Watch Carefully -'the ChildDiet Start Them Qff Right With a Good Laxative and Then Watch Their Food. Mothers , are often unconsciously very careless about the diet of their children, forcing all to eat the same foods. The fact is that all foods do . not. agree alike with different persons. Hence, avoid what seems to constipate the child or to give it indigestion, and ; urge it to take more of what is quick ly digested. If the child shows a tendency to constipation it should immediately be given a mild laxative to help the bow els. By this is not meant a physic or purgative, for these should never be given to children, nor anything like salts, pills, etc. What the child re quires is simply a small, dose of the gentlest of medicines, such as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, which, in the opinion of thousands of watchful moth ers, is the ideal remedy for any child showing a tendency to constipation. So many things can happen to a con stipated child that care is necessary. Colds, piles, headaches, sleeplessness, and many other annoyances that chil dren should not have can usually be traced to constipation. Many of America's foremost families are never without Syrup Pepsin, be cause one can never tell when some member of the family may need it, and all can use it. Thousands endorse it, among them Mrs. M. E. Patten, Valley Junction, Iowa, who is never without It in the house. Mrs. Patten , NOTHING TO BOTHER WITH Possibly Uncle-Cal Clay's Rebuke to Pastor May Have Had Some thing behind It Booker T. Washington told at Tus kogee a Christmas story. "Old -Uncle Cal Clay," he said, "in vited the pastor to eat Christmas din ner with him. The parson- accepted, and . the spread was magnificent sweet potatoes and celery, cranberries and mince pie, plum pudding, and a turkey so big' and yet so tender that the parson had never seen the like be fora " 'Uncle Cal,' the parson said, as he spread the pink cranberry sauce on a great, pearly-white, succulent slice of breast, 'Uncle Cal, where did you get this wonderful turkey?' " 'Pawson,' said Uncle Calhoun Clay solemnly, 'when you preached dat wonderful Christmas sermon dis mawnin', did I ax you whah you got him? Nuh, no. Dat's a trivial mat ter INDIGESTION. GAS "Pape's Diapepsin" cures sick. soup stomachs in five minutes v Time It! "Really does" put bad stomachs in order "really does" overcome indiges tion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and sourness in five minutes that just that makes Pipe's Diapepsin the lar gest selling stomach regulator in the world. If what you eat ferments into stubborn lumps, you belch gas and eructate sour, undigested food and acid; head is dizzy and aches; breath foul; tongue coated; your insldes filled with bile and indigestible waste, re member the moment 'Tape's Diapep sin" comes in contact with the stomach all such distress vanishes. It's truly astonishing almost marvelous, and the joy is its harmlessness. A large fifty-cent case of Pape's Dia pepsin will give you a hundred dollars' worth of satisfaction. It's worth its weight in gold to men and women who can't get their stom achs regulated. It belongs in your home should always be kept handy in' case of a sick, sour, upset stomach during the day or at night. It's he Quickest, surest and most harmless stomach doctor in the world. Adv. Logical Result. "What is to be the outcome of the romance?" . "Depends on the fellow's income." A vivid imagination is as dangerous as a little learning. Strength a Beauty Come With Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery This is a blood cleanser and alterative that b tarts the liver and stomach into vigorous action. It thus assists the body to manufacture rich red blood which feeds the heart nerves brain and organs of the body. The organs work smoothly like machinery running ia oil. You feel clean, strong and strenuous instead of tired, weak and faint. Nowadays yoa can obtain Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery . Tablets, as well as the liquid form from all medicine dealers, or trial box ' of tablets bv mail, on receipt of BOe. Address R.V. Pierce, M.D., Buffalo, N.Y. Dr. Pierce's Great 1008 Pas Illustrated Common Seme Medical AdvUer will be seat FRE Cloth Bound for 31 One-cent Stamp. .its r i ' U not sold by your drurrist, on receipt of price. Arthur T5 i RALPH M. PATTEN says that Syrup Pepsin has done won ders for her boy Ralph, who was con stipated from birth but is now doing fine. Naturally, she is enthusiastic about it and wants other mothers to use it. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is sold by druggists at fifty cents and one dollar a bottle, the latter size be ing bought by those who already know its value, and it contains proportion ately more. Everyone likes Syrup Pepsin, as it is very pleasant to the taste. It is also mild and non-griping and free from in jurious ingredients. Families wishing to try a free sam ple bottle can obtain it postpaid by ad dressing Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 203 Wash Washington St., Montlcellcs 111. A pos tal card with your name and address on it will do. No More ."Black Broth" for Him. Among the forgotten dishes of the past was the "black broth of Lace daemon." "What the inRredients of this sable composition wore," says a writer, "we cannot exactly ascertain Doctor Lister (in 'Apiclus') supposed It to have been hog's blood. . . . It could, not be a very alluring mess, since a citizen of Sybsris, having tasted it, declared it was no longer a matter of astonishment with him why the Spartans were so fearless of death, since any one in his senses would much rather die than exjuit on such execrable food." GIRLS! GIRLS! TRY IT, BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR Make It Thick, Glossy, Wavy, Luxur iant and Remove Dandruff Real Surprise for You. Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluf fy, abundant and appears as soft, lus trous and beautiful as a young girl's after a "Danderine hair cleanse." Just try this moisten a cloth with a little Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. This will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil and in just a few moments you have doubled the beauty of your hair. Besides beautifying the hair at once, Danderine dissolves every particle of dandruff; cleanses, purifies and invig orates the scalp, forever stopping itch ing and falling hair. But what will please you most will be after a few weeks' use when you will actually see new hair fine and downy at first yes but really new hair growing all over the scalp. If you care for pretty, soft hair and lots of It, surely get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any store and just try it. Adv. The Insult. Lady (ordering boots for her hus band) Do you keep men's boots? Shopman No, madam, but we keep up to nines in women's. London Opin ion. Drive that cough from your system. Dean's Mentholated Cough ' Drops will surely help you 5c at all Drug Stores. Even the high cost of living doesn't seem to have any effect on the wages of sin. - Dr. Peery's Vermifuge "Dead Shot" kills and expels Worms in a very few hours Adv. . A man who makes a bluff at hust ling succeeds in making others tired. will be sent by Parcels Post Peter & Co, Louisville, Ky. Torjio Ii J till JNIL1OTI0NAL StiMfSClOL Lesson (By B. O, SELLERS, Director of Evening Department, The Moody Bible Institute, Chicago.) LESSON FOR MARCH 1 TRUSTING IN RICHES AND TRUST ING IN GOD. LESSON TEXT Luke 12:13-24. GOLDEN TEXT "Where your treasure is, there will be your heart also." Luke 12:34 The section before us has a very logical progression from the introduc tory request to the words of Jesus which constitute the golden text Jesus is still in the midst of his Perean ministry. This lesson oc curred but a few months before the crucifixion. I. The lesson w. 13-15. "One out of the multitude" desired to bolster his claim to a portion of an inheri tance. He was sure that his brother needed admonition from Jesus, the result of which would accruo to his advantage. Jesus made a shajp, quick reply. He had been teaching about the sin of covetousness, but by his answer he intimates that his 'mission was not to judge men of that or any other sin. His work, as a Judge was to come later, John 5:19-32, There are thousands who for the prospect of personal gain would strictly enforce the ethical principles of the gospel though at the same time they are not willing themselves to abide there under. Covetousness is a desire to secure more and it is not confined to the rich nor to the poor. There fore Jesus sounds a warning, "take heed" (v. 15) e. g., beware. This itch ing is so gradual and often begins with a desire to possess things that are good of themselves and frequent ly good for him that has possession. But as it creeps in we find it, becom ing a great sin. A desire to build up a church, or even to compass the sal vation of a loved one, may be ani mated by a selfish, covetous motive, see I Cor. 5:10, 11; 6:10, ana Eph. 5:3, 5. A man's life consists not of the things possessed and the desire to get should be lost in the desire