Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
x THE SEATTLE STAR—WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5, 191 “SENATORS KILL “RPINSURANCE BILL BY CLOSE VOTE OLYMPIA, Mareh Oat an albday contest terviay defeated the Text of President’s New York Speech on League of Nations My fellow citizens, I accept the | ts intolerable, and we will not permit |them, It hieb <i intimation of the air just played. |!t' And the vision has been with | feel od Be come back “till it's over | 8S people. f the senate M My friends Scecn’ tn And yet, I pray God, in| meet omy . joe commission bill, designed to Vision as to Rect the public againat fire in oe Increases. { The vote was 21 to 20 This measure had received state Pwide attention before the legislature convened. Insuranc mmissioner | is inf Fishback sent out appeals urging | the need of legisiation empowering more rigid safeguards against un Just insurance rates supreme it, and I think J am in that situation streets of Kuropenn capitals, and acrifice|with regard to some of the criti {heard cries of the crowd, eries for with the| clams 1 have heard. ‘They do not|the league of nations from lips of | make any impression on me, because | people who, I venture to say, ANE I know there is no medium that will|no particular notion of how it was was that that made them | only in it if these youngsters ever yt &) the tre y t thold they puld ne be die | you cannot dim 1 wish you would re: | lod: and therefore every foot of|the treaty without destroying the | fortunes with men everywhere. Mr this The they won was permanently | whole elvil structure, ‘The structure | Patt apeaking of Washington's what ie ne permed y for X;. ove rin og akin ee | Of peace will not be xs meyer} o utteranee aoous peinating a . "| et i“ 7m that the sentiment of | to be who were not ready to tha weet | that cpemiae ue te then: - Long bee yrds 2: and if he will permit me to aay so, bi puntry is proof against such | propose a plan for a gue of na 2 7 Bama ade n| put the exactly right interpretation | narrowness and auch selfishness arts said that need and asp tm who went over there not to} him upon what Washington said; the in-| that I commend these gentlemen slo and nif sera ' PA a I Pla lag | gy terprotation that {# inevitable, if you|to communion with their fellow citi b S, conta dion of men wh -| fellow men, T am going to permit | led by sor read what he said, as most of thene | zens s A plain some of the eritk| myself for one moment to slacken | the criticiama themselves; gentlemen do not; and the thing that chiens which hav gen leveled | in my effort to be worthy of them | derstand them perfectly when | he longed for was just what we are Against thix great enterptine only by |and thelr cause? What I said at the| there was no foundation for them;| now about to supply-—an arrange- | Parts of the country, and the ve cae the eritictan oe the men ng be h I mud with a deeper mean-| but by the fact of the eriticiem, 1) which will dixentangle all the| " — : a ‘ or the criticiama have never felt the | than perhaps you have eaugh annot imagine how these gentle . ne lites Sutenm ot: Pres ccbhis wig Np very ease. I count | great pulse of the heart of the world. |I do mean not to come back until it's| men can live and not live in the at Bai Be Yed the fight axainst the bill. San|der the unused teak here un “And Lam amazed—not alarm | over there, and it must not be| mosphere of the world pty ages d dship Francisco underwriters have main-| this evenite, Tan nec es oT] od but amazed—that there over until the nations of the world| “I cannot tmagine how they can| Cee a eee ee ee eee Or ie cent me te tiie | wore the mensenuiee Me aaa tained a lobby at Olympta to try and | ate myself am happy (0 assoct | should be in some quarters such | anwured of the permanency of| live and not be in contact with the | bination with somebody else. Nothing | side of the water about the progress | and of hope, and these flowers Were y wih Mi. Catt inthis] -S eamprebteaee Leaner por | events of the times and I particular angles a nation, hampers it, binds | that is being made in Paris towards | their humble offerings of gratitude | | it, except to enter into a combination | the discussion and clarification of a|that friends from so. great a dime but so many threads of |we are ready to m the the covenant that | morifice for it, the supreme x 01 | will not the covenant from | of throwing in our fortunes over there.’ proposition ground won for the Interests of peace and of the ic world, what in nece i that that may on “The first thing that I be soon, great nation: the top in th Tt ha from the ration and the selfasertion of great | glorify league of nations, foing nations 2 am goin ‘o bring back . come to bring back tions, but whose to tell the people on the other sid of the water is that ing majority of the something by way of @ tion of all men ¢ come out of this. Pleased With Program ‘An along the country roads, weak old women would come out and hold flowers to us, Why should they hold flowers up t strangers from across the Atlantie? with great confidence, I heard |Only because they believed that we that I have been pux f the criticitm, not by Tecan un an overwhelm American people ‘avor of the league of nations. 