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DOES ALL OF HER OWN WORK And is Glad to Do So, as She Was Denied this Privilege For Two Years. Richmond, Ky.-Mrs. N. V. Willis, ot this place, says: "I suffered for over three years with womanly trouble, and tried many different treatments, but none of them seemed to do me any good. I had almost given up to die, when a friend of mine begged me to try Cardui, the woman's tonic. I got a bottle, and began to feel a great deal better after the first few doses. I then got four bottles, and after tak* ing these I was cured. I don't know what a female pain is now, do all of my work, eat anything I want, and feel like a 16 year old girl. I never expect to be without Cardui in my house as long as I live, as I firmly believe it saved my life, and I will praise it to all of my suffering lady friends." Cardui is a purely vegetable remedy, containing no harmful mineral prod ucts. Its ingredients act in a helping, building way, on the womanly consti tution. It has been relieving woman. •ly troubles for over half a century, during which time it has proven of more than ordinary value as a tonic for weak women. You can rely on Cardul. It will do for you what it has done for thou sands of others. Begin taking It today. N. B,-W,*r _LadIe' Advisor e.,Catts nooa Medici Co.. ChattabnoogTle., for SIm l br . and 64Dwa bool,"HomeTreat anent for Wame." sent I plain wrapper. -0 mqu-t. Adv. A bad memory is a cheerful liar's nightmare. pret ,I re88 or1$ ~tibe~rd ilb~abeep Fiantuat Q s3w VLIs Ver prVim wai The sto: W81~ 1:rwarn A Chi an hau ing Ba the wa oG GILT EDOR dr - i ii :: "' at : ,o w .n r;Pl 2~b ýwitbout rubt tar an clueasaud wbts~s nevus .S mi cbtm U o a co. gi Y !"01 tk T' ci 4 T D * fc al TI Y 3It 01 - 01 II E to e a b a I sck.3, ".2 [igcrs m'4 .c._ .ia 'IS.. Is J- si· ~ ~j~~ObiiC.·r·d 4'0 ~~~-PIPl~saaar~. ~ ~ , _ p a~y i 4 aster MR Ceremonies L I Lof Today Yiel and of the Past DITH the coming of Eastel interest is always aroused in the ancient, belief, ceremonies and observ , ances that are brought together in the celebra tion of the modern festi val. These include such things as eggs, cakes, flowers, presents and the Easter hare, to say nothing of other items obsolete in our times. Individual tors f notings of one or another of the cere- ry monies or observances have there Pinkhj been, but it is by no means easy to trial ai lay hand on any assembling of them. now a Authorities agree that the remote and ca ancestor of Easter was a ceremony of they b pagan worship. Distant as are the "If origins of the old religious forms and you b intertwined as are the threads, con- them. necting them with the present, it is Jamne not now easy to disentangle them, so Lyd that it may be said that Easter ob- pound servances among the people include contai remnants of the ancient worship of and tc the sun, the moon and fire and water. most The keynote of the festival has been we kr i from the very beginning resurrection, testin the re-awakening of the vernal world. labors The name is that of a goddess of prove spring, and certain of the emblems If have had a co-relation that is remark- that able, and through thirty centuries ble they have come down to us together, toL preserving the early. significance of vice resurrection, although the faith that read originated the ideas had ages ago and been forgotten. The idea of Easter - d sprang truly from a tomb; that tomb PRE was, however, the tomb of winter. batte The strong angel that rolled away the r ° stone from the door of the sepulcher was the April sun. Although Lent has the claim of Christian origin, there are antiquari lans who assert that it is of far more ancient origin. It arose, as nearly as - has yet been determined, in the fast D ing that was customary among the Babylonians, whose worship formed the starting point of Easter. The fast was one of sympathy with the goddess Rm of reproduction, who mourned her con* Aet and sort, and the period was marked by drui fasting and an abstinence from mirth *OR1 h& and social festivals. Fasting has been a widespread custom, Humboldt not' Ai w.i Ing fasts in Mexico, where, curiously dulg , enough, the invading Spaniards found . the natives practicing baptism, with m an invocation to Cioacooatl that "the easy ..d sin which was given before the be or ginning of the world might not visit VN. the child, but that cleansed