HOUSEHOLD /v$?\ * QUESTIONS I Jgtj Getting Ready to Can.?Zinc covers for fruit jars should be washed, then dipped in a solution of soda, dried, and allowed to sun for several hours. j ! Pink Mayonnaise.?Mayonnaise ; can be given a decorative pink by the addition of tomato catsup or j cooked tomatoes. | Aid to Golfers.?If the strap on your golf bag makes your shoulder sore, take a piece of old sheepskin and mount it on the strap with the wool inside. = I nHBHBBBHnTCHO S5""55H5,I POULTRY j BRED FOR PRODUCTION: Duck* J RAISED FOR PROFIT: Chicks KOI.D BY QUALITY: Turkc?? t\ STARTED CHICKS: Pullets MILFORD HATCHERYpMo! V, I n Their Own Medicine There is an old proverb which h says: "The cobbler's family go the worst shod." Probably he's j too tired at the end of the day to ^ worry about repairs to his own or ^ his family's shoes. What about other trades? The strenuous life of butchers demands the eating of plenty of meat. Very few vegetarians, if jr any, follow the butcher's profes- 6< sion. Tobacconists are general- co ly heavy smokers. et Sweetshops give permission to ft their employees to eat whatever they fancy. Most of the girls sam- ' pie every new sweet that comes I: in. Investigation proved that f while some girls are inveterate sweet eaters, others are soon surfeited. Sixty per cent of opti- i cians wear glasses. GOOD FOR MALARIA! ?And Malaria Chills and " Fever! Here's what you want for Malaria, I ? ? - auuws: raerc s wn;u you want lor g the awful chills and fever. * It's Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic! I A real Malaria medicine. Made & especially for the purpose. Con- 8 tair.s tasteless quinidine and iron. Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic actually combats the Malaria infee- " tion in the blood. It relieves the freezing chills, the burning fever. It helps you feel better fast. Thousands take Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic for Malaria and swear bv it. Pleasant to take. too. Even children take it without a whimper. Don't suffer! At first sien of Malaria, take Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic. At all drugstores. Buy the large size as it gives you much more for your money. Two Tasks It is one thing to show a man * that he is in error, and another to f put him in possession of truth.? ^ Locke. I 4 ?. , I Relax over-worked and p TirCO Itired muscles. Rub jj I ?? iwith soothing, cooling I ftlUSClCS J Penetro. Try it today. ^^VPENEIRO i Rebuke Sticks It takes little time to adminis ter a rebuke, but it takes a long time to forget it.?Chinese Prov- ? erb. | I Today's popularity of Doan's Pills, after ? many years of world- k wide use. surely must be accepted aa evidence Ad?J|IhdlB of satisfactory use. ? U BiwlBBlB And favorable public 5 opinion supports that m lli'ild^MB of toe able physicians ?i *?* *? ? "w W1,k wi?juc OL Doan'a under exacting laboratory conditions. I These physicians, too. approve every word of advertising you read, the objective of which is only to v recommend Doan't Piils as a good diuretio treatment for functional kidney disorder \ and for relief of tbe pain and worry it I Cannes. * If more people were aware of how the 5 kidneys must constantly remove waste f that cannot stay in tho blood without in- jj jury to health, there would be better un- ? dcrotandinc of why the whole body suffers when kidneys lag, and diuretic medica- * tion would be more often employed. Burning, scanty or too frequent urination may be warning of disturbed kidney function. You may suffer nagging hack- 3 ache, persistent headache, attacks of dizziness, getting up nights, swelling, puffi- S ness under tho eyes?feel weak, nervous, * *11 played out. Use Doan't PiUt. It Is better to rely on j; a medicino that has won world-wide acclaim than on something les* favorably known. Ask your neighbor! j lifiyl LlNIB&t I 1 k P I H I T 1 THE CHEROKI luly Is Sponge Fi: Big Tropical 17V MID-JliLY begins the . - annual sponge take bereen coasts of Miami, /a., ?nd Nassau, of the \nhnmn rrmn r> '*\'?iE8W om which comes most of ; le sponges used in U. S. -V i omes, bath rooms and isolinc stations. The \ 1 hove picturesque view \ } lows the sponge fleet at ichor off the British tlonial quay at Nassau. oonges arc taken from nghys which put out om the sloops when a ?d is sighted. Fishermen irry glass-bottomed buck- |H| Ijfl s and spears. Others B$|?3 ight) pick by hand. H 'fimr 2* ' y~' rt x - ' ; ^ ^ ' * >/, > %< ? *' Jafe ^ v ^ ^?t/y - > j ' '' ' When fishermen have secured a < ponges are dried out and placed i oulhern tobacco auction in the TJn shown above. Sponges are buried n the sun. Since the unique sponge can be cU he "protozoa" many zoologists plac a porifera. Sponges may range in everal feet high, and vary in weig founds. :e scout, murphy, n. c? thursdai shing Season; Industry Revived Sponges grow at almost any depth of water. Above photo shows natives picking them from a shallow pool. Left: A fisherman depositing part of the day* s catch in a rocked-in coral pool on a small island where the sponges will remain soaking until the fleet returns to Nassau. The British colonial government is experimenting in planting of sponge beds. There are three varieties: Silk sponge, wool and common type, most generally used in North America. IP"hen the fleet sets out from Nassau it usually remains away for two weeks to a month. Each boat carries small dinghys. : s *v - - - > ? '0' I ! '* :S^fwP-&.