todd, the irrepressible, confided to Howell, "so that he could get out an' scaro these hero Blackfeet oH'n tho face uh tho earth." After supper the three clustered round the stove, for the mercury was marking time around the "twenty-be-low" point, and the hoar frost hung thick on the window panes. Howell and Todd dicus;wd the various phases of the Indian question, but Bill sat silent, puffing industriously at his pipe. Ho seemed to be studying over some matters, and at times his eyes rested speculatively on TratiU How ell's lantern case. Suddenly Eill dropped his feet from the top of the oven door with a thump that brought a reproving look from Todd. Ho knocked tho ashe3 out of his pipe on tho stove front, and stowed it away in his pocket. Then he looked from one to the other and spoke. "I hae a plan for scarin' these red bodies finely," he began, rather dubiously. "Throw It out uh yuh, Scotty," cried Todd, enthusiastically. "I'm the greatest son-of-a-gun f work out schemes yuh ever saw only I never can think uh one t' work." "It's no on ye I'll be dependin' tae wark oot the thing," retorted Bill. "Ye'll no hae a big part taa play. It's on Mr. Howell here ma plan depen's, an' maybe he'll no care tae tak a han'." "Let's hear your plan, by all means," Howell said, impulsively. "If there's any sport in it I'll be right with yon." Thus pressed Eill voiced l.ii idea, and when he had done Todd Wayne and the schoolteacher were Idiotically giggling. "Yuh've shore got a vivid Imagina tion," Todd assured him. "Yuh ought f been one uh these here story-writin' sharps, Bill, with seen a noble set uh thlnk-woiks yuh shore had!" "I prophesy that we startle the no ble red man a little, anyway," How ell chuckled, gleefully, "even if it doesn't act ns Bill thinks It will." It was a cloudy night, and the ranch lay under a hh;h bank, which masked the cabin am stable, tho cor rals and calf sheds with unbroken gioom. Bill and Todd bundled them-1 seives in lur coats ana caps; they put on extra socks and dry moccasins and went outside. Their actions did not betray anything unusual. They sim ply secured an axe each, nnd split a good sized pile ot firewood. They piled tho wood forty or fifty yards from tho cabin almost on the river bank. While Todd whittled shavings to start a fire Bill dived into the cabin, reappearing in a mo ment with a ten-foot square of white cotton. This he fastened securely to a line that ran from the woodpile to the-Btable, placing blocks of wood on the lower edge to hold it taut. When Bill had completed his task Todd signified that he was ready to start the fire. Bill shouted to the cabin; "'e're ready noo, If ye are." The window lights were abruptly blotted out a second nfter ho spoke. They fanned the fire a little, and as the flame shof up a nipping night breeze caught and blew it to a roaring blaze. .From the blackness of the cabin wall a yellow glare of light shot forth, wavered a moment, then fast ened fairly on the white cotton square, and disappeared. Rules of Life Horace Fletcher has printed in a book his rules of life and eating, summing them up as thus: Don't eat when not hungry. Don't ever get angry. Don't drink in a hurry. Don't tolerate worry. Don't ever waste good taste. Don't pass it by in haste. Don't gobble pure good food. Don't fail to eat as you should. Don't make work of exercise. Don't make light of good advice. Don't ever half take breath. Don't thus court an early death. , , Don't squander precious time. Don't miss to do your best. Let Nature do the rest. "The old boy's got tho proper fo cus, all right, nil right," Todd ro- marked, jocularly. "Ain't it about time t' begin tho grand march? S'pose yeur copper faced friends don't get. curious?" "Dlnna ye fear," Bill replied, tost lly, 'the red deevlls 'II he here fast enoo'. Hae yo the concertina?" "I shore have," said Todd, produc ing the instrument. "I ain't no Pad dyrooBky, Bill, but I'll do the best I can." Ho squatted in tho snow by the fire, and, slipping his mitts Into his coat pocket, stretched the bollows and rans his fingers over tho keys of the antiquated nffair. The squeaking notes shrilled wonderfully loud in the silence. Whllo Todd 'indulged in a few preliminary flourishes. Bill heaped wood on the fire. Then he slipped out of his fur coat and straightened up with a six-shooter in his hand; the barking crack-crack of It. went echoing far up and down the river. The Blackfeet, peering