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Ar cnomc tehry tood All good P Plate r!ocers sell Skinner's FREE with Sklyiner' acaroni Products. dMacaroni Products. Skinner Mfg. Co. et Name.. .....s... an.d... .est mar n fatory n ra Dept. DAdrs................. Omaha Ne , wo...........o...... . state..... The chap who always tells the truth The chap with cuffs on his trouse r 13 apt to tell nine unpleasant ones out should never criticize the fur on the of a possible ten- ladies' shoes. Pneumlonia? Apply Hanford's Bal- Only One "BROMO QUININ13" 4am.1ub It onl and rub it In thor tet the genuine, ca full nam !Ugbl until he meantier b M Skne'QpUctN. Loo for ePntr ugly utl hesI s irritated. ofit.w -ROE. Clurea Cold in O Day.at o Weli Protected.ea Avc Edith-Aren't you afraid of mice?hae f you Ethel-Not now when I'm wearing at fur on my shootops.VitmWlyucnkei.Th cls coinin thd from yo cobtie Not Gray Haire but Tired Eyes $0 igaueus look older than we are. Keep MrE esLou~~ ano willocek sellg Soetis Apl RE It h~l.. Sek e v Murica onur EProdyues.c.n ic, en Ey Book on request.Co..salway Nasaolghly Towut........sutat. Spared. - th e ap wits hi trouse "My. boy," said the elderly million- on.Afwlgt kpiain r Iire, at the e d of a lecture on econ- sunever critiieee fo he omy, "when Iwas your age I carried is so euater for a gang of section hands." "I'my proud of you, dad," answered Ltl R Q ekign the gilded youth. "if it hadnW't On Cs a C e a as for Your Pluck and perseverance Iadvi ce aighte have had to do soyioething of hie sort myself."enaetoxerelohise'ht ith-ren' o afraio nausetsir. Lo t nor whn wayWll d you nd dit atou r o iln my loeo lart s. oini h f IlowrE you ated youm hwil loou fougt oeieApyitLgty - agains takMoieg threm. u Be. o th your ch.inen it'e dfeedC.n orctbrnsad,,oen lioeds Eyen Bookh old fremet opeonsawy pl afr' ilhBalsamimightly,'buteaeizurehahathey do hhlrnsared.l covrsandgeslo-tefound-ofth "y. boy," sendr tte "enlde miloare n.Afwlihplcainr l ijred at them.i falcueo cn eerlyalta snee oha oy wen ee cleansing,.gage onI crdis ls fdfiute.A u "ateriforia yrug of cihs."It "Im" proudy;f tynowd"childrednieal paig te gildaed yoth. that it hadn't failn Atoewsasf~et n a clor ythe luer and poersevance swe ineto dvc t ieeNele aih the had ta do tspoigonful om eata ouaef ien sotday saelf." ckchl tooenggdt oglthmseta Askouthave atwillfof your-own, botton h10 ful directonshforbaboeechmldre .I do" saihNellettem.elyd"I.do auntiefwheneverwwatawe alonevto A i e fu r CHLDSBtOESz Mitknit.oss.Do In Japanue te forc nlaseallow , the Wog i harshLphysicdvite. sickchild.awtfeyear- s hago my woteio to youa Lookbackat yur hli~hoodday. ihatbee-aWerle youcnerepro inTe anladderpinoubles had tha myo cohtme temmbe th "ose moh~ isised ianinormedime tAtpy lt Lihteywa un-csto oi, caome, ctharics Insur contiobunatthr wcads open 110wyouhatd temhowyoufouht orpe overy. alwas advise Hanfory' galns takig them yoarsamplighty asaut esort, tad aft ?~~1others who coverlandget to the olbomuttaisomatrarsfrwre yo the yicsimlydo't eaizwht he grv soun. Ae ihadn aprectrnof any Ilo.Thechidrens rvol is ellfoud erouly sinc tat time ndd ant sea ~d. heirtendr lttlefnsdee"aretouhi cnlavr of yures wodrulprp i~juro by them. aration tramp-oot Sphaihcreafe If your chil'snstomachaiverfand phyiciansdfall t~owl ned leaning,"Niewny dei.der tuly your afl r~cionispostie, ut enle.Miliosyouthe a wio l of. yoeron Ni, on -~~~~ Per~~imsonly eteds. oem, hs8s utmoherskeepthisharmess fruic"I oJ,100 saideHl. lemrely who sdo, Iwo to take it; tuhtatiwhnever falwota h aei re sbaeo alnd to clea thelive andbowes an sw ether."t . ~'i the tomachand thaAadteasoonfulasped.HAL M~stkenD~a Ni-otar torlic rossWrngAgi Ask t te stre or 6~entbotte Aboudteny cent. ao Ir winrot to oha Inhamben N. terribamle srfoineyt Ji ful diectins or bbie, chldrnd lso dderve troolet and valabl my phys miatn ingabedum the mydlefs kndneyawa al aes ad fr grwn-ps painyfor. Who ritiery be wsur adetotr O'1 eob bttle Adyothi paer -Rotas afftcen and ofe dollaingzer ftityfornsalezatoalleduI Most pfsusdgetgwhatlwetdeservehstorghedAtvn it~ ~ o us re ale t recgrazveI istone.u Have headn renjofyang In Jpan he on away folowsthearonte inceu thoa toimeep anot oay trdaorisfthrios ap-hiwhcefrea.e TheNewst isovey I Vey try us Xoel nd urgcalInsitue a Bufao t or even wrte. Roierbor, N. la.g 1: itl fo seeralyeas prvdd~a Pers'ony badere tober send thim a~s 'th~e '~~si~' reognied en~om ofofa~ it 0, nD. PieBre, whoreub urie ad reqenturnatonai.fl1be atement and madety oath lit'the loodhas ause~h tha t urie saeid, arud is husanlessn but iy'A~io' ~ot. Th bes ofr~$ Pro e hafelswamp- oo hil but Forhou a1~ bI~'inedlit aies' ~ Send tny cent gowDr.' K her&Cou. Jittit jmntsii t estaore thei kidneys btad out ad ikkari~~i1 der.