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PAGE SEVEN Iclassifiedl '—ADVERTISEMENTS 1 OUR TIME PAYMENT PLAN MAKES XT EASY AS YOU EARN as you learn at In land Empire's ONLY Nationally-Recognised school. FREE BARBER TOOLS. Our gradu ates in demand: hundreds own their shops. Write fer catalog. Moler Barber & Beauty College, W. 405 Trent, Spokane, Wash. O. P. Wiok, Mgr. BUSINESS OPPORTCNITV GOOD HOME OF TWO ACRES, fine soil, irrigated, fruit, etc. 7-room house, partly furnished. 5000 so. ft. Greenhouses. Go ing concern. Both equipped with hot water beat and electric pumps. Situated edge of town. Has barn, cellar 16 by 40. 15,000. Cash 61500, balance any reasonable terms at 6 per cent. Bears inspection. HAMILTON GAR DENS, Hamilton, Mont. LADlES— Positions in Montana towns for Representatives: good pay: advancement. Write E. H. ONYX, 336 Continental OU Bldg., Denver, Colo. Type Razor Blades. 50 Blades DELIV EkED 60 cents. HOYT'S, Sac City, lowa. PLAINS CITY PROPERTY for sale on account of sickness. 4-room house and out buildings; city and well water, 4 acres; land under fence. Price S7OO. MRS. PAULINE GEDLICH, Eddy, Montana. _ FOR SALE— lmproved 5-acre tract MRS. R. S. BINNER. Box 264, Livingston, Mont. 80 ACRE IRRIGATED FARM for sale WeU improved. One-half mile S. E. of Fair- View, Mont. Owner, J. B. Finneman, Sidney. Montana. wu --- u . LARGE and SMALL STOCK RANCH es cheap: terms. WOODS REALTY, Coeur d'Alene, Idaho. STOCK FARM’FOR SALE LARGE STOCK and GRAIN FARM for sale, fully equipped; good buildings, good wells, running water. For description, price, terms, write HENRY MUECKE, SR., Dickinson. N, D. R, R, 1. FARMS FOR SALE EASTERN CLIENTS ORDER US tr sacrifice the foUowlng lands: titles perfect WH Sec. 31 Tp. 26 N. R. 10 E. Price 6300.00 : 320 acres in Bec. 26 Tp. 28 N. R. 13 B 6500.00. Terms to suit. FRARY & BURLIN GAME. Great Falls. Montana. 40 ACRE FARM. Buffalo 2 miles; good set of buildings; heavy soil. 35 lakes within Six miles; price $4,000. R. LITTLE, Buffalo, Minn. A BRIGHT SPOT— Land of opportun ity. Southern Ozarks, long growing sea son. Planting fall gardens now; mild winters; pleasant summers. Send five cents for list farms for sale. M. N. WARE. Greenwood. Ark. OF FROM 1 to 10 SECTIONS each (taken under foreclosure) for sale at original amount of mortgage. Write CONRAD KOHRS COMPANY, Box 597 Helena, Montana SO ACRE FARM, near Osseo, Minn, productive soil, good buildings. Price $5,500. R. J, LITTLE, Buffalo. Minn. BARGAIN— My 160 Acre Dairy Farm $4,000. SI,OOO down. Easy terms. WITTE’S. Granton. Wis. FARMS any size, good crops, plenty 01 moisture, low prices. Write I. G. McOor mick, Hyde Bldg., Spokane, Wash. 80 ACRES— A real dairy farm; a bar gain. D. R, HOUCK, Rich HUI, Mo. SHEEP FOR, SALE RAMS—ROMNELLET—RAMS A PUREBRED CROSS Romney-Marsh and Rambouillet. 18 years of line breeding has produced this high class Utility Range ■heep. Big staple 1-2 blood to 3-8 wool, and a fine big Mutton type Feeder Lamb, with the wrinkles all ironed out. See them at the Davis ranch 2 miles south of Bole on Glacier park highway. R. E. McALLISTER, Box 393. Great Falls. Mont. Phone 7426. FOR SALE: Cross bred rams 250 head yearlings, Rambouillet Lincoln cross and Rambouillet Romney cross. Thrifty, rugged, range raised. E. W. WAYMAN, Ingomar, Mont. MO Yearling Rambouillet Bucks for «»le. B. C. WHITE. Buffalo, Mont. exchange WANTED—Good horses for $2200.00 mortgage S. E. Montana, Carter county. Section with farm bldgs., extra house, dance hall and store. Write particulars to HARRY E. MACK, Fort Atkinson, Wls. HORSES AND MULE SALES WE SELL HORSES AND MULES on commission, every Monday at Jamestown. N. D.; every Wednesday at Moorhead, Minn.; and every Friday at Staples. Minn. Sales are lOOd. Ship your horses. ELDER HORSE SALE 00., Jamestown. N. D. HORSES AND MULES WANTED HIGHEST CASH PRICES for carload lot, work or rance horses, colts and mules How man, can you ship at once? FRED CHANDLER. Charlton, lowa. HORSETKAp.TNG “How to Break and Train Horses.” A book every farmer and horseman ,hould nave. It Is free, no obligations. Simply ad dress BEERY SCHOOL OP HORSEMANSHIP, Dept. 408, Pleasant Hill, Ohio, LICENSED GOLD BUYERS CASH PAID FOR OLD GOLD! Rings. Pins, Watch-Cases, Ornaments, and dental sold wanted. United States Gov ernment Licensed buyer. Mall your gold to BALMBNSON’S, 225 Central Ave., Great Fallg, Montana. MISCELLANEOUS SIOO TON for certain common weeds, ..IS 0 *.?; , Pa , rtlcu l ar » 10 cents. L.