by these waters it. might live and be born n anew." In I Easter was at first a continuation of the Jewish Passoer and came O Lit the fourteenth of the month Nisan. When the revulsion of feeling in the church asainst the Jews occurred it g was changed and deliberately fixed the so that it could by no possibility fa ble on the same day as the Passover. the This matter was settled in A. D. 3356. a Easter was set for the first Sunday Coa following the full moon that comes after Mar(h 31.. This relation to the vernal equinox brought it to the time of the pagan festival of the goddess is 1 of spring, dating back to the Astarte so wdrship of Babylonia. The name, del ELaster, is demparatively modern, but be Sthe principle of the story and the Yo emblems and observances are of this anoient date. S"U1ster fires continue even now in narthern Emurope," wrote Grimm a t sgeneration aag. On the Weser a tar ye barrel was tied toa fire tree and ha lighted in the evening and the men and the maidens sang and danced i, about it. Tpere was a fire, on every lhiltop. There were processions to these fires and hymn singing and the tealng of white rods were features.a The people liked to carry the ro h ome with them; it was a sared flre and. embodied' elements of the old fre worship. It was produced by th frietion, a natural method, and to kin die it two boys were selected pho knew nothing of the vanities of the world. Withi u. quarter of a century in ilndesteim thi s heter ire. a been strack with the steeL Net. the peobte take til oe home to reklndlq p tielt #tililshed hearths. The old hi :.:5ii[ 0..el -of' tir byeoncentratitao ·.e.Oripr- Pq m::U i~iie4itah; iBUr vX fl·.:' · vi·~ MRS. WILLIAMS' te LONG SICKNESS g ha Yields To Lydia E. Pink- tN bam's Vegetable ph Compound. th4 Elkhart, Ind.:-" suffered for foure- h teen years from organic inflammation, me female weakness, pain and irregulari ties. The pains in my sides were in- de creased by walking ba or standing on my a feet and I had such P1 awful bearing down 7/ feelings, was de- S . pressed in spirits . . and became thin and :. ·pale with dull,heavy eyes. I hadsixdoc- Lc tors from whom I received only tempo rary relief. I decided to give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a fair trial and aleo the Sanative Wash. I have now used the remedies for four months and cannot express my thanks for what they have done for me. "If these lines will be of any benefit 0o you have my permission to publish them."-Mrs. SADIE WILLIAMS, 455 a James Street, Elkhart, Indiana. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Comn pound,madefrom nativerootsandherbs, d contains no narcotic or harmful drugs, and today holds the record of being the P most successful remedy for female ills 1l we knowof, an@thousands of voluntary t testimonials on file in the Pinkham laboratory at Lynn, Mans., seem to s prove this fact. If yon have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound will help you,write to Lydia E.Pinkhsm MedicineCo. (confidential) Lynn,Mass., for ad- f vice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence. PREVENTION , better then cure. Tutt's PIls If tamke, * *' " are not only a emedy for. but Wuti pi r SICK HEADACHE, blloumsss, eoatspldoa mad kindred dseses. Tutl's Pills DR. J. D. KELLOGG'S 3ASTHMA ' Remedy for the prompt relief of a- Asthma and Hay Fever. Ask Your 7 druggist for it. Write for FREE SAMPLE. h nORTHROP LYMAN CO.. Lt I RBUFFALO. N.Y. And many a toothless person in Bai dulges in biting sarcasm. Dr. Pierce's Pellets, small sugar-coated, Ur, i easy to take as candy, r ate and invig - orate stomach, liver and bowels. Do not eys ts gripe. Adv. lead. Definition of a Crisis. bladd "Pa, the paper says there's a crisis oblige In Mexico. What's a crisis?" times "A scarcity of news, my boy."- neys Life. off th be a Clhnate Knockers. you f Some people blame the climate for regioi their ill health, whereas the real trou- heads ble is that they shut themselves up in tongu their houses and won't give the cli- twing mate a chance.--Charleston News and Eal Courier. also ounce An idea. spool About the thinnest substance known breal is teleplasma, which is described as a kidni sort of a cross between smoke and spi- mou derweb. Wouldn't a ,gown made of it grapy be just too exquisite for anything!