~ en rtin bea csu adentonl * ~51~l~0l~ft ntYthis er.~*j r eycet extroee *stores.-Adv. It isd difficult forth an ejoin - a ontnuou hoiy~ to ee ot'of (3Y 1 . V SELLERS. Acting ]Director of tho unday School Course of the Moody Bigle -Institute of Chicago.) (Coriist. 1915, Western Newspaper Union.) LESSON FOR JANUARY 9 THE COMING OF THE HOLY SPIRIT. LESSON TEXT-Acts 2:1-18. GOLDEN TEXT-Know ye not that ye are a temple of God, and that the spirit of God dwelleth in you?-x Cor. 8:16 R. V. Good teaching demands the use of the concrete; objective teaching is. fundamental and essential. The incar nation is God's objective teaching, "God manifest," (a) to reveal him. self, John 14:9; (b) to take away sin, t John 8:6; (c) to destroy the works of the devil, I John 9:8. So likewise Pentecost is a great objectiv'e lesson. This chapter has been divided as fol lows: (1) The Coming of Power (vi. 1-13), (2) The Empowered Witness (vv. 14-36, (3) A Powerful Result (vy. 87-47). 1. Power, 1-4. At the end of our last lesson the disciples were in prayer. The Lord's promise (1:6) was conditioned upon obedience. At last "the day" arrived (Lev. 23:15-21). Their hearts were fused and the fin damental requirement for service, the baptism of the spirit, came upon them. There has been no need since then to tarry any time at all to receive a like blessing. Lack of unity has much to do with our not receiving the spirit now and the consequent lack of power. Suddenly from out of heaven came a mighty sound (v. 2) and it is such a wind that the church needs today. There were three manifestations at this time and one other subsequently (see 2:44, 4:34, 35; 5:4). (1) Wind. Let us keep clear the difference be tween symbol and spirit. The mani festation was "as wind." Wind is mys terious, universal and mighty, but like Elijah on the mountain God is not alone as a mighty tempest. The sound filled the whole house. Wind is figurative of judgment (Jer. 22:22, Hoe. 18:15) of the Spirit (John 3:8), also of heresy (Eph. 4:18). This last suggests the vagaries and imitations suggested or abetted by Satan to keep us from the truth. (2) Fire. This symbolizes power, light, heat and puri fying, but. the; fire was not the spirit nor do we recall another such mani festation since (3) Tongues. The fire took the form of tongues which parted or portioned themselves out to "each one of them" though Peter is alone subsequently more prominent. Every manifestation of the spirit is always that of some new power for Christ (I Cor. 14:2-19). 11. Perplexity, vv. 5-13. The ques tion may arise, had the spirit been seen before? and the answer is "yes" (Matt. 8:16, Jno. 1:32). What then was -new? The answer to this is the program of power, The first evidence of power was the gathering of the peo pie (v. 6). The disciples at once testi fled to each of the sixteen classes men tioned (9-11) of the "mighty works of God." Not of the gift, but the giver, 'a different sort of testimony than that given by many who today profess to have ,the gift of tongues. The second result was an amazed people, "per plexed," for them as now the world cannot .understand the spirit-filled man, These spirit-filled men forget self and were lost in their testimony (v. 11). It is of intereist to note that they did not even say much if anything about the spirit himself. Their testimony, for which many later gave their lives. wvas regarding God's mighty work of the resurrection of Jesus from the dead (vv. 24, 82), The spirit-filled man is sure to em phasize this mighty work and the evi dence of the spirit in a man's life is his loyalty to a crucified, risen and ascended Lord, A third result was that people mis understood and charged drunkenness, a fact seized upon later by Paul to teach us the truth (Eph. 5:18), The only sure cure for intemperance, or any other evil, is an infilling of the holy spirit. The final and complete fulfillment of the prophecy (vv. 14-21, Joel 2:28, 29) of which Pentecost was a partial fulfillment will be in the "day 'of the Lord." But then, as now, all who call upon him' shall be saved (v. 18, Rom. 10:18). "Some mocked," even as today ridicule or parody are the enemy's choicest weapon,. Pente cost is an event well attested, that marked the ushering in of a new dis pensation, that was misunderstood, but one that can be verified by experience. Pentecost was a revelation, a mani festation of a new spiritual kingdom, distinctly Christian, that exposes sin and exalts the son. Pentecost is a prophecy of real Christian unity, of a spiritual adminis tration, of Christ's intercession and an evidenco of an abiding