Newspaper Page Text
THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1913.
Comparative
Digestibility
of Food
Made with different Baking Powders
From a Series of Elaborate Chemical Tests:
An equal quantity of bread (biscuit) was made
with each of three different kinds of baking powder—
cream of tartar, phosphate, and alum—and submitted
separately to the action of the digestive fluid, each
for the same length of time.
The relative percentage of the food digested is
shown as follows: •
Bread made with
Royal Cream of Tartar Powder: ",,
1 100 Per Cent Digested "1
Bread made with
phosphate powder:
jj38*4 Per Cent. DigeatecTj
Bread made with x
alum powder:
/ |^67%JPer Cent, Digested jj
These tests7which,are absolutely reliable and
unprejudiced, make plain a fact of great importance
to everyone: Food raised with Royal, a cream of
tartar Baking Powder, is shown to be entirely diges
tible, while the alum and phosphate powders are found
to largely retard the digestion of the food made from
them. - '
Undigested food is not only wasted food, but it
is the source of very many bodily ailments.
A NOTABLE ADDRESS BY
VICE PRESIDENT MARSHALL
By ,‘Jfyishop
W. A. Candler
^ouMtry
FJome
TIMED'
TOPICS
CfWWCTED BT JTfiS. \T. HJTELTO/t.
MEXICO AND ITS F^CXEENESS
AND VIOLENCE.
War news from the Balkans has
Iceased to be interesting since Mexico
I has been A overtaken with one of its
I bloody revolutions, and the accounts
grow more and more tragic and horible
|day by day.
President Madero was betrayed by
his own generals and today’s dispatch-
les, as published in this afternoon^
I Journal, will most likely tell of* his
execution, since his brother went that
Iway within the last 'few c^ays. “It; is
|neck or nothing,” when the Mexicans
begin to revolt^ and the worst is gen
erally to be looked for when they get
a blood thirsty opportunity. Our
learly impressions are conceded to be
[most lasting, and I took a dislike to
[Mexico’s cruelty when the United
■States went to war with Santa-Anna
pn the forties. Our papers were scarce,
as compared to the newspapers of to-
|riay, but there was plenty to read about
and general joy when the United States
[gave Mexico a firstclass drubbing.
(There are very few rules without ex
ceptions. and there may be a whole lot
>f excellent people in ^rexico, but we
*re all impressed with the idea that
| the national character lias little to
attract and less to boast about.
They have a blood-thirsty popula-
ition. which always comes to the front,
| when rulers change over in Mexico,
and the principal features of the na
tive character centers about cruelty,,
treachery and illiterate superstitions.
Some people talk about a coming
|time, when the United States will ap-^
nfex Mexico, and quiet the unruly pop
ulation by military force, but I fancy
we vrjll do very well to let the Mexics
alone, apd keep away from their pe
culiar habits of violence and .insubor
dination.
were people over sixty-five or seventy.
I attribute this mortality to the weak
ened vitality of aged people, who have
been cramped as to outdoor exercise,
and their struggles with the cold of the
late winter time has made them liable
to serious illness. It is also said that
the very rich make a business of getting
to widwinter resorts in Florida and gulf
coasts to pass over the severe strain of
February cold.
I am, glad it is always a short month,
and soon numbered with the past.
PAIR days and foul.
I have long been persuaded that Feb
ruary has as many sins to answer for
Ion the score cf bad weather as any
|month in the year. It may be that the
average mortal is already wearied of
Iwinter’s cold and' is hoping for a better
Ideal in weather changes, or it is possi
ble that spring attempts to come in
(ahead of time, but it is a general fact
(that humankind gets impatient with
[the weather changes that February
[bring* to' us—in the usual run of suc
ceeding years.
Some years ago (I believe it was
11899) we had several ‘‘below zero” days
(in February—the coldest weather I ever
(experienced in 'Georgia—when the fruit
(was killed in the bud, before it arrived
|at the flower stage.
My parents told me of the cold Sat
in rctay-—which also came in February—
(when great 'trees cracked open from ex
cessive cold.