—MERRITT, 1752 Nicholson, St. Louis, Mo. U/AI |7 “d Coyote Exterminator capsules got nine coyotes one night, and brought 1121.50. Free Formulas and Instructions. GEORGE ED WARDS, Livingston, Montana. $l5O GIBSON TENOR BANJO & CASE —Also instruction books and music. Will sac rifice all for $40.00 cash. W. R. Horton, Box 801, Great Falls, Montana. SAVE MONEY on WHEAT —oat sacks—any kinds of sacks—a< ALASKA JUNK CO., South 118 Adams St. Spokane, Wash. BEER TAX $632,920 The tax on sale of beer in this state since the beverage became legal on April 17, 1933, has brought $632,920.20 Into the Montana treasury, J. J. Jewell, beer licensing clerk for the state board of equalization, said. London ambulances made 40,619 trips and carried 39,767 patients in the last year. Fifty-five per cent of the camphor ou the market today is synthetic cam phor, largely of German origin. Manufacturing plants which were damaged by floods in northern Japan are resuming operations. Step -Mother -in - Law Published by Special Arrangement With The Chicago Tribune-New York News Syndicate, Inc. .. Copyright: 1934: By DOROTHY ALDIS IN TWO PARTS—PART ONE AFTER EIGHT STAUNCH AND LOVELY YEARS OF MARRIAGE ANN IS BESET BY OLD FEARS WHEN HER STEPSON’S MATERNAL GRANDMOTHER COMES ON A VISIT FROM ABROAD. The cable had arrived two hours ago. Coming over the telephone Ann had taken it for her husband. (“Who is this speaking?" lam MRS. Holden.” “Mrs. John Holden?" “Yes.”) Followed the message which Ann took down. “Arriving Berengaria one week Satur day. New York two days. Expecting you and Johnny. Warmest greetings. MATER.” At first putting the receiver back, Ann had been delighted at her own in dlffemce. Ha, so that old enemy was slain! But then, little by little, as she went about her task of fixing flowers (the task that had been interrupted by the ringing of the telephone) she was dismayed to find old doubts besetting her. If this were only a new fear, she thought as she blindly stuck purple and yellow pansies in a low blue bowl, CLASSIFIED AD VERTISEMENTS — OLD COINS WANTED— I9O7 Indian Head Cents. We Buy them. Complete information one dime (coin). New Miss Mattick Co., Dept. MN., Box 345, Altoona, Pa. DO NOT READ THIS: unless you need personal help to solve correctly your life problems. Sincerely and gladly I extend t practical Meta-physical hand to you. Yot WILL write and let me help you, won’t you* A New Deal. Enclose SI.OO and birthdate Box 213, Orofino, Idaho. FALSE TEETH NEED not offend. Use Gill’s Dental Plate Brush. New, different, durable. 45c postpaid. GILL SPECIALTY CO. P. O. Box 813 Los Angeles, Calif. LONESOME: Join one of the most act ive correspondence clubs in the country several thousand members everywhere (fre* particulars). National Social Register, 21 Part Row, New York. FILMS FINISHED L —l—l~— ~T_—l_T~l_J—l_r—1_ _ _ l_l~l_T~l_J~L FILMS DEVELOPED 25c including twe enlargements and one Bxlo enlargement coupon. CAMPBELL'S PHOTO SHOP, La- Crosse, Wls. KODAK FILMS developed and 1 eack printed for 25c per roll. PATRONIZE MON TANA PEOPLE. Mall your films with 25> coin or stamps to Box 110, Fort Benton, Mont Prompt Service. FILMS DEVELOPED, any size, 25> coin. Including two enlargements. CENTURA PHOTO SERVICE. Box 829. LaCrosse. Wise LUMBER REDUCED PRICES—GUARANTEED LUMBER, housebills shipped direct. Im mediate loadings. Farmers’ trade our specialty KENWAY LUMBER CO., Tacoma, Wash. USED PARTS FOR TRACTORS- Twelve makes. Much cheaper than new re pairs. EUGENE BECKMAN, Glenham, Soutt Dakota. USED AUTO PARTS Auto Parts Co. MOTORCYCLES HARLEY-DAVID SONS and parts, al models. BLASIUB, INO.. Idaho Falls, Idahc SALESMEN WANTED HERE’S A JOB FOR YOU The Household