Atlanta semi-weekly journal. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1898-1920, November 13, 1917, Page 2, Image 2
2 MBETS FOB YOUR BOWELS IF HEADACHY. SICK Tonight! Clean your bowels and end Headaches. Colds, Sour Stomach Gat.a 10-cent box. rut aside—just once—the Salts. I’iils. Castor Oil or Purgative Waters which merely force a passageway through the boWsls. hut do not thoroughly cleanse, freshen and purify these drainage or gans. and have no effect whatever upon the liver and stomach Keep your ■•insides" pure and fresh with Cascarets. which thoroughly cleanse •he stomach, remote the undigested, sour food and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system all the constipated waste matter and poisons in the bowels A Cascaret tonight will make ywi feel great by morning. They work while you sleep— never gripe, sicken, and cost only • 19 cents a box from your druggist. Mil- : lions of men and women take a Can-; caret now and theu and never have Headache. Billlousnesa. Severe Colds. In digestion. Pour Stomach or Constipated Bowels. Cascarets belong in every household Children just love to take them.—<Advt ) Made to « 95 W Special Offer f or ' Dteea or .2) Badoow. ebatee tt toner h*»J- f bMOk pC* tone «tyfas. gua»»a-*ed foe U P.' oM«bs rod s»d sauefeettea !/ H ■ orubkXT BACK, abeehite/ T osfrSo-wHfe they last. i|..fc V ;iA •a* pair t® * ■ fapr*—trer»i No Extra Charges 'filj Medwrrr foebigßxtrwa- Pe« Too* or II I’l | ftirflMtoto*. notMaaertre for fsney W.il 11 I I I 'M Caah Profits CWcaxo Tailors A.-«ociation s rn< ? gM »US.FrsehH> ft.. OceeeJJJZZSiJ ii -'■■»_ u i _ : ■ ■ l ■ ■*' M Railroad Men These men know from experience that Sloan's Liniment will take the sriffneeWout of joints and the sore ness out of muscles —And it’s so convenient! No rubbing required. It quickly penetrates and brings re lief. Easy to apply and cleaner than mu say plasters or ointments. Always have a bottle in the house for rheumatic aches, lame back, sprains and strains. Generous sized bottles at all drug gist*. 25c.. 50c., $ 1.00. “Cure Your Rupture Like I Cured Mine” Old Sea Captain Cured His Own Bupture After Doctors Said “Operate or Death." HU Remedy and Book Seat Free. Captain Collings saiied the seas for many years; then he sustained a bad double rupture that soon forced him to not only remain ashore, but kept him bedridden for years. He tried doctor after doctor and truss after truss. No results! Finally, he was assured that he must either submit to a dangerous and abhorrent operation or die. He did •either 1 He cured himself Instead. • i' . ■-"-W "Fellow Men and Women, You Don’t Hare To Bo Cut Up, and Yea Don’t Have To Be Tortured By Trustee.” Captain Collings made a study of himself, of his condition—and at last ho was rewarded by the finding of the method that so quickly made him a well, strong, vigorous and happy man. Anyone can use the same method: it’s simple, easy*, safe and inexpensive. > . Every ruptured per>on in the world ! should have the Captain Collings book, telling all about how he cured himself, and how anyone may follow the same treatment In their own home without . any trouble. The book and are FREE. They will be s*nt prepaid to any rupture sufferer who will fill out the below coupon. Bn‘, send it right awn v now before you put down this pater, TREE RUPTURE BOOK AMD REMEDY COUPOM. Cant. W. A. Cnlllngs (Inc.) « Box «2 B Watertown. N. Y- P!ea»e send me your FREE Rupture . Remedy end Boole without any obit- , gallon on my part whatever. Namel Address | ** • • \ nKflB I tornart cl altido «ff« ».E>kssr f a'l ■Knp ;aj S«ci(MSi.Of Cco* j taaptecfC'&crs ■ fonmla We MY VM EIHiSMSE m Bal eRJB wri£ MM WisSy dtM CVT KT aoi •Mr . (Mars This M • w tetter. »w in had*** ot "‘j*’*** . fHAJI VET *oof CO.,D«H rim Cf.O.Bei.N.w Y.rk Moral Lepers Scored in Sermon ROAO TO HELL PAVED WITH JOY RIDES AND MIK SAYS BILLY He Advises Girls to Keep Away From Cabarets and to Cut Out the Street Flirtations. Billy’s Sermon .in Full Billy Sunday preached Sunday night ;on "The Moral Leper." taking as his I text. “But the Man Was a Ix>per." The ' evangelist said: “I have sometimes tried to imagine i myself in Damascus on review day, and have seen a man riding on a horse rich ly caparisoned with trappings of gold and stiver, and he himself clothed in garments of the finest fabrics and the most costly, but with a face so sad and melancholy that ft would cause the beholder to turn and look a second and third time. And a man unaccus tomed to such scenes might have been heard to make a remark like this: •How unequally God seems to divide His favors! There la a man who rides and others walk: he 1s clothed In costly garments; they are almost naked, while he is well fed.’ and they contract the difference between the man