The Calumet Chieftain. (Calumet, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 11, 1918 Page: 7 of 8
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Spring Colds
Are the Worst
They lead to catarrh and
8neumonia. They weaken
le entire system and 'eave
it unable to resist the sudden
changes. They interfere with
your digestion and lessen your ac-
tivity. Neglected they soon become
that dread disease known as sys-
temic catarrh. Don't neglect them.
It's costly as well as dangerous.
PERUNA
Will Safeguard You
Have a box of Peruna Tab-
lets with you for the sudden
cold or exposure. Tone your sys-
tem up with a regular course of the
liquid Peruna, fortify it against
colds, get your digestion up to nor-
mal, take care of yourself, and avoid
danger. If you are suffering now
begin the treatment at once. Give
Nature the help she needs to throw
off the catarrhal inflammation, and
again become well.
Peruna has been helping people
for 44 years. Thousands of homes
rely on it for coughs, colds and indi-
gestion. It's a good tonic for the
weak, as well.
The Peruna Company
Columbus, Ohio
mriovED umroiM international
SUNWSl
Lesson
(By REV. P. U. F1TZWATER, D. D„
Teacher of En«ll«h Bible In the
Moody Bible Institute of Chicago )
(Copyright. 1811. Western Newspaper Union >
- « a • 11 u v T CHIEFTAIN
GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER
ITS A LONG
i TALE
BUT I'LL CUTi
IT SHORTI
HOttf .
MONKEY GRIP
IS THE B€ST
TIRE PATCH!.
moco
Laboratowis i j !;| •••
A.,..aua Cm E rill" I
The dealer who has achieved big suc-
cess does not waste his time, energy and
money trying to sell unknown accessories.
He knows that cheap accessories are a
speculation, pure and simple, both for hfl
and his customers. He is not willing to ]
put himself in the class with the makers
of products that nre "just as good. He
banks on a steady, consistent turnover,
Moco Monkev Orip the one established i
patch, the one that Is universally accept- |
ed as standard. This famous tire patch j
has been tested by impartial experts and
pronounced p. rfect in performance. It
withstands the fri.tional beat generated
under anv conditions of service. If your
Sealer does not handle, order direct, pre-
paid If money a. ompanles order. Put tip
in two size cans onlv. .>4_ square inches
(1.00, 108 square inches $1.7o.
Manafacturtd only b f/i«
Moco Laboratories, Inc.
Oklahoma City, Okla.
HT WRITE F"0 R F-REIE S A M R l_ e
HAVE YOU A
SWEETHEART,
Son or Brother in training
camps in the American
Army or Navy ? 11 so, mail
him a package of ALLEN'S
F00T=EASE, the antiseptic
i powder to be shaken into
1 the shoes and sprinkled in
the foot-bath. The Ameri-
' can, British and French
troops use Allen's Foot-
Ease, because it takes the
Friction from the Shoe and
freshens the feet. It is the
greatest comforter for tired,
aching, tender, swollen feet,
and gives relief to corns and
?©•«-£■•• bunions.
( The I'latt6burg Camp Mannal advises
men in training to shake Foot-Ease
in their shoes each morning Ask
) vour dealer to-day for a 25c. box of
\ Sen's Foot-Ease, and for a 2c. stamp
he will mail it for you. What remem-
> brance could be so acceptable^
TYPHOID
Is no more
than Smallpox.. Army
experience bu demonstrate
the ftlmoat mlreculouj effl-
OCT. hirmleMnfi., of AntltTPholi V^lDjOMU
2 jests
^^'phnIc^dnJ„U.,or.«4f« HAT.
T"huoWtc^";r^
S.U for 50 T,.n TOR NaLARIA. CHILLS AND FEVEH
Ail. . Pl.l GcB.nl Str..|th.nln| To.It, At All Cro! Storei.
Heal SKin Troubles
That Itch and Burn
tyi with Cuticura.
U*y <v) The Soap to cleanse and
' purifij.the Ointment to
soothe and heal. Everp-
1 where Soap25<0iutinent 251.501
COUGHING
h noys others and hurte you. Relieve tbront
Irritation and tickling, and get rid of coughs,
colds and hoarseneaa by taking at once
PISO'S
LESSON FOR APRIL 14
JESUS REQUIRES CONFESSION
AND LOYALTY.
LESSON TEXT—Mark 8:in-38.
GOI.DEN TE*T—Whosoever will come
fcfter me, let him deny himself, and take
up his cross, and follow me.—Mark 8:34.
DEVOTIONAL HEADINGS—Romans
10:8-10; Hebrews 12:1-2, 12-15.
ADDITIONAL MATERIAL. FOR
TEACHERS—Luke 9:18-27; 67-62.
PRIMARY AND JUNIOR TOPIC—
Je us and the Blind Man.
LESSON MATERIAL— Mark 8.22-26.
I PRIMARY MEMORY VERSE—He hath
done all things well.—Mark 7:37.
| The time 1ms now come for Jesus
to take account of his ministry. Uav- 1
lng been rejected by the rulers, be
goes into retirement with bis disciples.
