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2 SOUTHERN BANKERS ENTHUSED OVER IT President and Cashier of Lou isiana and Georgia Banks Are Strong in Their Personal Endorsements Among tne countless thousands of prominent people all over America who have taken Tan lac and praised it for the benefits they derived from it, none are mor- enthusiastic than the two well known southern tankers whose state ments foliowt E. X Henry, president of the Haw kinsville Bank and Trust company. Hawkinsville. Ge.. says*. “Last spring 1 was all wrong some way or other and ct.uldn't get right. I took a bottle of Tanlac and began to improve. Two more bottles put me In good shape and I felt perfectly well. A few weeks ago. I took the Grippe ind was getting down and out again. I bought another bottle of Tanlac and I am well again. I unhesi tatingly recommend Tanlac to anyone who is sick and womout." W. C. McElveen, cashier Bank o* Hornbeck. Hornbeck. Louisiana, says: "I have taken five »3> bottles of Tanlac and have gained fifteen pounds in three weeks. I think it is a g~eat medicine.” Tanlac is sold by one regularly estab lished agency in every town —«Advt.) W Special * TO B etnsaa. eboie* of Many ham)- f rhlAfclrw Es aema -craa. jaseTaif far IS I’/’’’ \ ■Moths s-'lid »aar ssd ■etafact.oa ’/ j- A or MOXKY BACK, abaolu-.a / F V, it’rW, ga nlw-oWt tWyteaC. / J. •M Mir to • eo staler, I 1 ’• 1 t BESTTf DI No Extra Charges 11; KVI No eharye for bw Extreme Peg Top or il.B Vl'tl Cass Boiloan*, nothin* extra for firry H,i| rl 1 Bait Loooa ae Pm-ser F.aea. ro rharge r ~ feoo -as ext. i ebarxeo •< ay kfco. f W 18 Casta Profits * rtljT- T* aS 4 V nMC*b«a. IJ VI Chle-e- Tailors Association Sond No Be* k-S® SIS 5. fraailiaß»„ CL-eaca Monoy | Why I Believe In Nuxated Iron A Strength-Buiider for the Nation BY E. SAVEB, X. D. Prabably no remedy hM ewer met with such •heoomenal success a* haa Nuxated iron. It ta eunaerratively estimated that- o’er tbrex million people annually are taking it in this country alooe. It ha* been highly endorsed and used by former Tailed Staten Senators and Jfomhera of Coaprevs; Physician* who have been <W*toeeted with well known boapitala have pre scribed and recommended it: Mcnseigiteur Naaninl. a prominent Catholic Clergyman. rec ommends it to all member* of the t'atbolic Churcb. Former Health Fora miaa ion er Wm K. Kerr, of Chicago. *ay* it might tn he need •tn every uoapital and prescribed by every pb valet an Sarah Bernhardt—-the Divine Sarah.** tbe world s m«l noted actreas. haa mdered a large quantity sent to the French aoldiora tn help give t!>em strength, power and endurance. Dr. A. J. Newman, late Police S-ngeon of the City of Chicago, and former House Sur geon Jefferxm Part Hospital. Chicago. Bays Nuxated Iron has proven through his own tests of it tn excel say praneratior be has ever need for creating red Mood. building up the nerve*, strengthen mg tha mnscles and ror teeting digestive dtoorders. Dr. It. H. Homstine f|»r ten years Pbyairtan tn the Department of Public Health and Char ities of . uiladelvMa says that tests made with N-ixated Tran on a number of stubborn caves Where other tonics liad failed absolutely con vlncei him of its remarkable and nnuaual pewer. If yon are not airont or well, you owe it to ycurself to make the fell* «lug test: N*e how long you can wort or bow far you can walk without becoming tired. Next take two five-grain tablets of Nnxated Iran three times per day after meals for two weeks. Thea teat yonr strength again and see bow much you have gained. NOTE —Nuxated Iran, which baa been uses! toy former Member* of the Fnite.l States Sen ate and Hoose of Represents fives, an*! Other praminent people with sori- surprising results. a»: whleii is praam>bed and recommended al«v» by pkyasciaM In aerh a greaf variety of caees. Io not a patent med'cine n«*r secret remedy, but nee which is well known to druggists and vhora iron emietitnenf are widely prescribed bv eminent physician* everywhere, t'nlike the • 4der Inorganic Iran product*. It is easily a* atm Ha t*d doe* n«t ‘rjnre the teeth, make them bteck. nor npaet the atomaeh: on the .xintrary ft 1* a m«w’ potent rcmelv tn nearly all form* of Indigestion as well as for hervaua. nm-*lown renditions. The manufacturer* have assch great confi*lsore in Nuxated Iron, tba* the* offer to ftrfeit |IM to any charitable institution If thev cannot take any man o» woman under «0 whe locks Iran and tncraas* the!