1 know that is true; I have had un mistakable intimations of {t from all even we drove “What are we to say then as to the future? world | zens, ment I think, my fellow citi , Uat we can look forward to it over othing en- @efeat the measure. Sreat cause. Hoe has displayed an| . He ‘ There was a dramatic angle to tho | slevation of view “4 displayed @%! the state of the world, These ly cannot imagine how they ean be @oatest. Word had been circulated | public duty whic and a devotion to| gentlemen do not know what |Americana and set up a doctrine of| With some other nation against the | Kreat many different matters, and 1| tance should have brought them so bat Lamping, of Seattle, who is | ele auty which is beyond praive.| the mind of men ls, Just now. careful selfishness, thru to the last | Other nations of the world, And this| believe that settlements will begin to | great a hope Boreal insurance agent, would fight | cause this one PP roe Nag oped be | Everybody else does, 1 do not T have heard no counsel of | &Teat disentanglement of all alliances |be made rather rapidly from thin It is inconceivable that we Mhe Dill to protect selfish interests. | party iamua Ne pace Mee a, NOL | know where they have been elon rosity in their criticlam. I have|!# now to be accompanied by this/ time om at those conferences disappoint them, and we Trstead, Lamping spoke for the bill, | to appropriate rig as the er eted. I do not know by what in heard no constructive suggestion. 1|CoVenant, because one of the cove- But what I believe day will come when J @eclaring that he believed he bad! party will, in the long run, dare to} Wuenees they have been blinded; have heard pothing except ‘Will it/Mante t* that no nation shall enter/#* well aa belleve—ts this; That) men in America will look backs witis Scome to Olympia to represent the | oppose it. run, dare to! but 1 do know that they have hot be dangerous to ua to help the|!0 relationship with another nation | the men engaged in those confer-|swelling hearts and rising pride | Mate’s interests,” and would, there-| “We have Hatened to so clear aaa bean separated from the general world? It would be fatal to us not! inconsistent with the covenants eS aa pry Prager ea as they | that they should have been privileg- fore, not oppose the measure for! admirable an exposition ot 4) currents of the thought of man to help it. She league ef Setons j sili i it; that they are find ed to make the sacrifice which it onal gain. ou ante oo rea : is many of kind. k lations promise not to have al-|/"S etapragy of purpose and com: | was necessary to make in order to Even organization leaders, who| covenant. of the leccue of nacet| “And I want to utter this sol- Would Bo Contemptible ances; nations promise not to make |™munItY of ideal t0 an extent that | combine thelr might and thelr moral J Bave been bitter at Lamping for his | that it is, perhaps car Guanes one) mm warning, not in the way of “Prom baing what I will venture to| Combinations against each other; na- | hr Pamiiet ate caliscee 1'B4| power with the cause of justice for c > 3 Apa, not ce y for! 5 | ons agree that there shall be play of in Eeméependence, Were today talking | me to discuss in any particular way @ threat; the forces of the world (oy icn you always mean that it in| C@ll the most famous and the most | tions agree that there shall be but) rience because it ia tafinitely com men of every kind rywhere. @bout the situation, and praising | the contents of os dhcadaane Stn Rape threaten, they operate, [not an ideal basis. Well, 1 never| Powerful nation in the world, we| one combination, and that is the com-| Diicated eanidet all the interplay of ‘God give us strength and vision him for his sincerity. . great tides of the world do | . | » be: » the | bination of all against the wrongdoer. ws : to do it wively. God give us the é |meek rather to give you its setting ‘ Jeame into intimate contact with | Would of a sudden have become the | ‘|influence, there is a forward move- se | French had fought Lamping’s|1 do not know whee I have been| et lve notice that they are go | them before, but if they used to be| Moat contemptible. Bo I did not need | And vo I am going back to my task! ment which i# running toward the privilege of knowing that We aie fp Seldier bill. When he took the floor | more tmpreased than by the confer.