Ills primary object In bis teaching
during this time Is to prepare the dis- !
clples for tbe trugedy of the cross,
which he knew was so near. Ills
teaching gathers around the great
cardinal doctrines of the Christian
fnlth. lie instructs them touching his
person, atoning death, resurrection
j and glorious coming again. He knew
j that in the measure that they intelli-
1 gently apprehended these things they
! would be able to pass through the
| ordeals before them. The same is
j true today. Those who clearly appre-
I hend the Divine Person, the vicarious
I atonement, the glorious resurrection,
i and second coming of Christ, are uu-
j disturbed by the world tragedies of
1 the present hour.
I. Peter's Confession of Christ (vv.
| 27-30).
; Two questions of Christ provoked
• j this confession :
j j 1. "Whom do men say that I am?"
I (vv. 27, 28).
I This question referred to the opin-
ions of the people regarding Jesus.
Some believed him to be John the j
Baptist, some Elijah, and some one of ;
the prophets. They all recognized him (
to be a teacher or prophet with more j
than human authority and power. To- j
day, as then, there is a diversity of
opinion among people as to Jesus j
Christ. Some think that he was only J
a man, others that he was a great j
teacher, but nothing more. Jesus was
not content with this acknowledgment.
Had be been satisfied with this, he j
would not have been molested in j
Jerusalem, for the Jews willingly ac- j
knowledged him as much more than a
human teacher.
2. "Whom say ye that I am?" (vv.
29, 30).
II. Jesus Teaching Concerning the
Cross (vv. 31-33).
Christ charged the disciples not to
make public his Messiahship, as that
would precipitate the crisis. The dis-
ciples needed much instruction yet to
prepare them for the crucial hour of
the cross.
1. What he taught (v. 31).
(1) "The Son of Man must suffer
many things,"
He suffered physical weariness and
hunger, ridicule and contempt, and
even misunderstanding and lack of ap-
preciation on the part of his friends
and disciples.
(2) "Be rejected of the elders, chief
priests and scribes."
These were the nation's official rep-
resentatives, the very ones who should
have known and received Christ and
recommended his reception on the part
of the nation. Truly, he came to Ills
own, and his own received him not—
John 1 :11. To be rejected by one's
own friends and relatives is doubly
painful.
(3) "Be killed."
This announcement was startling to
the disciples. They had not yet come
to realize that redemption was to be
accomplished through the passion and
| the cross. Jesus now states with
I definlteness and certainty that be
! must die on the cross. This necessity
was due primarily to the fact that It
; was the divine purpose to make the
, death of Christ the heart and core of
the atonement; and also, to human
I hatred and opposition.
| (4) "Itlse again."
Though this was utterly Incompre-
hensible to the disciples, he shows
them that this would be the glorious
Issue of bis death.
III. The Cost of Discipleshlp (v. 34).
The law of the Christian life is
suffei*ng. To follow Christ means to
| turn one's back upon the world. To
repudiate the world means to Incur
| the hatred of the world. To be Chris-
tians, therefore, means to share
Christ's sufferings.
1. There must be denial of self (. 34).
This means the sufferings and shame
which lie In the path of loyalty to
God. To live the godly life means
suffering (2 Tim. 3:12).
3. Christ must be followed (v. 84).
This means to have the mind of
Christ (Phil. 2:5) and to perform the
service of Christ.
H«is been used for all ailments that
ftre caused by a disordered stomach
and inactive liver, such as sick head-
ache, constipation, sour stomach,
nervous Indigestion, fermentation of
! food, palpitation of the heart caused by
gases in the stomach. August Flower
Is a gentle laxative, regulates dlgestlou
j both In stomach and Intestines, cleans
and sweetens the stomach and alimen-
tary cnnal, stimulates the liver to se-
crete the bile and Impurities from the
blood. Sold in all civilized countries.
Give it a trial.—Adv.
Resented th Snub.
An Irishman was at work 011 11 holst-
' lng machine that carried bods of
bricks to the lop of a building, and
brought them down empty. Happening
to get caught, he waa carried to the
top floor, and 111 the orderly but rapid
progress of the machine was brought
to the ground rather suddenly. A fel-
low-workman leaned from the second
story scaffolding and cried:
"Are you hurt. Put"
"You go to the dlvvle!" shouted
Pat. "I passed you twicet and ye nlver
spoke to me."
Calomel Users! Listen To Me!
I Guarantee Dodson's Liver Tone
Your druggist gives back your money if it doesn't
liven your liver and bowels and straighten
you up without making you sick.
Musical Beginnings.
Mrs. Boynton caught a glimpse of
her young son going to the library one
afternoon concealing something be-
hind him. Upon investigation, she dis-
covered be had a new porous plaster
which lie had found in the medicine
closet.
"Why, Edmund," said the mother,
"what in the world are you going to
do with that plaster?"
"I am going to see what tune it will
pi ay on the pianola, mother," replied
(he boy.—Puck.