* *trer.gth I<|O per cent **r over Ir. four weMra’ time, provided tteev have no seric-ua organi* t-oubl*. They a>s<> offer to refund your money if it does not a* least double your -tter.rth and endurance tn ter days’ tim» It la dispensed by all good drugriv't- (Advt. 1 Tobacco Habit Easily Overcome A New Yotker. of wMe expertenra. he, writ ten a book telling h*rw the tobacco vr snuff habit may be easily ami quickly t>«nisbe<l with 4eilgbtf.rl benefit The author. Edward J. Woods. &31 H. Station F.. Mew York City, will mall his book five oa r*u>ievt. Tbe health improves wonderfully after toba<- ee rravin« is ranqnervri. Calmness, tranquil Sleep. Clear eyes. »«.rinal appetite, rood dlges ttno. manly rigor, strong memory an*] a eenerat gain la effHency are among the many Imported. Get rid of that nerrnna, irritable fselina. no mor» n-e«1 of pt-*, ••igar. rigaratte. an iff or rhewing tobacco to parity morbid dr aft*. —(Advt.'t Ends The Misery Os Wearing Worthless Trusses Away dfitL Leg-Strip ff and Spring Trusses So far a. we know. -<;r HOy*- guaranteed rupture bvidrr i« ■) the oaiy thing of any kind »*•« ’ * for rapture that you ran get on 00 days trial the only thing good enough to stano such a long and thorough teat. It's tbe ftnwi Clutl.r —made on an absolutely new principle hat 1' patented features. Self-adjusting. I>oes away With the misery of nearing belts, leg-etrajo and springs. Guaranteed to bold at ail time*. Has eurea in case after <sse that seemed n.»se iMßo Write far Free Book of Advice -Oota-bounil. ]<M peg's. Explains tbe dangers of -x*rati<»:. Bbews tnst what’s wrong with elastic and spring tnisses. Exposes -he buariMga—ttbows how old-tasbione.l worthless trusses ire aohl under false and misleading names Tells all abodt tbe rare and attention we give yon. Endorse- Kents frt-m over .l.uott newple. 'n.lcdtng physi cians Write today. »o x «71—Clutha Co.. IM E. 23rd St. Bast WSft« < Advt.) Billy Sunday’s Sermon on ‘ Ihe Sins of Society” NOTED REVIVALIST PREACHED FORCEFUL SERMON ON SUNDAY Former Baseball Player, Now World's Most Famous Evan gelist, Delivers Great Ser mon Sunday Night The efttire gamut of human voices, from the Demon Hunt to promiscuous spooning in the front parlor, fell un der the hammer of Billy Sunday’s con demnation in his famous sermon. “The ; Sins of Society,” which he delivered to a tremendous audience at the Jackson street tabernacle Sunday night. The sermon—one of the most typical “Sunday sermons," it is said, that Billy has ever conceived —follows in full: In the sixth chapter of Luke, in the forty-sixth verse—“ Why call ye me V<-rd, Lqrd, and do not the things 1 say T'. Why call yourself a Democrat and then vote the Republican ticket? Why call yourself honest and then lie? Why say that you are pure and then live in sin? "Why call ye me Lord. Lord. and Jdo not the tnings which 1 say?” What did Jesus mean? Do you be lieve he meant the things that are re corded that he said, or do you believe that he said one thing and meant an other? Do you believe that he uttered things that were impractical and im possible for us to carry into effect and then told us he’d damn us if we did Inot live up to it? I don't believe you (are fool enough to charge him with that, and if you are that doesn’t jus tify the fact that you are a fool if you do it. ' Did he put the standard too high for I human attainment and then tell us he’d i damn us if we didn't reach it? No! I read where a bishop of the English I church said that the teachings of Jesus Christ should be regarded as ideal and . were never intended to J>e carried into ' effect or lived. I knew a T. M. C. A. that had a de | bating society, and it jus: decided that I under social, political, economical con ditions. that the teachings of Jesus should be regarded as itteal and were not mtended to be lived, yet they both had the audacity to call themselves Christians. > Another man said Christianity had failed. He lied! Christianity can no more fail than God can fail or that the suu can fail. The church can fail but there is no (allure in Christianity for that is of God. One man said it’s ne'er been tried. It hasn’t been with a good I many. LOVE XS GREATEST FOBCi: IN THE WORLD. I will admit that Christianity has fallen way beneath lo'e as the original standard. Love is the dominant prin ciple of the world; love can never be defeated. Love may be checked; love may be prevented for the time being, iin accomplishing its aim. but love will driil a tunnel through all the mountains lof opposition and reach the goal for a touchdown. Love —it's the mightiest thing in the world! And the world is istarving today for the manifestation of the love of God in the hearts of men and women. I always had a good deal of sym pathy with a hobo that went up. to the back door of a professing Christian woman's home and panhandled her for a cup of coffee and mooched her for a flapjack and after much persuasion I she came across with a tract on the I bread of life, and he began to tear the tract up and curse and mutter. I have I no sympathy with his oaths, but I have a good deal of sympathy with the feel ings that possessed him. What that fellow needed then was a piece of meat with two pieces of bread under It. The shortest route into that fellow's heart was by the way of his stomach. It was the quickest way to land him there. I believe that there is no prejudice existing between man and men. between masses and classes, between capital and labor, that can't be driven from the | world by the principles of Jesus Christ 1 manifested in the lives of man and men, ! masses and classes, capital and labor. I read of a Scotchman who learned I just enough of the French language tc | say “God loves you.” and he walked the streets of gay. sinful Paris with the rears trickling down his cheeks and his arms outstretched, crying the words in French. It struck conviction to the 1 hearts of th* people until out of that •he great Al! Mission work