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DRESSMAKER
MADE WELL
Followed a Neighbor’s Advice
and Took Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Vernon, Tex.—“ For three years I
■offered untold agony each month with
pains in my sides. I
* * ISSSfij loun,; i only tempe
st * ary relief in doct. r's
WmMf *o| medicine or anything
:£W gfigjfe aswHKj else 1 took until my
j||ff * I§l| husband saw an a<f
vertisement of
H'’ JBBlLydia E. Pinkham’s
|p|t|| Vegetable Com
pr '■//>'{ • it to a neighbor and
., j she told me she had
Li .. iw..i 1 1 results and advised
me to try it. I was then in bed part of
the time and my doctor said I would
have to be operated on, but we decided
to try the Vegetable Compound and I
also used Lydia E. Pinkham’s Sanative
Wash. lam a dressmaker and am now
able to go about my work and do my
housework besides. You are welcome
to use this letter as a testimonial as I am
always glad to speak a word for your
medicine.”—Mrs. W. M. Stephens, 1103
N. Commerce St., Vernon, Texas.
Dressmakers when overworked are
Krone to such ailments and should profit
y Mrs. Stephen’s experience.
Write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine
Co. (confidential), Lynn, Mass., about
your health. Your letter will be opened,
read and answered by a woman and
held in strict confidence.
SLOW
DEATH
Aches, pains, nervousness, diffi
culty in urinating, often mean
serious disorders. The world’s
standard remedy for kidney, liver,
blLider and uric acid troubles —
COLD MEDAL
bring quick relief and often ward off
deadly diseases. Known as the national
remedy of Holland for more than 200
ygprs. All druggists, in three sizes.
iSHOt for the name Gold Medal on every bos
and accept no imitation
Keep Stomach and Bowels Right
By giving baby the harmless, purely
vegetable, infants' and children's regulator.
MRS. WINSLOWS SYRUP
brings astonishing, gratifying result*
lr making baby’s stomach digest
8 food and bowels move as
they should at teething £ 'Hff
time. Guaranteed freo CA kLHB
Shoes
Old Shoes ;
Tight Shoes:
\ all Same '
if you shake;
into them I
s ° me
ALLEN’S FOOUEASE
The Antiseptic. Healing Powder
tor the Feet , .
Takes the friction from the shoe, fresh-;
eus the feet and gives new vigor. At,
night, when your feet are tired, sore
and swollen from walking and dancing,,
Sprinkle ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE in the;
toot-bath and en|oy the bliss of teet;
without an ache- , „ . . •!
i Over 1,500,000 pounds of Powder for the;
Teet were used by our Army and Navy dur
ingthewar. __ '
Ash lor ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE '
KING PIN
PLUG TOBACCO
Known as
“that good kind"
CJry it—and you
will know why
FARM IN FLORIDA
where things grow year
Tb men with *1.000.00 or so our PRODUC
ING FARMS, land cleared and fenced, oner
wonderful opportunities to make big m y
in early potatoes, trucking, poultry, f * •
etc. Only 30 miles from Jacksont die the
great shipping and marketing center.
roads, schools, churches and stores. ,
for full particulars and then come down and
investigate personally. m
FLORIDA FARMS A IVI, rSTRIES CO.
Green Cove Springs, Florida
AUTO ACCESSORIES
SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES
Write for FREB Weekly HuUetm
how you may save I *■ Tipton, E. urooau
Baltimore, Md.
Dddyi Evening
BULL AND DOG.
“I’m a very superior Pomeranian
dog.” said the small black dog.
“I'm a great big superior bull,” said
tiie bull.
“Ah, Bull,” said the Pomeranian
dog, whose name was Fluff-Fluff, “you
may be very big and you may be very
superior, but you are not as flue as I
ain.”
“How do you happen to be so near
the field?” asked the bull. “I suppose
you wouldn’t dare come too near.
You’d lie afraid I’d chase you.”
“Bow-wow-wow,” said Fluff-Fluff.
“I'm not afraid of you. Haven't I been
barking at you to show you I wasn’t
afraid of you?”
“That doesn’t show me anything,”
said the bull. “You wouldn’t care to
come too near me and you know it.
“Barking doesn’t show that you’re
so brave. It* doesn’t show that at all.
You’ve really got a very cross and un
pleasant little bark. Why are you
such a cranky sort, Fluff-Fluff?”
Fluff-Fluff barked angrily at the bull
and jumped about on his hind legs and
showed his little teeth and made up
a very cross face. •
"Now, now, Fluff-Fluff,” said the
bull, “you can’t pretend to be so brave
because I know you aren’t. I know
you're cranky, I know that.
