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STOMACH MISERY
GAS._INDIGESTION
“Pape’s Diapepsin” fixes sick,
sour, gassy stomachs in
five minutes.
Time It! In five minutes all stomach
distress will go. No indigestion, heart
burn, sourness or belching of gas, acid,
or eructations of undigested food, no
dizziness, bloating, or foul breath.
Pape's Diapepsin is noted for its
speed in regulating upset stomachs.
It is the surest, quickest and most cer
tain indigestion remedy in the whole
world, and besides it is harmless.
Please for your sake, get a large
fifty-cent case of Pape’s Diapepsin
from any store and put your stomach
right. Don’t keep on being miserable
—life is too short —you are not here
long, so make your stay agreeable.
Eat what you like and digest it; en
joy it, without dread of rebellion in
the stomach.
Pape's Diapepsin belongs in your
home anyway. Should one of the fam
ily eat something which don't agree
with them, or in case of an attack of
Indigestion, dyspepsia, gastritis or
stomach derangement at daytime or
during the night, it is handy to give
the quickest relief known. Adv.
Keep one eye on your enemies and
two on your friends.
flooding and Cramping!
STELLA VITAE
STOPPED IT!
This has a world of meaning
to every woman who suffers
as Mrs. J. S. Blair, of Enter
prise, Okla., suffered and there
are many thousands such.
Mrs. Blair telle the story of her suf
fering and cure much better than we
can tell it. We quote her own words:
“I had been floodinn. crampl nit and
vomiting tot five mouth, and taking
medicine from a* good a doctor as the
country affords, but he did me no good.
I cot tired of doctor's medicine and sent
to the drug store for a woman's medi
cine and the druggist sent me STELLA
VITAE.
"One bottle stopped sverything and
I felt like a different woman. I have
used six bottles already and will
continue to use and praise STELLA
VITAE whenever I need a woman’s
medicine. ”
' , What STELLA VITAE did for Mrs.
* Blair it will do for you. We guar
antee the first bottle to benefit you.
Ifour money back if it don’t. You
rannot afford to not try it —when
you have ail to gain and not a penny
to lose.
Go to your dealer today and begin
trying STELLA VITAE, trying to
become well. We lose the price if
you are not benefited. In many
years of guaranteeing STELLA
VITAE less than one bottle out of
every thousand has failed to benefit.
Vourohancoo of being benefited
are a thousand to one t
Thacher Medicine Co.
CHATTANOOGA, TENN.
TMuttemore’s
11 sAbe Polishes
Finest Quality Lsrgest Variety
l^^r’;^
GILT EDGE the only ladies’ shoe dressing that pass-
Ivdy contains OIL. Blacks and polishes ladies' and
■Mdrrn'a boots and shoe*, shines without rub
bing. 25c. “French Gloss," lOc,
STAR combination for cleaning and polishing all kinds
russet or tan shoes. lOc. "Dandy" sire 25c.
“QUICK WHITE" (in liquid form with sponge)
euickly cleans and whitens dirty canvas shoes,
lOr and 25c.
BABY ELITE comUnation for gentlemen who taka
wide in having their shoes look AI. Restates color and
iastfeto all black shoe*. Polish with a brush or doth. lOc.
u EHte” size 25c.
II your dealer does not keep the kind you want, send
••the price in stamps for a full site package, charges paid.
WHITTEMORE BROS. & CO.
■klk Albany St. Cambridge. Mam.
The Oldest and largest Manufacturers of
Shoe Polishes in the Warid
BEGIN NOW
If you have not decided upon what
Spring Medicine
to take, try
By arousing the liver
They cleanse the system of accumulated
Impurities and
PURIFY THE BLOOD
How to Help
Inquirers—
The Fearful
Br REV. HOWARD W. POPE
Superintendent of Men
Moody Bible Ineituie. Chica«°
TEXT—"Look unto me and be ye
saved.’’—lsaiah 45:22.
A very common
excuse which is
met in Christian
work is this:
‘I am afraid i
cannot hold out."
In dealing with
any case it is well
to dejh o n strate
first the cause,
and then look for
a cure. There
may be many
causes, but what
ever they are,
there Is always a
sure cure in the
Word of God. In
; this case it Is evident that the cause
I of the man’s fear Is this: He is think
j ing of saving himself, instead of com
| mltting the case to Christ. He means
to try a little harder than ever before
to do good, but he has failed bo often
in the past that he has little con
l fidence that he will succeed any bet-
I ter in the future. And the man is
right. He certainly will fail If he re
lies upon his own efforts to lead a
Christian life.