I have noticed also the mortality
I which is recorded in the deaths of old
people, in February. I have watched the
obituary notes in the newspapers for
several weeks, and at least nine-tenths
REAR ADMIRALS TO HUNT.
When the appropriation bill for sup
port of the navy of the United States
was before congress during last week
I found there was something uncov
ered that will help us to understand
why this country has been over
whelmed with extravagance and injus
tice to the taxpayers.
We were told that we had nearly one
hundred and fifty' retired rear admi
rals, and many were pensioned with
extravagant salaries, and of that num
ber, so handsomely pensioned, only
twenty-one of these men, wede in the
service of the United States. As soon
as they begin to receive their $8,500
per annum they go where they please,
stay where they please and enter any
service they please, and the taxpay
ers must pay them twenty odd dollars
jrer day, willy-nilly, as long as they
live. They can live 'in Europe or sail
the seas in expensive vessels, they
can live at Palm Beach in winter at the
costliest hotels or spend the year' at
the Woldorf-Astoria hotel, and actu
ally laugh at the clod-hoppers, who
must contribute to that enormous sal
ary or be sold out by the sheriff! And
we have no statesmen to protect us!
If there.is no power to reduce this fear
ful extravagance (for $180,000,000 and
more was appropriated to keep up this
naval extravagance) it requires? no
prophet or son of a prophet to tell that
there must be ah end to it, or some
thing will burst!
A Georgia congressman made a
strong protest, but his brethren and
co-workers in the house of representa
tives meekly voted the “swag” that
these petted naval men are getting.
At the recent session of “The Coun
cil of The Federation of Churches of
Christ in America”, Hon. Thomas R.
Marshall, Vice-President-elect of the
United States, delivered an address of
unusual power. It contains several para
graphs of the most important charac
ter which deserve the careful considera
tion of all good people in our coun
try.
Concerning the decline of spiritual
power in some of the churches he ut
tered these weighty words:
There is, I sometimes think, a
weakening to a greater or less de
gree in the spiritual power of the
church together with a lessening
of the faith and hopes of men. I
think I know what has- produced
it. From my viewpoint, Jesus
Christ was not a reformer in the
usual and ordinary acceptation of
that term. He lived when the
greatest despotism that the world
has ever known ruled the habitable,
globe. Yet, the only recorded state
ment of anything He said with ref
erence to the Roman Empire was,
“Render unto Caesar the Ujings
which are Caesar’s and unto God the
things which are God’s.” Slavery
had reached the very depths of
degradation and yet His great apos
tle advised a runaway slave to re
turn to his master. The Christ
was not engaged in repealing bad
laws nor in providing criminal
punishments for the violators of
good ones.
Jesus Christ was more than a re
former. He was a regenerator. The
church is to stand as the Represen
tative of the Kingdom of God on
earth and “except ye be born again,
ye cannot enter into the King
dom.” He brooded over Jerusalem
as a hen broods over her chickens
and yet, He never strove to make
bad Jerusalem appear to be good
Jerusalem. He was wiser, because
He was divine, than we are. He
sought to teach men that God was
their Father; that He had come to
y save them from their transgres
sions and that no man could ap
proximate unto good citizenship or
hope to enter into His»Kingdom
unless he had an abiding faith in
Him as the mediator and redeemer
of mankind despite the weakness,
frailties, follies and sins of human
nature.
As good citizens we may well rejoice
in the progress of moral reforms and
give our support to legislative measures
designed to promote and preserve such
reforms; but as Christian men we may
not entertain the thought that the
spiritual forces of the kingdom of Christ
are impotent without the aid of the
civil power. To entertain such a
thought is to^ accept the worst sort of
heresy and suffer distinct loss of faith.
It has been evident for years that the
preachers and churches who have be
come so absorbed in the preaching of
what they are pleased to call “civic
righteousness” as almost to ignore that
heavenly and personal righteousness
“which cometh by faith”, have been
losing spiritual power in exact propor
tion to the heat of their zeal as reform
ers. It is time all such ministers and
churches should ponded the significance
of Gov. Marshall’s words when he says,
“Jesus Christ was more than a re
former”.