in Paris was s arted THE PBOfESSOB AWP HIB INFIDEL BROTHER I* I heard of a professor who was a Christian. He had a brother-in-law, a IN FIVE MINUTES ND SICK STOMACH INDIGESTION. GAS “Pape’s Diapepsin” is the quickest and surest Stom ach relief You don't Know what upset your stom ach—which portion of the food did the damage—do you7 Well, don't bother. If your stomach is in a revolt; if sick, gamy and upset, and what you just ate has fermented and turned sour; bead disxy and aches: belch gases and acids and eructate undigested food; breath foul, tongue coated—just take a little Pape’s Diapepsin to neutralixe acidity and in five minutes you wonder what became of the indigestion and distress. .Miliiraxs of men and women today know that It is needless to have dys pepsia. A little Diapepsin occasionally keeps the stomach sweetened, and they eat their favorite foods without fear. If your stomach doesn't take care of your li!»eral limit without rebellion; if your food is a damage instead of a help, remember the quickest, surest, most harmless antacid Is Pape’s Diapepsin which costs only fifty cents for a large case at drug stores. It's truly wonder ful—it stops food souring and sets things straight, so gently and easily that it is j really astonishing. Your stomach will I digest your meats if you keep acids neu- I trail zed.—(Advt.) THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1917. doctor, who was an infidel and this doc tor sail! the reason that all Christians didn't sin was because they weren't sufficiently tempted. Somebody chal lenged the statement, and said: "What’s the matter with your brother in-law. the professor?” He said. “He's like the rest of the bunch, and I’ll bet you ten bucks that i I can make him mad.” ' The wager was made. These two men had a business transaction and the doctor purposely falsified the account ,in order to test the religion of his brother-in-law. the professor, and in re sponse to some question that the doc tor knew was a lie < for he was trying to string him and put one, over on him. and the professor knew he was) the pro fessor jumped to his feet and said: “You’re a liar. Get out of my house.” And he drove him out. And his brother-in-law. the doctor, took up his hat and went, somewhat crestfallen to think that so great and good a man had sidestepped, but highly elated to think he had rightly interpreted human na ture and tyas a ten spot ahead. So they went to their homes and re tired. Soon told doc was reeling her off like a twin six, and the old professor was rolling and tossing with a trou , bled insomnia, and he arose at 2 o’clock In the morning and dressed, walked four miles across the city and us the sun came tripping o’er the banks of myrrh, he rapped on the door. His brother-in-iaw opened it ami he said: “Yeeterday I called you a liar. 1 am sorry 1 did it. 1 have come to ;uK you to forgive me.” And he drew him in and .said, “if that’s religion, that’s the brand I’m looking for, and I think I'd better take a good old hypodermic injection of the good old-time. worth-lying-for re ligion.” What did Jesus Christ say? 1 haven’t time if you had the disposition to hear all that he had to say. but listen! Jesus Christ said. “Forgive your deb tors.” And the world says. “Sue them “for their dough." Jesus Christ said, “It’s more blessed to give than to receive.” The world says. “Get all you can and then can all you get.” Jesus said, “Give to him that ask eth of thee, him that would borrow of thee turn not away.” ’ The world says, “Go to the Associ ated Charities. 1 subscribe.” Jesus Christ said, "You can’t servo God and mammon.” The world says, “God on Sunday, mammon through the rest of the week.” Jesus Christ said. "Love your neigh bor as yourself.” « The world says. "First come I, then I, then 1 come again.” Jesus Christ said. "Him that smlt eth thee on one cheek, turn to him. the other also." The world says, “Call a cop.” Jesus Christ said. “Let hint that is among you without sin cast the first I stone.” The world says. “Choose judges that know the law and will give a decision in your favor if you put them there.” Jesus Christ said. "Whosoever would be great among you, let him be serv ant of all.” The world says. “If you want to tbe sonic pumpkins, you must keep a valet.” Jesus Christ said. "What God hath joined together let not man put asunder.” The world says, "I will divorce you and marry another woman ami that will not be sin.” You lie! BELIEVES MO DIVOBCED PEOPLE CAN REMARRY The only scriptural grounds for di vorce is adultery. When it comes to the divorce question I am a Roman Catholic from the top of my head to the -bottom of my feet. 1 believe the Bible teaches that you nave a right, my friend, to get a divorce on scriptural grounds, but you never have a right to re-marry as long as the one from whom you are divorced is alive. I am an ordained minister of the gos pel. so help me God I shall never pros titute .my manhood and high and hon orable calling to unite in marriage any man or woman that has ever been di vorced for any reason, as long as the man or woman from whom he or she is divorced is alive! One day in Chicago a fellow came up and rang the doorbell, and oh. he. was