The remedy In this case Is to take
the man’s attention away from him
self, and fix it upon the Lord Jesus,
who alone can save him. Say to him,
"My dear friend, the question is not
I whether you can hold out, but whether
। or not God Is able to save you. Let us
■ see what he says about it." Opening
| your Bible ask him to read aloud He
l brews 7:25. "Wherefore he is able
; also to save them to the uttermost
' that come unto God by him. seeing he
। ever llveth to make intercession for
them." After he has read it, say to
him, “If God is able to save to the
•uttermost, there Is certainly some
i hope for you. With an 'uttermost'
I salvation such as Christ offers, there
■ are no hopeless cases, do you see?”
“Yes, It does look a little more bope
j ful, I must confess, but I am afraid I
j should fail, if I started In the Chris
tian life My bump of persistence is
not very prominent, and I am easily
discouraged."
“That may be true, but do you know
this ‘uttermost’ Savior has made pro
vision also to keep you from fallihg?
Read what he says in Jude 24." "Now
unto him that is able to keep you from
falling, and to present you faultless
before tbs presence of his glory with
exceeding joy.”
"Isn't that splendid? 'Able to keep
you from falling, and to present you
faultless.’ Blameless would mean a
great deal, but without fault means
much more. And that Is the condition
in which Christ promises that you
shall be when he presents you before
the Father. <And the joy referred
to In that verse is not the joy of the
; sinner, though that will be unspeak
able, but the joy of the Savior as he
| looks with actual pride upon his finish
ed work. It doesn’t seem possible,
does It, that you can be saved so com
pletely, and made so perfect and beau
ttful, that the Lord Jesus will put you
on exhibition as a sample of his handi
work, with actual pride and joy? And
yet that is precisely what he says he
can do, and he certainly ought to
know.) Now does not your case seem
hopeful, looking at It from God’s stand
point?"
"Yes, I must admit that it does, but
i you see my case is peculiar. I had a
I grandfather who was a drunkard, and
: I have inherited from him an apoetite
TRUEST JOY IN TEACHING
Is Its Practice In Those Hours of
Leisure Which One Has Right
fully Earned.
Let us be practical. It is excellent
| to dream, to preach, to pray, to write,
।to lecture. But these are pastimes.
' self-indulgences.
The real business of life is: Feed
I my sheep.
> Let him who divines in himself an
' inspired teacher toil in the common
marts throughout the day, as other
men do toil, earning, thereby, where
withal to discharge his debts and sup
ply the upkeep of those dependent
on him. and let him add a dependent
for every ounce and grain of spirit
strength he gains, and let him hide
the facts of their dependency from
all the world, and mostly from him
self. Then let him who knows that
he is called to teach in God’s name
teach, with the mown and stars for
lamp and candles, in the evening
when men are merry and at rest; for
‘ he has.. earned these hours for his
i pleasure and of all riotous, luxurious.
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE. ALAMO. GEORGIA.
for liquor. Occasionally an awful crav
ing for strong drink comes upon me
with irresistible power, and down I go
before it. That is the real cause of
my apprehension. If it were not for
that I think I could be saved, but you
see my case Is peculiar."
"Yes, I see your case Is peculiar, but
do you know we have a peculiar
Savior? In the first place, he was ac
quainted with that grandfather of
yours, and he knows all about that ap
petite. In the second place, he has
made ample provision for it in the
Book. Indeed, he has provided a spe
cial promise for just such cases. Read
If you will 1 Corinthians 10:13, 'God
is faithful, who will not suffer you to
be tempted above that ye are able;
but will with the temptation also
make away to escape, that ye may be
able to bear IL’
"Now, let us sum it all up. Jesus
says that if you will commit the keep
ing of your soul to him, he is able to
save you to the uttermost, and able
to keep you from falling. Further
more, knowing just how weak you are,
be guarantees that no temptation /hall
be allowed to come nigh you which
you are not able to bear, and that
when temptation does comes, as come
it must to all. he will provide some
door of escape. But this Is not all.
He promises that he will present you
before God so faultless and perfect
that he himself will be proud of you.
Now what will you do? Will you keep
on trying to save yourself, and fail as
you always have, or will you commit
your soul to this ‘uttermost’ Savior,
who Is able to save, and keep, and pro
tect you from every foe?”
If these verses do not lead a per
son to a decision I have sometimes
tried this method: “You are lost now,
anyway, are you not?” “Yes. I am
lost now.” "Well, if you should try
the Christian life and fail, you could
not be any worse off than you are now,
could you?” "No.” “But if you should
succeed you would be a great deal bet
ter off, would you not?” "Certainly.”