And let all such lay to heart the fol
lowing thought-ful paragraph taken
from this notable address:
The church was a divinely ap
pointed institution to proclaim the
.necessity of regeneration and an
honest endeavor to be obedient un
to the law of God. I do not wish
to criticise but I do want you to
look around and see whether the
church is not more and more be
coming an ethical society interested
in the uplift of humanity by good
works and good laws, and in the
preaching of propagandas against
public evils which it dreamt are
immediately suppressed if general/
assemblies and congresses enact
laws making such evils offenses.
This, I call symptomatic treatment.
I do not deny that it affords some
rejief but it does not go to the
root. You may investigate and
should investigate a thieving public
official and you should put him out
of office for the protection of the
public service. But by so doing
you have not added anything to the
sum of the world’s honesty. With
like opportunity he will be a thief
somewhere else. It is only when
he is regenerated and comes to re
gard larceny not as a breach of
faith nor as a violation of the civil .
law but as a violation of the law of
God that the sum of human honesty
has been increased and I maintain
that the state cannot do this thing.
That is the work for which the Sa
viour of mankind set up His church
in this world.
Let me ask, are not men more
and more picking out some par
ticular evil of the day and devoting
their entire time, energy and abil
ity to the enactment of some law
which will make that evil unlawful
\ and are they not shouting with joy
when some general assembly en
acts a statute to cover it? If there
is a weakness in the church or
ganization of today, the weakness
springs from the fact that too
many followers of the Nazerene are
more interested in some particular
phase of evil in civil life than they
are in proclaiming the original sin
of mankind and its only sure rem
edy—an undoubting, unqualified and
everlasting hold upon the Gospel of
the Galilean.
Now% as everybody knows, Governor
Marshall has been conspicuous for his
efforts in the interest of reform meas
ures; and he has been notably suc
cessful in these efforts—far more suc
cessful than most of the “clerical re
formers” can ever hop© to be. But this
honest minded man sqes clearly that
the mere legal proliib^ion of SINS is
not the divine remedy for SIN; he
knows that man-made statutes can do
nothing more than work external re
formations, whereas the supreme need
of men is inward regeneration.
The gospel of Christ is the most rad
ical and penetrating moral force which
can be brought to bear upon the lives
of men; it is nothing less than “the
power. His course is something worse
who chooses to neglect the use of it,
and to substitute for it mere reform
measures, makes the capital blunder of
using a feeble and ineffective force when
he might employ the greatest possible
power. His course is something wrose
than a mistake; it amounts to assuming
a faithless atitude tow r ards Jesus Christ
and His word. ,
The Vice-President-elect draws his
remarks to a close with these ringing
words:
The Kingdom of God was to be
in the earth and not of it. I hope
soon, all chuch organizations will
make it their exclusive mission to
preach the Gospel of Jesus Christ
and to reach the conclusion that the
world is to be regenerated by re
generated men and women and not
by regenerated laws and ordinances.
The value and efficiency of a young
people’s organization must essen
tially depend upon the z^al and
•fervor of the church from which it
springs. If its minister can draw
more inspiration from a Titanic
disaster than from the Cross of
Calvary, the church will be a very
beautiful literary society whose
Saturday evening hops are largely
attended but so wearying as to keep
the members from church until
some fresh horror has furnished
the pastor with a text upon which
to preach. If, however, the organiza
tion springs from a church whose
pastor has the Spirit of John
Knox when he cried: “Give me
Scotland or I die,” who is not
brooding over laws and ordinances
and constitutions, but over the
ruined and needy condition of men,
who is not taking men in a mass
but who is taking them one by one
and bearing them to the throne of
God. then that organization will be
strong not only in the good works
of v this life but in the faith w’hich
It has in the ultirhate triumph
of the Gospel of Christ. And after
all, it is faith that not only moves
the world but does the world’s busi
ness. The financial affairs of this
country are not based upon the
money, stocks, bonds and mortgages
of the men engaged in finance, but
upon the faith men have in each
other; the social life of the world
\*uns u-pon faith; our political life
depends upon the faith of the people
In those whom they put in power;
and the real life of the people de*
jends on their faith in Almighty
f God.
