f HOUSEHOLD [ QUESTIONS [JmJ Cleaning Dust Mops.?Use your vacuum cleaner to clean the dust Emops with. Care of Wood en ware.?Woodenware used in mixing foods should be scalded often. * Mildew on Leather.?Petroleum c intment will remove mildew from leather furniture. * Soak Dried Fruits. ? Raisins, dates, currants and figs blend better with other ingredients if thev are soaked for five minutes in a little boiling water. ~ ; I lie Stowaway Little romance or adventure awaits the average stowaway. Generally he is clapped in the ship brig as soon as discovered, sees only what passes outside its tiny porthole. Never is he allowed ashore in a foreign country. He gets food, water, no luxuries, usually is regarded a nuisance by officers and crew. Stowing away is risky, too. Anyone hiding in the hold of a ship on a long voyage may be shut up for weeks, may even starve. In case of fire or shipwreck, he would be trapped and probably lose his i fe.?Washington Post. CALOMEL NIGHT NOWAJPLEASURE The old time calomel was the doctor's favorite remedy for biliousness or so-called "Torpid Liver," so prevalent in hot weather, but it had some serious drawbacks from the standpoint of the patient. The nauseating and sickening aftereffects and the necessity to follow it with a dose of Epsom salts made many of us hate to take it. Now you can really enjoy your calomel, for Calotabs make calomel-taking a pleasure. They give you the comuincd effects of calomel and salts, helping Nature to expel the sour, stagnant bile and washing it out of the system. One or two Calotabs at bedtime with a glass of water or sweet milk, ?that's all. Next morning your system feels clean and refreshed, j our head is clear, your spirit bright, : r.d you are feeling fine with a hearty appetite for breakfast. Eat what you wish and go about your work or pleasure. Genuine Calotabs are sold only in c"tiecKcr-ooara (black una wnite) packties bearing the trade mark "Calotabs." .Irfuse Imitations. Family package only : wnnty-llve cents; trial packago ten ? ents, at your dealer's. (Adv.) Without Modes t Architecture aims at eternity; . r;d therefore is the only thing ini apable of modes and fashions in ts principles. ? Sir Christopher Wren. How Women in Their 40's Can Attract Men Here'* good advice for a woman during her ? hange (usually from 38 to 5'J), who fears she'll lose her appeal to men, who worries about hot flashes, loss of pep, dizzy spells, upset nerves and moody spells. Get more fresh air, 8 hrs. sleep and if you need a good general system tonic take Lydia R. Pinkham'n Vegetable Compound, made txptrially for vomcn. It helps Nature build up physical resistance, thus helps give more vivacity to enjoy life and assist calming jittery nerves and disturbing symptoms that often accompany change of life. WELL WOKTH TKYING! Done in Silence A good word is an easy obligation; but not to speak ill requires only our silence, which costs us nothing.?Tillotson. mOROLINECgl SNOW-WHITE PETROLEUM JELUT UUI Tomorrow's Precedent The acts of today become the precedents of tomorrow.? F. HerschelL ? MUCH F&a'MtR M DASH IN WATMIRSTTS^ W i mODERHIZE Whether you're planning a party Kg or remodeling a room you should fl Jnllow the advertisements... to learn 8f what's new...and cheaper...and better. And the place to find out BH aoout new things is right here in this newspaper. Its columns are filled with importzut messages HB which you should read regularly. THE CHEROKE j-toyd fy adventurer; HEADLINES FROM OF PEOPLE LIKE Y "The Gray F Hello everybody: Dorothy Dublin of Broi honor today with the story of happened to her dad. That m club's newest Distinguished Ad It happened in Russia, in th< of Minsk, close by what is no\ pened forty-eight years ago, in Dublin was just a little nine-ye gone through the adventure the on a lonely country road that cl stiii be a wow of a siury. Bui happens to a nine-year-old kidnition of the true meaning of tl They had wolves in West matter, you'll still find wolv today. Then, there were pie few lurked in the forests around Take* Dnhlin nlr>nt*? tn tmer.. _ ? .... r >v nun j ouuu his father's horses to the feeding ground was on the edge of the foi Wolves Harmless D It wasn't driving the horses TO home again in the evening that w the wolves never bothered anyone, the darkness, they had been know was that little Jake had to be mi| from pasture while it was still lig delayed until dusk began to fall?' of bringing those horses home. But one day things went wron] Dublin almost didn't get back. lie started early enough. I there wouldn't have been an when he reached the feeding gn home. There was a beautiful fil was as yet unbroken. A coup hard to manage, but this afte with her. For almost an hour trying to get her under control, It was almost dark by the tim? the other horses to round up. It 1 Suddenly, a lithe, gray form shot into the neck of the first horse! pet all the beasts tethered togetl his dad had taught him to bring th< Little Jake Has CI The forest, to one side of him, loomed over him, silent against an knew it was no hour for a nine-ye that the ^uicker he got home, the b< take on his way home. One path 1 edge of the forest. It was a roun than the other. The other ran part way tl dangerous than the first route, straight toward his home. Fa two paths, little Jake chose the On either path there was dangi shorter way because?well?he