on the horse and the others. Ts we only knew the breaking hearts of the people we envy we would pity them from the bottom of otfr souls. “I was being driven through a. suburb of Chicago by a real estate man who wanted to sell me a lot. He was tell-' Ing me who lived here and who lived there, and what an honor It would be for me and my children to possess a home there. We were •driving past a home that must have cost SIOO,OOO. and he said: ‘That house is owned by Mr. So-and-So. He is one of our multi millionaires and he and his wife have been known to live in that house for months and never speak to each other. They each have separate apartments, each has a separate retinue of servants, each a dining room and sleeping apart ments. and months come and go by and they never speak to one another.’ My thoughts hurried back to the little flat in Chicago that we called our home and where we have lived for 17 years. T had paid rent enough to pay for it. There wasn't much In it; T codld load it in two furniture vans, mayhe three, counting the piano, but I would not trade the happipess and the joy and the love of that little Hat for that palatial home and the sorrow and the things that went with it. . . , “As you are driving along the street and a man who was Intimately acquaint ed with the skeletons that are in every familv should tell you the secrets of them all. of that boy who has broken .his father’s heart by being a drunkard. a ner-ler gambler, and that girl who haT gone astray, and that wife who is a common drunkard, made so by society, and the father himself, who was also * "But he was a leper.” That disease, peculiar to the orient, is exceedingly loathsome, and as I stud y'‘ B pat J‘Vt°as I am not surprised that God used lit as a tvpe of sin. A man who is able to understand this disease, its beginning and its progress, might be £P p ™ache by a man who was thus niight say to him. • Hurry! Hurry. Show vourself to the priest for .the clea " s ’°® by the Mosaic law. “Why? says the man thus addressed, “what is the trou ble’" The other man would sa>. Do vou see the spot on your hand H U rr and show yourself to the priest. But the man says, ’That is only a fester, onlv a water blister; only a p mple. nothing more. There is no to be alarmed. You are unduly excited and agitated for my welfare." Those sores are only a few now. but it spreads and it is first upon the hand, then upon the arm and from the arm it goes on until it lavs hold of every nerve, artery, vein, with its slimy coil and continues until the rotten disintegration of the parts takes place and they drop off. and then .it is too late. But rhe man who waF concerned saw the beginning of that not only the end. but the beginning. He looked wonder and saw the end. too. -That is the reason why you hurry when you get evidence of the disease. So I say to you. young man. don't you go with that Godless, good-for-nothing gang, that blaspheme and sneer at re ligion. that bunch of character assas sins; they will make of your body a doormat to wipe their feet upon. Don’t go with that bunch; I heard you swear. I heard you sneer at religion; stop, or you will become a staggering, muttering, blear-eyed, foul-mouthed, down-and-out , er. on your way to hell. T say to you. stop! or you will go reeling down to hell, breaking your wife's heart and wrecking your children's lives. And What-have you to show for it? What have you got* to show for it? “Don’t you go, my boy; don't yoi laugh at that smutty story with a double meaning. Don't go with that gang. But you say to me. Mr. Sun- day, you are unduly excited for my wel fare. I know you smell liquor on my 1 breath, but I never expect to become a drunkard. I never expect to become an outcast.' Well, you are a fool. No man ever intended to become a drunkard. .Every drunkard started out to be •sim ply a moderate drinker. The fellow i that tells me he can leave it alone when ■he wants to Iles. If you can. why don't ; you leave It alone? You will never let It alone. ‘lf you could, you would. My boy. hear me. 1 have walked along the shores of time and have seen them i strewn with the wrecks of those who have drifted in from the seas of lust and passion, and are fit only for danger ■ signals to warn the coming race. Vou ! can't leave it alone, or if you can, the i time will come when It will get you. i Take It from me. “Don't go to that dance. Don’t yow ; know that It la the most damnable low . down institution on the face of God’s ‘ earth, that It causes more ruin than I anything this side of hell? Don't you Igo with that young man: don't you go I to that dance.” 