To the first preachers of the gospel
Jesus said on a most memorable oc
casion, “Have faith In God”; and the
exhortation needs repeating a vast num
ber of ministers of the gospel today.
Not a few pulpits are degraded to the
level of the discussions of a “current
topics club”; and it is a stretch of
courtesy and a perversion of language
to call the men who thus degrade the
sacred desk “ministers of the gospel.”
The thing that such men dispense least
is the gospel; they resort to the tricks
of popular entertainers and abdicate
the high functions of ambassadors of
Christ. Hence their advertising schemes
through which they beg the patronage
of the multitude in the distribution of
their pulpit wares.
It is a humiliating thing to read the
notices by which such men call atten
tion to what they propose to dtfer.
They literally beg for the patronage of
the world which they should call to re
pentance. How can such a man preach
with authority?
We need a revival of faith in our
country. It is as sorely needed in many
pulpits as it is needed in the pews.
Rationalism, petty-fogging criticism,
sensationalism, and the discussion o-f
current events has displaced, in not a
few pulpits the gospel. In the “blue- |
ba§k speller” we used to read “the
preacher preaches the gospel”; but that
book is out of date. “The up-to-date
preacher” preaches almost everything
else but the gospel.
WILL FORM CITY
SYRUP OF FIOS IS
t BEST FOR II CHILD
Baptist Pastors and Superin-
tendants Make, Plans for
Organization
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
MACON, Ga., Feb. 22.—The Baptist
pastors and Sunday school superinten
dents of Macon have held a meeting and
decided to organize a city Baptist Sun
day school union. Dr. John L. White,
of the Vineville Baptist church, is
chairman of a committee that are now
arranging a mass meeting soon, when
the constitution and by-laws of the
union will be submitted for ratification.
The other denominations of the city
have formed like unions and the Baptist
Sunday school workers have made tho
same decision. The purpose of the or
ganization, like all others of its kind,
will be to draw the different Sunday
schools together constantly so each
member can become acquainted with
the other and lend help along differ
ent lines of the church work.
/
Mother Finds Child
Alive After Thinking
Her Dead Two Weeks
(By Associated Press.) i
PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 21.—Deep
grief came to one family and testacies
of, joy to another here today when a
mixifp in the identity of two children
who had been sent to the municipal
hospital suffering from scarlet fever
was straightened out. Yesterday a
family named Kaufman refused, to ac
cept a three-year-old child turned over
to them because it was not theirs. An
investigation followed and today the
hospital authorities sent for a mother
who had been notified two weeks ago
her daughter had died. When
she saw the child sent to
the Kaufman family yesterday
sent to the Kaufman family yesterday
she instantly recognized as her daugh
ter, her joy knew no bounds. Two
weeks ago she buried a child that was
turned over to her in a sealed coffin.
The parents of the Kaufman girl
have visited the hospital. None of
the children there did they recognize
as their daughter. The hospital au
thorities ar e convinced the dead child
is the Kaufman girl but the body will
be exhumed for positive identification.
ings. They displayed as much enthu
siasm as their suffragists sisters m
buttonholing members.
The batteries of typewriters in both
camps situated only a block apart, be
gan rapid fire clicking at an early hour
in the preparation of literature ammur
nition to be used for and against the
“cause.” The two big guards, both of
whom resemble ‘white hopes”.also \y4re
early on the scene, and they fiesmed to
have become ardently partisan.
Cleanses its little stomach,
torpid liver and consti
pated bowels.
Mother! look at the tongue! see if it
is coated. If your child is listless,
drooping, isn’t sleeping well, is restless.,
doesn’t eat heartily or is cross, irritable,
out of sorts with everybody, stomach
sour, feverish, breath bad; has stomach
ache, diarrhoea, sore throat, or is full
of cold, it means the little one’s stom
ach, liver and 30 feet of bowels are
filled with poisons and clogged up waste
and need a gentle, thorough cleansing
at once.
Give a teaspoonful of Syrup of Figs,
and in a few hours the foul, decaying
constipated matter, undigested food and
sour bile will gently move on and out
of Its little bowels without nausea, gxjp-
ing or weakness, and you will surely
have a well and smiling child shortly.