“Then It looks to me as If you had
everything to win and nothing to lose
by starting, is that not so?” “Yes,
but I never thought of that before."
“Will you then kneel right down here
and commit the keeping of your soul
to Christ?” “I will.”
I have seldom found a person who
could not be convinced by such simple
reasoning, if they honestly desired to
be a Christian
Consider Rights of Others.
You have no right for the sake of
pleasure to trench upon the life and
happiness of your horse, your dog.
your cat. You have no right to trench
upon the happiness of the birds in the
trees, or the wild beasts In the for
est; and I think somewhat less of that
man than I otherwise should, who is
capable of enjoying what is called
“sportsmanship” at the expense of the
life and pleasure of others, and with
no higher object in it than simply his
personal enjoyment. 1 believe Cow
per gave utterances to a grand truth,
which will some time be recognized
as a universal principle of morality,
when he said:
"I would not enter on my list of
friends
(Though graced with polished man
ners and fine sense.
Yet wanting sensibility) the man
Who needlessly sets his foot upon a
worm.” — M. J. Savage.
Joy an Unbought Prize.
Joy Is a prize unbought, and is
freest, purest in its flow when it comes
unsought. No getting into heaven as
a place will compass it. You must
carry it with you, else it is not there.
You must have It in you, as the music
of a well-ordered soul, the fire of a
holy purpose, the welling up out of the
central depths of eternal spring that
hide their waters there.—H. Bushnell
There is no greater grief than in
misery to turn our thoughts back to
happier times. —Dante.
How often do we misjudge others,
mistaking their calm for Insensibility.
voluptuous glee this is most joy to
succor with ample bread and foun
tatning wine of the- spirit starved,
thirsting, empty souls. —Florence Fol
som, in Nautilus.
Influence of the Rural Church.
The church in the country ought to
be the social as well as the spiritual
center of the neighborhood, writes
Archibald Johnson in the Progressive
Fanner. The religious sentiment is,
after all, the dominant sentiment of
human nature. Religion is embedded
more deeply in our inner lives than
anything else, and the country church
has by all odds the advantage over
the church of the city because the
field is clear and the world is a weak
competitor with the church. The
myriad social organizations in urban
life restrict and limit the influence
of the church, but in the wide open
country the church ought to be the
mainspring of the social order.
Change is the only condition under
which a healthy life can be lived.
It is the only condition under which
a man can attain to the full flower
of himself. —Bart. Kennedy.
French Market Coffee
is Southern Through
and Through!
Brought in ships from the coffee
countries through warm summer
seas to the southern port of New
Orleans, no cold climates affect, in
juriously, the delicate coffee beans.
Roasted and blended by Southern
ers, it is best adapted for use in the
Southern climate—-no Northern roast
coffee can compete with it.
Sold to Southern merchants for
Southern trade —blended, roasted,
packed and shipped in the South—
Southern through and through. No
wonder it outsells all other brands
in the South.
Endorsed by the best judges in
New Orleans a hundred years ago,
and by coffee drinkers daily through
out the South. No wonder it has
Keeping Her at Home.
Wife—Don’t you think you might ,
manage to keep house alone for a j
week, while 1 go on a visit?
Husband —I guess so; yes, of course. ;
"But won’t you be lonely and mis
erable ?”
"Not a bit.”
"Huh! Then I won't go.”—New York
Weekly.
SAGE TEA AND SULPHUR
DARKENS YOUR GRAY HAIR
Look Years Younger! Try Grandma’s
Recipe cf Sage and Sulphur
and Nobody Will Know.
Almost everyone knows that Sage
Tea and Sulphur, properly compound
ed, brings back the natural color and
lustre to the hair when faded, streaked
or gray; also ends dandruff, itching
scalp and stops falling hair. Years
ago the only way to get thie mixture
was to make it at home, which is
mussy and troublesome.
Nowadays we simply ask at any
drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sul
phur Hair Remedy.’’ You will get a,
large bottle for about 50 cents. Every- :
body uses this old, famous recipe, be-:
cause no one can possibly tell that
you darkened your hair, ae it does it:
so naturally and evenly. You dampen :
a sponge or soft brush with it and ,
draw this through your hair, taking
one small strand at a time; by morn
ing the gray hair disappears, and
after another application or two, your
hair becomes beautifully dark, thick
and glossy and you look years younger. •
—Adv.
Fitting Advice.
“My son has found an opening.”
"Well, let him take care that he i
does not get himself into a hole.”
FOR MALARIA. CHILLS. FEVER
Colds and La Grippe take Elixir Babek,
a preventative and remedy
“I have used ’Elixir Babek’ for four
years for Malaria, and found it all that
Is claimed for It. Without it I would
ba obliged to change my residence, as
I can not take quinine in any of its
forms."—J. Middleton. Four-Mile Run.
