Newspaper Page Text
March 20, 1912 ]
' All Doubts Dispelled?Tlic Scriptural
Mode of Baptism Proved by
Scriptures.
I Since the dawn of the Chriatiau era
here has been constant discussion and
bontroveray as to the true?the Bible?
mode of baptism. Eminent men of
analytical mind and profound intellect,
have delved deep in ancient annals and
language in an earnest and sincere
effort to determine the manner of the
Saviour's baptism, and from time to
V time announcement has been made that
success had crowned the effort; yet the
m world has as yet been unwilling to acJ
cept the evidence offered In support of
r such announcement.
Why?
Because the world has long since decided
that nothing short of actual Bible
proof shall determine what is this Bible
mode of baptism.
And at last this Bible proof has been
collated and presented In simple, read,
able form, so that all who deeire the
scriptural truth may gratify that desire.
Kev. W. T. Dale. D. D.. who has devoted
the best years of bis life to this laborious
search after truth, has published
a 70-page book of Bible roof that
plainly shows the method of Christ's
baptism. The title of the book Is "Bible
.*1. ?? J fa. i- - -1 J
ui'auiufiD uu ua^iiioiu, una ii ) sum
at the small price of 26 cents a copy,
postpaid.
The author haa constituted Rev. E.
H. Roy, of Tullahoma, Tenn., sole agent
of the book, and he will be glad to
supply copies on request, aorompanied
by the price. Addreaa, Rev. B. H. Roy.
Tullahoma, Tcnn.
DYSPEPTICS MIST DIET
llcaltb or Kvm Rrllrf Iimiiol ll?* Secured
Without n Careful Dirt ou
Wholmome, Prepared Fooil,
Dyspepsia or indigestion of any kind
can be cured only by proper dieting.
"When such care is neglected, the disease
develops and defies every medical effort
to halt its progress. Therefore, every
morsel of food that enters a dyspeptic's
stomach must be of a character very
easily digested and nutritious.
Cereals and bread constitute a large
percentage of the dyspeptic's diet and
unless these are lighter than usual, and
especially made for dietetic purposes,
will likely create more trouble for the
digestive organs.
During the past thirty years hundreds
of physicians have prescribed Crescn
Klour for making bread, biscuit, gems,
griddle cakes, etc., having proved bv
actual experience that this flour best
meets the needs of persons suffering
from dyspepsia. As a breakfast or
dessert cereal, "Cresco Grits" possesses
the same necessary oualities?rich in
gluten and free from bran particles.
.The long practical experience of the
manufacturers?Messrs. Far well &
Ithines. Watertown, N. Y.?serves as a
guarantee of their products' efficiency.
Others of their dietetic foods?Gluten
Klour, Special Dietetic Food. and
"Barley Crystals"?can be recommended
with as much confidence. A request addressed
to Messrs. Farwell & Rhines.
Watertown, N. Y., will be certain to
bring you some desirable information.
The Best Cough Syrup is
Easily Made at Home
Costs l.lttle and Acts Quickly*
Money Refunded If It Fall*.
>
This recipe makes a pint of cough
syrup, and Haves you about $2.00 as compared
with ordinary cough remedies. It
stops obstinate coughs?even whooping
cough?'in a hurry, and is splendid for
soro lungs, asthma, croup, hoarseness
and other throat troubles.
Mix one pint of granulated sugar with
Ms pint of warm water, and stir for 2
minutes. Put 2Mj ounces of Pinex (fifty
cents' worth) in a pint bottle, and add
the Sugar Syrup. Take a teaspoonful
every one, two or three hours. Tastes
good.
/This takes right hold of a cough and
gives almost instant relief. It stimulates
the appetite, and is slightly laxative?both
excellent features.
Pinex, as perhaps you know, is the
most valuable concentrated compound of
Knrurovr wkli- ?5 1
mil mi jiiiio exiracr, rich in
guaiacol and the other natural healing
pine elements.
No other preparation will do the work
of Pinex in this recipe, although strained
honey can be used instead of the sugar
syrup, if desired.
Thousands of housewives In the United
States and Canada now use this Pinex
and Sugar Syrup recipe. This plan has
often been imitated, but the old successful
formula has never been equaled. ""Its
low cost and quick results have made it
immensely popular.