Magazine will make a very Interesting offer to one person well acquainted with this city. The position will pay well for the time required, and has Interesting feature? Ln addition to the liberal commissions given for forwarding new and renewal subscriptions If Interested, write N. D. GRAY, 5420 Capper Building, Topeka, Kansas. SEALS WE MAKE STAMPS, Rubber typ* etc. HELENA STAMP WORKS. Helena, Mon* ASSAYERS, CHEMISTS. ETC LEWIS & WALKER, assayers, chem ists. 108 N. Wyoming. BUTTE, MONT. THREE HUNDRED DARK Eastern Mink, Fifty Dollars pair. W. T. PATTERSON, Great Falls, Montana. „ _ .Dogs FOR WELL trained setters, pointers, span iels. retrievers, Chesapeakes, fine pups. Pedl greed. Thoroughbred Kennels. Atlantic, lowa. _ PEALJH OR. BOYD WILLIAMS. HudsSn. Wise. OVER-WEIGHTS — Lose Six to Ten Pounds Weekly. WHY? Health and ap pearance. HOW? Write Dr. O. L. WENDT, Canton, So, Dak, for information. SAFETY OIL FOR DEAFNESS, dry ness, and ringing in the ears. MRS. G. H IKLLIS, 1733 East Van Buren St. Phoenix fill PH OLDEST CASES go quickly PH wlth Drysorb. (U. S. Reg.) mod- I ILLu crn vreaseless, safe, quick, better way. Send 11 for full (7 days) treatment for proof. DRYSORB CO, Dk 22 St. Louis, Mo. ’ SICK? Get well at home. Eat COR- RECrLY WITHOUT STARVATION. Get 67- page Diet booklet, learn to clean poison out of system, get rid of gas, bowel and heart troubles, rheumatism, stomach ulcers, blood _ Uver and kldne v aliments. CHART with 90 Menus. CORRECT food combinations, J}. ?2 st P ald - Beatrice Sessions. D. C. R. N. 720 w, Amerlge ave„ Fullerton, Calif. „J° ur checks for aU tailoring and fur AT Fn ®» er «O«t» from 122.50 UP. I S n^ nT t, 1 ' lberty Tailors, Now at 21 Fourth St. No,, Great Falls, Mont. M. N. A., September 24, 1934 (2) ® MUSIC ® * M RIVKASIDa Avenue ■ but this old one, this old unworthy one that she had fought with every weapon in her power years ago! - • The flowers fixed (Black Eyed Susan and pink snap dragon like spilling sun shine in the living room, petunias and the little bowl of pansies in John’s den) she strolled outdoors and down into her garden. It was, quite literally, her garden. Except for the building of a low brick wall no one had touched It but herself, and now, as always, when she sought it out in times of stress, she felt chidden by its quiet peace. Phlox and larkspur in the late light of a sum mer’s afternoon make any human agi tation seem unnecessary. And this particular agitation, Ann admitted to herself, was quite unneces sary. Eight summers ago it would have been understandable enough: a 19- year-old girl marrying a widower of 30 whose first wife had only been dead a year might well, now and again, feel a pang of wonder about the girl in whose room she now slept. Nor would it have seemed strange if, her husband mur muring in his sleep, she had leaned over to listen for that other name. Now, however, after eight staunch and lovely years of marriage, all such ghosts should have been laid. Were laid, insisted Ann. But as her young stepson burst through the door which opened on to the terrace, she was sud denly stabbed by the sharpest of those early fears: that John had married her (quickly like that!) so that Johnny wouldn’t have to grow up an only child. And then she had failed him. They had had no children. To be fair to Ann, John’s first wife had been a very glamorous creature. Like ripples the legend of her charm spread out and out until there was hardly any place that you could go that people didn’t say: “Oh, you come from Buffalo, do you? I wonder did you ever know a girl named Cecily Mosely? She married, but I don’t remember her married name. She died soon afterward —having a baby. I think.” After a while Ann got so she could say: “Cecily Mosely was my husband’s first wife. I wish I had known her, but we never met.” Never met. Why, in those first years Ann felt they were always meeting. <»<»<?