?mt cnronGim> 1hi> 'cKecke.r-bov.rd of ni0^t5 ^r>d dr.yi" I j jv>ck x. prtxtictJ de>i^r> , Its just the. wty we. needed it ? Tke v^rld t.ccomrr\odt.tei WNU Service. Here's Laundry Bag That's Streamlined [5* 1U Til tVYETH SPEARS ?>: !!0! 11 this modern version of old-lime laundry bag. It is r ; of sturdy ticking in crisp : .11 .1 white stripes. It hangs ii.ii against the wall with ivory r : i ? < r brass hooks. It closcs no .. . with a zipper and may be p. : . I with "tie hand. The zip p, r applied in a curve to make i! pie opening, and the bag is hoi hape with a board in the i. ? Surely you will want one if and will want to make one or more for gifts. Christmas is n. ?' so far away, and here is something for a man, woman or child. Ev :y thing you need to know to maki- this bag is given in the sketch. These directions are not in any of the booklets, so be sure to clip them. There is also an in teresting laundry and shoe door pocket in Bpok 4. An easy-to make garment bag illustrated in Book 1. and twin pockets for a pantry door in Book 3, solve the problem of what to do with clean and soiled tea towels. All these closet accessories make grand gift and bazaar items. NOTE These homemaking booklets are a >L*!vice to our readers and No. 5 just published contains a description of the >!her numbe.'s. as well as 32 pases of clever ideas fully Illustrated. They are 10 cents each to cover cost and mailing. Send order to: MRS. RUTH WYETH SPEARS Drawer 10 Bedford Hills New York Enclose 10 cents for each book ordered. Name Address mw V*^5UNBt/M? MOR0LINE WORLD S LARGEST SELLER at 5? Want of Courage A great deal of talent is lost to the world for the want of a little courage. ? Sydney Smith. Cat Descendants C.ils within the walls of the Wash state penitentiary at Walla -iila have reached the seventy-fifth generation. The last census of the e me dynasty showed 50 cats in the Pnson that are direct descendants ?' those acquired in 1887 to keep ">e institution free of rats. "All the Traffic Would Bear" * There was a time in America whcn there were no set prices. Each merchant charged what he thought "the traffic would ^vert's'n8 came to rescue of the consumer. !cd the way to the estab lished prices you pgy when v?u buy anything today. Gems of Thought A WILLFUL falsehood is a cripple. not able to stand by itself without another to support it. It is easy to tell a lie, but hard to tell only cne lie.? Fuller. There is no gain at rrrl iin as thai uhich uriiri /rem sparing uh at you huie.-l'ublius Syru s. Depend on no man, on no friend, but him who can depend on himself Lavater. He who sees without loving is only straining his eyes in the darkness.? Maeterlinck. .4 man't first iluty is to educate his conscience. ? II i ?.hop Core. Our joys here aro born weep ing. ? Samuel Ilutherford. Pretty Flowers Fill Crocheted Baskets Pattern No. 66S1. FLOWERS in simplest stitchery " fill these easily crocheted bas ket edgings. Take your pick of pillow cases, towels or scarfs. Pattern 6681 contains a transfer pattern of 12 motifs ranging from 5 by 15 to 2 by 4 inches; chart and directions for crochet; illus trations of stitches; materials needed. Send order to: Sewing ClrcJe Needlocraft Dept. 82 Eighth Ave. New York Enclose 15 cents In coins for Fat* tern No Name Address FIRST CHOICi Of MILLIONS WHO HAVE MADE IT WORLD'S LARGEST SELLER AT IO<. ST. JOSEPH ASPIRIN Time Deadens Hatred Time, which deadens hatred, secretly strengthens love. ? Richter. UMiirii in "in." mrumcn ,our iu5 Read This Important Message! Do you dread thooo "trying years" (88 to 62)7 Aro you getting moody, cranky and NERVOUS? Do ytoa fear hot flashes weak ening dizzy spells? Are you Jealous of atten tions other women get? THEN LISTEN? These symptoms often result from female functional disorders. So start today and take famous Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound. For over 60 years Pinkham's Com pound has helped hundreds of thousands of grateful women to gc "smiling thru" difficult days. Pinkham's has helped calm unstrung nerves and lessen annoying female func tional "irregularities." One of the most tfftc (in "woman's" tonics. Tty Hi WNU ? 7 36?40 Reckoned Love There's beggary in the love that can be reckoned. ? Shakespeare. May Warn of Disordered Kidney Action Modern life with its harry and worry: Irregular habita. improper eating and drinking ? its risk of exposure and infec tion ? throw? heavy strain on the work of the kidneys. They are apt to become over-taxed and fal to filter excess acid and Other impu-itiee from the life-giving blood. You may suffer nagtfng backache; headache, dix^n*"*. getting up nights, leg pains, swelling? feel constantly tired, nervous, all worn out. Other signs of kidney or btadder disorder are some times burning, scanty or too frequent urination. ... . Try Doan't PilU. Doon't help the Wdneys to pasi off harmful exees* bmiy waste. They h*ve had more than ball ? century of public approval. Are recom mended by grateful usees everywhere. Ask ge*r neighbor t IMPROVED" ? ? UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY I chool Lesson By HA HOLD A. lUNlMJUlS'l. U. U. Dean of The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. (Released bv Western Newspaper Union.) Lesson for September 8 Lesson subjects and Scripture texts se lected and copyrighted ?