dressed fit to kill! Had on a silk lid. die had a diamond in his shirt front as big as a hickory nut. patent leather shoes, a Prince Albert coat, silk lined, hung below his knees. And there was a girl about eighteen years of age—a ; pea h of a girl—one of these kind if 1 girls you’d involuntarily turn and look at twice if you saw her on the street standing by his side. So he tipped his lid and said. “Does the Reverend Mr. Sunday live here?” I said. “J am he.” He said. “Will you officiate at our wedding?” I said. “Have you the marriage li cense ?” He said. “Sure. Mike!" I said. “I’m from Missouri. come across." Ho be pulled it out and 1 looked at it. and I said. “That looks good to me.” I said. "Have either of you been mar ried before?" He said, "Not the young lady; I have.” I said. “Your wife living or dead?” He said. “She’s alive.” I said, “Beat it—twenty-three for you. you lobster.” He said. “What do you mean?" I said. "I mean according to my in terpretation of the bible 1 haven’t any right to hook you up to that girl." He said, "I have a license here from the county clerk” I said. "Some thing ■ that’ are legally | right morally roite.i. That's one of thei .” I ! .sa'd. "Perhaps he j'eilow that en . girders tb« brick-“hee-e box around the corner will tie you up for a ten-spot, btu v not your im-lc Fuller.” A man comes to me and sa> s. ’ I have been married and divorced —living un happily— what will I do?’ J said. “I would go home and get down on niy knees and say.'‘Look here, Lord, I’ve sinned against you. trans gressed your laws, forgive me.’ Get up and trot square and go decent. That's tjie best advice I can give you under the circumstances.” Now listen! “Why call ye me Lord, Lord, and do not the things I say " GIVING DOESN'T MEAN YOU 808 YOURSELF In the works of benesolenee? How much do you give away? I don’t want to do anything to despise scientific charity, I don't care to do anything of that sort, but listen! That doesn't mean that if a fellow meets you on the street ami asks you for your clothes that you’ve got to yank them off and give them to him and go home clothed in ’ sunshine. That doesn't mean if some lazy wop that never worked in his life asks you i to get out of your automobile that you climb out and let him get in and drive away and you hot-hoof it. i That doesn't mean If you work and i save your money and build your home that you've got to move and give it to • somebody—no! Listen! # A Jew wouldn't speak to a Samarl- • tan, a Samaritan wouldn't ,«peak to a i Jew; a Jew wouldn’t loan to a Samari tan. neither would a, Samaritan loan to ■ a Jew. Not at, all! Jesus Christ went into Samaria. There he sat on the well-curb —hungry, dust-covered. Out came that woman and he asked her for » a drink of water. She said: t “Not on your life, you're a Jew. I'm a Samaritan. We have no dealings one i with the other." • “Now." Jesus waid, "look here, if you t become my disciple you've got to loan to i a Samaritan if he asks you the same ■ as a Jew. Give to him that hsketli of - you and him that would borrow of. you : i turn not away." , I If a Samaritan came to borrow from • I a Jew. he gave him the cold-shoulder, I and vice-versa, .but Jesus said: ’ I “Here, if you become my disciple t! you’ve got to give to him that asks t i you whether he’s a. Jew or a Gentile." < ' It doesn’t make any difference in the 1 ! world. That's what Jesus was trying ,to show—-the spirit thej .’•hould man- • i ifest and live. i Now I don't want, to say anything tp ; despise scientific charity—it's better • I than none—but what do you do for a ■ 1 fellow when you take down the color 'of his hair and of his eyes and the i number of his teeth, and you give him i the price of a sandwich and you keep the breath of life in him but you don’t • save him; you stud him out to shovel snow off your sidewalk when you own a corner lot, apd you give, him a cup of coffee and a sinker. , , . I’ll tell you, yo.u don’t try to save him. Love will save him. I»ve j r s, tlje djvine philosophy. Some* people are. so, I darned stingy that they never glve.aw.,y ' ten cents that they don’t sing “God be with you till we meet again." I have met people so contemptibly stingy that they talked through their nose to keep from wearing their false, teeth out. They’d steal a fly from a blind spider. WHAT BILLY THINKS ABOUT DEMON BUM Hear me! . Last year we spent In this country two billion five hundred and ninety million dollars for drink; we wasted grain enough in America last year to make the whisky that sent six hundred thousand men staggering and reeling and screaming into drunkard’s graves and drunkard’s hell; if made iyto : loaves of bread it would pave a street two hundred thousand miles long, one hundred feet wide, with every loaf weighing two pounds. We wasted grain ; enough in the breweries and distilleries. |my friends, to have fed this country jas much grain as we used for bread. We wasted grain enough, my friends, to make whisky, to have fed. England or France in the war. This government is formed by states, to insure the domestic tranquility and to provide for the public safety, and the security of blessings to Individuals, and today the saloon stands with Its