'That is why we have so many whip poor will widows around the country: they married some of these mutts to re form them, and instead of doing that the undertaker got them. I say. young girl, don't go to that dance; it has prov en to he the moral graveyard that < a used more ruination than anything that was ever spewed out of the month of hell. Don't go with that young fel low for a joyride at midnight. If a young fello wcame up and asked my CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears •Turcot I THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER .3, 1917. | girl to take her joyriding at midnight I I would knock him off the face of th ’ I earth. I tel! you if automobiles and Icarriagea could talk there would i>c I something doing. “Girls, when some young fellow comes tsp to you and asks you the greatest question that you will ever be asked I or*called upo:e to answer, next to the salvation of your own soul, what would you say? ‘Oh, this is so sudden.' That is all a bluff: you have been waiting for it all the time. “Rut girls, never mind now. get down to facts. When he asks you that great est question, the most important one ■ that any girl is ever asked, next to the ' salvation of her soul, just say: ‘Sit down and let me ask you three ques , tions. I want to ask yon these three questions and if I am satisfied with your answers it will determine my an swer to your question. “ ‘Did you believe me to be virtu'ou's when you catne here, to ask me to be your wife? Oh, ves, I believe you to ha vlrtitotts. That's the reason I came here. Violets dipped in dew would he as cow fodder compartd to you." “The second question: "Have you as a young ! mar. lived as you demand of me as a I girl, that I should have lived?" The third question: “If T, ax a girl, had lived and done a,s you, as a you'ng man. 1 and you know it. would you ask me to marry you?" "They will line up and nine times out o r ten they will take the count. You can line them up, and I know what 1 ’! am talking about and 1 defy any man 'I on God’s earth to successfully contra dict me. I have the goods. The aver age young man is more particular about i the company’ he keeps than the average | girl. I'll tell you. Ts he meets some body on "the street whom he doesn’t want to meet he will duck into the first I open doorway and avoid the publicity '! of meeting her, for fear she might smile ,1 or give an indication that she had seen ' him somewhere and sometime before ; that. Yet our so-called best girls keep i company with young men whoso char ' aeter would make a black mark on a piece of anthracite. Their characters are foul and rotten and damnable. I like to see a girl who has a good head ■ choose right because It is right, never I minding the criticism. Choose the good and be careful of her conduct, careftrt of good company and good conduct, and keep company with a good young fel low. Don’t go with a fellow whose rep utation is bad. Everybody knows it is had. and if you are seen with him you will lose vour reputation as well, al though your virtue is intact, and they might as well take you to the graveyard and bury you when your reputation is gone. If a man like that asks you to go with him. say to him if he will live the way you want him to you will go with him. Ts you would take a stand like that there wouldn’t be so many -wrecks. Ts our women and girls would take higher stands and say. ‘No. no, we win not keep company with you unless you live the way we want you to.’ there would be better men. "Leprosy is an infections disease like typhoid fever, smallpox or diphtheria, and goes through a community like an epidemic: when one leper comes in con tact with the clean, he becomes infect ed. And so it Is with sin. Sin begins In a so-called innocent flirtation. The old, God-forsaken scoundrel of a liber tine. who looks upon every woman as legitimate prey for his lust, will con taminate a community; one drunkard staggering and maundering and mutter ing his way down to perdition will de bauch a town. "So with the boy. He will sit at your table and drink beer, and I want to tell you if you are low down enough I to serve beer and wine in your home, 'when you serve it you are as low down as the saloonkeeper, and T don’t care whether you do it for society or for anything else. Ts you serve liquor or drink you are as low down as the sa loonkeeper in my opinion. So the boy who had not grit enough to turn down • . . —a knnniiaf anti . his gljiss at the banquet ana reiuse i to drink is now a blear-eyed.staggering. ' vermin-covered drunkard, reeling to ’ 1 hell. He couldn't stand the sneers of i the crowd; many a fellow started out I to play cards for beans, and tonight il he would stake his soul for a show -1 down. The hole in the gambling table • is not very big; it is about big enough I to shove a dollar through, but it is big enough to shove through, but it is big [ enough to shove your wife through; big