“TelF me why you are so cranky,
Fluff-Fluff, tell me why.”
“Ah, you’re interested in hearing
about me,” said Fluff-Fluff: “All
creatures admire me, and even you,
! Bull, admire me.
“You are very big but you can’t help
seeing that little Fluff-Fluff is su
perior.”
"I don’t see that at all,” said the
hull. “Do you know what my name
is?”
•‘I don’t,” said Fluff-Fluff.
“Well, my name is King. That shows
what folks think of me. They were
the ones who named me King. My
family name is Bull, but the people
| who own me call me King.
“That is because 1 am so big and
“You Are Not as Fine.”
strong and brave and splendid. I’m
like a king in the animal world.”
“You may be a king," said Fluff-
Fluff, “in the animal world, and you
may be called a king, but you aren’t
treated like a king and I am.
"You don’t lie upon a silken cushion
when you go to bed at night, nor
when you take a nap In the daytime.”
“I wouldn’t care to,” said King. “A
silken cushion wouldn’t be of much
use to me.”
“I am treated more wonderfully
than a royal person would be treated.
Royal people have to work and study
and think.
“But I don’t have to do any of those
things. lam treated more royally than
a royal person, as I said.
“I can he cranky and no one minds.
1 can bark a harsh little bark and
tliey’H put up with me.
“I can jump about the people who
sit at the dining-room table and I can
make their meals miserable unless they
feed me when I want to be fed.
“I sit in the motorcar and go for
i rides and I see visitors come and go
and I look at them with a haughty look
| ami I say to them In my barking voice:
“ ‘You’re cot treated as well as I’m
treated. You don’t get the things I
get. You don’t have the fuss made
over you I have made over me.’
“If you were rude to your hostess
and to your host, who are my master
and mistress, you wouldn’t be asked
again, but I am allowed to live here
all the time and spoilt more and more
every day, and yet I'm rude to them.
“Gracious yes, I snap at them when
I’m cross. They may even be patting
me and I snap at them. They don’t
tell me I can’t come again. They give
me cream the very next time I want it
just the same as always.
“Ah yes, Fluff-Fluff leads a more
royal life than royalty.”
“You needn’t bother to tell me why
you're cranky,” said King, the bull,
“for I can see, and you’d better trot
buck home now, for I’m very angry,
and an angry bul! is a pretty wild
creature.”
HENRY COUNTY WEEKLY, McDONOUGH, GEORGIA.
KSS ■ THE •
tfIKITCMEiNSy
fea cabinet!^
((£), XitZl. Western Newspaper Union.)
To make good tea for you and me
We’ll heat this earthen pot, you see,
Then in it place Just one, two, three
Full teaspoons of the fragrant tea.
One each for urn and me and thee.
And when the water boiling be,
Turn on; then steep it thoroughly
Three minutes to set the flavor free.
MEATS THAT ARE DIFFERENT.
Lnmb chops may be cooked with a
stuffing making them a dish quite ele
gant and differ
to the bone, mak
ing a pocket to hold the stuffing. Make
any desired stuffing, sprinkle the
chops with salt and pepper and place
them in a buttered pan to bake for
20 minutes in a hot oven. Make a
gravy from the fat in the pan and
serve with the chops. A mint sauce
may he served also.
Calf’s Liver a la Begue.—Cut a
pound of calf's liver into half-inch
cubes, add two onions cut in slices, a
dash of paprika, and half a dozen
stalks of parsley cut fine; cover and
let stand a half hour; shake the liver
from the onions, roll in ttour and fry
in a basket in deep fat.
Sweetbreads a la Newburg.—Parboil
a pair of swetbreads half an hour
with two bay leaves. Drain, cool, r(>
move the membranes and cut in small
dice. Chop fine one cupful of fresh
mushrooms. Heat a cupful of thick
cream in a double boiler, add the
sweetbreads and mushrooms. Beat
three egg yolks, add salt, paprika and
two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice, one
tablespoonful of Worcestershire sauce
and stir into the cream. Serve hot in
ramekins.
Fricassee of Veal.—Cut a slice of
veal in serving sized pieces—a cut
from the leg. Pound each piece to
reduce thfc thickness, roll in flour and
fry in salt pork fat until brown on
both sides. Remove to a casserole,
pour broth or hot water over the
meat; the broth is made by rinsing
out the frying pan with hot water.
Add salt and pepper and cook covered
an hour or longer. Carrots and other
vegetables may he added If desired.
Almond Salad. —Blanch and shred
one-half cupful of almonds, add six
olives stoned and chopped, one-half
cupful of celery, one-half cupful of
mayonnaise or a good boiled dressing.
Serve on head lettuce.