foot upon the neck of the American people and says to the government: “Wait, don't disturb me. The wage» earner has two billion five hundred and ninety million dollars in his (locket. You wait until I get the swag and I’ll divide it with ypu. I give you ten per cent.” And this government of ours, my friends, receives about one-third of its revenue from,.a system that barters and sells away, the wellbeing and the hap piness of the American people—the grog shops! In my opinion it's against tlie con- j stitution of the United States, and they have no right to let it exist and damn and curse this old land in which we live. But the liquor traffic is law-de fying. rebellious, anarchistic, and in its schoolhouses of infamy, it is educating the people in disrespect of law. and it gathers around it as its allies in crime the gambling dens, the brothels and wherever men meet to plan crime. Here the yegg comes to divide his swag after he has cracked the safe, and the liquor traffic is a political and it is a com mercial machine—colossal, sagacious, rich, powerful beyond any personal en treaty or rebuke, or ostracism, and it has dropped into the federal and in mu nicipal and the church plate hundreds of millions of dollars, but the liquor traffic, thank God! is folding its tents and preparing to creep into hell out of which it wriggled itw carcass. By the grace of God I’m going to live long enough to preach its funeral sermon! Oh. hold on. old buil-neck! Wait a miute! Some day you’ll meet your cus tomers when there will be no counter between you. when your damnable, dia bolic, dirty work on earth is done, and you enter the just rpward of your busi j ness which is eternal damnation, and I then all tbe souls of men and the wom en and the children that you have damned will crowd around you and they will show you their wounds and say, ' “You made them." | And they will point to their un quenchable thirst and say. “You! Damp you! You kindled it.” They will show their clanking chains and say, "Damn you! You forged them, sir.” And then with their fiendish groans smiting your ears, iind with the hands out of which you picked the nickels and the dimes and the hard-earned money, they will push you to the verge ot the yawning .abyss of hell, while rolling up from .the inferno of eternal I damnation their shrieks and screams will break among tbe crags and the peaks of death and thay will cry, “Woe unto him that putteth the bottle to his •neighbor’s lip.” WHAT BILLY THINKS ABOUT CIGABETTES. Last vear we spent one billion two hundred million 'dollars for tobacco. I am not a crank about tobacco. A man said to me: “B’ll. ean’t a man be a Christian and I us« tobacco? ’’ I said. “Yes. but bed- be a good deal .better one if .he iHdnt. 1 think, and you !i.i'e more respect for . a man that ; doesn’t.’’ 1 . ; • ... i Yvu have* metre r<sp«ct for tpy I preaching oecause you know !„• don't 'than you would have if I’d come- here with a brtarwooii, or conie in> my friends, with the northwest corner ot a plug of LorliJard's Climax in my cheek and then spit it out and take a dr nk of water. You’d say. “If the Hply Spirit’s got to roost |around in a man like that. I don’t care I to hear him." I’m not a crank about it—no! no! But hero. Cigarettes Hint are con sumed in this couiitvy. if laid end to end. they’d circle this globe one hun dred and twenty-two times around; ! they'd reach three million sixty thou ; • sand four hundred and ten miles; there I ; are about sixty billion consumed an inually. Thirty million men and boys I smoke. Allowing it takes ten minutes ito consume a cigarette, it an army of two million six hundred ! thousand men, smoking ten hours a CASTORIA For Infants and Children 9n Use For Over 30 Yeas*s Always bears Signature of I day to consume the annual output of the United States. I have heard keen, shrewd men say i that they would about as soon tYieir boy 1 would drink as smoke cigarettes. Oh, i if you keep on smoking cigarettes the ) way you are doing you’ll wake up some ' morning when your brain has run out i I on the p'illow. • I It’s almost certain to lead to drink, • they say. It grinds a man’s will into i powder, racks his nerves, ruins his i i heart, deadens his sensibilities. You • I see him going up the street with a hacking cough, a pale face, yellow-fin gered. anaemic. It’s getting to be one of the greatest obstacles and barriers ' to getting a job nowadays. Every young man applying in the great institutions in Chicago—Marshall Fields. Cudahy, , Swifts. Nelsoq and Morris, the Inter i! national Harvester Co., and other in stitutions —is asked three questions: Do you drink? Do you smoke cigar j ettes? Do you gamble? Therefore, a fellow’s got to be passa t bly decent to hold a good job down, i There was a time when the traveling man that could put away the most booze and had the biggest stock of dirty, smutty stories could get the big gest orders. Today that fellow is wear ing out shoe leather looking for a job. I haven’t seen a traveling man drunk ! in ten years. I NO POODLE PETS i FOB B. SUNDAY Ixast year we spent eight hundred I million dollars for amusements. Well, I w<» all enjoy a good laugh. Y’oy can’t 'go around with a gloomy