presence, When 'we are spirit-filled the Lord Jesus Christ will occupy the whole horizon of our experience, our testi anony and will control our service. The spirit-filled servant can exclaim "The Lord (Jesus) is mny shepherd," he is Lord, he is my shepherd; he is, not has been or will be, but he is my shep lyerd. The gift of the. spirit nust not be confused with the* spirit'g "giftt" (I Cor. 12) whereby epre enabled to do thie work he direct~ 1)rder to glority the son----not 'the-,~r~~ endr man, nor ta religious. expe'%ia bhutili the L BILIOUS, HEADACHY SICK 'CASOARES Gently cleanse your liver and sluggish bowels while you sleep. Get a 10-cent box. Sick headache, biliousness, dizzi ness, coated tongue, foul taste and foul breath-always trace them to torpid liver; delayed, fermenting food in the bowels or sour, gassy stomach. Poisonous matter clogged in the in testines, instead of being cast out of the system is re-absorbed into the blood. When this poison reaches the delicate brain tissuo it causes con gestion and that dull, throbbing, sick ening headache. Cascarets immediately cleanse the stomach, remove the sour, undigested food and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry out all the constipated waste matter and poisons in the bowels. A Cascarot to-night will surely straighten you out by morning. They work while you sleep-a 10-cent box from your druggist means your head clear, stomach sweet and your liver and bowels regular for months. Adv. MINES,BY NO MEANS STUFFY Underground Visitor Is Consolous of a Sweep of Air Against Him at All Times. To the layman the thought of the miner in the "stuffy'' mine is rather an uncomfortable one. As a matter of fact, the miner breathes more pure air during working hours than the operatives in most mills and factories. Necessity and state law alike re quire 'that every tunnel shall be par alleled with an air shaft-a "modkey", it is called in the parlance of the mines. The law requires the com panies to pump into the mines 200 cubic feet of air a minute for every man and 600 cubic feet for every mule. In the farthest reaches of these underground tunnels the visitor is con scious of a sweep of air against him at all times. The temperature in the mines nec essarily varies with that of the sur face, for the immense shafts take the air from the outside and force it down in a continuous stream. Natu rally all chambers are run through solid coal wherever possible, and the parallel air shafts, which are about six feet high, contribute their share in many cases to the output of the mine. Of course, to be effective the air must be given complete circula tion, and the continual inrush of pure air from the outside has its use als< in minimizing .gas explosions and re moving dangerous gases rapidly. Literal Praise. "How could you praise that tenor'i voice so highly when it has such i beery sound?" "Exactly. Didn't I put the empha sis on his liquid notes?" Appropriate. "My husband is so cynical about feminine fads." "Then I suppose he treats the one for carrying dogs with biting scorn." It requires 70,000 tons of cork an nually to serve the British bottling industry. The czar of Russia has an income of $40,000,000 a year. Madam, Allow To . .Ne Post T< You may have < but you have neve equal the New Post These new fla crisp and flakey, and and toastie flavour, a make them distinctiv< Dainty to be sur body and firmness th and a true ripe-corr something relynew New Post Toasti it was never prepare< Your grocer has Buy an ': i'V~' 6 n Vetterine for Ring Worn ~s Skin Disease. Varnville, S. C., Ju 1?, 1908. My wife uses your Tetterine for Ring Worm, also usesy it In her fanflily for all kind of skin diseases, and sl e thinks It % good medicine. There is no SUbstitute. Tetterine cures Eczema fet er, In Worm Old Itching Bores, bandrrfft, Itch ing Piles Corns, Chilblains and' every gornoof Acalp and Skin Disease. Tetter-. Ine 5c; Tetterine Soap 2c. At drug g.ftbor by mail direct from The Shup.. t .,Co.. Savannal. Ga. every-mail order for Tetterine we Io box of. Shuptrine's 10o Liver Pills Won't Listen to Advice. "/rhe only objection I have to Dods worth 'is his self-complacency. Why, he acts as it he simply couldn't be Im proved upon." "At least he's true to his type." "Well?" "As a rule you can't improve a man like that, no matter how badly he needs it." GRANDMA USED SAGE TEA TO DARKEN HER GRAY HAIR She Made Up a Mixture of Sage Toa and Sulphur to Bring Back Color, Gloss, Thickness. 