> “Hie, Ann, won't you play croquet, please?" “Sure I will,” shouted Ann. “Get the mallets out. I want yellow.” As though mad dogs were at his heels Johnny dashed around the side of the house shouting: “Gonna play croquet, gonna play croquet.” In less Fame Comes Tardily to Pioneer Explorer of Northwest Territory . T^ se days when feats of daring vie ivith those of scientific genius for public acclaim. Achievement crowds on achievement, until ive vaunt our conquests as beyond compare, says the Minneapolis Journal. Yet our crowded present hangs on our patient past- It was the plodding genius of yesterday that gave us our today. The pioneers of science, as of set tlement, blazed the trails that are our highways of knowledge. No more, striking example may be found, especially in this region, than the career of David Thompson, the great geographer whose story was told in The Journal. His span of life ran from 1770 to 1851, yet only within recent years has his name been rescued from obscurity. And this in the face of astounding service to science, his amazing traverse of a continent virtually unknown. To no section is this career of greater interest than to Minnesota, across whose northern reaches, tracing its streams, marking the shore lines of its lakes, penetrating its mighty forests, this fur trading geographer journeyed. It was to this self-taught scientist that Minnesota owes the defining of its northern boundary; to him that it must accredit the basic maps that stand now as the foundation of its geography. So long ago as 1798 he mapped the region that is northern Minnesota. He ivas the first to make extensive astronomical observations around the headwaters of the Mississippi. He knew in the detailed knowledge of the woodsman and the voy ageur, the streams and traverses from Lake Superior to the valley of the Red river. His world lay from Montreal to Ore gon, from the Mississippi watershed to the Arctic divide. He pioneered geography over almost two million square miles of territory on both sides of the present Canadian line, from the St. Lawrence-Great Lakes waterway to the Pacific. His dis coy erics rivaled those of scores of explorers familiar to fame. His research in the field set the boundaries in great treaties as when he defined the frontier from eastern New York to Northwestern Minnesota. iotzi He died in 'Poverty, unhonored, neglected; so lately as 1851 and yet so long ago it seems incredible that the world could then have been so hurried as to pass him by. Half a century before. he died, David Thompson had sensed the epic of the Mississippi valley, had visoned the greatness of an em~ pire whose builders were yet unborn. “Whatever the Nile has been in ancient times in arts and arms,” he wrote in these journals of his, which only lately have been retrieved from oblivion-. “The noble valley of the Mississippi bids fair to be, and its Anglo-Saxon population will far exceed the Egyptians in all the arts of a civilized life and in a pure religion. Although these are the predictions of a solitary traveler unknown to the world, they will surely be verified. European critics of the American character declare we have no yesterdays, no sense of chronology, no reverence for our own past. They might almost justify the charge, from the forgetting of David Thompson. We may answer the in dictment by pointing to our belated commemoration of his service, and to awakening, growing interest in the records of our pioneers. Perhaps in the story of. David Thompson we in the Northwest may find inspiration for resurrection o/ a glorious history, peopled by heroes now unsung, to match the flashing figures that crowd the screen that is today. David Thompson built the first house to be erected in what now comprises the state of Montana, in 1811. A few months oqo Thompson Falls dedicated a monument to the honor of this explorer and geographer. time than It takes to tell about it, he was back brandishing mallets. “Here you are, Ann.” He charged down the terrace toward her, his new front teeth exposed in a radiant grin. “How do we stand?” Ann asked, re ceiving her mallet. “I’m tow up. Don’t you remember, I m up? Hie, don’t you remember the last game we played I socked you way out under the lilac bushes? Boy, was that