out of their tepees at the report of the gun, noted the flro by the Gordon line camp. They looked with growing wonder at the figures of tho two men vividly silhouetted in the glare, one huddled by the fire, the other capering before it with loud cries and strange con tortions of his body; and as the squeaky trill of the concertina drifted over the frozen river, the Indian dogs voiced a canine protest that died away In an eerie, wolf-like howl. Hesitat ing between curiosity and suporsti- tlous fear, the Blackfeet listened and watched silently, nntll Wolf-That Runs-Swtftly, medicine man, struck his inflated chest with thp palm of his hand, and spoke. -it may te that the white men have drank too much firewater," he shrilled. "Or they may make medi cine against us; for they like us not Shall, fifty lodges of ther Blackfeet stand Jn fear before two palefaces? Let us cross the river and behold the things they do! My medicine is stronger than theirs and it is far to where dwell the redcoats, in their big tepees of wood." By the time Bill Mathison had exe cuted some thirty different steps of tho Highland fling, great drops of sweat were standing out on his tanned cheeks, and it was with a feeling of thankfulness that he heard Todd growl encouragingly, "Go to it, old boy! Yuh got 'em a-comln." As Bill balanced airily on the toes of one foot, pirouetting like a giddy chorus girl, nnd ylp-ylpplng In a man ner that amazed even Todd, he heard the shuffling pat-pat of moccasins In the snow. He glimpsed a line of in scrutable bronze faces peering at him out of the dark. Closer they pressed, until the light of the flro touched their features with its glow, and their figures took on tangible shape. Then Bill faced them with hands outspread. Todd fingered the keys dolorously. "Have the Blackfeet come to be hold the strength of my medicine?" ho asked, calmly. Bill spoke the Blackfoot tongue like a chief of the tribe, and wide knowledge of their customs and superstitions gave him a solid foundation to work upon. "What medicine does tho white man boast of?" Wolt-Thut-Runs- Swiftly demanded, in a scornful tone. "Does he think the Blackfeet are lit tle children to fear a fire and a thing that squeaks and groans with a strange voice?" "Listen! For many days tho Black feet have had good bunting on. the Iced Deer. Is it not so?" Bill made a gesture up and down the river. "Our young men have had good hunting," responded Wolf-Thut-Runs-Swlftly, spokesman by virtue of his position when medicine talk was made. "Even so!" thundered Bill. "The hunting has been good so good that the young men,, having powder a plenty, slaughtered the prong-horns for the joy of killing. And now the carcasses, stripped only of hide and tongue, lie 011 the river bottoms as close together as the cottonwoods in the coulees; so that when the Chin ook conies tho stink of them will drive even the gray badger to the high lands. Wherefore, O men of the Blackfoot nation! the Great Spirit is angry. And he has said to me this night, 'Make medicine, nnd I, the Great Spirit, will send a sign that the Blackfeet who hunt undor Medicine Child may be warned and cease their wanton slaying of the deer.' " and Eating. v $$$$$$$ ! Wolf-That-Runs-Swiftly nnd Medi cine Child exchanged guttural confi dences for a minute. The younger Indians stood silent, but the gleam in their roving eyes betokon an uneaay spirit. All through this Todd Wayno with bowed head faithfully squeezed pianissimo strains out of the concer tina, oblivious, seemingly, to his sur roundings. "We would see tho sign," boldly declared Wolf - That - Runs - Swiftly. "We are no coyotes, to bo driven from our hunting by a white mau who speaks loudly. Show our young men the sign, white medicine-maker." Turning his back on the Indians, Bill Mathison threw his arms aloft and shouted Invocation to tho black masses of cloud-drift overhead. The strident tones of him went bellowing across the bills. What he said was Greek to the Indians, and even Todd Wayne, though he attended strlccly to the orchestral part of the affair, racked his brains to make sense of tho words. But Frank Howell, list eplng through a window, caught such fragments as "They reeled, they set, they cross'd, they cleeklt, Till ilka carlln swat and reeklt. And coost her duddlcs tae the wark. And linket at It i' her sark," and he leaned against the casement, holding hands to his shaking sides. Of a