i your home through; your salary, your i character; just big enough to shove everything that is dear to you in this world through, the little solid top of the > table. “Listen to me. Bad as it is to be afflicted with physical leprosy, moral leprosy is 10,000 times worse. I don’t i care if you are the richest man in the town, the biggest politician in the eon ■ greasional district or in the state. I • don't care a rap if you carry the poli h tical vote, and if you can change the : i vote convention—if after your worldly career is closed my text would make ■'you a fitting epitaph for your tomb , stone and obiturary notice in the pa ■pers, then what difference would it , make what you had done —‘He was a > leper.’ He was a great politician—but, I -He was a leper.’ What difference I would It make? "I tell you. I was never more ■ in terested in my life than in reading the | story of an old Confederate colonel who i was a-sticker for martial discipline, j One day he had a trifling case of in- I subordination. He ordered his men |»to halt, and he had the offender shot. ' They dug the grave and he gave the I command to inarch, and they had stojS ■ ped just three minutes by the dock. At the close of the war they made him ; chief of police of a southern city, and ; he was so vile and corruptible that the people arose and ordered his dismissal. (Then a great earthquake swept over the I city and the people rushed from their ! homes and thousands of people crowded , the streets and there was great exclte- : ment. | “Some asked. ‘Where is the colonel'.” | and they said. ’You will find him in one lof two or three places.’ So they serch ed and found him in a den of infamy. He was so drunk that he didn’t realize the danger he was in. They led him out. then put him on a snow-white I horse, put his spurs on his boots and his regimentals on, the mayor pinned a star on l|is breast and put a cockade ion his head, and said to him; ‘‘Colonel I I command you as mayor of the city to ; quell the riot. You have supreme au thority.’ “He rode out among the people to quell them, spurring the white side of the horse until the crimson fldwed out. and he rode in and out among the surg ing mass of humanity. “He rode out among the people with a command here, torrents of obscenity there, and in twenty-five minutes still ness of death reigned In City Square, so greatly did they fear him. so wonderful his power over men. He then rode out. dismounted, took off his cockad. t*»i f the star from his breast and threw it /down, threw off his regimentals, took 1 off his sword, then he staggered hack ito the home of infamy, where three months later he died, away from his Wife, awav from virtue. away from mor ality. his name synonymous with all that is vile. What difference did it i make that he had power over men when i you might sum up his life in m; text, i‘But he was a leper.’ What difference Idid it make. “I pity that boy or girl from the (depth of my soul who. if you ask, are you willing to Christian, will an swer: 'Mr. Sunday, I would like to be. but if I fell that at home my father will abuse me. inv mother wil sneer at me. i If I were I would have no encourage merit io stand and fight the battle.’ I ■ jfliy from the depths of my soul that I boy or girl that has a mother like that. i With a mother like that in a home a I stepmother would l>e a Godsend if she I had religion. | "Unclean! Suppose every voung man ( in Atlanta who is a moral leper was impelled and compelled by some uncon , trollable impulse over which he had no , power to make public revelations of his sin! Down the street he comes in his auto and voti speak to him from the , curbstone and he will say, ‘Unclean! ! Unclean!’ Yonder he conies walking down the street. Supose that to every • man and woman he meets he is impelled jand compelled to make public revela •' tions of the fact that he is a leper. Sup ‘ 1 Pose every young woman Is Impelled • and compelled to moke public revela ’ the fact taht she is living a life ‘iof sin. Somebody else pays for her ' clpthes and her board. I "Suppose that some voung woman who lives a good life calls upon her ’ and rings the doorbell .it'd she comes 1 down and says: ‘Unclean! Unclean! • I Keep away: do not come near lest you • be contaminated. There are lots of moral lepers that, are apparently clean. Oh. .ves! They live in the best homes iiand lots of so-called best girls receive them and keep company with them i They open the door to the moral leper . and he comes and sits with your daugh . iter, and many of you know that they are moral lepers. And many a fool girl ■ will mary a biped like that. .' "These are the things we are up : against nowadays—that so-called ‘Mod- : I csty.’ “Leprosy is an infectious disease: it . is the germ of sin. ts there is evil in i you the evil will dwell in others. When ■ 'we do wrong we inspire others —and i ■ your fives scatter-disease when you corrie in contact with others. Ts there iis sin in the father, there will be sin ii in the boy; if there is sin in the mother, ! there will be sin in the daughter; if I there is sin in the sister, there will be I sin in the sister; by yout Influence you ' will spread it. If you live the wrong way you will drag somebody else to i perdition with you as you go. and kin dred ties will facilitate it. ‘‘Supposing all your hearts were open. 1 Supposing we had glass doors to our hearts and we could walk down the street and look in and see where you have been, and with whom you have been and what you have been doing. A great’ many of you would want stained ' glass and heavy tapestry to cover them. "Suppose 1 could put a screen liehind me. pull a string or push a button and produce on that screen a view of the hearts of the people. I would say. ‘Here is Mr. and Mrs. A's life as it is and here as the people think it is. Here is what he really is. Here is what he has been. Here is how much booze he drinks. Here is bow much he lost last year at horse races.’ But are the things that society does not take note of. Society takes no note of flirtation on the street. It waits until the girl has lost her virtue and then slams the . door in her face. It takes no note of ; that young man drinking at a banquet 1 ’table: it waits until he becomes a 1 bleary-eyed drunkard and then it will slam the door in his face. It takes no note of card-playing for some dinky lit tle cream pitcher or a pair of silk hose; it waits until you become a gambler land then it slams the door in your face, i God says: ‘Look out in the beginning : for that thing.’ Society takes no note lof the beginning. It waits until it he | comes vice and then it organizes civic 1 righteousness clubs. Get back to the beginning and do your work there. , “The Servant of Naaman entered the I hut of the Prophet Elisha and found him j sitting on a high stool writing with a i quill on papyrus. The servant bowed low and said: ‘The great and mighty Naaman. captain of the hosts of the ! king of Syria, awaits thee. Unfortu nately' he is a leper and cannot enter ■ your august presence. He has heard of the miraculous cures that you have wrought and he hopes to become the re cipient of your power.’ The old Prophet of God tells him! “ ‘Tell him to dip seven times in the Jordan —beat it, beat it.’ The servant came out to Naaman. who was sitting on his horse. “ 'Well, is he at home?’ “ ‘He’s at home, but he's a queer duck.’ ‘‘Naaman thought that Elisha would ' come out and pat the sores and say incantations, like an Indian medicine man. and say: Matter is nonexistent; it is an Illusion of your mind, my dear fellow. Why didn't you phone me from Damascus and I would have given you absent treatment.’ Poor old cuss sit ting away—‘matter nonexistent—you just imagine you have leprosy.’ “Naaman was wroth, like many a fellow today. God reveals to the sin ner the plan of salvation and instead of thanking God for salvation and do ing what God wants them to do, they ’ damn God and everybody else for both- Ip‘ln most cases! ; I of Dyspepsia Coffee Does I Net Agree”— j says a well known authority. Many who use cof fee not knowing that» i t aggravates stomach troubles— could still enjoy a delicious hot table beverage and es cape coffee’s effects by a change to the wholesome, pure cereal drink — POSTUM I 1 •'There’s a Reason” r™.' iitwn fostv* I.,'*:, 1 ., ® GE«*L ' ering them. “Some men ought io be hurled out of society; they ought to be kicked out of churches, ami out of politics, and every other place where decent men live or associate. And I want to lift the burden tonight from the heads of the unoffending womanhood and hurl it on the heads of offending manhood. So eietj - needs a new division of anathe mas. You hurl the burden on the head of the girl, and the double-dyed, licen tious scoundrel that caused her ruin is received in society with open arms, while the girl is left to hang her head and spend her life in shame. "Here is a man who wants to be a Christian. What will he do? Will he go ask some of those old brewers? Will he ask some of the fellows of the town.’ Where will he go? To the preacher, of course. He is the man to go to when you want to be a Christian. Go to a doctor wlien you are sick, to a black smith when your horse is to be shod, but go to a preaclrer when you want your heart fixed. "So Naaman goes into the muddy wa ter and the water begins to lubricate those old sores and it begirds to itch, and lie says. ’Gee Whiz, like many a young fellow today who goes to church and just gets religion enough to make hint miserable. Like an old fellow in lowa tame to me and said. ‘Bill.’ I have been to-bear you every night and you have done me a lot of good. I used to cuss my old woman every day, and I ain't cussed her for a week. I am get ting a little better.' "The trouble with many men is that they have just got enough religion to make them miserable. If there is no Joy in religion, you have got a leak <n your religion. Some* haven’t religion enough to pay their debts. Would that 1 might have a hook and for every debt that you left unpaid I might jerk off a piece of clothing. If I did. some of you fellows would not have anything on but a celluloid collar and a pair of socks. “Some of you have not got religion enough to have a family prayer. Some of you people haven’t got religion enough to take the beer bottles out of your cellar and. throw them in the al ley. The trouble with wou is that you are so taken up with business, with poli tics. with making money, with vour lodges, and each and every one is so dependent on the other, that you are scared to death to come out and live clean cut for God Almighty. You have not fully surrendered yourself to God. "The mater with a lot of you people is that your religion is not complete. Yon have not yielded yourself to God and gone out for God and God’s truth. Why. I am almost afraid to make some folks laugh for fear that I will be ar rested for breaking a costly piece of an tique bric-a-brac. You would think that if some people laughed it would break their faces. To see some you would think the essential of orthodox Chris tianity is to have a face so long you could eat oatmeal out of the end of a gaspipe. Sis\er, that is not religion; I want to tejl you that the happy, smil ing. sunny-faced religion will win more people to Jesus Christ than the miser able, old gbim-faced kind will in ten years. I pity any one that can’t laugh. There must be something wrong with their religion or their liver. The devil can’t laugh. “Oh, laugh and the world laughs with you, I Weep and you weep alone; I ’Tis easy enough to be pleasant I When life goes along with a song. But the man worth while is the man who can smile ■ When everything goes dead wrong.” "I wish to God the church were as afraid of imperfection as it is of per fection. / “Naaman dipped himself seven times in the Jordan, ‘and his flesh came again Doctor Says Crying Need Os The Woman Os Today ' Is More Iron In Her Blood TO PUT STRENGTH IN HER NERVES AND COLOR IN HER CHEEKS Any Woman Who Tires Easily, is Nervous or Irritable, or Looks Pale, Haggard and Worn Should Have Her Blood Examined for Iron Deficiency Administration of Nuxated Iron in Clinical Tests Gives Most Astonishing Youthful Strength and Makes Women Look Years You 3 ger “There can be no healthy, beautiful, “Iron is also absolutely necessary to ply by taking iron in the proper form, rnsv-cheeked women without iron," says enable your blood to change food into And this after they had in some cases rosy cnee l living tissue. Without it, no matter how been doctoring for months without ob- Dr. Ferdinand King, a .xen torn rnysi much or what you eat, your food merely taining any benefit. But don’t take the cian and Medical Author. “In my recent passes through you without doing you old forms of reduced iron, iron acetate, talks to uhvsicians on the grave and se- any good. You don’t get the strength or tincture of iron simply to save a few r i««,.i t >ncv in ut ot and as a consequence you be- cents. The iron demanded by Mother nous consequences of iron den . come weak, pale and sickly looking, just Nature for the red coloring matter in the blood of American women. I have nice a plant trying to grow’ in a soil de- the blood of her children is, alas! not strongly emphasized ‘ the fact that doc- fieient in iron. ,If you are not strong or that kind of iron. You must take iron tors should prescribe more organic iron well, you owe it to yourself to make the in a form that can be easily absorbed tors should prescnoe m * following test; See how long you can and assimilated to do you anv good —nuXated iron—for their nervo , work or how far you can walk without otherwise it may prove worse than use- down, weak, haggard-looking women pa- becoming tired. Next take two five- less. tients. Pallor means anaemia. The skin grain tablets of Nuxated Iron three times have u9ed Nuxated Iron Jn of the anaemic woman is pale, the flesh per day after meals for two weeks, the niy own pract j ce Jn moß t aev ere ag'gra - flabby The muscles lack tone, the brain have’^rlfn^f 3 '! hare seen do" vated cond4tlona with unfailing resets fags and the memory failj -nd often muchj 1 .h» v e they become weak, nervous, irritable. were a nj nc a ii while double their n a or whom have given despondent and melancholy, "men the