>v International Council of Religious Education; used by permission. INVITING OTHERS TO WORSHIP GOD LESSON TEXT? Psalm 96 GOLDEN TEXT-O magnify the Lord with me. and let us exalt his name to gether. ? Psalm 34:3. Worship is not only fitting, but al together natural to the soul aglow with the love of God. Yet it is a sacred privilege to which we may call ourselves and others and in the doing of which we may be helped by an intelligent understanding of its nature ana preparation tor us prac tice. What is worship? How does it dif fer from prayer, or from praise (which we studied last week)? While ? Pfaycr, praise and worship belong together and often merge in one blessed art of devotion, we may pos sibly distinguish between them by saying that in prayer we are con cerned with our needs; in praise, with our blessings; and in worship, with God Himself. I. The Call to Worship (vv. 1-3). This psalm has to do with collec tive rather than individual worship. It is not enough that man should worship God in his own soul, there is an added blessing which comes to us only as we worship with oth ers. So we need to be called to gether for worship. True worship centers in "a new song tiiat is the song of a regener ated heart. Worship is only a for mality without life until there is a new song in the heart, and then it becomes life's greatest joy and sat isfaction. Real worship is a "day to day" matter (v. 2), not just something we put on like our "Sunday-go-to meeting" clothes. Every day we are to worship, and as we do. to shall "declare his glory among the heathen"; among those nearest to us, but ultimately to all the na tions of the earth. Worship leads out in a desire that its blessing may be shared with all the people of the earth. II. The Reason for Worship (vv. 4-6). Why should we worship God? He is "great" and is a God so good and gracious that He is "greatly to be praised." He made the heav- I ens. "Honor and majesty" stand before Him like sentinels; "strength and beauty" fill the holy place which is "his sanctuary." The very words bespeak that glorious majesty and gracious loving-kindness which im pel the heart to worship. They en courage us who need and seek 1 strength and beauty of life to seek communion with Him who dwells eternally in such an atmosphere. in. The Manner of Worship (vv. 7-10). We have suggested that fellowship with God prompts us to worship. Some would feel that nothing more is needed, but expuiieiiCc tells us that, while we may worship any where, we are helped to do so by proper surroundings and circum stances. We are told to "come into his courts" (v. 8) and to worship "in the beauty of holiness" (v. 9), or, as the Revised Version puts it, "in holy array." We are to give or ascribe unto the Lord praise and glory among our "kindred" (v. V); that is, our own family, as well as in "his courts," His sanctuary. Note that one of the outstanding ways of wor shiping is to "bring an offering" (v. 8), which means more than casually slipping a small coin in the "collec tion." If our "offerings" are liberal and regular the church will be able to send the news that "the Lord reigneth" to the whole world (v. 10). IV. The Universality of Worship (vv. 11-13). A world which has felt the blow \ of man's sin (Rom. 8:22) and has ! suffered from his wickedness and destructive violence will so rejoice in the righteousness of God's judg- : ment that even the realm of nature will break into joyous worship. What a beautiful picture we see in these verses, how God's creation will lift itself up in praise, the sea in tu multuous jcy, when "the hills shall break forth before you into sing ing, and all the trees shall clap their hands" (Isa. 55:12). Can man then hold his peace? Must not "mortal tongues awake" and "all that breathe partake" in wholehearted worship of God? Who then will want to stand among "them that know not God, and that obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ" (II Thess. 1:7, 8), and with whom God can deal only in Not Her Debt "When arc you going to pay for the vacuum-cleaner you bought from us last year?" "But you told me it would pay for itself!" A bachelor is a man who has lost the opportunity of making some woman miserable. Variation How old uould u [HTsim he 1 4 ho hai born tn INV7?~ * Man or u-oman?" All Out of It Thr man uu.t a nuloriou*lv %taw %ez* tlvr ??/ ucrounls, am! on? dity hr row plmneil : "/' i ?? fcmi l?? nrn ihvp in itmn. nriii /'m nrdrr and righting the wrongs of the op pressed, is higher and holier than the following of visions. The serv j ice of man is the best worship of I God. ? Henry Van Dyke. Calm Within The height of human wisdom is to bring our tempers down to our circumstances, and to make a calm witiun, under the weight of j the greatest storm without. ? 1 Defoe. 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Table models, consoles including Short-Wave and Radio-Phonograph models ... in a variety of beautiful cabinet designs to please every taste. Liberal TracU-ln Allowonct for Yowr Old Radio or Phonograph. Froo Trial. Long Tlmo to Pay. Oof full Dofallt. PhUco Radio A Telovitio n Corporation, D?pf. 2J| Tiogo and C Phifod?!phio. fa. Please send me FREE and without ohlica* lion. literature describing the new 1941 Philco Radio?. Also full details of your Free T rial. Easy Payment.! rade-in Allowance Offer. Name Address or R.F.D Town. .County. State. Better for Trying Those who try to do something ind fail are infinitely better than those who try to do nothing and succeed. ? Lloyd Jones. Test of Friendship We only need to face the "test" when we realize the priceless worth of "an unchanging friend." ? Royston. Get tins FREE BIBLE! For over 70 years grateful people all over the South have trusted Wintersmith'8 Tonic for the relief of Malaria. To convince YOU, we are offering this complete, 761-page Holy Bible, FREE. Just mail the top from one large carton (or the tops from two small cartons) to Winteramith Chemical Co., Inc., Louisville, Ky. |