With Syrup of Figs you are not
drugging your children, being composed
entirely of luscious figs, senna and aro
matics it cannot be harmful, besides
they dearly love its delicious taste.
Mothers should always keep Syrup of
Figs handy. It is‘ the only stomach,
liver and bow’el cleanser and regulator
needed—a little given today will save a
sick child tomorrow.
Full directions for children of all ages (
and for grown-ups plainly printed on
the package. ,
Ask your druggist for the full name.
“Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna.”
prepared by the California Fig Syrup
Co. This is the delicious tasting, gen
uine old reliable. Refuse anything else
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
Tim Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of <
. WOMEN THE WORLD OVER
FfBIAN WOMEN AND THE FEMINIST MOVEMENT.
By Vlfia Sutton. 4
TAFT WATCHES DRILL
OF blind CHILDREN
CBy Associated Press.)
NNEW YORK. Feb. 22.—President
Taft this afteifioon saw a play and a
military drill by blind children and
other evidences of what modern teach
ing can* do for those who have lost their
sight. Upon his return from Staten
Island .he dedicated the new ‘‘light
house” of the New York Association for
the Blind’.
President Taft laid the cornerstorilT
of this budding ,a year ago. It is both
a club and a settlement house where the
blind may meet socially and receive in
struction. One of the features is a
library ; of books by raised type.
(LOTS OF BEAUTIFUL, SOFT, GLOSSY HI~
: ~25 CENT "I
IF"
Hair coming out?-lf dry, brittle, thin or your scalp itches
and is full of dandruff-Use “Danderine.”
Within ten minutes after an applica
tion of Danderine you cannot find a
|single trace of Dandruff or a loose or
ailing hair and your scalp will not itch,
|l ut what will pleasfc you most will be
fter a few^weeks’ use, when you will
|? dually see new hair, fine and downy
< first—yes—but really new hair—
\jrowing all over the scalp.
A little Danderine will immediately
double the beauty of your hair. No dif-
ITerence how dull, faded, brittle and
scraggy, jtfst moisten a cloth with
Danderine and carefully draw it through
>)ur hair, taking one small strand at. a
time. The effect is amazing—your hair
will be light, fluffy and wavy, and have
an appearance of abundance; an incom
parable lustre, softness and luxuriance,
the beauty and shimmer of true hair
health.
Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton’s
Danderine from any drug store or toilet
counter, and prove to yourself tonight
—now—that your hair-is as pretty and
soft as any—that it has been neglected
or injured by careless treatment—that’s
all—you surely can have beautiful hair
and lots of it if you will just try a lit
tle Danderine.— (Advt.)
The vanguard of the feminist move
ment' in London are the women of the
Fabian society. Mrs. Bernard Shaw and
Mrs. Sidney Webb, whose susbands
were the original Fabians, are impor
tant members, and Mrs. Charlotte Wil
son is secretary of the Women’s group.
The Fabians are 'socialist. Their aim
is the reorganization of society by free
ing land and industrial capital from
class ownership and visiting them in
the community for the general benefit.
There are to be no idlers or wasters
in this system, but every person is to
be trained in the occupation for which
he has aptitude and preference, and
every one is to be economically free and
independent.
The Fabian women, therefore, are
working not only for the political free
dom of women, taking an active part in
the suffrage agitation and encouraging
the participation of women in local af
fairs, where their citizenship is now
recognized, but they are making a most
comprehensive study of the work of
woman in the past and in the present,
her fitness and her disabilities, so that
the claim for her economic independ
ence may be based on accurate scien
tific knowledge.
Natural disabilities of women as
workers and the disabilities of moth
ers was the study first pursued in this
connection. The physiology was pre
sented by woman physicians, and the
views of women workers who were
mothers as well were given. The re
sult of this study forms some of the
interesting tracts of the society, with
a preface by Mrs. Bernard Shaw.
Then the historical aspects of wom
an’s work were gone into. A tremen
dous* field for original research for the
economic history of England from tire
point o'£ view of the workers, to say
nothing of women workers, has yet to
be written. Teutonic tribal conditions,
the Celtic woman, woman under the
manor and guilds, laws and regulations^
relating to* prostitution from S00- ana
1,500, and women in the various indus
tries, are some of the phases presented
—a. valuable'contribution to the intel
lectual side of the Socialist movement,
as well as giving particular light on the
economic progress of women.