ever a sock!” In the course of their game, Ann said: “You and your father are going to New York next week, Johnny.” The little boy looked up from mea suring a mallet’s length. “To New York? O, boy! What for?” “To see your grandmother. She’s going to be there.” “Honestly, are we going to New York? But aren’t you coming, too?” No, she had to stay home, Ann told him. She couldn’t leave the garden just now. “Go on, shoot—it’s your turn." “But don’t you want to see my grand mother? Ann, why hasn’t she ever come to this country before?” Ann explained about his grandmoth er. His grandfather, who was her husband, had been very ill in London for a long time and she hadn’t been able to get away. But now he was bet ter and so she could.” “Does she look old? “Darling, I don’t know. I’ve never seen her.” After their came it was time for Johnny’s supper and Ann read Tom Sawyer out loud to him After that big John came home. He and Ann went upstairs to dress for dinner. Had he had a hard day in town? Ann wanted to know as she padded about the room shedding and collecting clothes. Had it been hot? How about the McCracken deal—was It coming along? She knew as much about the business as he did. Her tact and sense were Indirectly responsible for more decisions and innovations in the office than ever John realized. He launched into a complicated recital of his day. But after a few minutes: “Ann, you’re not listening!” he complained. Accustomed to an attention which went leaping and bounding ahead of his words, he felt aggrieved. He turned dark and sulky like a small boy de prived of some legitimate privilege. “Darling, I am so sorry but I’d for gotten to tell you something quite im portant.” She told him the news, show ed him the cable, and waited. “What’s that date?” big John ask ed, knitting his brow more deeply. “A week from Saturday—why that's the sixteenth, I can’t possibly go.” Inaudibly Ann drew in her breath. “What do you mean you can’t go? I should think you’d have to, dear.” “It’s the devil but I really can’t. I have that meeting in Washington, you see. Oh Lord, and I’m afraid If I cable her to put It off she just won’t come at all.” “Oh, John, I think she would.” “No, because I know how agonizing it was for her to decide to leave at all. Any obstacle would put her off.” They sat considering their problem. “I know,” said John suddenly, sett ing down the shoe he had been about to put on. “You take Johnny.” Sitting in front of her dressing table Ann kept on patting powder on her neck. She screwed her head around watching herself in the mirror. Her nose was sunburned at its tip. Her fair hair sprang back from her fore head, exuberantly curly. “Now why didn’t we think of that before?” she said lightly. “I’d love to, of course.” “As a matter of fact you could see some shows. And see the Jewetts. And buy some clothes. It might be fun.” “Oh, I think it would be lots of fun," Ann said. She put her powder puff back, clinking the lid on its china con tainer. On the train Johnny cut cut and set up a cardboard barnyard, and asked a million questions. “Will we meet her at the boat, Ann?” “No, dear; she didn’t want us to. Her boat docked early this morning. She wanted to take a bath and get rested before we came to the hotel.” “Hasn’t she ever seen me?” knitting the brow so like his father’s. His chin with a cleft in it was like his father’s, too. But the large, beautifully mold ed mouth that could stretch in such enchanting title boy grins—that wasn’t his father’s. Nor was wheat colored hair, or very bright, very deep-set green eyes. “No darling, she’s never seen you. Look, If you'd bend it back like this that fence would stand up.” “She's never seen you, either, has she, Ann?” “No; I’ve told you that before.” “What do you suppose we’ll do, Ann?” “Do?” “Yes, for two days.” “Darling, I don’t know,” said Ann, who was wondering herself. She needn’t have worried. Those two days, she found, had been most care fully plotted by Mrs. Mosley with oc casional loopholes of escape for Ann in case she wished to use them. Only In |i| AN HONEST jwww FOR