^ A True Neighbor J E r F ALL the best talents, that 8 ? of belonging, of being a true member of the community, is ' m the greatest, and for many in our large cities, the least expressed. To be a true neighbor, citizen, patriot?to take on the state, so that what it does you do; to have the state within you, that all that wounds public life hurts you?is to rei over the top root of existence, to lay hold of the most vital of all the strands of life.?Joseph Lee. To accept good advice is but to increase one's own ability. The Typical American Foreign observers note a marked change in the physical appearance of Americans within the last half century. Fifty years ago the tall lantern-jawed man typified Uncle Sam. Today, they gay, the square-faced, stocky business man of the Babbitt type best ypifies him. To Alkalize Acid Indigestion Away Fast People Everywhere Are Adopting This Remarkable"Phillips" Way The way to gain almost incredibly quick relief, from stomach condition rising from overacidity, is to alkalize the stomach quickly with Philips' Milk of Magnesia. You take cither two teaspoons of the liquid Phillips' after meals; or two Phillips' Milk of Magnesia Tablets. Almost instantly "acid indigestion" goes, gas from hyperacidity, "acid - headaches"?from over-indulgence in food or smoking ? and nausea are relieved. You feel made over; forget you have a stomach. Try this Phillips' way if you have any acid stomach upsets. Get either the liquid "Phillips' or the remarkable, new Phillips Milk of Magnesia Tablets. Only 251 for a big box of tablets at drug stores. ALSO IN TABLET FORM: j Each tiny tablet Ib the equivalent f a Uaspoonful I of genuine^ Phillips' milk of i niLLira magnesia Praise Inspires You can discourage some real talent by withholding praise. Don't put up with useless PAIN Get rid of it When functional pains of menstruation are severe, take OARDTJI. If it doesn't benefit you, consult a i-hysician. Don't neglect such pains. Xhey depress the tone of the nerves, cause sleeplessness, loss of appetite, wear out your resistance. Get a bottle of Cardul and see whether It will help you, as thousands of women have said it helped them. Besides casing certain pains, Cardul aids h? building up the whole system by helping women to get more strength from tha Jood they eat. J"y) you suffer burring, scanty or too frequent urination; backache, headache, dizziness, loss of energy, leg pains, swellings and puffiness under the eyes? Are you tired, nervous?feel all unstrung and don't know what is wrong? L-J^n so,n thought to your kidneys. Be sure they function property 'or functional kidney disorder permits excess waste to stay in the blood, and to poison and upset the whole system. Use Doan's Pills. Doan's are for the kidneys only. They are recommended the world over. You can get the genuine, time-tested Dean's at any drug sto*?. Rsi The Cherokee i "IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY I chool Lesson By REV. HAROLD J,. LUNDQI'IST. Dean of the Moody Bible Instit jte of Chicago. ? Western Xijwsiaper Union. Lesson for October 25 CHRISTIANITY AS LOVE LESSON TKXT-AcU 18:1-4: I CorinthI lans 13. j GOLDEN TEXT?And now abldeth faith. i hope, charity (love), these three: but the greatest of these is charity (love). I Cor. , 13:13. I PRIMARY TOPIC?Why Paul Was Not 1 Afraid. | JUNIOR TOPIC?CouroRe in the Night. ! INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC ! ?What Christian Love Is and Does, j YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC ; ?Love, the Law of Life. By way of Athens the apostle Paul j and his co-workers came to Cor! inth, one of the great commercial | and social centers of Greece. It was a city known for its magnificent architecture and its patronage of the fire arts, but even more widely known for its abandonment to vice and wickedness. Here Paul, the apostie of faith, demonstrated | that his faith was rooted in love, and it was to the Christians who were dwelling in this infamous spot of corruption that he addressed his supremely pure and beautiful discourse on love. The first portion of our lesson finds Paul at Corinth, and provides an introduction to the study of the ! love chapter from I Corinthians by j showing from his experience that I. Love Is a Fact, Not a Theory I (Acts 18:1-4). The man whom we now recognize as perhaps the greatest preacher and teacher of Christian truth who ever followed the Lord Jesus Christ i "came to Corinth." That great and j busy city in all probability knew nothing of his arrival and cared nothing for his message. No one met the distinguished messenger of God and received him into a home of comfort and honor. But God had not forgotten him. For we read that Paul "found a , certain jew ?a convert to unrist, , and his noble wife, and "abode with them." Persecution had sent Aquila i to Corinth, and he was there for j Paul to find. And the humility of loving service | expresses itself further in the fact ; that the one who was to bring Corinth the glorious message of the gospel did so at his own cost. He labored with his hands at the trade which he, as every Jewish hoy, had been taught by his father. Christianity does not ask, "What will ye give me?" but "How much can I give?" In his first letter to the church which grew up at Corinth we find the enexhaustibly rich chapter in which Paul so fittingly describes true Christian love. It is impossible ; in any short discussion of this passage to make a complete study of it, but we note II. F our Truths About Love (I Cor. 13:1-13). 1. Love is superior to the other graces (vv. 1-3). Life has many excellent gifts and men seek after them. How do they compare with love? Glowing eloquence, the far-seeing eye of the prophet, mountain - moving faith, j self-sacrifice?without love they all ! lose their worth; in fact they are I nothing. All the attainments of men ! apart from Ciirisl are vain and empty. 2. Love is necessary to the other l graces (vv. 4-7). There is a sense in which love I is not so much a grace in itself I as the underlying and motivating ! power, which shows in every fine and noble expression of Christian I character. Study these verses to ! see how patiently and unselfishly ; love works. 3. Love is permanent; other graces fail (vv. 8-12). Some gifts will cease, for there will no longer be any need for them. They are temporary in their value or simply a means to an end. But love?it began with God in eternity and will go on with him through eternity. Why then do we labor and seek after these other graces so diligently and neglect the one grace which is above them all, for 4. Love is supreme (v. 13). Even over those other graces which with love will abide, namely, faith and hope, love stands supreme. It is the fundamental of all fundamentals. Without it all else is empty and futile. And let us remember, this is not pious theory; it is fact and to be translated into daily life. Hardships Wounds and hardships provoke our courage, and when our fortunes are at the lowest, our wits and minds are commonly at the best. ?Charron. scout, Murphy, N. C? 7 Harmony of Life TO EXIST is to bless. Iiife is Happiness. In this sublime pause of things all dissonances have disappeared. It is as though Creation were but one vast symphony, glorifying the God of Goodness with an inexhaustible wealth of praise and harmony . . . We have ourselves become notes in the great concert, and the soul breaks the silence of ecstasy, only to vibrate in unison with the Eternal Joy! I Failures are facts that prove a man has at least actually tried to be successful. Puttering Arou Tim Aw, TX7HEN a family is orderly * * no one has to do much pu tering about. When the member are not particular where they pi their things, it becomes the ui desirable duty of some person 1 spend much time in just thi very thing, puttering. Hours ar wasted daily in such trivialitic as gathering up newspa pci spread about, picking up and pu ting away gloves, hats, scissor: thimbles, pencils, etc. Whatevc it may be that has been in us* and not put away by the use or has been put in the wron place, must be placed where belongs or the house would r< fleet poor housekeeping. Nondescript Tasks. The time given to these noi descript jobs should be given t those whn Imvp fV?? wnrlr i r-?ir-n-r 1" The Mind LOWF.Lt Meter HKNI,KKSO <?> Bell syndicate WNU S-vvlce. The Similarities Test In each problem of the follo\ i ing tost there are three word | The first two bear a certain ri i lationship to each other. Writ in a fourth word which will her the same relationship to the thir word that the second docs to tli first. 1. Trenton, New Jersey; Bi? | mark, 2. i 2. Grapes, California; cotton, 1 3. J. P. Morgan, banking Luther Burbank, 2. 4. F. D. Roosevelt, John 1^ Garner; George Washington, 5. Lou Gehrig, baseball; Fran ! Parker, . G. Cotton gin, Eli Whitney phonograph, . 7. Robert Browning, poet Emil Ludwig, . 3. Automobile, garage; ail plane, . > \nswers 1. North Dakota. 2. Louisiana. 3. Horticulture. 4. John Adams. 5. Tennis. ; G. Thomas A. Edison, i 7. Biographer. 8. Hangar. I ^ Yjff ?j| CALORIE? for ENERGY U ^^ ^ % hursday, October 22, 1936 I Though Groat, Custer ] F Kept His Equipoise a | During an encampment in the Civil war, General Custer heard gi | that John Giles, an old friend of the Custer family, was a private h? in a nearby encampment. As! soon as possible Custer went to 1 rt call upon the man. Upor enter- j ing the tent, Custer clasped the h< | man's hand and asked why he 1 had not called on him. Giles re- si plied that he wanted to but J thought it might not be proper , p t for a common soldier to call upon ' a great man. q "Humph," responded Custer, "I thought you knew that I am above f; all such nonsense."