to be for the glory of God. Lighten Other's Burdens. II. The Illustration, w. 16-21. This warning of Jesus against wrong sense valuations and his suggestion as to the true source of life, are empha sized by his illustration from life. All material values come from the earth. Mine, forest and field are the sources of all wealth. But in this illustration the ground yielded "plentifully." He took great counsel with himself. In these three verses are twelve personal pronouns. Prosperity is heaped upon prosperity, yet his enterprises were lawful and legitimate for there is no suggestion of wrong methods. Th6 trouble was that in his self-centered pride he saw only the gratification of his material appetites. Any human activity, even the highest, may be come grossly self-centered. His plans of enlargement were wise in the sight of men, but lie left God out of his cal culations, and this is the common mis take worldly men are making, Jas. 4:13-15. His anxiety, a characteris tic of those who trust in riches, was uncalled for, and the folly of that course was revealed in a flash when he was called into the presence of God: "The things which thou hast prepared, whose shall they be?" Jesus reveals the worthlessness of such motives, the uselessness of such anxiety, and its unworthiness in 'view of what God is in himself, vv. 20, 21. He who can array the lily and clothe the grass of the field. The place tc lay up goods is not in barns, Mark 10:21; the right way to be merry is to lighten the burden of another, and the way to satisfy the soul Is not to pamper the body. Read John 4:13, 14; John 7:37-39; I. Tim. 5:6; Jas. 5:5; Rev. 18:7. True. Way of Life. III. The application, vv. 22-34. Jesus then proceeds to set before his disciples the true way of life from the positive side, just as in the illus tration he had set before them the negative side. Those who are living in right relationships "with God are not to seek satisfaction in the things of time and sense, those things of which their father knows they have need, and which he will supply, Phil, 4:19. They are, however, to seek, his kingdom and to rest in confidence in the knowledge that it is his pleas-, ure to give to them that kingdom (v. 32). The way to get Is to give, Prov. 11:24, 25. This is laying up treasure In heaven. Every man is the judge of his own acts. If they be ac cording to divine standards, his de cision is wise, if not, the Bible char acterizes that man as a fool. It is our sense of values which determines our wisdom. tV. The teaching. Jesus does not begin in his dealings, with the, sub jects of his kingdom by making com pulsory division of their possessions. In this lesson we can see the false and the true method by which to establish right social conditions. This man's idea was to "divide"; Christ's idea is expressed in the words, "sell and give alms." The pas sion of this man was to possess, the passion of Christ was to give, Matt. 20:28. In the mind 8f Christ, life does not consist of the things pos sessed. John 6:27. Things have a value only aa life is strong. I Sih - I Agamsi0iom? & Br REV. J. H; RALSTON I & Secretary of ConespoadcBce Department X J Moedr Bible lottWe. C3iie4o TEXT "Against thee, thee only, have1 I sinned, and done this evil Jn thy sight." Pea. 51:4. .' ' Very much as to ultimate re sults depends on the answer to this question. Sin Against. Self. It is ntot very difficult to show a man that a cer tain kind of life will land him In poverty, shame, and consequent wretchedness. It is among those who thus fall that rescue missions have their field. That which is referred to is often spoken of as sin against one's self, and sad to say, much of the preaching of this day is the appeal to self, as far as sin is concerned,, and the strength of this appeal is in the conse quences of sin that are in this life and temporal. The words: "He that sow eth to the flesh, shall of the flesh reap corruption," are frequently quoted and their truth is rarely questioned. But even in this there is something forgotten, the consequences of puch a life in the future world. The hell be yond this life Is not alluded to fre quently, except often in a sneering way as suggesting the hell on earth into which so many fall. There are many who work along religious lines, who appear to have very little in view, except the consequences of sin as seen in the present life. Mafty who are enthusiastic in the support of foreign missions are so simply because they wish to lift up the heathen who live in huts and caves of the earth into which they crawl as the wild