A guaranty of absolute satisfaction, or
money promptly refunded, goes with this
recipe. Your druggist has Pinex, or will
gpt it for you. If not, send to The
Pinex Co? ft. Wayne, lad.
THE PRESBYTERIJ
1 asked hiiu questions uud lie told me
this tale of woe:
"This town has all gone to liell. It
ain't no good any more, "Ike saloons
aren't making their Bait. The vets used
to get half drunk in the canteens and
then would come to us and we would
fix them, good and plenty. Now if an
oid sojer gets drunk, they hold up his
pension for a year and the boys have
no ohance."
Ike no-canteen era has resulted in
the closing up of two-thirds of the dives
wnicn hud been established under tne
canteen policy. It has resulted in
actually closing up the other classes of
unspeakable dives. Not one is left to
tell the story.
it is no wondpr that the brewers are
moving heaven and earth and troubling
the waters under the earth in order to
get the canteen back into the army.
Fortress Monroe, February 28, 1912.
SOBER MEN WANTED.
The increasing opposition of labor to
the brewery and saloon can be better
understood when it is realized the extent
to wnich men are losing their positions
and are being barred out from all
lines of employment because they are
suloon pations. lhe Detriot Jourual
recently stated that a quiet campaign
is being carried on by members of the
board of school inspectors to weed oui
school building engineers, firemen and
janitors who are patrons of the saloon.
Some of them have already been separated
from their jobs and others are
being watched. Inspector Goldberg, in
explanation of the board's action, declared
that "an engineer in a school
buiiaing in whose surety lies the care of
hundreds of livos should be sober, a
steady-going man. We won't stand any
longer lor drinking men." And in every
line of employment the same weeding
out process is in operation. The saloon
is not only in a direct way causing a
lOHH f n ittt nntrnnfi alr-i**or * V? /-?i ?. AO _
iiigs, and compelling their families to
sutler privation, but is creating a great
cIhsb of incompetents, men against
whom all lines of desirable labor are
closed. No better task now presents
itself for the laboring men of the United
States than to relieve themselves of the
greatest enemy to labor by driving the
saloon out of existence.?Michigan Presbyterian.
WH1 ME W AS NOT PROMOTED.
He watched the clock.
He was always grumbling.
He was always behinduand.
His stock excuse was, "i forgot."
He wasn't ready for the next step.
He did not put his heart in his work.
He learned nothing from his blunders.
He was content to be a second-rate
man.
He chose his friends among his inferiors.
He ruined his ability by half doing
things.
He never dared act on his own judgment.
He did not think it worth while to
learn how.
He thought it clever to use coarse and
profane language.
He imitated the habits of men who
could stand more than he could.
He did not learn that the best part of
his salary was not in his pay envelope.?Suecess.
It is almost startling to find that, in
the majorityofcasesinwlilch the Spirit
lias wrought wonderfully on human
souls, and has made that work the
foundation of a great manhood or
womanhood, a primary work had*been
done by a good mother or father, or
both. We can not ignore the awful
responsibility of parenthood.
i N OF THE SOUTH
Your Hair? C.o To
Ayer's Hair Vigor is composed of ^
Show this to your doctor. Ask him if there is a
him if he thinks Ayer's Hair Vigor, as made f
preparation you could use for fahing hair, or for
J. O. Sy?r Company. Low
PT
M?il> *l?ln HuIKIIuk
TK1A? I'KH.MI VTKIll AN COM
THE GREAT PRESBYTERIAN SCHOO
">ir splendid buildings. elegantly furnlshe
I nietal furnace room, obviating all danger of
gh' Large gymnasium, basket-ball, tennis,
>n the htnlory of the school. Two courses of si
to degrees. Special departments: Piano, Vole
'Expression. Ail branches of Art. Artistic Nee
^ 1th skylight Edward Baxter Perry, Boston,
Teacher of Interpretation Classes. One hundre
vear College opens September 21st. 1911. Ft
Ti>|jiir n rire r.liv, wtwnT U. KVAWB. A. M., I
1776 Hampden-Sidnc
Able faculty. Select student body drawn
and intellectual tone. High standards and tl
and Athlectlc Field. 14 Unl Entrance Requ
grec-s B. A., R. S., B. Lit.. M. A. Steam heat,
veniencea. Expenses moderate. The Winter 1
grin Jan. 4, l?iz. For catalogue or other infori
Orabrun, I). D? President, Hampden-Sidney, VI
STATESVILLE FEM/
Presbyterian: Thorough Courses; Modern Kquii
moderate. Pupils received at any time. Send
RET. J.