But it is the study of present work
ers, with workers themselves, in all
fields, professional and industrial, down
to the lowest form of drudgery, as wit
nesses, that today is proving of such
interest and profit to these Fabians.
Actresses, doctors, shop assistants, fac
tory women,' charwomen, and domestic
servants have in their turn been asked
to appear before the society and tell
about their work, to supplement the re
ports from the outside.
In a recent meeting in Clements Inn,
Mrs. Jenner, a laundry worker, told
of that field from her experience and
answered questions, while other women
gave accounts of their investigations.
From all of which it appears that, while
laundry workers are often Abetter paid
than other workers, there is in the city
a terrible exploitation of the 8-shilling
girls, who are expected to have “other
means of support.” The §ay, befrtzzled
girl walking Piccadilly at night is often
the tidy. hard working girl, with hair
in criinpins: pins, to be seen daytimes
in the laundry. Also that married
women working are expected to ac
cept lower wages, while at the same
time employers of their husbands will
justify a low wage paid them, because
“the wife is working.”
To secure justice to women, *the
Fabian women have what is known
as a “right to work” conynittee, whose
duty it is to look into grievances. They
have taken up the question of the mar
ried school teachers, of the girl mes
sengers in the postoffice, who get less
thai/ the boy messengers, and recently
when the council founded at Westmin
ster Institute a school of cooking for
boys they tried to secure the same kind
of school for the girls.
All of these members of the van
guard are engaged in special work, po
litical, economic, or social service. They
are not the.orists, but are demonstrating
by their lives the advantage of woman’s
economic independence.)
SUFFRAGETTES AND ANTIS
PLAN FOR INAUGURATION
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Feb. 21.—-From all
apearances it will be nip and tuok
March 3, W’hether the perturbed and
perspiring sergeants-at-arms of the sen
ate and house will be able to keep a
quorum in congress during the passage
of the suffragist procession on that
day.
A number of leading members of both
branches, according to a statement
given out today at the national suffra
gist headquarters have announced that
they would march in the parade, “even
if they had to hide from their respec
tive sergeants-at-arms to do so.” Among
those quoted are. Senator Poindexter, of
Washington, and Representative Vic
tor Murdock, of Kansas.
A majority of the members of con
gress, however, are showing signs of
nervousness over the prospect of being
caught between two fires on the univer
sal suffrage question.
The anti-suffragists today appeared
in numbers in the halls of the capital
and in the senate and house office build-
To Make
Soak
Always
use Red
Seal Lye.
Itis9Sper
cent pure
lye—strongest
lye made—unites
^Sitting
' Top Can
—Savom
Money.
better and quicker with fat—finest lye tot
making either hard or soft soap.
RED SEAL
LYE
is the greatest soap maker, water softener, dis
infectant and cleanser. It makes bird water
soft and saves soap. Red SealLye is splendid
for cleansing kitchen sinks, water
closets, garbage cans, barns,
troughs, etc. Ask your store
keeper for Red Seal Lye—
It he hasn’t it, write us and
we’ll see you get suppli-d
and send you valuable
book-free.
P. C. TG&ISON & CO.
DEPT. P. 29 WASHINGTON
AVE . PH1U0ELPHIA, PA. 1
CAMP FIRE GIRLS PLAN
WASHINGTON CHAPTER
(Special'Disnatcl) to The Journal.)
WASHINGTON, Ga., Feb. 21.—As a
result of an entertainment given by one
of the ladies of Washington to a num
ber, of her young lady friends, on val
entine's, there is a likelihood o£ organ
izing a local camp of the Camp Fire
Girls of America, movement which Is
rapidly becoming widespread.
Its objects are to teach the girls to
do the very things which has always
been looked upon as drudgery, but to do
t(iem in such a manner as to make
housekeeping and Some-making a pleas-
BETTER THAN SPANKING
bed-wetting. There is a constitutional
cause for this trouble, Mrs. M. Sum
mers, Box 327, South Bend, Ind., will
send free to any mother her successful
home treatment, with full instructions.