Our day Is that of short cuts, labor
saving devices and greater efficiency
in all forms of labor. In steam and
electricity man has come Into posses
sion of well-nigh unlimited possibili
ties.
GOOD DISHES WORTH TRYING.
When ideas seem scarce and one
does not know what to serve, try some
of these:
Corn, California Style.
igJH ■—Mix a can of corn
■V3SJ/ ggri with chopped green pep
wtt pei " antl one ' half cupful
High pSfm thick white sauce,
W ° U seusone(J with salt.
Turn into a buttered
casserole and cover with
strips of bacon. Bake
in the oven until the bacon is cooked.
Cabbage With Veal Balls.—Cut the
center from a firm head of cabbage
and boil the shell in a cloth to keep
it from breaking; drain when tender
and season well with salt and pepper.
To the cabbage taken from the cen
ter. chop and add half as much minced
veal, one chopped onion, one cupful of
cooked rice and one-half cupful of
butter, mix and form into balls, the
size of a walnut, dip in egg and
crumbs and fry in deep fat until
brown. Serve the balls in the cab
bage shell both steaming hot.
Stuffed Rabbit —Mix together a cup
ful of bread crumbs, two tablespoon
fuls .of chopped parsley, two table
spoonfuls of poultry dressing or any
desired herbs, four tablespoonfuls of
chopped suet, one teaspoonful of
grated lemon rind, one egg and salt
and pepper to taste. Add milk If
more moisture is needed. Fill the. well
cleaned rabbit with this mixture and
sew up carefully. Simmer for an hour
or longer, according to the age of the
rabbit. Serve with parsley and butter
and serve buttered onions as a vego
table.
Preserved Berries. Currants,
crushed, or any fruit which can be
well mashed and mixed with an equal
quantity of sugar, allowed to stand
overnight in a cool place, or long
enough to have the sugar thoroughly
dissolved and mixed through the fruit,
may be canned in cold sterile jars and
sealed, keeping perfectly if kept in a
cold cellar or in the bottom of the
ice chest until cold weather comes on.
Keep the jars from the light
IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
Sunday School
* Lesson T
(By REV. P. B. FITZWATKK, D. D.,
Teacher of English Bible in the Moody
Bible Institute of Chicago.)
(©, 1021, Western Newspaper Union.)
LESSON FOR JULY 31
SAUL TEACHING AT ANTIOCH.
LESSON TEXT-Acts 11:19-30.
GOLDEN TEXT—A whole year they
assembled themselves with the church,
and taught much people.—Acts 11:26.
REFERENCE MATERIAL Acts 5:42;
I Tim. 2:5-7; 11 Tim. 2:2.
PRIMARY TOPlC—Carrying Help to
Jerusalem.
JUNIOR TOPIC—SauI Helping Others
In the Christian Life.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC
—Entering Upon a New Career.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC
—A Year's Teaching in Antioch.
When God was about to launch the
missionary enterprise among the Gen
tiles, He arranged for a new religious
center. Antioch was admirably
adapted for such a center. The upper
classes were Greeks and used the
Greek language. The government
officials were Romans and used the
Latin tongue. While the masses were
Syrians, sprinkled among them were
Jews who had come for commercial
purposes; also travellers from all parts
of the world were in evidence.
I. A Religious Awakening at Antioch
(vv. 39-21).
1. The occasion (v. 19a). The perse
cution at Jerusalem scattered the
disciples abroad. This God permitted
in order to separate them from the
home people at Jerusalem,
2. The preachers (v. 19a). They
were ordinary men and women, not
officials, but they were filled with the
yearning desire for lost souls and
witnessed of the Lord Jesus in the
power of the Holy Ghost.
3. What they preached (vv. 19b,
20). They preached the “Word” and
the “Lord Jesus.” All who preach the
Word will preach the Lord Jesus;
for He is its center. The real reason
why there are not conversions today
is the failure of ministers to preach
the Word.
11. Barnabas Sent to Inspect the
Work at Antioch (vv. 22-24).
This was a wise selection.
1. The character of Barnabas (v.
24). He was a good man. It Is
highly important in sending a man
to follow up a work of the Spirit that
i his character be good. He not only must
be of an unblemished character, but
his sympathies must be broad. He
must he capable of entering into full
appreciation of the things about him.
Much mischief often results from
sending injudicious men to look after
the Lord’s work. He was full of the
Holy Spirit. This is an essentiul
qualification for pastoral work. Only
a Spirit-filled man can appreciate the
workings of the Spirit of God. He
was also a man of great faith.