- with Youngstown Telegram. gene and, The Reason. also Cause and Effect-"It must be great so ii to be a man! One dress suit lasts for tion, years and years, and a woman must Jai have a new gown for every party." jure; "That's why one dress suit lasts a man littbi for years and years."-Judge. shou r jiidn Saw Something, at Least here Two little English children had run folks away from home, drawn by the irre- ney sistible attractions of a circus. "Oh, Adv. Mary,. come here!" cried one, lying on the ground and raising the bottom of Fi the large tent, "I see the 'horses le 'oofs."--The Delineator. chat CLEVER WIFE mu SKnew How to. Keep Peace in Family, a c It is quite signifcant, the number of was opewo 'who get well of alarming He heart trouble when they let up on cot- hoo tee and use Post~m as the beverage at nati meals. and There is nothing surprising about it, judo however, because the harmful alkaloid of -.cafine--itn coffee 'Is not present in Postum, which is made of clean, hard wheat. Ril "Two years ago I was having so much trouble with my heart," writes a lady In WauhIngton, "that at times I felt quite alarmed. My husbahtd took i me.to a specialist to have my heart examined. ca "The doctor said he could find no we oganic trouble but daid my heart'wae it rr'ýtble :from something I had been it accustomed to, 'and ask6d me to try ju and remember whet disagreed with it. me. "I. remembered that coffee always soured on my stoimaci and caused me trouble, from. plpitatlon' of the heart all so I:stopped .ofee oandbean to use or Ptein. l have had no further sol troubleirinee. be ".A neighrbor of ours, an old man, h 'was so irritable from drinking ree that bi wife wanted ;h odrink F r. 'This made im verya ory made it. carefully ac~ordtig .to dIt i eCi te. ^Jth uiý o h ud s 1*5' v~anmiI% b~~*ll ··' * A Century Ago. One hundred years ago saw the end of the Chatillon congress which had been endeavoring to settle upon terms o" peace between France and the na- Unse tions allied against her. From the be- tect in ginning of the negotiations little hope painful had been entertained cn either side polsoni that an agreement would be reached. stages Napoleon consented to give up West- stgs our phalia, Holland and Spain, to restore and w the pope to Rome and Ferdinand VII except to Madrid. He agreed to give up monia. Malta to England, as well as most of poison her colonial conquests. But he re- weakn mained steadfast in claiming for cure, I Frence her natural limits, the Rhir.e i to kno and the Alps. The plenipotentiaries, W ea8 deciding that further discussion would and t] be useless, declared the negotiations cold, c at an end, and the allied armies pre- indulg pared to resume their march on Paris. gets ii ache, SAGE TEA AND SULPHUR with DARKENS YOUR GRAY HAIR acd Re _ aidne] Look Years Younger! Try Grandma's kidne Recipe of Sage and Sulphur tubini and Nobody Will Know. of neo --ica, n Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compound-' ed, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streaked or gray; also ends dandruff, itching scalp and stops falling, hair. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and troublesome. Nowadays we simply ask at any drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sul- HIS phur Hair Remedy." You will get a ,s large bottle for about 50 cents. Every- Schol body uses this old, famous recipe, be cause no one. can possibly tell that + you darkened your hair, as it does it so naturally and evenly. You dampen A a sponge or soft brush with it and to th draw this through your hair, taking fame one small strand at a time; by morn- who > ing the gray hair disappears, an a I- after another application or two, your or tý I, hair becomes beautifully dark, thick edne and glossy and you look years younger. Al --Adv. mon Water for St. Petersburg. ly hi The city council of St. Petersburg is poc considering a measure appropriating whe $25,000,000 for a supply of pure wa- put ter, to be drawn from Lake Ladoga, 40 and miles away. On raching the Ladoga less pumping station the water will be agal driven into reservoirs and filters, O - whence it will flow through the pipes ios S unaided to the capital and there dis- Dur tributed. The capacity of the wotks, a sl which will be ready in 1920, is calcu- of E lated for a population of 4,500,000. cab: Afts r° DRINK LOTS OF WATER the I. TO FLUSH THE KIDNEYS can i.Y sud Eat Less Meat and Take Salts for to in Backache or Bladder Trouble-- we