face all the : time. (I am just showing you the wealth ' we’ve got. niy friends.) Last year we spent two hundred mil ■ lion dollars for dogs. Well, I like a ! good dog. My favorite is an Airedale. ! But I don’t like to see a fool woman hugging and kissing a pug-nosed dog. A woman must love something but I don’t call a pug dog something. Perhaps that’s one reason why your husband isn’t more affectionate. Any man with good, rich, red blood in his veins don’t care to play second fiddle to a bow legged bulldog. Last year we spent eight hundred million dollars for jewelry. All right! I love to see nice jewelry if you can afford it. I love to see it. . Last year we spent six hundred mil lion dollars for autos. I wish every body could afford an auto. I think It ! is one of the greatest inventions for the comfort, the happiness of the Amer ican people. It makes a man forget. He spins out into the country in the i motor and forgets his cares. I wish we all could afford it. We spent three hundred million dol i lars last year for candy; thirty-six mil lion dollars for soda water; twenty-six million dollars for chewing-gum; we spent more money for gum than we give j for missions of all churches of all de ■ nominations. Why? "Why call ye me i Lord. Lord, and do not the things I ’ say?" ’ . So we have the money. Nineteen- I twentieths of the wealth of the United j States is in the hands of professing j Christians, Catholic and Protestant. I That ought to mean that Gqd has it, I that it's at the disposal of God’s cause and God’s kingdom. “Why call ye me Lord. Lord, and do pot the things I say—” in your per sonal conduct? I believe the law of ! Moses was the best law ever given. The i law of Moses said, “An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth; limb for limb; A Medical Mongoos We can manufacture poisons within our own bodies which are as deadly as a snake’s venom. The liver acts as a guard over our well-being, sifting out the cinders and ashes from the general circulation. ,A blockade in the intestines piles a heavy burden upon the liver. If the intestines are choked or clogged up, the circula tion of the blood becomes poisoned, the system becomes loaded with toxic waste, and we suffer from auto-intoxication or ptomaine poisoning. Something is wrong with the liver, and we suffer from head ache. yellow-coated tongue, bad taste in mouth, nausea, or gas, acid dyspepsia, languor, debility, skin or eyes yellow, the water is scant and high colored, con taining “brick-dust” deposits and bile pigments. At such times one should drink plenty of water between meals, and a pint of hot water before breakfast, and occasionally take a pleasant laxa tive.. Such a one is made of 'the May apple. leaves of aloe and root of jalap, first extracted and put in ready-to-use form by Dr. Pierce nearly fifty years ago. and sold by druggists as Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. Do not take mineral oils or so-called “Russian Oil.” for the experiments by R. F. McDonald have shown as lately reported in a government publication of the U . S. Public Health Service, that mineral oil may act as an irritant that produces gastro-intestinal disturbances and that it may cause tissue prolifera tion. simulating cancer. The next important organ to be reckon ed with is the kidneys. Kidney disease carries away a large percentage of our people. What can the ordinary person do to properly balance bodily health? The answer is not easy, but I advise every body to eat less meat, eat coarse, plain food, with plenty of vegetables, drink plenty of water between meals, and take an uric acid solvent, such as Anuric (double strength), before meals for awhile. Anuric can be obtained at al most any drug store.—(Advt.) RHEUMATISM CURED ■<.!! »enu any Rbeiunstlsm sufferer a Sinipb Herl- Kei’ipe .Absolutely Free that Coin -1 ltH<.-Iy ( :rnl me of « terrible attack of muscular ■n.d .r.fl .mmetory Rheumatism of lonx standing I after .> - r ytbiuz'else I tried had failed mo. I i ,v< given it to many sufferers who believed i tli'ir .c- i ipeless. yet they found relief from j - .tfering bv taking these simple herbs. It I also relic . . S. lat'- a promptly, as well as Neu- • rulgla. and i» a wonderful blood purifier, iou i 1 »re m--c welcome to this Herb Recipe If yot’ will for it nt once. I believe you will , • onsider it a god-send utter you have put it to ; the teat. There is nothing injurious contained : in It, and yon '-an see for yourself exactly | what you are taking. I will gladly send this i Ke-tpe—nbeolutely free—to any sufferer who I will send name and address. W. G. SUTTON, 26M Magnolia Ave. Los Angeles. California. ; Cured His RUPTURE I was badly ruptured while lifting a trunk several years ago. Doctors said my only hope of cure was an operation. Trusses did me no good. Finally I got hold of something that quickly and completely cured tue. Years have passed and the rupture'has never returned, al though I am d- lug hard work as a carpenter. There was n<> i.vri tion, no lost time, too trop hic. I bare : •” ! g to sell, but will give full information ;,'.oic hew you uiay find a com pi te cun v. thont operation, if you write t< m<. Engeno M. l uilen, Carpenter, 4«2-D Mar ■ ell :- Aven-,'’, Mur:»squa,i. N. -T. Better cut out tilth notice and show it to any others win are ruptured -you may save a life or at least stop the misery of rupture and the worry and danger of an operation.