surety Bill Mathison knew how to conjuro up spirits. Suddenly he ceased nnd held both hands over the dying fire, palms down. There was a Bputter, a bril liant flash of blood-red flame that died away instantly. Bill faced the cabin and, pointing Into the gloom, shouted: "Behold the Blgn!" As he spoke a yellow glare showed fearsomely bright on what seemed empty atmosphere. In a breath a group of Indians stood where the yel low beam had fjared, then they were eclipsed by a squad of mounted po lice, the Riders of the North, their red coats standing out like splotches of scarlet paint. A brief space they lingered, startllngly life-like, then there was nothing but black night. "Have the Blackfeet seen?" howled Bill. "Let them look again. Behold the sign!" Bill delivered himself of more language as another scene flashed boldly out. It was a smoke-stained ground a grim picture, perfect in detail. Back from the bodies a gaunt, gray wolf squatted on his haunches, nose pointed skyward, as though he were calling his brethren to the grewsome feast. Bill turned on his heel ns the pic ture wont out like a match In the wind, but there was no half circle of glltterlng-eyed braves. There was nothing but the shuffling pat-pat of many moccasins In the crisp snow, and Todd Wayne, sitting by n few glowing embers, grinning foolishly up at him. "They drifted," said Todd, tersely. "Mon, mon!" Bill Mathison said, earnestly when, next morning, there was no sign ot the Blackfoot camp, "the puir antelope '11 be thankfu' for the nlcht's wark. But wha wad 'a' thought the ignorant bodies wad flee frae a mageek lantern an' a bit o' Bobble Bums!" Bertram! W. Sin clair, SCIENTIFIC s'lMnw.'sTni aim A Welsh Ann Is exporting to Brazil briquets made from waste coal Rnd coal tar pitch, moulded under pres sure and heat. Compelling oysters to produce pearls by placing a foreign substance, such as small pebbles. In their shells, has become an extensive industry, In which the Japanese bnve specially ex celled, but the Chinese can claim dis tinction in the originality of 0110 of the substances ofteu used by them. Paul Eecquerel has exposed seeds of lucerne mustard and w heat to the temperature ot liquid air for three weeks, nnd subsequently for hour.s, to the temperature of boiling hydro gen, 253 degrees centigrade, and yet all of the lucerne and mustard seeds, and soveral of the wheat seeds, ger minated normally when planted. Bees were unknov.-n to tho Indians, but they were brought over from Eng land only a few years after the land ing of the pilgrim fathers. It was more than two centuries nfter the first white invasion ot New England, however, before modern beekeeping began. The industry of the present day dates from the Invention of the movable frame hive by Langstreth, in 1852. Canadian doctors having reported frequent cases of slight Injury or strain to passengers alighting from electric cars, the Toronto Railway Company at the request of the Rail way and Municipal Board has made some experiments with both two and three steps below the car platform level. The latter were found to pro ject too far from the side of the car, but the two step pattern has been adopted. An electric rail girder has been de vised by the Albany and Hudson Railway for use in grinding the wing rails of frogs to insure smoother pas sage of car wheels. A motor is car ried In nn ordinary hand car, a sort of small barrow carrying the emory wheel being suspended from a crane overhanging the end of tho car, and the operator supplying the necessary pressure upon the grindins wheel 1 through the handles ot the barrow. I Famous Com mercial Travelers Hy FORREST CIUSSE1. Marshall Field was a commercial traveler; so were John Wanamaker nnd Tom Murray. So nlso were Dwlght L. Moody, the groat evange list, and Richard Cobden, tho famous English statesman nnd writer. Ex Governor Frank Black, of Now York, followed "tho road" with his sample cases before beginning his legal nnd political career. Walter D. Moody, ono 'of the chief executives of the Chicago Association of Commerce and author of "Men Who Soil Things," was for fifteen years a road Bales man. This list might be extended al most Indefinitely. Occasionally the commercial trav eler leaves the road to enter one of the professions. Milton J. Foreman, one of the leaders of tho Chlcrfgo bar, president of tho Chicago Charter As sociation, alderman, and a power in local politics; was a "star' hat Bales man and took his law books on the road with him until he was well grounded iu the rudiments of the profession. Another commercial traveler, Charles N. Crewdson, took a course in the University of Chicago after he was married. There ho became In terested in Egyptology and later, be tween his regular commercial trips on the road, visited Egypt and studied the ancient ruins nt first hand. This brought him into print in a series of travol articles, and ho found that he could write, nnd write well. Later he began to draw upon his experi ence ns a commercial traveler for lit erary material and scored a success nnd a National reputation. But he resolutely withstood all temptation to be drawn away from the road. His work kept him in touch with the world of affairs, and one day his alert eye caught sight of tho oppor tunity to start a novel business "on the side." His "road partner" be came his actual partner In the new enterprise. Their work for their re spective houses took them where they most needed to go in the Interest of their private venture. To-day one of these men draws a salary ot $12, 000 and the other a little less than that, while their private venture probably yields them more than they enrn from their regular calling. Ev erybody's. Did ns We Wns Told. Some years ago the Yankee schoon er Sally Ann, under command ot Captain Spooner, was beating up the Connecticut River. Mr. Comstock, the mate, was at his station forward. According to his notion of things the schooner was getting a "leetle" too near certain mud flats which lay along the larboard shore, so aft he went to the captain, and with his hat cocked on one side said: "Cap'n Spooner, you're getting a leetle too close to thera flats. Hadn't ye better go about?" The captain glared nt him. "Mr. Comstock, jest you go for'ard and tend to your part of the skuner. I'll tend to mine." Mr. Comstock went for'ard in high dudgeon. "Boys," he bellowed out, "see that ar mud hook's all clear for lettln" go!" "Ay, ay, sir!" "Let go, then!" he roared. Down wtnt the anchor, out rattled the chains, and like a flash the Sally Ann came lulling into tho wind, and then brought up all standing. Mr. Comstock walked aft and touched his hat. "Well, cap't, my part of the skuner is to anchor." The Bluejacket. f Leather Money and Medals. On the authority of Seneca, a cu rious account is given of a period when leather, appropriately stamped to givo it a certain legal character, was the only current money. At a comparatively recent date in the an nals of Europe, Fredlch the Second, who died in 1250 at the siege of Mi lan, paid his , troops with leather money. Nearly the same circum stance occurred in England during the great wars of the barons. In the course of 1350 King John, for the ransom of his royal person, promised to pay to Edward the Third of Eng land three millions of gold crowns. In order to fill his obligation John was reduced to the mortifying neces sity of paying the expenses of the pal ace in leather money, in the centre of each piece there being a little bright point of silver In that reign is found the origin of the burlesque honor of conferring "a leather medal," King John having used them when he wished to confer honor upon gome, nobleman. Har per's Weekly. 1 Best Wheat For Bread. It is a well recognized fact that the flour from the hard spring wheats of the Northwestern districts will pro duce a large, well plied loaf of bread of excellent quality, and because it absorbs a lot of. water it also gives a good yield of bread. These are de slrablo qualities and naturally ex plain why this class of flour is so pop ular for bread making. The softer winter wheats do not contain so much gluten and do not make so large or to many people so desirable a loaf as the spring wheat flours. Yet a good, palatable loaf o bread can be made, and Is being made every day, from this class of flour. Bakers' Weekly. ... Changing Times For a "JusgrTOtrut-" As sequel to the Jaggan Nath Car Festival at Mahesh, In which one man was killed and seneral injured, Fo llce Inspector of Serampur has been, suspsnded. Lahore Tribune. DOCTOR ADVISED OPERATION Cured by LydiaE.Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Taw Paw, Mich. " I suffered terH bly from female ills, including inflam mation and conges tion, ' for several years. My doctor said there was no hope for me but an operation. I began taking Lydla E. Hnkliam's Vegeta ble Compound, and I can now say I am a well woman." Emma Dhapkh. Another Operation Avoided. Chicago, 111. "1 want women to know what that wonderful medicine, Lydia E. I'inkiiam's Vegetable Com- Eound, has done for me. Two of the est doctors in Chicago said I would .tt la 1 .1:. l 1 is 1 uiu 11 i uiu nub iKive an operation, ana I never thought of seeing a well day again. I liada small tumor and female troubles so that I suffered day and night. A friend recommended Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Compound, and it made me n well woman." Mrs. At.vena Spkblixo, 11 Langdon St, Chicago, 111. Lydia E. rinkham's Vegetable Com- ound, made from roots and herbs, ins proved to bo the most successful remedy for curing the worst forms of female ills, including displacements, inflammation, fibroid tumors, irregu larities, periodic pains, backache, bear, ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges. tion, and nervous prostration. It costs but a trifle to try it, nnd the result lias been worth millions to many suffering women. One Or the Other. Little Lola was sitting on her grand father's knee one day, and, after look ing at him for some time, she said: "Gwanpa, was '00 in ze ark?" "Certainly not, my dear," replied the astonishing old gentleman. "Zen,' continued tho small Inquisi tor, "why wasn't '00 dwowndod?" Llppincott's Mag.naine. ECZEMA BURNED AND ITCHED. Spread Over Hand, Arms, Legs and Face It Was Something Terrible Complete Cure bjr Cuticura. "About fifteen or eighteen years ago lema developed on top of my hand. It burned and itched so much that I was compelled to show it to a doctor. He pro nounoed it ringworm. After trying hia dif ferent remedies the disease increased and went up my arms and to my legs and Anally on my face. The burning was aome , thing terrible. I went to another doctor who had the reputation of being the beat in town. He told me it was eczema. His medicine checked the advance of the dis ease but no further. I finally concluded to try the Cuticura Remedies and found relief in the first trial. I continued until I was completely free from tho disease and I hav not been troubled since. C. Hurkhart, 231 W. Market St., Chambcrslmrg, Pa., Sept. 19,19(18." Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sola Props, of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Maaa. 40 In Good Training. "Fust time you've ever milked a cow, is it?" said Uncle Josh to his Tit King nephew. "Well, y' do. it a durn sight better'n most city fellers do." "It seems to come natural some how," said the youth, flushing with pleasure. "I've had a good deal of practice with a fountain pen." Seat tle Week-End. Thousands of country people know that in time of midden mishap or accident Him lina Wizard Oil is the best substitute for the family doctor. That is why it is so often found upon the shelf. Montreal, with its winters of great severity, is 350 miles nearer the equator than is Ixndoh. Montreal, in deed, is on the same degree of lati tude as Venice. Mra. WinaloVa Soothing Syrup forChildrea teething, softens thegums. reduces inflamma tion, alloys pain, cures wind col ic, 2 jc a bottle. j 40 Major George P7 Ahern, U. S. A., recently accomplished a journey around the world at a cost of less than $1,000. The major chose the route across Siberia and the Philippines, whore he was stationed. His actual time was 67 days 15 hours. While 60,000 volts was considered a maximum tension for transmission lines a few years ago they are now using 72.000. An S0,000-volt line 13 4 miles long is now -building, and a line has been built designed for 100,000 volts. WHY PEOPLE SCFFFIt. Too often the kidneys are the cause' and the sufferer is not aware of it. Sick kidneys bring headache and side paras, lameness and stiffness, dizzi ness, headaches, tired feeling, urin ary troubles. Doan's Kidney Pills euro the cause. Mrs. Virginia Spitzer. Buena Vista, Va says: "For thirty years I Buffered everything but deatbj with my kidneys. 1 cannot describe my suffering from terrible bearing down pains, dizzy spells, headaches and periods of par tial blindness. The urine was full ot sediment. I was In the hospital three weeks. Doan'B Kidney Pills were nnlck tn hrln? rpllnf nnri tnnn m n 1 a " auwu UIUUU me well and strong again." Remember the name Doan's. For sale by aH dealers. 60 cents a box, Foster-Mllourn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. i tit