IQeutralize Acids, at tiox d, Uric acid in meat excites the kid- stre no neys, they become overworked; get the sluggish, ache, and feel like lumps of wit lead. The urine becomes cloudy; the see bladder is irritated, and you may be eve iis obliged to' seek relief two or three the times during the night. When the kid 'neys clog you must help them flush off the body's urinous waste or you'll 1 be a real sick person shortly. At first C you feel a dull misery in the kidney for region, you suffer from backache, sick rou headache, dizziness, stomach gets sour, 51 p in tongue coated and you feel rheumatic In cli- twinges when the weather is bad, Cb nd Eat less meat, drink lots of water; also get from any pharmacist four ounces of Jad Salts; take a table spoonful in a glass of water before wn breakfast for a few days and your ho as a kidneys will than act fine. This fa spi- mous salts is made from the acid of ft tgrapes and lemon juice, combined Ca g!- with lithia, and has been used for of generations to clean clogged kidneys fe and stimulate them to'normal activity, also to neutralize the acids in urine, p eat so it no longer is a source of irrita- r Sfor tion, thus endihg bladder weaknesas. must Jad Salts is inexpensive, canqot in ty." Iure; makes a.delightful effervescent ma l lithbia-water - Ink which everyone should take now and then to keep the ec kidneys clean and active. Druggists here say they sell lots of Jad Salts to Srun folks who believe in overcoming kid rre- ney trouble while it is only trouble.- "Oh, Adv. • " g on All Equally Right--or Wrong. of Former President Taft told this lit a fle story to illiustrate the puzzling character of a certain public question: '"I feel about that question very much as the man did who came across l a creek which, as some one told him, sof was called the askaschilqualie creek. 'mu He asked a resident of the neighbor a ct- hood how they spelled that name. The g at native said: 'Some spells it one way, azid some spells it another, bit"in my tt it, judgment there ain~t any correct way aloid of spelling it.' "--Ybuth's Companion. RINGWORM SPREAD ON HAND R. P, D. No. 2, Box 67, Ulllpy, Ga. tim "My son's ringworm began on the heart back of his hand. 'A fiery red spot came about as large as a dime and it a no would itch io badly he would scratch i'9. it till !t bled. It beglan to spread till een it wentr all over his hand. He would ty just scream every time I went to wash ith it. The nail came of on th9 lddle Uiwas finger. " I used - and it got worse h all the time. The trouble lasted two to ase or three months. Then I sent and got rther some Cuticura Soap and Ofintment and began to use them. I would wash his hand wit( the Cuticara Soap and dry it good and apply the Cutieum drink Ointment. Relief was found in two , I or three days and the ringworm wu aitec caredinitwo, weeks after using Cutl CrM Soap and Oiatment." (Bined) Jos Parks Jan. 4, 191 Itmitng a .jns- and Otatment sold ]p ~ll world. Baiple ofeasb t as , soBn . okAidre post ' Ourldeadat poor, sec of a man ....ne Miclt dit e for his Som wt t i4 l iJl - - - I -w A, 0 . _X'.:ary. ý' . 'ý>.'. , F t ixý.;.t p. . -qý-: UJric Acid is Slow Poison Unseen in its approach, hard to de tect in its early stages, and cruely painful in its later forms, uric acid poisoning is a disease too often fatal. Bright's disease is one of the final stages of uric acid poisoning. It kills in our country every year more men and women than any other ailment except two--consumption and pneu monia. Bright's disease and uric acid poisoning usually start in some kidney weakness that would not be hard to cure, if discovered early, so it is well I to know the early signs of kidney dis ease and uric poisoning. When uric acid is formed too fast and the kidneys are weakened by a cold, or fever, by overwork, or by over indulgences, the acid collects, the blood gets impure and heavy, there is head ache, dizziness, heart palpitation, and a dull, heavy-headed, drowsy feeling with disturbances of the urine. Real torture begins when the uric acid forms into gravel or stone in the kidney, or crystallizes into jagged bits in the muscles, joints or on the nerve tubings. Then follow the awful pains of neuralgia, rheumatism, gout, sciat ica, neuritis, lumbago or kidney colic. When Your Back is Lame-Remember the Name" I DOAN'S KDNEYPllS oId by aln Pdes . Pris 50 ceob. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., Proprietos HIS MIND ON HIGHER THINGS Scholar Unable to Sit Down and Rea son Quietly on Matters of Everyday Life. A monument was recently unveiled to the memory of Henri Poincaire, the famous mathematician and physicist, who was a cousin of the president of France. The occasion recalls a story or two of his remarkable absent-mind edness. Almost every day Poincare left his money lying about somewhere. Final ly his mother-sewed his purse into the pocket of his coat. But one day, when he had dressed in a hotel, he put on his overcoat without the coat, and left that lying on a chair. Need less to say, he never saw the purse again. One evening he. was looking in a I closed bookcase for a manuscript. During the search he set the lamp on a shelf in the case, and in a moment of abstraction closed the door of the cabinet, and sat down in darkness. After he had pondered for a time on the disappearance of the light, he came to the conclusion that he had suddenly become blind. That seemed r to him quite possible since his eyes were weak, anyway, and he groaned at the thight of his deplorable condi tion. Suddenly to his surprise, a I- stream of light appeared, coming from ýt the adjoining room, and he remarked, ,f with much satisfaction: "My sight e seems to have come back aga ." Not io even then did he think of the lamp in e the bookcase!-Youth's Comp nion. 1- 1 h ImportantJo Moth . 11 Examine carefUlly every ttle of t CASTORIA, a safe and sure edy for infants and children, and that it k Bears the r, Signature of IC In Use For Over sO Years Children Cry for Fletcher's Castorla ur Poor Henry. * Heck-Do you play an instrument? re Peck (sadly) - Second fiddle at a home.-Boston Transcript. of BADACHl AND BILIOUS ATrrACKS ed Caused by Malaria removed by the use r of Elixir Babek cure for such ailments. "Myself and whole household had suf 8s fered very much for some time with ty, Malarial Fever. 'Elixir Babek' has cured us perfectly, so that we enjoy at , present the best of health."--Jacob Eb a- erly. Fairfax Court House. Va. Elixr rBbek 50 cents, all druggists or b Parcels Post prepaid from Klocsew In- ski & Co.. Washnlaton, DA C. Int ne To land in jail for taking things he easy, that is the irony of fate. ... , " ' As a matter of f at it Is Natre Never Intended . &e enp ect hath and ý ý' ej , . : !_ , .- _i~t .. tre gn t h - to be j est t Woa n t be trong oand-altm es p- erhps-more so-In viep. . the fat that itis she who brings the world the offepring. Every woman can be strong and healty. Don't resign yourselftoa delicate life. It on er from headaches.- backaches, enonisu, low sht." , lack of ambition, or have lost all hope of being well t's more than an even chuace that you mu wpeediiy regain your health If you will try Dr Plerce's Favo$te Pres!r !on (I. Tblet tr Lquid Fopm) 'This famous remedy Is the reinhlof years of patient SIIlIch by a physician who as made women pecl alilmen a Nli study. i mIt. V. Mi e ts I7ss a ý Dai b s. Iii1/11tl ,....,,,.._a;r· ~o ..:;-.,o King Gaprge in Frane,. "During the visit of King Georgq and Queen Mary to Paris his majesty will be present at the annual spring review of the Paris garrison on April 22. The review will be held, as in previous years, in Vincennes. The review is generally held In March, but out of compliment to King George it has been delayed this year. ROOFINGS We believe that we carry the largest stocka of roofing in the south, In patnted and galvanised steel, rubber and compo sition; all prices. 0o per square, co m plete, and. up. Try "Pearo," -the i o Rubber Roofing. Ten years without a brush. Pldgeon'Tbomas Iron Company, Iron, Steel. Railway and MIl Supplies, Memphis, Tennesee. Adv. World's Deepest Mud. The roads of the plains of Argen tina have deeper dust in summer and deeper mud in winter than those of any other part of the world; conse quently the wagons used on them have Wheels fopi .six to. fifteen feet In f'r ry Picture Te·I lls <Stor y in ffl fl i! GIC I "I don't know what ails me." HORSE SALE DISTEMPER You know what you sell or buy through the sales has about one chance in fifty to escape SALE STABLE DISTEMPER. "SPOHN'S" is your true protection, your only safeguard, for as sure as you treat all your horses with it, you will soon be rid of the disease. It acts as a sure preventive no mat ter how they are "exposed." f0 cents and $1 a bottle: $5 and $10 