Va. Elixir Babek 50 cents, all drug- [
gists or by Parcels Post prepaid from ■
Klocxewskl & Co.. Washington. D. C.
The fable of the hare and the tor
toise indicates that perseverance cops :
the gate receipts.
Let Dean’s Mentholated Cough Drops re- j
lieve you of that cough and stop the
throat irritation—sc at Drug Stores.
There is nothing hypocritical about
the wagging of a dog’s tail.
Putnam Fadeless Dyes make no
muss. Adv.
An excess of "bracers" will unbrace
anybody.
Kay be critical and'cause untold
after-life. The modern young
‘bundleof nerves”’—“high strung”
—emotional — frequently blue and
life. Such girls should be helped
ling'stage in life—-by a woman’s
e—that has proven successful for
ite Prescription
t woman, A medicine prepared by
encein treating woman’s diseases—
i most delicate feminine constitution*
r-coated tablet form at the
for a trial box, to Buffalo.
-— ' —— cvsiHuvnuajiy w
Dr. Pierce and his staff of physicians and Specialists
at the invalids’Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, ILx a
N. Y.. and may be sure that her case will receive care- JSr
lul, conscientious, confidential consideration, and that f T 9 > wA
experienced medical advice will be art ven to her free, yjr fl FT? /T 0/100 Q
DR./PIERCE’S PLEASANT PELLETS ngulatt
and inatgorati afomacA, livr and bowth
—atad, granu^ easy to taAa ae candy.
been called the National Drink of
the South.
There is a real treat tn store for
those who have not yet tried French
Market Coffee. Buy a can today.
Try it. Be convinced of the ex
cellence and quality of this brand.
Turn back over a hundred years
to the days of Andrew Jackson-
French Market Coffee was even thea
the most famous drink in America.
Its history entwines itself with the
history of the old aristocracy of the
South. The Belles and Beaux of
New Orleans sipped it at midnight
for generations. To them no Mardi
Gras Ball was complete without a
cty> of French Market Coffye, Think
what it means to you to be able to
serve this identical blend on your
table daily —for your own grocer
now sells it—in air-tight cans.
FRENCH MARKET MILLS
(New Orleans Coffee Co., Ltd., Proprietors)
NEW ORLEANS
DIRECTIONS— We recommend that you
make French Market Coffee in your usual
way. If you find it too strong, reduce quan
tity until strength and flavor are satisfac
tory. French Market makes more cups
of good coffee to the pound than other
brands, thereby reducing your coffee bill.
Rheumatic
Twinges
yield immediately to Sloan’s Lin
iment. It relieves aching and
swollen parts instantly. Reduces
inflammation and quiet, that agon
izing pain. Don’t rub—it pene
tratea.
SLOANS
LINIMENT
Kills Pain
gives quick relief from chest and
throat affections. Have vou tried
Sloan's? Here’s what others say:
Relief from Rheumatism
*'My mother has uted one 60c. bottle
of Sloan’s Liniment, and although she
is or«r 83 years of age. she has ot>
tained great relief from her rtieuma
tism."--Mr«. H. FL Linde leaf, Gilroy, CaL
Good for Cold and Croup
“A little boy next door had cronp. I
gave the mother Sloan’s Liniment to
try. She gave him three drops on sugar
before going to bed, and he got up with
out the croup in the morning"—Mr. IF.
H. Strange, 3721 Elmwood Ave., Chicago, HL
Neuralgia Gone
'Sloan’s Liniment is the best medi
cine in the world It has relieved me
of neuralgia. Thr^e pains have all gone
and I can truly say your Liniment did
stop them." — hire. C. M. Docker of Johan
not burg. Mich.
At all Dealers. Priee 25c., 50c. A SI.OO
Sloan’s Instructive Booklet on
Horses sent free.
DR. fARL S. SIOAN, Inc, BOSTON, KASS.
EcZ^^
cures ECZEMA
GUARANTEED
OIL 50c - Bl SOAP 25c
Send ten cent, for sample,.
Ec-Z E NE Co., ST.PAUL, MINN.
t MOTHER GRAY’S SWEET
POWDERS FOR CHILDREN
Relieve Feverishness, Constipa
tion .Colds and correct disorders of
the stomach and bowels. Used by
Mothers for 24 years. At all Drug
gists 25c. Sample mailed FREE.
nUDKMAMK. Address A. S. Olmstad, Le Roy, M- Y.
quick REUEF
UdlJjjlJLsLjLsK^ EYE TROUBLES