?Cleveland \ Plain Dealer. B 1 ======== nd the House? b ( -Wasting Work of Putting "! y Things Others Have Used ir r, others. Putting things away is | t- part of the job connected with! I s using the things, just as much it as getting the things out, is part , i of it. The work is regular and 0 legitimate and only becomes an ' is annoyance w hen left for the e wrong person to do. Left-Over Jobs. No person wants her time frit~ tered away doing the left-over I ^ jobs of others. Nobody enjoysj I 6 having a person puttering around, I either. It is distracting to at' tention, and disturbing to the ! 1 - nprvoc l?11 - - ?? - ' .aww!?uvjin me angle 01 ; j e the person who putters about and those who have to endure the I annoyance of such activity, there should be some remcdv found. a)y Remedies Suggested. to Mothers can teach their chil_ dren to put their playthings away m when through with them. This i 5 is the first step to take. Then she can instruct the little folk , to put their outside things away , when they come in from out- h \* doors. Children can get into the j habit of orderliness by being i ! made to realize that what they ? ; don't do, has to be done by j mother who is very busy and i often too tired to do the extra tasks. Affection will gain the v" day. Breaking the Habit. e I Adults should consider how to ir break themselves of the repre^ honsible habit of leaving work i e they should do, to be completed ! by others. If they really deter- i mine to stop this bothersome fault, they will decrease the; > necessity of puttering about by '. the person who heartily dislikes i ' the work, but who, for the sake T of order prefers to do it rather than have disorder around. " l.? i v., WNU >erw . k ; 1 Range of Temperature Cities in the United States which ; have a great range of temperature are Boise, Idaho, which has recorded a difference of as much as 149 degrees between Summer and Winter extremes; Bismarck, N. " Dak.. 153 degrees; Pierre, S. Dak., ; 152 degrees; Yakutsk in Siberia ; has recorded temperatures as high ! as 102 degrees and as low as?82 [ degrees, and Verkheyansk, 94 de-! | grees and?90 degrees (in both 1 f ! cases a range of 184 degrees).? J Washington Star. j <5 50 CRUNCH* And DELICIOUS AANY PEOPLE PON'T REALIZE how nourishing Quaker." UFFEP WHEAT REALLY IS.. COMPARE VtTH OTHER. INE FOOPS. RON for STRENGTH pinach... 1.02 mgms. .v B AC QUAKER ORIGINATED THI SHOT-FROM-GUNS PROCE! THAT MAKES QUAKER PUFF RTON ( WHEAT SO TASTY AND FLAVORY. ASK FOR THE TRIPLE-SEALED PACK AG ft GUARDS ITS FRESHNE "oreign Words end Phrases Bis dat qui cito dat. (L.) Ho ves twice who gives quickly. Con amore. (It.) With love; sartily; zealously. Dernier ressort. (F.) The last ?sort. Ein mann, ein wort. (G.) An anest man's word is his bond. Festina lente. (L.) Make haste lowly. Ici on parle francais. (F.) rench is spoken here. Jubilate Deo. (L.) Fejoice in lod. Le beau monde. (F.) The ishionable world. Ma foi! (F.) On my faith! less me! Measuring Men Man's capacities have never een measured: nor are we to jdge of what he can do by any recedents, so little has been ried.?Thoreau. Plenty of qnlrk. penetrating warmth wherever you want it!.. . that's what you net with a Coleman Radiant Urate'. Carry and use anywhere. No connections Mokes and burns its own gas from untreated gasoline. Just th" thing for removing chill from home, office, store or for ixtra warmth in aevere weather. Costs 1*?* than an hour to operate! See it at your dealer s. WOT1[ FOR Mil FOI OCR. Send postcard now! THF COLEMAN LAMP AN'D STOVE CO. IVpt W1IWJ, Wichita, K?n?.; Chicago. 1U.| Philadelphia, Pa.; Lot Angclca, Calif. (6403) f chicks -Sc up. A.: Varictleii 1.ay\ , Inc ami Mea- n-.. mc| Vu\.vla Kyl'aT and Brnler *' -ai?i l?o?*kjf\ lines and baJ;>- T ur* >>. llmrhiur Kevn Slispji?i Any?ln>rt', i u?i>>m latching. Iikai.fuh Wamph Kvi.nvwur.itK. IF IDE I HATCHERIES. 3940 N Market. St. Lours. Mo. ??? For Southerners whose family traditions are tied to the glory of The lost Cause Gone With The Wind by Mitchell offers a story of romance, adventure, veracious history "unsurpassed in American literature" IC37 pages ? equal to FIVE ordinary novels I $3.00 SEND COUPON TODAY THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 60 Fifth Avenue, N. Y C. Send copy(ios) of GONE WITH THE WINO to Nam Address Check M. O C. O 0. O Small quiet and select One half M ft block from Fifth Avenue stores. H Single from $2. Double from S3. I HOTEL COLLING WOOD V I 45 WEST 35TH ST . NEW YOUK 1 jr> \ Soft Crzim Cheese I I PUFFEP WHEAT

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