| nk, Fine and ran; they rise In | that way, they are not that way|to be told, as I have been told, that | on the other ride with renewed vigor. | right, Men have at last perostved | Without counting tke cost Samii fo close the debate for the insur ence of the commission set up by | their majesty and overwhelming | now. ‘They have been subdued, if| the people of the United States would |I had not forgotten what the eptrit! tat the only permanent thing in the | “@U%®, We were true Americans, love, [nce commission, he paid tribute to| the conference of pence te try ty | Might and thowe who stand in | that was onoe thelr temper, by the|support this covenant. 1 am an|of the American people ts, but TI have | yoy lers of liberty and of doing right.” Lamping's action a covenant for the league of nations the pond ot tae wecie $0; Now |awful significance of recont events | American, and J knew they would, | been immensely refreshed by coming | W°" fo the right, and that a wrong| —_— — “Aitho Senator Lamping would be of ie heart of the wo is awake, | nd the - om al 6 on in contact with it again. 1 did not|#ettiement is bound to be a tem- IS Personal lover if this hil passed.” | around that board-—not young men, | pod,ttie heart of the wortd must | ‘ensue; aod. trate, ln not che | the workd. ‘They laughed at ts once; |AROW Row food ome felt until 1/ porary settlement—tound to be a \Suffragettes Are ; ’ ‘ athe age ens 0 ensue; and the 0 mt ; on; = ~ Hee x igaid French, “he holds his duty to/ not men inexperienced tn the affairs age a hem with whom I have come in|they thought we did not mean our | ®°% there. i pooeygene Bl peggy gr S ne tel Arrested in N. Y. the state above personal gain. We! of their own countries, not men in jo not let your Jeontact who does not feet that he! professions of principles They|, The only place a man can feel at Stent, Geek tel. . @anect but admire him f . & moment that the uneasiness in the | . 7 5 |home is where nothing has to be ex.|0® @ temporary settlement, and the| NEW YORK, March 5.—After mire him for it. If) experienced in the politics of the annot in conscience return to his! thought so until April of 1917, It em | aoe | he will support this measure 1 can. | | populations of “ . ne han | ‘| plained to him, Nothing has to be| *Pirits of men will rebel against it, | battling with the policemen for world; and the inspiring influence of | 1p ¢ economic eat bl ple from Paris unless he has! way hardly credible to them that we | : and the spirits of men are now in| mat understand why. any r very meeting was the concurring of | -notiy vomtathing very mney {tone bis utmost to do something | would do more than send a fow men nggesg idee er rece Perera POMEL TN | time ‘Tuseday night in foe Eppoee it." : : . oulves: Something very much|more than attach his name to a|".. Ml all the sentiment of the American | the dle. " ile Ginnstiibabhats ‘Fpose on the part of all those Men | deeper underlies it all than that over, and go thru the forms of help-| Sonia, I mean about great funda-| “When I was in Italy « little limp-| Metropolitan opera house, ste wou rranization ; , 1a > come to AN Agreement and an ef: | ing group of wounded Italian sol-|€ members of the national wom diers sought an interview with me. I/an’s party, were arrested on @ . treaty of peace. Every man in that| ing, and when they mw multitudes @erted French and rallie Bente “ ‘They see that their governments | conference treaty of | ~ | mental things like this. There are chief opponent of the m fective working agreement with re pave never been able to defend | omerence knows that the treaty Of/ hastening across tho sea, and SW) many differences of judgment as to conjecture what it was|charge of disorderly conduct. Three of the women gave thelr | — peace in itself will be inoperative, os . ¥ ited an insurance m. alee. this league of the civillted thom against intrigue I har. pte ree Base ce ect gig es what those multitudes were eager to| po) and perfectly legitimate, | could not ae been « faithful organisation |" and that there is no for etane cupdurt and enerzy of & creat | 22 When they got to the other side, | Sometimes profound differences of | they were going to my to me, and | ‘voter. | Should Be Done sight or of prudence in any modern | organisation, such as is supplied by | they stood amaved, and maid: “The judgment, but those are not differ-| with the greatest simplicity, with a| names as Jane Doe. The others were 5 “There was a conviction in the |Cabinet to stop war. And therefore > thing in real; this nation ls the friend | ences, of sentiment, those are not| touching simplicity, they presented| Miss Alice Paul and Mi Those who voted with Young, to | a ~~ the league of nations. of mankind, as It maid it wan’ The f a Elsie DR the French measure, were. | Whole impulse; there was conviction |they say: “There must be some fum| wana men who, when I first went _ erences ‘of purposes, those are|me with @ petition in favor of the! Stevens, of } York, and EX Rishop, Bolinger, Cart yon, | Of more than one sort; there was the | damental cause for this.’ The fun] enthusiasm, the hope, the trust and| pot differences of ideals. And the league of nations. Their wounded| Hill, of Norwalk, Conn. pe ee ree Cornwell, Con, Chan. {conviction that this thing ought to|damental cause, they are beginning over there, were skeptical of the pow | the confidence in the future bred by advantage of not having to have| limbs, their impaired vitality were) ‘The women, who had intended iiied, Tiastines, Hutchinson, Loomis |P® done, and there wns also the con-|to perceive, is that nations have| MDIIty of forming ® league of ne |that change of view tw indescribable. anything explained to you is that|the only argument they brought | stage a demonstration against Presk Tocetrell. Siclay, “oornis. | viction that not a man there would |stood singly or in little jealous| Hons. admitted that. if we could but Take an individual American and| you recognize a wrong explanation | with them. It was a simple request | dent Wilson. were taken up to @ DO — Een pcg = uth. | Venture to go home and say that he |€Toupe against each other, fostering ‘orm it, it would an invaluable | you may often find him selfish, and| when you hear it. | that I lend all the influence that I| jjce station and were released soon % , } prejudice inereasing the danger of iaatrumentality thru which to #e-|confined to his special interests but! “In a certain rather abandoned | might happen to have to relieve fu-| after. cure the operation of the various take the American tn the mas and| part of the frontier at one time it|ture generations of the sacrifices parts of the treaty, and when that he is willing to die for an idea. The | was said they found a man who told| that they had been obliged to make. ‘Thomas H. Ince has had a b 2 weather bureau established at his oune. | had not tried to do it = who voted for the French| “MP. Taft has set the picture for | war, rather than concerning cneas Those | ures to prevent it; and that if there comes back, gentlemen on | sweet revenge, therefore, ts this: that) the truth; he was not found telling} “That appeal has remained in my venant not we believe in righteousnens, now but he could tell it when he heard | mind as I have ridden along the | studios in California Could Heed Europe “Gentlemen on thia side of the wa ter would be very much profited by | Betting communication with some gentiemen on the other side of | the water We sometimes think, my fellow citizens, that the expertenced | statesmen of the European nations | |are an unueually hard-headed set of men, by which we generally mean, altho we do not admit ft, that they jare a bit cynical; that they may: | "This ts a very practieal world,’ by should what I know | small not into ves suppose for Sm were: Brown, Davis, Fairchild, | YOU Of what a failure of this great n | purpose would mean. We have been |fe right in the world. or if there is ing, Landon, t, Ferryman, French, Groff, Iverson, Ben Johnson, Lon Judd, Kuykendall, Lamp McCoy, Morthiand, ae a | WILL BE ADMITTED TO SEE THE MERRIEST OF COMEDIES, WITH FOUR BELGIAN CHILDREN AND FOUR SANTA CLAUSES, AT THE MATINEE SATURDAY KOLB DILL “As You Were” 13 = ounrsrs Liberty Bonds Bought and sold at market rates. The Seattle > National Bank Bond Department Second Ave. and Columbia St, {hearing for all these weary months that this agony of war has lasted because of the sinister purposes of the central empires, and we have meant thelr conquests to take. Where did the lines of that map lie, of that central line that we used to eall from Bremen to Bagdad’ “They lay thru these very regions to whic: Mr. Taft has called your attention, but they lay then thru the united empires; the Austro-Eun. garian empire, whose integrity Ger many was bound to respect as her ally, lay in the path of that line of conquest; the Turkish empire, whore Interests she professed to make he own, lay in the direct path that she intended to trend. Result of Liberation “And now what haa happened? ‘The Austro-Hungarian empire has gone to pieces and the Turkish ¢m- | pire has disappeared, and the na | tons that effected that great result —for it was a result of liberation are now responsible as the trustees of the assets of those great nations You not only would have weak na tions lying in this path, but would have nations in which that old polsonous seed of intrigue could be planted with the certainty that © crop would be abundant; and lone of the things that the league you| justice in the world, there is no reason why nations should be divid ed in the support of justice. “They are therefore saying, if you made maps of the courwe that they | really believe that there is a right. }if you really believe that wars ought |to be stopped, stop thinking about the rival interests of nations and |think about cen and women and} children thruout the world. “Nations are not made to afford | distinction to their rulers by way of success in the maneuvers of pol| tics; nations are meant, If they are [meant for anything, to make the men and women and children ia} them secure and happy and prow perous, and no