strength and endurance and entirely rid l^ea’lttf iron goes from the blood of women, the themselveg of all SV mptoms of dyspep- as a health and strength roses go from their cheeks. sia . liver builder. In the most common foods of America. an( j other “Many an athlete and prizefighter has the starches, sugars, table syrups, can- (roubles in won the day simply because he knew the die® nolished rice, white bread, soda from ten secret of great strength and endurance crackers biscuits, macaroni, spaghetti. four- an d filled his blood with iron before he tHDioca sago, farina. _. ’ .’WB leen d a >'«’ w ? nt iato the affra >” while many an- degerm’inated cornmeal • Sr WL* "f,' - F time sim ' 2 th ? r . has , g ? ne in inglorious de- no longer is i ron to , ... "a siuipl.v for the lack of iron." found Refining pro- • r ‘ Schuyler C. Jaques, Visiting Bur- Zs have removed WgrW 1. keen of St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. New the iron of Mother J / J City, said: “I have never before Earth from these im- ”V given out any medical information or noverished foods, and advice for publication, as I ordinarily do silly methods of home not believe In it. But so many Ameri- [•nokerx . bj throwing aaggK can women suffer from iron deficiency, down the waste pipe with its attendant ills—physics: t’>f water in which our weakness, nervous irritability, melan- vege.allies are cooked. ?J- eholy, indigestion, flabby, sagging are r< sponsible f |,! an- muscles, etc., etc.—and in conre- otlier grave iron loss bfla quence of their weakened, run-down ' Therefore, if you wish to pre- (6^ condition they are so liable to con serte '<>nr southful tint and ’’’act serious and even fatal diseases t ,, a rip., old age, you must «up- that T deem it my duty to advise ell piv the h-mi defi. ieney in your food ’' uch ,o ta ke Nuxated Iron. I have bv using some form of organic taken it myself and given it to my iron just as vou would use salt patients with most surprising and when your food has not enough Dn Ferdinand King, New York Physician £ lß )r* qSukl7“ U to"' tJTei? i have said a hundred times and Medical Author, tells physicians that they 2n'I n H t a’ w ”' over, organic iron Is the greatest „ r / . >T , ’* a T ost . ’’emarkable and won- of ail strength builders, if peo- should prescribe more organic iron —Nuxated de 4vJJ.’J y K ? ffe^ V T rem t < ?<’, pie would onlv take Nuxated Iron . / , L - *0 - - Iron, which is presertt-a when they feel weak or rundown. iron—JOT their patients —Says anaemia —iron and . recommended ebo’-r by physicians in the greats eur,e to the health. ;K.^«V<'hT. r X’.b.*y n elrength, ritalilg and beauty of the modern ward off disease, preventing it fie- American Woman.—Sounds warning aqainst ira - Unlike the erfder inorganic iron pro; coming organic in thousands of u g ucta it is easily assimilated, does not injur.- cases and thereby the lives of use of metallic iron which tho make them Maek. nor upset the thousands might be saved who . . stomach; ■*» *he contrary, it is a most jn»- now <lie every year from pneumonia, m.aq injure the teeth. COTTode k,lf remedy in ne.*”- s.U forma of indig' < grippe, kidney, liver, heart trouble and oth- . j . e tin ° •’ " e ” as for n *r” ,u ’- run dowr condition*. Thr e r dangerous maladies The real and true Stomach and do far more mannfa< turers have such great confidence in nurth-d cause which started their disease was noth- t . iron th,,t they o,fer to °r fe,t *IOO.OO to any char:- n..r-ks. .. I .n . harm than good: odmee, ““5”"«... "J th« •'-< "J ‘’"'h "Wied iron. woman, and the graat drain placed upon n iso offer to refund your money jf it does not at leaM her system at certain periods, she re- double your strength and endurance in ten <laya’ time, quires iron mifeh more than man to helj' It is‘dispensed in this city by al! good druggists, make up for the loss. tAdvt.r - like unto the flesh of a little child, and he was clean." He offered Elisha of the store of gold and other precious metals, but the prophet would not take any of it. But Gehazi. servant to Elisha, count oil the goods, and ran after Naaman, saying that Elisha had changed his mind. Naaman dumped a pile of it or, the ground, and mark this, the leprosy, of Naaman Infected Gehazi. He rwas! the first grafter mentioned in the Bible. “I saw a woman that for twenty-seven years had been a madam, and 1 saw her come down the aisle, close her doors and turn them out of her house and live foq God. I, saw enough converted in one town where there four houses tq close their doors: they were empty: they; had all fled home to their mothers. ', "Listen to me and I am through. Out in lowa a fellow came to me and spread; a napkin on the platform—a napkin as big as a table cloth. He said. ‘I want, a lot of shavings and sawdust.' 