—(Advt.) [ the mtn that sheds blood, by man shall j his blood be shed.” r Jesus Christ in his teachings did not r abrogate the law of Moses. He said. • “Love your neighbor as yourself,” and ! if you did there’d be no “eye for eye, ! tooth for tooth, or limb for limb.” ' If everybody loved God and served Him. what a happy place this old world ’ would be. and if everybody could do the ’ will of God! Everybody, my’ friends, has some verse In the bible that’s hard 1 for you. Here’s the hardest verse in 1 1 the bible for me to live up to —honest M confession is good for the soul—" Resist . not evil. If a man smite thee on one ’ cheek, turn to hint the other also.” I j don’t know whether I have gotten down to that one cheek basis or not. If a fel ’ 1 low should swat me on one cheek. I ’ think I’d clear for action like a battle- shipv ■ SAYS HE HAS HOT AND FIE BY NATURE “Love your enemies. Bless them that I curse y’ou and do good to them that hate ; you and pray for them that despitefully ■ use and persecute you." If you think that’s easy try it out. ’ I'm trying my level best to live up to , • it. I’ve got a combative nature. I’ve ' ! got a temper like a sheet-iron stove —j a bunch of shavings and a bundle of I paper and a match will make it red > hot in two minutes. I want to think I'm making a little) headway. Ask Mrs. Sunday—she’s lived , i with me nearly thirty y’ears, and see if I’ve changed. If I Should happen to i get on a two hundred and fifty pound pressure and head out of the yard with out orders and run by every danger signal and blow out a cylinder head, ■ break a side-rod and throw a tire and ) go into the ditch. I’d feel worse about . it than you do, but if you think it’s i ■ ■ ■ »»»» ■■ » »«.»»» ■» w w » » »»» W■■ —, I \ I ' Tonight! Take Dodson's Liver Tone! ; Better Than Calomel For Liver I ■ Calomel sickens! If bilious, constipated and head- ! achy read my guarantee. ' Listen to me! Take no more sicken ing. salivating calomel when bilious or - constipated. Don’t lose a day’s work! Calomel is mercury or quicksilver , which causes necrosis of the bones. \ Calomel, when it comes into contact with sour bile, crashes into it, breaking , it up. This is when you feel that aw ful nausea and cramping. If you are sluggish and “all knocked out.” if your , liver is torpid and bowels constipated I or you have headache, dissiness, coated . tongue, if breath is bad or stomach sour just take a spoonful of harmless Dodson's Liver Tone. Here’s my guarantee—Go to any drug store and get a bottle of Dodson’s Liv • er Tone for a few cents. Take a spoon- ’• • "SHih Superfluous Hair • . Off Like Magic of water and add two tablespoonfula of glycerine. Ruh this erram well the skin i tremendous 1 in duet melt Away in a Faw MISS WRINKLES—Here is a wrinkle se Momuti." Say a Vala.ka Stiratt. which has meant a fortune to man,* . woman. It has the effect of making the akin the Movie Star. plump and youthful, remarkably vigorous and fresh. You will positively get the same re- BX VALESKA SVBATT suits as any one else has. Try It and you .. , . . .. .. will see. Mix this yourself at home tn a YOt can say good-bye to all the old . .. . drudgery and Irritation of skin due to few moments. Get two ounces of eptol at present method* of removing hair. A the drng store for fifty cents. Mix this with ten drops of a wonderful liquid make every two tablpgpoonfn | R cf glycerine In half a pint hair seem to melt away into nothingness and « leave the skin gloriously clean and soft, of water, tse the cream very freely every without a sign of having used anything at all day. and I'll warrant your friends will qulck for removing superfluous hair. Here is the lv see a difference ln your f ace . way: Just moisten the hairs with anlfo » • » solution, which yon can obtain from your druggist for one dollar. In a very few mo- VERY THIN—I assure you that you can mente the hairs will seem to just fall off, < loose from the skin. It Is so easy to do make your hair grow «ong, ailfry and beautl compared with the old methods, with their ful, stop it from falling—-make it queenly, objectionable odor and ’•fixing to do be- exce ptional in vigor and growth. Make up forehand. Try it. Tbe styles of today with , . . . , .. . the transparent gowns and low cut waists a mixture of one ounce of beta-quinol which absolutely demand the use of a superfluous your druggist will supply you for fifty cents, hair remover. This formula can be used and a foU int of rum or ha ts a ptnl witn perfect safety on the most dellrate akin. <e 'Tv™? yO ” WiU ,mpr ° re yW,r • PP ** r * nC * mV&? a h£4£wta7 mar^e Prf U U also many roia. much cheaper than any of the hair treat • • • merits you buy in prepared form. Use it and you’ll be a very much surprised woman. Mt'DDY —Muddinese and general poor com- • • • plexlon that nothing else in the world seem- ed to affect have disappeared completely in DISAPPOINTED —If you can t get the lust a very few days by a simple mixture sulfo solution for removing superfluous hairs which I have recommended to my friends and the zintone for the complexion send the with remarkable results.