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 this mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and troublesome. Nowadays, by asking at any store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy," you will get a large bottle of the famous old recipe for about 50 cents. Don't stay gray I Try it! No one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as 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 morning the gray hair disappears, and after another ap plication or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, thick and glossy. Adv. McPhee's Reinvestment. An Irishman named Mcihee lived in a shanty that stood in a field near a main highway out of Kansas City. The foundations of the shanty were lower than the road, through which ran a big water main. As the living floor of the place was raised on posts to make it level with the highway, it left a large cellar underneath, where McPhee kept a dozen hens. One day the water main burst, flood. ed the cellar and drowned the hens, Thereupon McPhee entered a claim for damages against the city. After muc delay, influential friends succeeded ir getting thirty dollars in settlement ol his claim. "I've got me moneyl" shouted thi old man to his next do)or neighbor. "Glad to hear that," was the reply -and how much was it, McPhee?" "Thirty dollars." "And phwat are ye goin' to do witi the money?" "I'm going to buy thirty dollars worth of ducl~s," said McPhee. - Youth's Companion. His Retort. "Let's get married right away," hE said. "I simply can't do it. It will take me several months to get my trous. seau ready," she replied. "Another delay due to the lack of preparedness," he retorted.-Detroit Free Press. Some nien who are too slow to dc the courting are married by strenuoui widows. Me Introduce the, W )asties. saten "corn flakes" r tasted any that Toasties. kces, madam, are have a substance snap and zest that e in their sweetness, thle Ne at don't mush down When flavour that makes/one I and good to eat./ les--selected In com, p I bbefore. them now./ Everyone Shou Drink Hot Wate in the Mornin 3 Wash away all the stpmachI Iv. er, and bowel po.isons be4 fore breakfast. To feel your best day i and AV out, to feel clean inside; -no ur bl to coat your tongue and sikeih your breath or dull your head; n'o'cs6tW tion, bilious attacks, sick headaohe colds, rheumatism or gassy, acid sto# & . ach, you must bathe on the inside like you bathe outside. This is vastly more important, because the Okla pores do not absorb impurities .htt the blood, while the bowel pores do. says a well-known physician. To keep these poisons and toxin - well Bushed from the stomach, Iver. kidneys and bowels, drink before breakfast each day, a glass of hot wa ter with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate In -it. This will cleanse,. purity and freshen the entire alitien. tary tract, .before putting more food into the stomach. Get a quarter pound of limestone' phosphate from your druggist or at the store. It is inexpensive and Sle most tasteless, except a sourist tinge which to Dot unpleasant. Drink phosphated hot water every morning to rid your system of these vile poi sons and toxins; also to prevent their formation. To feel like young folks feel; like you felt before your blood, nerves and muscles became saturated witig an ao cumulation of body poisons, begin this treatment and above all, keep it upi As soap and hot water act on the skin, cleansing, sweetening and purifying, so limestone phosphate and hot water. before breakfast, act on the stomach# liver, kidneys and bowels.-Adv. T. P.'S HARD RAP AT NEWPORT Considerable Meaning In Remark Irish Statesman Made to Associated Press Reporter. T. P. O'Connor, who, after 30 years' representation of a Liverpool constit uency in the British house of com mons and the editorshib .of countless publications, is still one of the most versatile talkers and writers in publio .life, does not venture to prepare any addresses in advance. An Associated Press man, knowing that he was to ad. dress the house on a certain day, asked him if he had a summary to take in with him. "My dear boy," said T. P., "I never do that and if a grateful country would give me a competence I would agree never to write or speak another word in public." "Then where would you go-to Liv erpool or to Ireland?" asked the Amer ican. "To neither," replied T. P. with a smile, "to Newport of course." Good Riddance. "Having any trouble these days with that motor car of yours?" "None whatever." "You may consider yourself lucky.'' "And so I do, but my wife shed teai.s~. .. copiously when the blamed thing wae attached by a fellow from the sherif" office." The Trouble. / "What's the matter with that eac' ship?"' "Oh, it is all of a piece with t~ rest." w Post Toasties have a cream or milk is added; eel that here, at 'last, is repared for the table as