2. Work done by Barnabas (v. 23).
He gladly endorsed the work and
earnestly exhorted them to steadfastly
continue in the faith, clinging unto
the Lord. There are many allurements
to tempt young Christians. The re
joicing of Barnabas shows that he
was a man who could rejoice in Hie
work of others. He did more than
Inspect the work; for many people
were added unto the Lord. Doubt
less he preached.
111. Barnabas Brings Saul (vv. 25,
26).
The work grew to such an extent
that help Was needed. Barnabas had
the good jugment to seek Saul for
this important work. Barnabas knew
that the bringing of Saul would mean
his taking a secondary place. It is
the duty of Christian leaders to seek
out men who are qualified for the
Lord's work and bring them from their
places of obscurity, setting them to
work in the Lord’s vineyard. There
are many men in obscurity which it
requires a Barnabas to bring forth.
IV. The Disciples First Called Chris
tians (v. 26b).
They were not called Christians in
derision, as is so often asserted. It
was a consequence of Saul and Barna
bas teaching there for a year that
they were called Christians. The name
was a consequence of the teaching. In
all Saul’s teaching he showed the
unique relation which the Christian
sustains to Christ. Since the body
closely resembles its head, Christ, they
were called Christians.
V. The Church at Antioch Sends Re
lief to Jerusalem (vv. 27-30).
The Holy Spirit through Agabus
made known a great dearth through
out the world. This came to pass In
the days of Claudius Cesar. Every
man according to his ability deter
mined to send relief unto the brethren
which dwelt in Judea. They made up
money for the poor saints at Jerusalem
and sent it by the hands of Barnabas
and Saul. This act not only proved
the genuineness of the work at An
tioch, but it emphasized the fact that
there is no division between Jew and
Gentile.
Get Back Y )ur Health
Are you dragging around day after
day with a dull backache? Are you,
tired and lame mornings—subject to
headaches, dizzy spells and sharp, stab.*
bing pains. Then there's surely somo
thing wrong. Probably it’s kidney
weakness! Don’t wait for more seri
ous kidney trouble. Get back you!
health and keep it. For quick relief
get plenty of sleep and exercise and
use Doan's Kidney Pills. They have
helped thousands. Ask your neighbor!
A Georgia Case
S mm T. C. Cook, re
ffiSc tired salesman, 17
•,/w. Carml chael St.,
Newnaw Ga„ says:
\sN^| ene( j my kidneys
! N&sjf w (BE Hand I suffered
KiqKSV » SSJtr.W from a constant
y* pa in the bmII
friend recommended Doan’s Kidney
Pills and they cured me of all signs
of the trouble.”
Get Doan’s at Any Store, 60c a Box
DOAN’S ■yj’JLV
FOSTER.MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y.
rifiRfERSMITw
If Chill Tonic 0
NOT ONLY FOR CHILLS AND FEVER
BUT A FINE GENERAL TONIC.
Skin Troubles
Soothed
With Cuticura
Soap 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c, Talcum 25c.
Our KUBSJAN WOLFHOUNDS are Ideal com
panions. good hunters, bench show winners.
i’rize winning; strums. Booklet, prices. Arkan
sas Valley Kennels, Dept. A, Cimarron, Kan.
SWEET DREAMS
Liberal Bottles 35c. SOLD KVKIiI/WIIBRB
Enormous I’roflts Helling wondeiful remedy
for tired, aching feel. Destroys odor instant
ly. Send SI for complete recipe, Firestone,
Suffern, N. Y Money returned if not satisfied.
AUKNTS—QI ICk WALKS—BIG I’ROKITH.
ldea.l Washing Tablets, washes clothes with
out rubbing. Sells ID cents. Samples free.
M. W. Bennett, 282 Hawthorne, Yonkers, N.Y.
What Happens to ’Em.
An observant Boston matron was
speaking in condemnation of the flirt
t«. a young girl of her acquaintance.
“The dirt,” said she, "has a good
time in the present—a sort ol good
time, according to her view—but what
about the future, my dear? Many a
girl is on the shelf today because she
kept men on the rack yesterday.”
FOR SUNBURN OR SORENESS
Apply Yacher-Balin; it relieves at
once. If we have no agent where you
live, write to E. W. Vacher, Inc., New
Orleans, La.
Just So.
“Lady lawyers are beginning to
appear in our courts.”
“I know.”
“And when the lawyers on both
sides are beautiful it is going to be
harder than ever to decide a case,” —
Louisville Courier-Journal.
Sure
Relief
CY‘T'7
]V\ \ jt-jjl IMDIcisTJOsj!
s
I Hot water
ls-L W s Sure Relief
Be 11-ans
FOR INDIGESTION
•*
GENUINE
BU LL"
DURHAM
tobacco makes 50
good cigarettes for
,0c
W. N. u., ATLANTA, NO. 31-t*2l o