Ugh! Calomel makes you sick. It's
horrible! Take a dose of the dangerous
drug tonight and tomorrow you may
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 awful
nausea and cramping. If you are slug-
gish and "all knocked out, if your
liver Is torpid and bowels constipated
or you have headache, dizziness, coat-
ed tongue, if breath Is bad or stomach
sour, just try a spoonful of harmless
llodson's Liver Tone tonight.
Here's my guarantee—Go t<> any
drug store and get a bottle of I)ods n s
Liver Tone for a few cents. Take a
spoonful and if it doesn t straiglitefl
you right up and make you feel fin#
and vigorous 1 want you to go back te
the store and get your money. Do*
son's Liver Tone is destroying the salt
f calomel because It Is real lives
medicine; entirely vegetable, therefor*
it cannot salivate or make you sick.
I guarantee that one spoonful o$
Dodson's Liver Tone will put you
sluggish liver to work and clean youi
bowels of that sour bile and consti-
pated waste which is clogging youi
system and making yotl feel miserable.
I guarantee that i bottle of Hudson*!
Liver Time will keep your entire fam-
ily feeling fine for months. Give it to
your children, it Is harmless; doesn*!
gripe and they like lis pleasant tasta,
inu ennoren, uuu see umi 11
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, that famous old remedy
for infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of \
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria
Has His Hands Full.
"I thought I knew what it was to
have responsibilities," said the head
of a large concern.
"But you found yourself mis-
taken?"
"Yes. My wife went away, leav-
ing a poodle, a Maltese cat and a bowl
| nf goldfish in my care."
Carter's Little 1
You Cannot be
Constipated i®gjRTER5
and Happy ^flWlivER
StnnU Pill Bpius.
Small Dote I JHmkJH
Small Prlc* FjT VW1 "
jver Pills
A Remedy That
> Makes Life
Worth Living
Genuine bears signature
A BSENCE of Iron In the BARTER'S IRON PILLS
many'°colorles8! tVcT but L will greatly help most pale-faced people
THIS IS THE AGE OF YOUTH.
You will look ten years younger if you
darken your ugly, grizzly, gray hairs by
using 'La Creole" Hair Dressing.—Adv.
The world's most northerly rail-
way, in Norway and Sweden, runs to a
point 130 miles above the Arctic clr
cle.
Pr. Pierce's Pellets nre best for liver,
bowels and stomach. One little Pellet
for a laxative, three for a cathartic. Ad.
Occasionally the world blazes with
•nius—but the linkers are innumer-
abl.
Scenes of Prosperity
Are Common in Western Canada
The thousands of U. S. farmers whe have accepted
Canada's generous offer to settle on homesteads or buy
farm land in her provinces have been well repaid by
bountiful crops of wheat and other grains.
Where you can buy good farm land at $15 to $30
per acre - get $2 a bushel for wheat and raise 20 to
45 bushels to the acre you are bound to make money
—that's what you can do in Western Canada.
In the provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan or
Alberta you can get a
HOMESTEAD OF 160 ACRES FREE
and other land at very low prices.
During many years Canadian
wheat fields have averaged 20 bushels
to the acre — many yields as high as
45 bushels to the acre. Wonderful
crops also of Oats, Barley, and Flax.
Mixed Farming is as profitable an
industry as grain raising. Good
schools, churches; markets convenient.
climate excellent. Writefor literature and
particulars as to reduced railway rates to
Supt. of Immigration, Ottawa. Can., or to
0. A. COOK
2012 MalaSl.,KansasClty,Mo.
Canadian Government Ajpent
Sparton Women Suffered Untold Tortures
but who wants to be a Spartan? Take
"Femenlna" for all female disorders.
Price 50c and $1.00.—Adv.
1
A spring gun has been Invented for
easting fishing lines farther than can
Many a man who has a reputation
for tnlking too much doesn't talk
enough at the right time.
Sentiment for a Pessimist.
"This is old Grouch's birthday. I i l-u uiib n^um* ""
| suppose I ought to say something to j be done by band.
him about It." "
"Wish him many unhappy returns I Matrimonial packages are not. at-
of the day." ' ways what they are tied up to be.
Middle Aged
Womeiv
Are Here Told the Best Remedy
for Their Troubles.
Freemont, O.—"I was passing through the critical
period of life, being forty-six years of age and had all
the symptoms incident to that change — heat flashes,
nervousness, and was in a general run down condition,
bo it was hard for me to do my work. Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound was recommended to me as
the best remedy for my troubles,which it surely proved
to be. I feel better and stronger in every way since
taking it, and the annoying symptoms have disap-
peared."—Mrs. M. Goddkn, 925 Napoleon St., Fremont,
Ohio.
North Haven, Conn.—"Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta-
ble Compound restored my health after everything else
had failed when passing through change of life. Ihero
is nothing like it to overcome the trying symptoms.
—M.ra. Ft "'": n'' k Ibella, Box 197, North Haven, Conn.
/,
Ssadk Cases
LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
\qs ik<s r©c©ffd for A® cptsitestt good
LYDIA E.P1NKHAM MEDICINE CO. lynn. MASS.
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Petree, Elmer. The Calumet Chieftain. (Calumet, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 11, 1918, newspaper, April 11, 1918; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc168152/m1/7/: accessed May 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.