THE AMERICAN PUBLIC Here’s an economical S’ way to buy fine char* SWPHIj acter, crystal-clear STo- * I gin. 32 full ounces to W j the bottle—2s% more J gin at slight addi* in ) M tional cost. I fc 9nc I V KJLXF \ MR.BOSTON "jasSl "os smooth as old brandy" BEN BURK, INC., DISTILLERS BOSTON, MASI T FREE: Send for Bartender’s Guide / absolutely free. INTERMOUNTAIN Bus Lines Connecting With Union Pacific and Greyhound Stages BUS SCHEDULE Read Down Stations Read Up 4:00 pm. Lv. Edmonton Ar. 2:00 pm. 11:15 pm. Ar. Calgary Lv. 7:ooam. 8:00 am. Lv. Calgary Ar. 8:10 pm. 1:10 pm. Ar. Lethbridge Lv. 4:00 p.m. 3:45 pm. Lv. Lethbridge Ar. 3:15 pm. 6:lspm. Ar. Coutts Lv. 1:00 pm. 7:00 pm. Lv. Coutts Ar. 12:00 N. 10:30 pm. Ar. Great Falls Lv. 8:30 am. 9:00 am. Lv. Great Falls Ar. 10:30 p.m. 12:00 N. Ar. Helena Lv. 7:30 pm. 12:30 pm. Lv. Helena Ar. 7:00 pm. 7:00 am. 4:00 pm. Lv. Butte Ar. 3:00 pm. 10:30 pm I:lspm. 10:20pm. Lv. Idaho Falls Lv. 9:ooam. 4:30 nm. 3:00 pm. 11:59 pm. Lv. Pocatello Lv. 7:00 am. 2:30 pm 10:00pm. 6:25am. Lv. Salt Lake Lv. 10:00pm. 7:lsam. 10:30pm. 10:35am. Ar. Los Angeles Lv. 6:oopm. B-nnpm 4:30 pm. 8:00 am. Lv. Butte Ar. 4:00 pm. 11:20 pm. 6:20 pm. 8:00 am. Lv. Anaconda Lv. 3:30 pm. 10:80Dm 6:20 pm. 10:00 am. Lv. Philipsburg Lv. 2:30 pm. 9:30 pm. 8:36 pm. 13:16 pm. Ar. Missoula Lv. 12:30 pm. 7:15 pm. 4:00 pm. Lv. Missoula Ar. 12:30 pm. -m. Ar. Kalispell Lv. 8:30 am. 3:40 am. 12:30pm. Lv. Missoula Ar. 3:2oam. 3:15 nm. 10:40 am. 7:10 pm. Ar. Spokane Lv. 7:15 pm 7:00 am. esse, however. Lunch was the flmt thing on this program and the three of them ate it In her sunny small sitt ing room high up in the Ritz hoteL If Ann had tried visualizing her step mother-in-law before they met, it would have been just that much time wasted, she decided, because she’d never seen any one even remotely resembling her before . Small and brisk, she had a birdlike trick of putting her head to one side and considering what you were saying as though it were something especially delightful—a worm or a crumb maybe— before she gobbled it up. Her laugh, coming straight from the stomach and surprisingly loud for her size, kept bubbling up at her grandson. Her clothes were smart. Smarter than mine, Ann thought, who had spent considerable time on her own appear ance that morning, studying her rosy prettiness in the train mirror with a kind of despair. $ Employment in Austria is increasing. Skin Health Derived from Daily Use of the CUTICURA PREPARATIONS Price 25c. each. Sample free. Address: "Cnttcura," Dept. 38, Malden, Mam. MODERN WOMEN Nm 4 Hot monthly pain and delay tela colds, nacrous a train, exposure or similar was Cbi-ebaHtenDiamood Brand Pills are sffectm, reliablsandgiraQslckßallel. Soldby — sUdrueristsforarar4sy«Lrs. Aakfoa eaAity Jr WASH OUT 15 MILES OF KIDNEY TUBES Win Back Pep .. . Vigor ... Vitality Medical authorities agree that your Md aeya contain 15 MILES of tiny tubes or Alters which help to purify the blood nd kw® you healthy. If you have trouble with too frequent ■ladder passages with scanty amount caus ing burning and discomfort, the 15 MILES of kidney tubes need washins out. This dan ger signal may be the beginning of naggins backache, leg pains, loss of pep and vitality, setting up nights, lumbago, swollen feet and ankles, rheumatic pains and dizziness. If kidneys don’t empty 3 pinta every day and get rid of 4 pounds of waste matter, your body will take up these poisons cousins serious trouble. It may knock you out and lay you up for many months. Don’t wait. Ask your druggist for DOAN’S PILLS . . . a doctor's prescription . . . which has hewn used successfully by millions of kidney suf. *®J*rs for over 40 years. They give quick relief and will help to wash out th* IS MILES of kidney tubes. “ But don’t take chances with strong deny or so-called “kidney cures” that claim to fix 7°” in 15 minutes, for they may seriously injureud irritate delicate tissues. Insist S^: ILLS .V • the r «ii*Me ro- Def that contain no “dope” or habit-forming drugs. Be jure you get DOAhT ? PILLS at your druswut. © 1934. Foster-M Jburn Co.