'What, for?’ ‘l'll tell you: I -want enough to make a soft pillow to have something in niy home to help me think of God. I don't want to forget God, or that I was saved. Can yoU give me enough?’ I said. ‘Yes. indeed, and if you want enough to ffiake a mattress, all right; take it. and if. you want enough of the tent (I was preaching in a tent then) to make a pair of breeches for each of the boys, take your scissors and cut it right out if it will help you to keep your mind on God.’ That is why I like to have people come down to the front* and publicly acknowledge God. I like to have a man have a definite experience in re ligion. Something to remember. * * I once read of a preacher who used to quarrel with his wife. That was before he became a preacheV: no man can quarrel with his wife after he be comesc a preacher. Abe and his wife used to fight because Abe was an Epis copalian and his wife was a Methodist. Abe said to his wife: ‘See here, all they do down at your church is read the prayers.’ Abe's wife said: ‘lt isn’t the church, it’s the life we lead.’ And the devil said to Abe: *Yotf run this ranch; give her a blowing up; let her understand who runs this thing.’ But the Lord said, ‘Abe, you are a preacher and your wife has more religion in her little finger than you have in your old carcass. You aYe a preacher. Be a man.’ “So he went out to the ashhoppers. Did you ever see one of those ash hop pers? It is a thing you build with four sides, small at the bottom and with an angle of 45 degrees, and you will fill it with hickory ashes, and pouY water on the ashes and the water per colates through the ashes and makes lye, and they make soap out of It. A lot of folks can make ‘lie’ without ashes or soap. They used to make that kind of eoap when I was a boy. So Abe went behind the old ashhopper and said: ‘Eliza, forgive me. You have more religion in your little finger than I have in my whole body.’ He went back to the house and threw his arms around the old woman and kissed her. And when the devil comes around to Abe he says: ‘Ash-hopper! ash-hopper! ash-hopper! On my knees behind the ash-hopper I fought the battle and beat the devil.’ ” (Copyright. William A. Sunday.) © C 5 © Get the Genuine CASCARA 0 QUININE No advance in price for this 20-yesr old remedy—2sc for 24 tablets—Some cold tablets now 30c for 21 tablets — Figured on proportionate cost per tablet, you save 9%c when you buy e Hill’s—Cures Cold in 24 ahours —grip MB 24 Tablets for 2Se. WjulU At any Drug Store DONI COUGH • W LONGER Too,late to prevent your cold! But now’s the time to pre vent its serious conse quences B You will not And a better remedy than Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey to prevent your cough from developing into a grave and even dangerous ailment. This pleas ant balsam preparation is antiseptic and quickly effective. When you take Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar-Honey you check the spread of infectious germs, loosen and help eliminate the phlegm, soothe the inflammation, and relieve that grippy feeling. Get a bottle of Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar- Honey and watch your improvement from the first dose. Do not be satisfied with half-treatment, however. Take Mr. Bell’s Pine-Tar-Honey till your grippe, col & or bronchitis is completely re lieved. For hoarsness and sore throat ifse also as a gargle. The taste is so pleasant, children take it without coax ing. Tear this ad. out and take it to your druggist with 25c and he will give you the genuine Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar-Honey. (Advt.) easedJjft with ‘"‘Kind’s | discovery I for Coughs € Golds I That wretching, torturous I tearing at the throat and lungs I give away to ease and comfort I through the prompt use of Dr. New I Discovery—the standard cough and I cold remedy for SO yesra Keep it on ■ hand and use freely. It goes right to I the root of a cold —brings up the pnlegn I and eases the raw. feverish membranes. I Containing balsams, it cools and soothes I the sore parts. J ust the thing for baby’s I croup. The kiddie likes it. Your drug* I gist sells it. Dizzy? Bilious? Constipated? Dr. King’s new Life Pills cause a healthy flow of Bile and rids your Stomach and Bowels of waste and fermenting body poisons. They are a Tonic to your Stomach and Liver and tone th» general system. First dose relieves. < Let a bottle today. 25c. all druggists. Do You Love Chlldron? i liu i ■■l BMB Vou may avoid gains sad aafering as bars tbemaads el * other women all orer the eousvy by writing far Dr. Dgs'* wonderfal book which teUa bow to gfae birth to baggy. **»«>» children. Write TODAY for FXZB book, goemaid. Dr. 1. H. Dye Medical losttfete, Mwcele BldK~ Buftale. N.Y.