dozen bottles, at all good druggists, horse goods houses, or delivered by the manufacturers. SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. Chemists sand Bacteriologists, GOSHEN, IND., U.S.LA Rheumatism, Sprains Backache, Neuralgia "Yes, daughter, that's good stan. The pain In my back is all gaoe-I never saw anything work as quickly as Sloan's Liniment." Thousands of grateful people voice the same opinion. Here's the proof. Relievd Pain in Bae. "I was troubled with a very bad pain Inmy beck forsome time. I went to a doctor but he did not do me any good, so I purchased a bottle of Sloan's Iniment, and now lam a well woman. I always keep a bot tie of Slosn's Liniment the bouse."--M Matilda 164Mydt Ass, BrooMl, N. Y. Sciatic Rheamatm. "We have used Sloan's Lini ment for over six years anad found it the best we ever used. When my wife had sciatli rheumatism theonly thin Ithat did her anood was Sloan's Liniment. We cannt praise it sraiad Anhle Relied. "I was il for a lon time with a severely sprained ankle. I rot a bottle of Sloan's Liniment and now Iam abnleto be about ancan walk a w eat deal. wrte ths be. market ,and shall al? take time to recommend Dr. Sloan's Liimet.'t SLOAN'S LINIMENT A.ID r.rIsr4l.Soq . oMd $ s.OO. a *Ue k a hes ""ae*ttilk s s Ad sm Dr. Earl S. Sloe, Inc. " Bose* lgMas. •~~~ ~ , m li Bil I nIl Wide Assortment. She thought she would try the new telephone. "What number?" asked central. "Why, I don't know. What numbers . have you ?"_-Courier.Journal. Putnam Fadeless Dyes do not stain r the kettle. Adv. It she marries the wrong one it is ; because the right one failed to ask her. oSLOUEL IS DAKEIIOUIS abd Is betag displaced now In many sectioo p th South by DR. S. B. WILLIAMS' LIVER & KIDNEY PILLS These pills ilmulsie the liver sad Bowels without the wekedlS afteIr eect caused by (llomel. Bec at ali dealers iiiampi seft free on requet. THE 6, B. WILLAMS CO., Qaitian, 6a. GALL !!1 Our Ltier-41l t Boo sent ':t3.i UU.Ol e yoursdlf at bom Writ Die oct eoom eL' r U00 Bulbs se.tpostpald tluri These Bouli s bat shown wonderfulluttsio or rlt th Pend moneyiorder. :4RBUTDDB B UOwOnIu, Eoo Uodw k elIeoadbwsodd 13r5nB I US YOUR FRUITS ald VEGETABLES Cople Brotle., I1 W,S0,Wat St,Shluca Write for shipping stamp and quotationo g SORE .YESI Some DBariai InP~VlA U am wriifi E Get our frie list. Du i lad, ens READER of thi papr dr used lsIU colo umn sould 1.51 uponha,- wha ,5k for. rsfuai3 all soutISM or lmlMaIonsL W. N. U MEMPHIS, NO. 14-1914. What do'you do for your fruit? ývtL. Insure yield, flavor, and shipping quality by supplying adequate available Poth. POTASH makes strong wood, and early and coaunuo bearing. " ,Manr. srtin annuaslly 200 oomds MuWrits or Sulfate of Potash per acre. ba e founm that Potash Put. So will you ii you ouse lO9 to 1 2X Potash siture. Write for ouar free books and formlas. also ar pr oa Potash in any amount from aom opggd b-i s QIgAN UALI WOS e.. .e.. 43 m wai. New tst l iMt l t #, 8 lti o 6ndVLNI ie i A hl 1e~ , m e i I oe T .e 1in: i tnsl I lLII It is but a further step to dropsy or Bright's disease. Be warnetd by balckaehe, by sediment in the kidn,'vs'eretions.bv pal n fu ,seant or t ox fr'eq uent pa.sage.s. Cure the veak cued kidnevs l.'e I)oan's Kidney Pills --a medicine made just for weak kid neys, that has been provedi good in years of use, in thousands of eases-the rem edy that is reconmmended by grateful users from coast to coast. CONFINED TO BED A Story of Terrible Suffering From Kidney Disease Mrs. Eltza Kirk. Main St. Spencer. Ind., saves: "When my back began to get lame. I didn't pay much attention to the trouble and as the result. I got worse. If I mad.' a sudden mo.', the pain in my back was like a knife, thrust. Th" next symptnms were dizziness. languor and a worn-out feellng. I w.-nt to the doctor, but his medicine didn't help me. I began to have terrible nervous spells and in three month,,. I was a physical wrr ek. fMy timbs and hands becam,, use I'es from rheumatie pains and I had to be fed, dressed and helped at evrey turn. My limbe swelled and I would rather be dead than go through thatunffering again. All that time. I was Isln bed and oplates were my only relief. The kidney secretions were in awful shape. When I had almost given up hope. I began using XDoan's Kidney Pi'lls and ive bores put moon my feet. Ilightboxescuredme. For over seven tears I have remained cured.'"