beasts crawl into their dens, who are alto gether unclothed, or slightly clothed, and subsist on foods that are not prop erly prepared, to the comforts of sani tary homes, modern dress, and the delicacies of the modern dining table. The Effect of Sin on Others. The appeal here is not as strong as in the first case, but there are per sons who have so much .of the better man in them that they 'really regard the welfare of those who are about them. The husband has regard to his obligations to his children, and he provides for their comfort. The son Tecognizes that the father and mother have deepest love for him, and If he acts in a way that wounds that love he feels that he has sinned against them. This is all very worthy, and It Is proper on certain occasions to call the attention of certain persons to their sinning In this regard. Sin Against God. There is another sphere that in these days needs notice. Harry Mon roe, the man who In years long gone, knew the depths of sin, but who for thirty years at the Pacific Garden Mission in Chicago has been the mean3 of leading hundreds of sinful men and women to God said to the writer of these words only a few days ago: "It is not hard to get men and women to raise their hands, and to stand up and go forward to the altar but that is not enough, the trouble is, there is not enough conviction of sin," and he quoted the words of David, "Against thee, thee only have I sinned." One. of the greatest dif ficulties that workers for God have to meet is to get men and women to get hold of the idea of Ggd. A man's moral degradation may be acknowl edged with very little thought of God. Even one's sins against others may be conceded with very little or no thought of God, and there are many men and women who are faithful to their, dependents who do not know God. But in deeper thinking on sin practically everything is lost if God is left out. There is no proper ap prehension of sin until God is brought into the foreground. The man readily says: "Yes, I have sinned against myself, and I have sinned against so ciety," but when asked if he has sinned against God he is dazed, and is silent. If the man who acknowl edges sins against himself and so ciety, would only think . a little, he would ask the question, "Who estab lished the law that enforced 'these re sults?" he will soon come to the place where he must acknowledge God, and if he does so, the solution of the problem of his sin is at hand. David was near that solution when he said: "I acknowledge my trans gressions, and my 6in is ever before me. Against thee, thee only have I sinned, and done this evil in thy sight." Jobwas near it when he said: "Behold, I am vile; what shall I an swer thee? I will lay my hand upon my mouth." This Is properly called conviction of sin. It is not produced by trial in a court of Justice, nor is it the result of carrying an abstract proposition to its logical conclusion, but to "a sense of personal wrong doing in the sight of God. A great evangelical teacher of the last century said that conviction of sin involves a sense of wrong doing, distress in view of the past and an apprehension in view of what is to com. How much of the conviction of the pre3nt day contains these elements? ' , -: 427 .-;v.-;-;v?;-:v.vj '-Jy W "CASCARETS" FOR LB; BOILS No sick headache, biliousness, bad taste or constipation by morning. . Get a 10-cent box. Are you keeping your bowels, liver; and stomach clean, pure and fresh with Cascarets, or merely forcing a passageway every few days with Salts, Cathartic Pilhv Castor Oil or Purgative Waters? 'Stop having a bowel wash-day. Let Cascarets thoroughly cleanse and reg ulate the stomach, remove the sour an fermenting 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 to-night win make you feel great by morning. They work while you sleep never gripe, sicken or cause any inconvenience, and cost only 10 cents a box from your store. Millions of men and women take a Cascaret mow and then and never have Headache, Biliousness, Coated Tongue, Indigestion, Sour Stomach or. Constipation. Adv. ' .v Something Different.' "Let us get up a piscatorial excur sion." "Can't do it. Jve just arranged to go on a fishing party. . SAGE TEA DARKENS. GRAY HAIR TO ANY SHADE TRY IT! Keep Your Locks Youthful, Dark, Glossy and Thick With Common Garden Sage and Sulphur. When you darken your hair with Sage Tea and Sulphur, no one can tell, because it's done so naturally, so evenly. Preparing this , mixture, though, at home is mussy and trouble some. For 50 cents you can buy at any drug store the' ready-to-use