nation has the right to set up special interests against the interests and benefits of man-| kind, least of all, this great pation which we love. “It wag set up for the benefit of| mankind; it was setup to filustrate| the highest ideals and to achieve |the highest aspirations of men who |wanted to be free; and the world |the world of today—belleves that and counts on us, and would be thrown back into the blackness of despair | if we deserted it } Tragedy of Suffering “T have tried once again, my fellow jeltizens, to say to little circles of |friends or to larger bodies, what | seems to be the real hope of the peo of nations is intended to watch is|ples of Europe and tell you frankly the course of intrigue. cannot stand publicity, and if league of nations were nothing but & great debating society, it would | kill intrigue. Intrigue |1 have not the |cause when the been able to do so be thought tries to | crowd itself into speech, the profound emotion of the thing is too much, |so speech will not carry. I have “It ig one of the agreements of | felt the tragedy of the hope of those | this covenant that it is the friendly |right of every nation a member of the league to call attention to any: | thing that It thinks will disturb the peace of the world, no matter where that thing 1s occurring. “There is no subject that may touch the peace of the world which is exempt from inquiry and discus sion, and I think everybody her | present will agree with me that Ger: | many would never have gone to war lif she had permitted the world to discuss the aggression upon Serbia | for a single week. | “The British foreign office sug: a day or two delay, so fat the | representatives of the nations of Europe could get together and dis cuss the possibilities of settlement. Germany did not dare permit a day | discussion. You know what hap pened. So soon as the world re alized that an outlaw was at large, the nations began, one by one, to draw together against her. “We know for a certainty that if Gernany had thought for a moment |that Great Britain would go in with France and with Ruasia, she never | prise, and the league of nations is meant as a notice to all outlaw na- but the United States and the rest of the world will go In to stop enter- prises of that sort. And so the league of nations is nothing more |nor less than the covenant that the lworld will always maintain the | standards which it has now vindicat- ed by some of the most precious blood ever spilt Europe Sick at Heart “The liberated peoples of the Aus: troHungarian empire and of the Turkish empire call out to us for this thing. It has not arisen in the council of statesmen. Europe is a | bit sick at heart at this very sno | ment, because it is seen that states men have had no vision and that the Jonly vision has been the vision of |the people. Those who suffer nee. |Those against whom wrong ts wrought know how desirable is the |right and the righteous. “The nations that have long been under the heel of the Austrian, that |have long cowered before the Ger. |man, that have long suffered the in describable agonies of being govern led by the Turk, have called out to the world, generation | tion, for justice, | succor; and no cabinet in the world |has heard them. A | “Private organizations, gested It plead that there ight be | would have undertaken the enter-| tions that not only Great Britain, | after genera. | cam for liberation, for | enemy pitying | my fellow citizens, not suffering peoples. “It is tragedy because it is a hope |which cannot be realized in its per: |fection, and yet I have felt, besides its tragedy, its compulsion—its com-| pulsion upon every living man to exercise every influence he has to the utmost to seo that as Uttle as possible of that hope is disappointed, | |because if men cannot now, after this agony of bloody sweat, come to their self-poswession and see how to | regulate the affairs of the world, we | will «ink back into @ period of strug lle in which there will be no hope, and therefore no mercy. There can be no mercy where there is no hope, for why should you spare another | if you yourself expect to perish?) Why should you be pitiful if you can/ get no pity?) Why should you be Just if upon every hand you are put upon? | “There is another thing which I} think the critics of this covenant | have not observed. They not only have not observed the. temper of those splendid boys in khaki that} they sent across the sens. I have! had the proud consciousness of the| | reflected glory of those boys, be cause the constitution made me heir |commander-in-chief, and they have taught me some lessons. When we} went into the war, we went into it on the basis of declarations, which it was my privilege to utter, because I believed them to be an interpre-| tation of the purpose and thought| |Of the people of the United States, | | Sacredly Bound | “And those boys went over there with the feeling that they were « credly bound to