^?KvJ-:-.feZir's.:.?Ji&&&St.' ..!,$% catc! rT j return to Nassau where jn sale at an auction similar to a ited States. Actual drying process ! under weeds and straw to dry out issed neither ivith the "metazoa" or e it in a special subkingdom known size from a pin's head to masses ht from a grain to more than 100 r, JULY 13, 1939 IK'PROVED J UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL Sunday i chool Lesson By HAKOL1) L. LU N L>V*U1ST. D. D. Dean of The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. ?R? it-, sed bv Western NewSDaoet Union.* ===== Lesson for July 16 Lesson subjects and Scripture texts selected and copyrighted by International Council of Religious Education; used by permission. REHOKOAM: A MAN WHO MADE A FOOLISH CHOICE LESSON i'EX'l?1 Kings 12:1-5. 12-17, 20 GOLDEN TEXT?A mar's pride shali brine him low.?Proverbs 29:23. "He did evil because he prepared not his heart to seek the Lord"? this is the divine epitome of the life of Rehoboam as given in II Chronicles 12:14. Life is full of choices, and the decisions we make determine our destiny both in this life and in the life to come. Since the great issues of our life may hinge on the simplest of choices, it is obvious that we need guidance at every point and in every moment of life The counsel of men, the right impulses which are born of good breeding, the light of knowledge?all these may help us to make right choices. But since there is only One who has all the knowledge, who can see the end from the beginning, who has all the power to make His decisions effective, it is obviously folly of the highest degree to do without His holy guidance. The picture before us is astonishingly up-to-date. People were crying for relief from tax burdens. One , group of leaders counseled moderation; another group, said in effect, : tax them all you can and keep on 1 spending. The king, who in a monarchy had the final decree in his power, replied to the plea of the people with the 900 B. C. equivalent of our modern slang expression, "Oh, yeah?" and the ten tribes promptly revolted. I. A Reasonable Request (w. 15). Governments exist for the people, not the people for the government. Political leaders seem to forget this , axiom and begin to rule as though they need not listen to the reason able pleas of the people. Tax bur- | dens rise, regimentation of the life of the nation takes place, and sooner or later the people rise to overthrow the government. It happened in Rome, it was back of the French Revolution, it brought an uprising of ! the serfs of Russia, it can and will j happen elsewhere if men who rale do not listen to reason. Rehoboam made at least one wise decision?to wait three days before speaking and to seek counsel. He needed this, for having been brought up in the palace of Solomon, without proper training for his place as king, he was unable to answer. II. An Unreasonable Refusal (w. 12-15). The picture of the two groups of advisers is a most graphic one and should afford the teacher an excellent opportunity to show young people especially, how important it is to heed the counsel of their elders. Even so youth stands today at the fork of the road. Let us in all kindness, love, and tact seek to help them choose the right way. III. The Inevitable Revolt (w. 16, 17, 20). The people, long submissive and apparently servile, ultimately come to the point where they think, and when they do, dictatorial rulers tumble from their self-made thrones. Would that the people of the earth realized the power which they have and that they would use it for the glory of God. Rehoboam felt the power of the people who revolted, others have followed him, for it is still true in the world that the rulers "do evil" because "they prepate not their hearts to seek the Lord." zienuooam, who nau awanea me arrival of this crucial hour in anticipation of taking his place as the king of the ten tribes, was ready, and was at once chosen as the leader of those who withdrew from the rule of the house of David. Rehoboam's sin brought this about, but it was also in the counsels of God (v. 15). As Alexander Maclaren expresses it, "... the historian draws back the curtain. On earth stand the insolent king and mutinous people, each driving at their ends, and neither free of sin and selfishness A stormy sea of people, without thought of God, rages below, and above sits the Lord, working His great purpose by men's sin. That divine control does not in the least affect the freedom or the responsibility of the actors. Rehoboam's disregard of the people's terms was 'a thing brought about of the Lord.' but it was Rehoboam's sin none the less." THE CHEEKFVL CHEKUbj VJker\ 1 wtws yovog I used to tkink Tktt Id ke rick ?j\d greet e_r\d &eir\tly, E>vt lately , lk\ constreirsed to sey, I've felt some smJl dovkts stirring Feint ly