* Pour tbe contents price to ‘‘Secretary to Valeska Suratt, 470 of 3 one-ounce package of xintone (obtained Thompson Bldg., Chicago, and my secretary st any drug store for fifty cents) in a pint will send It to you by mail at once.—(Advt.) The Coming of the Sun Beam J The coming of the sunbeam —the new baby—should be a happy time for the expectant mother. She should help nature by the daily use of the safe, penetrating external prepara tion, “Mother's Friend.” By its reg ular use the breasts are kept in good condition, the tendency to morning sickness is avoided. The abdominal muscles relax without ECZEMA ; Also called Tetter, Salt Rheum, Pruritus, Milk Crust, Water | Poison, Weeping Skin, etc. __ For fifteen years I have been treating one disease ■ xSSh M alone, ECZEMA. I have handled over one million - - r jtaj® I cases, Ido not pretend to know it all, but I am con- &’ I vinced the disease is due to an excess of acid in the ‘4'JrT y *7 ijyrj Hl blood, and closely related to rheumatism and cancer. 'vjy'-'iff This acid must be removed. A Eczema is called by some people Itch, Tetter, Salt / J fjjf 5 I Rheum, Pruritus. Milk Crust, Weeping Skin, etc. I // I am fully convinced Eczema is a curable disease, and no CANMAnAV ' I when I say it can be cured. I mean just what I say— _ u "’ v | C-L'-R-E-D, and not merely patched up for a while to Eex <J7*is return worse than before. It makes no difference *' Egg what other doctors have told you, or what all you have tried, all lack is just a EE chance to prove to you that this vast experience has taught me a great deal that HI Nr?! would be of help to you. If you will write me today I will send you a free trial HI SSI of my mild, soothmg, guaranteed treatment that w ill do more to convince you £JK than lor anyone else could in a month’s preaching. It's all up to you. If you suffer any more with eczema and refuse to mere'y write to me for free trial. Just I gj blame yourrelf.. No matter where you live. I have treated your neighbors. Merely Eg fig® dropping me a postal today is likely to give you more real comfort in a week than UM you ever expected to enjoy again. Do it right now, your very life may be at stake. ■ H J. E. CANNADAY, M. D.,1428 Court Bk., Sedalia, Mo. I Re/erence.- Third National Bank. Sedalia, or aok tour banker to find out about mo. I SencMhh notice to some poor sufferer from eczema. It will be a kind act by yaw. easy, you get out and take and pray for some old weasel-eyed. hatchet-facw, t lantern-jawed neighborhood that’s assassi nating youi* character and peddling a lot of lies up and down the neighbor hood, get down on your knees, and say —"Now. Lord —” Suppose you did turn the right cheek. There isn't one fellow in a thousand that would swat you, but suppose he would. Suppose he knocked you down, suppose he loosened a molar. Jesus i Christ could have had twelve legions . of angels to come and fight for him but he didn't call. I was preaching in a town in lowa and I was stopping at a hotel, and the “Yes. mom.” ''Will you please come up to my phone rang, wanted me to come to the phone. I went and found a woman’s voice at the other, end. She said. “Mr. Sunday?” house? I want to see you.” “No, mom. I’ll not. I’ve been , preaching for twenty years and I’ve never yet crossed the threshold of any man's home alone.” I’m not afraid of any skirt on God’s dirt, or anybody else. No, sir! But I want to serve notice on veu and the i dirty, stinking, hiack-hearted degener i ate, whisky gang, if I don’t live what i I preach I’ll leave the platform and I have never allowed a woman to come and see me alone. A woman said. "Mr. Sunaay, I want ! to see you alone.” . “I don’t see anybody but Mrs. Sun day alone. If you’ve got anything you want to talk to me about, sis, you do it right out here.” I said. “I will come up.” she begged so hard, “but I will bring somebody with me.” I turned to a friend and said, "Let’s (Continued on Page f. Column 1.) ful tonight, if it doesn’t straighten you right up and make you feel fine and vigorous by morning. J want you to go back to the store and get your money. ’ Dodson’s Liver Tone is destroying the sale of calomel because it is real liver medicine; entirely vegetable, therefore it can not salivate or make you sick. I guarantee that one spoonful of Dod son’s Liver Tone will put your sluggish liver to work and clean your bowels of that sour bile and constipated watte which is clogging your system and mak ing you feel miserable. I guarantee that a bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone will keep your entire family feeling fine for months. Give it to your children. It is harmless; doesn’t gripe and they like its pleasant taste.—(Advt.) i strain when baby is born and the crisis is naturally one of less pain | and danger. To neglect the use of "Mother’s Friend” for a single night is a mis- ' take. Send or phone to the drug gist for a bottle today and write for valuable free book, "Motherhood and the Baby.” Address The Bradfield ! Regulator Co., Dept. K, 300 Lamar (Building, Atlanta, Ga. —(Advt.)