the realization of those ideals; that they were not only |golng over there to beat Germany;| |they were not going over there mere- ly with resentment in their hearts] against a particular outlaw nation;| but that they were crossing these| 3,000 miles of sea in order to show! to Burope that the United ates, | when it became necessary, would go| anywhere where the rights of man-| kind were threatened | | “They would not sit still in the! |trenches, They would not be re-| |strained by the prudence of experi-| enced continental commanders. ‘They | thought they had come over there| | to do a particular thing and they | |were going to do it and do it at} Jonce, And just as soon as that rush | of spirit as well as rush of body » in contact with the lines of the those lines began to break, and they continued to break until the end. They continued to break, merely be- | hearts, philanthropic men and wom-| cause of the physical force of those len have poured out their treasure in |order to relieve these sufferings, but no nation has said to the nations re ispongible: ‘You must stop; this thing lusty youngsters, but because of the irresistible spiritual force of the armies of the United States. It was that they felt. It was that that awed Bieesiory 2 if f | ? ( f March } hills Bring idney Ills MAnCH is a month of heavy work for the kidneys. Exposure to sud- den changes of temperature, with chills, colds and influenza, all tend to throw an extra burden on the kidneys. They fall behind in keeping the blood stream pure, and poisons, that well kid- neys normally throw off, accumulate and set up disturbances in various parts of the body. That is why March is apt to find you feeling tired, irritable and sick. Don’t wait for worse troubles to set in. If you suffer constant backache, headaches, dizzy spells and irregular kidney action, you’ve good proof that your kidneys are demanding attention. Get a box of Doan’s Kid- ney Pills today. Doan’s are helping thousands and should help you. Read These Seattle Cases: Fourth Avenue N. E. Eleventh Avenue N. Elmwood Place F. A. Woods, 7411 Fourth ave. N. EB, says: “Typhoid fever left me with weak kidneys, and my back just felt as though it were broken. To bend over or lift anything heavy was impossible. The kidney secre~ tions were unnatural and parsed irregularly, The different medicines I used failed to help” me, and T certainly waa in bad shape. Doan’s Kidney Pilla, however, helped me quickly, and continued use rid me of every symptom of kidney complaint.” James Court Mra J. R my kidn often enough d run down, about Dennia, 1405 11th ave. N., 8 were bothering ut of sorta, Doan's ney Pills, an's soon had rong, and so did my back, A box, I was cured. Vale Street Join Breen, 1207 James court, saya: “A num- i, and after that I Mra ber of years ago I strained my b had trouble with my kidneys, 1 tit go on, thinking it would soon go away, but I was mistaken. I finally iid hardly get around, and was miser- on I got up L waa all tire didn't refresh me. dome, I saw the trou got where I able. Mornin, listless, as P and dizzy spells annoy the t getting the best of me, and as Doan's Kidney Pills were recommended highly, L tried them, They soon relieved me, and before long I was cured.” y muse My kidneys acted trreguiarly, and the secre- As several different kidney ns were edies failed to help me, | used Doan's Kidney Pills, f my back ached, and unnatural. Heved me right away, and so cured m me, I had awful dizzy My kidneys were awfully weak, and didn’t act so my hands and feet be d every minute of the day, ade me feel all dragged out and ne feeling better, says: “When James Cubbon, Manager Victor Cleaning and Dye Works, 2712 Elmwood Place, says: “My kidneys were in bad shape. Every time I bent over it seemed as though my back would break. The kidney secretions were unnatural, being scanty, painful and irregular in passage. My work as a tailor kept me bent over, and that made me suffer all the more. I was lame and stiff all over, and could hardly straighten up. It didn’t take Doan's Kidney Pills long to relieve me, and I was soon cured of every sign of the trouble.” ame swollen, and a weak- Fortunately I began using My kidneys fter I had fin- Dallas Avenue C. M. Lindell, proprietor barber shop, 986 Vale st, “My kidneys were in such bad shape about 12 yeara ago I had to give up my barber shop, After I quit work and came here from & Dakota, I didn't get I had inflammation of the bladder, too, Mrs. J, Harbridge, 8406 Dallas Ave., says: “I never hesitate to recommend Doan's Kidney Pills, for T know they are reliable for kidney troubles. When I have taken them, they have never failed to respond most. satisfactorily, A short use has always given me quick relief from pains across the small of my back.” I could hardly pon completely Doan’s Kidney Pills Every Druggist has Doan’s, 60c a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Manufacturing Chemists, Buffalo, N. Y.