as he could. He started down the path les i hadn't gone very far when suddenl | the line, began to get unruly agair ; u( the horses became nervous an< matter with Tara now, Jake moved But the horse wouldn't be calme< | tnd frightening her mighty badly Little Jake wasn't long in Tara. Suddenly, a lithe, gray ! side of the path and sank it: horse! A wolf! Forest Turns Into Then, in an instant the stil shrieking bedlam. The other while the first horse, blood gus down by the wolf. So far the v Jake. He was too intent on i wolves were coming, attracted blood. Jake conld hear their v nearer. When the rest of the pi for it. Then there would be a mats, and he, too, would find t tearing at his throat. He stood in the midst of his r< fright to move a step. What goi Those wolves could pick up a scent And then little Jake saw it?a scured by trees, a torch was flaring Hi. -ould hear voices now?men's \ he was. The wolf heard those voic and the howls of the advancing pi a band of villagers came running i ing the forest when little Jake die had arrived just in time to insure (Released by Weste :e scout, murphy, n. c.. Thursday 5' CLUB THE LIVES 1 OURSELFI 1anged Terror'' oklyn, N. Y., wins the place of a terrible experience that once akes her dad, Jacob Dublin, the venturer. - town of Ubtchark, near the city v the Polish border, and it hapthe late fall of 1888, when Jacob ar-old boy. If a grown man had it little Jake Dublin encountered lilly fall evening in 1888, it would when an adventure of that sort -well?then you have a new defile word "terror." Russia in those days. For that es in certain parts of Russia nty of them?and more than a Ubtchark. Those wolves gave little t, too. For it was his duty to drive ground every day, and that feeding est. uring Morning Hours. the pasture so much as driving them orried little Jake. In the mornings, But in the evening, emboldened by n to attack grown men. The result ghty sure to bring those horses back ht. And if it ever happened he was well?then his dad took over the job g out at the pasture?and little Jake f he had come back as promptly ly danger. But trouble started mnd and tried to bring the horses ly in the herd, called Tara, which le of times before she had been moon Jake couldn't do anything he chased her about the pasture ! he got her quieted, and still he had took him another 10 or 15 mirutes to out of the woods and sank its teeth ler, one behind the other, the way ;m in, and by that time it was n ght. hoice of Two Paths. , was ominously still. Dark treitops almost pitch black sky. Little lake ar-old boy to be out alone. He knew :tter. There were two paths he could turned into a road that ran along the dabout way, but it was a little safer tirough the forest. It was moie but it was shorter and it went ced with a choice between these one that went through the forest, er from wolves. Jake picked the wanted to get home just as fast iding his long string of horses. He y Tara, who was the second horse in >. She bucked and reared. The rest d fidgety. Wondering what was the down the line and tried to calm her. 1. Something was frightening her? , too. finding out what was frightening form shot out of the brush along: teeth into the neck of the first a Shrieking Bedlam. Iness ot the forest was rent by a horses screamed and struggled ;hing from his throat, was pulled volf had paid no attention to little making his kill. But now, other I by the noise and the scent of reird howling coming nearer and ick arrived?well?then he'd be in general slaughter of his poor aniiow it felt to have a wolf's fangs ;aring, plunging horses, too stiff with od would it do him to run anyway? and follow it faster than he could run. light. Far down the path, half ob. Then he saw another?and another! roices, shouting to him to stay where :es, too. He slunk off into the forest rck were stilled. In a few moments ip the trail. They had started combin't get home by nightfall?and they his getting home at all. rn Newspaper Union.) r. SEPTEMBER 21. 1939 _|Mp)ROVED 1 UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL Sunday i chool L. ess on Bv HAROLD L LUN'DQUIST. D. D. De;in of The Moodv Bible Institute of Chicago. 'Released by Western Newspaper Union.) ; Lesson for September 24 Lesson subjects and Scripture texts ne- , lected and copyrighted by International \ Council of Religious Education; used by permission ISAIAH: FORETELLING THE BIRTH OF THE MESSIANIC KING LESSON TEXT?Isaiah 7:14; 9:1-7; 11:1-5. GOLDEN TEXT?His name shall be called Wonderful. Counsellor. The mighty God. The everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace.? | Isaiah 9:6: Christ is coming! Christ has come! Christ is coming again! All three of these great truths are declared by Holy Scripture. In our lesson for today we study the prophecy of His birth which was given by Isaiah about 750 years before the event | took place. It is entirely appropriate that the lesson should be taken from the Old Testament and relate ? ?- t.wi/nci.jr ui nit: turning 01 ine Messianic King, thus binding together the Old and the New Testaments. Isaiah's prophecy prepares i us to study His life in the Gospel of | Matthew, beginning next week. I. The Coming of the King (7:14; 9:1-6). To us it is entirely understandable ' that the Son of God was to be- I 1 come flesh and dwell among us and that all the grace and power of God should be upon Him, for we know i | that He did come in perfect fulfillment of the Scriptures. But let us ; not fail to note the marvel of this | revelation made centuries in ad- ( i vance through God's prophet. 