Washington arid
1. 4 tv. tAOiKFIKRnH, COHMUKCI
Sxuoenta drawn from thirty States. Exp?
?r<1 religious tone. Address, Pve*. GEO. B
Ward Seminary
90
?*iaMisb<*4 il6S brimoii) and Special Courses French
Conservators ol Music- WINKLER. Director; CAMPOBELLO
Domestic Science- all under specialists. 173 Boardinf Pupil
Beautiful campus for outdoor sports. For ratalofue address
"A WORD TO rI
we have always heard, "la sufficient." Thei
realizes that we have done our best in giving
eqvately describe our many facilities?the
SECUKJTY AND 8
of the
AMERICAN NATI(
OF RICHMOND, V.
National State ar
RICHMOND, V
(Consolidation of National State and
CAPITAL, fl.bOO.4MtO
OFFICKR? t
Wm. H. Palmer, Piesldent; John 8. Ellett, V
President; J. W. Slnton, Vice-Preside*
latereet Allowed on Savings Deposited. VI
THE NOW LAN
High-Class Diamonds and other Precious Si
and W eddlng Klncs, Silver Novelties, and Cas
the largest Patterns. Kin? Imported aad Ant
I.orgnettea. Goods pant on approval npon satii
Ml Km? M?U ?*r?v*
$The Ideal Mt
JXT The most fitting tribute to the dead?
Aw one that will forever keep living the
J. I dear memory of those gone?is a monJy
umcnt erected from
Winnshoro Blue Granite
J&i.k of Hit JTrobt"
Its lasting qualities are unequalled. Will
stand for time interminable without
cracking or chipping. Its beauty is
surpassed by none?a gray granite with
a delicate blue tint, uniform in both
color and texture. The finishing quality
is such as to render the inscription
beautiful beyond compare.
1 Everything about Winnsboro Blue
I points to its superiority. You should
U insist upon it when you have need of
1 a monument.
blame of Naaremt Dealer on Request
V WINNSBORO GRANITE CORPORATION. Rion.S. C.
(385 ) 23
Your Doctor
Ipliur. Glycerin. Quinin. Sodium Chlorid,
p<ucum, Satfe. Alcohol, Water. Perfume.
i sirigic- injurious ingredient. Ask
rom these ingredients, is the best
dandruff. Does not color the hair.
ell. Men
*
Dlrttxt ttall
.EUK KMX OIIII.M.
L OF THE SOUTHWEST
d, heated by steam from outsid*
Are. The beautiful acetylene pa*
outdoor games. No serious nines*
:udy, College and Seminary, leading
b Culture, Violin, Organ, Quitar
dlework. China Kiln. Art Room*
Visiting Director of Music and
d and thiriy-slx music pupils laat
?r Catalogue illustrated by photo
>. LV. President. Mllford. Texaa
>y College 1911
from many states. Notable moral
borough work. Extensive campus
ilrement. Courses leading to degas.
baths, and other modern conform
of the 136th session will l>enation,
address Rev. Henry Tucker
rglnta
VLE COLLEGE
>ment: A Home School. Prices very
for catalogue.
\. S' OTT, l>. I)., StateMvllle, C.
University
; SCIENCE, LVFI'KftS.
mees very moderate. High mors
I. DENNY, IX. r?? Uzlsgtos, Va.
FOR GIRLS AND YOUNG WOMEN
Nashville, Tennessee
i and German tpoken. College preparation
, Voice ; SCHMITZ, Violin. Expression, Art,
s. Complete appointments. City advantages.
J. D. BLANTON, President
'HE WISE"
efore we believe that the public
them the TWO WttliDI which adBRVIOB
DNAL BANK,
IRGJNIA.
id City Bank
A*
City Bank of Richmond)
SliH.FL.il8, C<(UO,WOO
'Ice-President; Win. M. Hill, Vice
it; Julien H. Hill, Caahier.
f invite you to do bualneea with ue
COMPANY
toaea. New deelffna i? Knrac?m?Dt
ea of ?Hver for Bridal Preeenta of
irlean Watches. Opera Olaaaee and
factory city reftnmt
?ICHNOI?l. VA.
tnument