Send no money, but write her today if
your cJvildren trouble you in this way.
Don’t mame the child; the chances are
it can’t help it. This treatment also
cures adults and aged people troubled
with urine difficulties bv day or night.
r
be a Little More Economical, Dear?
T The man with his nose to the grindstone trying to “make both
ends meet” is asking that question of his helpmate more and
more as the price of living Soars.
Cottolene
will help you immensely by cutting down your butter bills. Use butter on your table,
but not in your kitchen. With butter at present prices, you simply could not afford to
use it in cooking, even if it would produce better results. But when
Cottolene will shorten and fry as good as or even better than butter—and
the price is about one-third—why not-try it, and practice economy
without feeling that you are “skimping’’ yourself or your table?
Remember also that two-thirds of a pound of Cottolene will go as far as a full
pound of either butter or lard. Cottolene is Nature’s Shortening—a vegetable
product—healthful, digestible, and in every way satisfactory. Try this recipe:
-PLAIN LAYER CAKE-
“HE GOT THE GERM FIRST”
J. G. BELT, of Missouri, writes—
When I
vU Xn
nt and or
ME.
began feeding Red
Devil Xts to my bogs two bad
died and others were sick. Real
Devil Lye cured them and I lost
no more.”
We wish to state emphatically that Bed
Devil Lye did not cure cholera. Mr. Belt
Used Red Devil Lye
before the germ reached the cholera stage
and “Got the Germ Before the Germ
Got the Hog.”
This is what you can do. What you should
do. What you must do if you will be fair
to yourself. No one else can do It for
you. It’s up to you and you alone.
Everybody, everywhere* knows that pre
vention is best. You believe it, yet you
hesitate and you lose. You will losmagaln
if you don’t use the Prevention Method;
Start the Prevention Movement in your
neighborhood. Get your neighbors to
adopt this method. Bid your neighbor
hood of every vestige of cholera. Send
the names of your neighbors and we will
send them our booklet “PREVENT”
with your compliments. They will thank
you many times for calling their atten
tion to it.
Get RED DEVIL LYE at
your dealers. Buy the Big
41i*lnch 10c. Can, they
are cheapest. The handy
Friction Top prevents waste.
Cream cup Cottolene with 1 cup sugar,mix in alternately
>/ 2 cup milk and 2 cups pastry flour, in which 2 teaspoons
baking powder and % teaspoon salt have been thoroughly
sifted. Beat well, flavor, and add three stiffly beaten
eggs. Bake in two layers.
This batter is a good foundation recipe and may be used
with spices, chocolate, fruit or nuts, with any desired filling.
Made only by THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY
v
WM. SGHIELD MFG. CO.,
ST. LOUIS, MO.
ECZEMA
Also called Tetter, Salt Rheum, Pruritus, Milk.
Crust, Weeping Skin, Etc.
ECZEMA CAN BE CURED TO STAY, and
when I say cured, 1 mean Just what I say —
C-U-lt-E-1), and not merely patched up for
awhile, to return worse tnan before. Remember
I make this broad statement after puttm,
twelve years of my time on this one *diseaf*
aud handling in the meantime nearly half of n
million case of this dreadful disease. Now.
1 do not care what all you have used, nor how
many doctors have told you tnat you could not
he cur^d—all I ask Is just a chance to show
you that I know what I am talking about,
if you will write me TOPAY, I will send you
a i'REE TRIAL of my mild, soothing, guaran
teed cure that will convince you more in a
day than 1 or anyone else could in a mouth t
time. If you are disgusted and discourage ,
1 dare you to give me a chance to prose i.<$
claims. By writing me today you will vuv>f
more real comfort titan yon nad ever tbo;i$,iif
this world holds for you. Just try It and r*t
will see I am telling you the truth.
Ur, j. r. uann&aay, dus Court Block, befall*, no.'
References: Third National Bank, Sedalin, ai< .
Could you do a better act than to s* nd thte no
tice to some poor sufferer of Eczema V—tAuvt.>