tonic called "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy." You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small ' strand at a time. By morn ing all gray hair disappears, and, after, another application or two, your hair becomes beautifully darkened, glossy and luxuriant. You will also dis cover dandruff is gone and hair has stopped falling. Gray, faded hair, though no dis grace, is a sign of old age, and as we all desire a youthful and attractive ap pearance, get busy at once with Wy eth's Sage . and Sulphur and look years younger. Adv. ' Its Kind. "'How do they propose to entertain the convention after business hours V "I supposed with canned music" IF YOU'RE GROUCHY It is likely that your liver needs stir ring up. Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills will set you right quickly. Adv. If men were as perfect as their wives expect them to be the monotony of married life w'oulfl be debilitating.' Only One "BROMO QUININE" To get the genuine, call for fnU nave. LAXA TIVE BROMO QUININE. Look for tiirnatare ot E. W. GROVE. Cures a Cold in On ly. ZSc Every mother knows that her son ought to marry a princess. ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT AVegetable Preparation Tor As -similating the Food and Regula ting rti? S tomachs and Bowels of mm Promotes Digestion,ChcerfuI ness ahd Rest .Contains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral Not Narcotic j Rctip, SOU DrSAfUmtfflt 4xSfHo -Jtothtlk Satis -Anist Slid -fPfttrmuU -BiCariomtUStln -Harm Setd - tt'mkiyrrtit ffmvr A perfect Remedy for Constipa tion . Sour Stomach.DiaVrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverishr ness and LOSS OF SLEEP Fac Simile Signature of The Centaur Comrxxy. NEW YORK. Guaranteed under the FoodawjJ Exact Copy of Wrapper :3 if Bat Conch 8mp. Twit Good. Dm f . is tlma. Sold br Droccwta. T 3 I (I: J II To Cleanse Rusty Nail Wounds Atwava (Vfe It to the Bottom HANFORD'G r i r. nn Ji eaisam ot i.iyrra For Galls, Wire vuts, Lameness, x Strains, Bunches, n 1. om c iiuwui) viu inures Nail Wounds, Foot Rot Fistula, Bleeding, Etc Etc Mada Since 1846. Price 25c, 50c and $1jOO All Dealers jgl&KajSf Big Pay for Easy Work If You Live in a Small Town We want 5000 aeenta 6000 bright, young no willing to bustle nnd earn I5 W to tlS UU a day Milling dob Cue hand .mad-to-mtamur oloihoa. Tola throws open one pood job la rcry oommuaicy or tow a ot not orer iu.uw people. To the firnt man In yoor tows w h write aft, will be Riven the Jirwt opportunity to got oar Complete Sample Out- J fit Free. Von need no experience, btit i tart rinht out makins money 12.00 to fft.OO ' croflt nn imi iu it von aell. Wholeaain Prirea for Bnlta 17.86 to K80O-Fanta Z.4o to 18.SO. W prepay th foatagt or Errrr (raiment ta made-to-order , ana mtrtctiy hand tatttmd. featta- faction Guaranteed or x our Money Back. - A To nw to Ton tbe nneoaaled Quality of our tailoring, we will let i yoa order a Sampl 9utt or even a nalrof Danta at the wkoUoak imce. KeoManbar. wa want oniu on aotnt In each Someone elm from your town mar write na o MI delay oat m&u your letter The Chicago Tailors' Association pmpt. 3g , Vaw tivrmm and Mrfct .. CTflcaVQO BOOTH -OVERTOFJ Dyspepsia Tablets too Intestinal Fermentation. Immediately. Relieve Una and Distress after Eatiuir. One size only, 60c. Hooey refunded II they do not help, or write for Free Sample Box aad Txvx toem nrsi n yon wiao. 11 iroatar BOOTH-OiERTOR CO. K Tart PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM A toilet preparation of mertfe Helps to eradicate dandruff. For Reatorina Color aad Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair. ouo. ana li-uoai uruniawa. KODAKS & SUPPLIES We also do highest class of finishing. Prices and Catalogue upon requm. S. Galetki Optical Co.. Rickmoai, Va, TYPEWRITERS New, rebuilt and second hand. tlT OO op and guaranteed satisfactory. fe sell supplies for all niafcea. We re pair all makes. I. K. CRAYTOa a COMPaaVCWitatta, V.C KODAKS and High Grade Finishing. Mail orders iriren Spe cial attention. Prices reasonable. Service prompt. Bend for Price Ust LUMKaG'S ami dtoiu fHtmnwroa. a, G. W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 9-1914 w m n ;i v x r b will a i : Iff! tl H II :l For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears Signature n e For Over Thirty Years ET""3 flip mm nn MTAua eoa.tay, mm Yoaa oitt. AGENTS WANTED prt mtloo of a lai.- mllL Addresa CIUHV.N KNlTTINO SmJ&SU N.rKANKU2ST.,rHlL.Ai)KLrmA,lA. - It'. i err QUICK RELIEF SORE EYE.S -.. S5 a r v 4. i 7 i fe? i tan. e Urn