1. Born of a Virgin (7:14; 9:6). He was to be born. Christ did not come as a fully matured divine | | being alter the fashion of the socalled gods of mythology, but He entered our needy world as the Babe of Bethlehem's manger. What infinite condescension! He was to be born of a virgin, and so He was. There are those who would minimize the importance of this, or try to explain it away by i interpreting the word "virgin" to i mean a young married woman. The late Robert Dick Wilson, an outstanding authority, says, "The great and only difficulty lies in disbelief in predictive prophecy and in the almighty power of God, or in the desire to throw discredit on the divine Sonship." 2. God with Us (7:14). "Immanucl" means "God with us." Isaiah had a foregleam of the incarnation which brought the eternal Son of God into that God-man relationship which was absolute!)' indispensable if there was to be redemption. Sin had made a barrier between God and man which man could not pass, and only as the Godman, Christ Jesus, came through that barrier to be "God with us" could there be any hope of our salvai tion. 3. A Great Light (9:2). The Messiah was to break through the dense darkness of sin and sor: row to bring light and joy. How gloriously that prophecy has been , fulfilled! II. Tbe Character of the King (9: 6, 7; 11:1-5). The prophet foretold not only the meaningful names of the coming Messiah, but pictured in glowing beauty the mighty things which He was to accomplish. 1. Revealed by His Names (9:6). "Wonderful"?that word has been so misused that it means compara- I tively little to us. It really fulfills | its true meaning in Christ. He is j unique, remarkable, yes, truly won- 1 derful. "Counsellor"?in every de- ! tail of life, great or small, an in- i fallible guide. "Mighty God"?not just like God, or representing God; Christ is God. "Everlasting Father"?the tender and loving, unfailing One to whom time does not bring any change, for He is the "Father of eternity." "Prince of Peace"?He is not yet the ruler of the nations of the world, hence we hear not only of wars but of rumors of wars. Mark it well that there will be no enduring peace until He comes to reign whose right it is to reign, the divine Prince of Peace. 2. Revealed by His Deeds (9:7; 11:1-5). Eternal justice and righteousness, peace, wisdom, understanding, counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and the fear of God, unfailing equity?all these gloriou3 accomplishments are to characterize the Messiah according to Isaiah's prophecy. Has the prophecy been fulfilled? We know that all of these qualities were in Christ when He came to earth the first time, but the complete fulfillment of this prophecy awaits that day toward which the child of God looks with joy and hope when Christ shall come again The SuccessF^*C The father of Success Work. The mother ot Success JH Th Ambition. The oldest son is_r Sense. Some of the other hovs Perseverance. Honesty. \ oughness. Foresight, Er.ti^^|l<r asm. Co-operation. The oldest daughter is-gw^B" acter. !ieW Some of the sisters s^^B^as Cheerfulness. Loyalty. CoaJ^^,ar sy. Care. Economy, Sincenty^B^tt Get acquainted with tht'ia^B ther and you will be ab'je get along pretty well wife rest of the family. ? Simple Scrap Quilt Is Colorful anilOjB V Out of your scrap bag. " magic, come all these coloriuli^B patches so simple to cut and 'J ply! Make a gay quilt, pillow irB p scarf or all three to add chanH ' to your room. Pattern 2216 ctoH tains accurate pattern pieces: Q.H , gram of block; instructions ir^H | cutting, sewing and finisrugH yardage chart: diagram ofqdH Send 15 cents in coins for i pattern to The Sewing Circle. dlecraft Dept., 82 Eighth New York. MB Please write your name. dress and pattern number plau^.^H Voltaire Horn Arouet B The great French poet, drama-H tist and philosopher known to theB world as Voltaire, was FranccsB Marie Arouet, born in 1694. theB son of Francois and Marie Mai-B gueritc Daumart Arouet. At ti*B age of 24 he was imprisoned in tbeH Bastile for writing verses that&s-B pleased the regent of France. Dur-B ing this imprisonment he changed B his name to Arouet de Voltaire B But as time passed the "Arouet" B was dropped and he becan*B known simply as Voltaire. E World's largest seller it 10c. H /Oemand\ Guaranteed - PepeDiUjjA St. Joseph I GENUINE PURE ASPtW M Public Life B True friendships are very rarely found in those who are occupied in the pursuit of honors and pa* lie affairs.?Cicero. H IIIIII# be miserable with B yyni malaria! ,B " ' and COLDS ?ta 1 Cpjj will check MALARIA futud ! UUU gives symptomatic cold rehsi B LIQUID. TABLETS. SALVE. NOSE DSOB B Whereabouts of Happiness B Happiness is where we find iL H but very seldom where we seei " H ?J. Petit-Scnn. Weak eyes I are made strong by Leonardf* JEye Lotion. Inflammation ? H relieved in one day. No other eye remedy so pure and heaHo?? H Keeps the eyes in working tn?? LEONARDO ^ GOLDEN EYE LOTIOff Mxrw WEAK EYES STRONG H New Large Size with Dropper f ^B ? B. I dl QCo. lac.. VNU?7 %f? I Good Merch mm# I Can fie CONSISTENTLY I advertised e

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