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Cool, Easy Frocks
For Midsummer Use
[)O YOU go in—or rather out—
for active sports? Then
there’s a place in your life for
the pretty play frock (1767) with
short tennis skirt, sunback, and
bright bands of braid. A little short
sleeved jacket and head kerchief
are included in your easy pattern.
In pique, gingham or chambray, it
will make your vacation smarter
and gayer.
Cool Daytime Frock.
Are you looking for something
cool, becoming and different for
daytime? Then 1778 is just what
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you want! A square-necked,
youthful basque frock, with circu
lar skirt, upped sleeves and a tiny
waistline, it will look summery
and refreshing even on the hottest
day, with your big hat and white
shoes. For this, choose silk print,
linen, gingham or lawn.
The Patterns.
1767 is designed for sizes 12, 14,
16, 18 and 20. Size 14 requires 514
yards of 35 inch material without
nap. 2% yards of braid.
1778 is designed for sizes 12, 14,
16, 18, 20 and 40. Size 14 requires
4% yards of 35 inch material with
short sleeves. 1% yards of trim
ming.
Send your order to The Sewing
Circle Pattern Dept., Room 1324,
211 W. Wacker Dr., Chicago, 111.
Price of patterns, 15 cents (in
coins) each.
(Bell Syndicate—WNU Service.)
How Women
in Their 40’s
Can Attract Men
Here's good advice for a woman during her
change (usually from 38 to 52), who fears
she’ll lose her appeal to men, who worries
about hot flashes, loss of pen, 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
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, made
especially for women. 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
WORTH TRYING!
Rests With Fools
Anger may glance into the wise
man’s breast, but only in the
bosom of fools doth it rest.
For quick relief—lnsist
<Simpler on this accurate aspirin.
iHpadadiJSt, Joseph
GENUINE PURE ASPIRIN
Escaped Deeds
Youth once gone is gone. Deeds,
let escape, are never to be done.—
Robert Browning.
Try THIS for Malaria!
When Malaria hits you or your
family this year, get a bottle of
Wintersmith’s Tonic the first thing.
Wintersmith’s has been proven by
over 70 years of use. It has helped
thousands upon thousands of peo
ple. Ask for Wintersmith’s by
name. If your dealer doesn’t stock
it, he can get it for you. Ask him!
WINTERSMITH'S
TONIC
Sorrow’s Crown
A sorrow’s crown of sorrow is
remembering happier things.—
Dante.
A wonderful aid for boll,
where ■ drawing agent
la indicated. Soothing
111 an< * com,ort ' n ß-
■ » rUdKr children and grown-upa.
Practical. Economical
MORE FOR YOUR M
• Read the advertisement*.
They are more than a selling
aid for business. They form — _
an educational system which MJ
is making Americans the best
educated buyers in the world. ■■
The advertisements are part JE
of an economic system which
is giving Americans more
for their money every day. A
Household Neirs
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KEEP COOL WITH REFRIGERATOR MEALS
See Recipes Below.
Refrigerator Meals
It’s a smart stunt to get meal
preparation out of the way in the
cool of the morning. Knowing that
dinner’s ready and
practically wait
ing to be served
helps you to look
and feel cool,
calm and collect-
ed, and it leaves
you free for “vacationing” during
the hot hours of the day.
Here’s a menu that can be pre
pared in the morning, almost down
to the last sprig of parsley, so that
it will be ready to serve at the ap
pointed dinner hour with only a little
additional work.
Pineapple Upside Down Loaf
Tomatoes Stuffed With Macaroni
Buttered Fresh Peas
Minted Pear Salad
Hot Biscuits
Strawberry Fluff
Biscuits.
(Makes 12-14 Biscuits).
2 cups flour
4 teaspoons baking powder
% teaspoon salt
% cup shortening
% cup milk
Sift dry ingredients together and
cut in shortening. Add liquid slow
ly. Turn dough onto lightly floured
board, pat to %-ineh thickness, and
cut in rounds. Place on greased
cookie sheet. Brush biscuits with
melted butter and store in refrig
erator until 20 minutes before din
ner. Bake in hot oven (450 degrees)
for 15-20 minutes.
Pineapple Upside Down Ham Loaf.
Sliced pineapple
Whole cloves
1% pounds ham (ground)
% pound veal (ground)
1 green pepper
(minced) % cup
1 cup rice (cook
ed)
2 tablespoons on
ion (minced)
Vi teaspoon pep-
per .
1 teaspoon salt
1 egg (beaten)
% cup chili sauce or catsup
% cup wat*
Dot several slices of pineapple
with whole cloves. Arrange in the
bottom of a loaf pan.
Combine meat, green pepper,
rice, onion and seasonings. Add
egg, chili sauce (or catsup) and wa
ter. Shape into loaf, and bake at
375 degrees for one hour. Turn out
onto platter. Serve hot or cold.
Buttered Fresh Peas.
Simply place the shelled peas in
a saucepan, partially filled with wa
ter. Set in refrigerator, then just
before dinner, cook in this same
water. For variety, sprinkle finely
chopped garden mint over peas be
fore serving.
Tomatoes Stuffed With Macaroni.
Remove the centers from the de
aired number of tomatoes and fill
with cooked and
seasoned macaro
ni, topping with
slices of cheese,
or better yet, if
the refrigerator
divulges some
freshly kept, left
over macaroni
and cheese, this may be used in
stead, with a buttered crumb top
ping. Chill until dinner time, then
bake in a hot oven (400 degrees)
for about 20 minutes.
Minted Pear Salad.
1 package mint-flavored gelatin
1 cup boiling water
1 cup cold water
% teaspoon salt
5 or 6 pear halves (canned)
Lettuce
Salad dressing.
Dissolve gelatin in boiling water,
add cold water and salt. Let stand
in refrigerator until cool. Dip pear
halves in cold gelatin mixture and
BAKER COUNTY NEWS
arrange in ring mold. Place in re
frigerator until set, and fill the mold
with the cooled gelatin mixture.
Chill until firm. Serve on large plat
ter with a small bowl of salad dress
ing and lettuce for garnish.
Strawberry Fluff.
And for dessert, combine whipped
cream, sliced strawberries and
marshmallows cut in quarters.
Place in sherbets and chill for sev
eral hours or overnight.
Get Your Copy of This New Book.
Just imagine being able to turn to
a helpful little book for the answers
to puzzling questions about home
making. Tips on how to save work
while ironing, how to remove old
paint and varnish from furniture,
what to do when your net curtains
tear and the budget just won’t per
mit a new pair, the answers to these
and many other questions will be
found in Eleanor Howe’s useful little
book “Household Hints.” Send 10
cents in coin to Eleanor Howe, 919
N. Michigan Avenue, Chicago, 111.,
and get your copy of “Household
Hints” now.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
Pure Cellulose Curtains
Look Like Rare Chintzes
Pure cellulose curtains that look
like printed linens and rare chintzes
are making home-decorating history
for 1939. So low is their cost that
an entire house can be redraped
for less than $lO, and when the cur
tains are soiled they can be thrown
away and replaced for a cost equal
to or less than the cost of launder
ing.
Looking like vellum and feeling
like fine percale, these materials are
soft, pliable, with permanent drapa
bility and “hand.” They are avail
able in a wide number of patterns
and designs in rich, sunfast colors.
Coming completely finished and
ready to hang, with matching tie
backs, the drapes are sold in three
lengths.
Little Niceties Make
Cheerful Guest Room
Summer guests will appreciate a
cheerful guest room—one that has
its own style furniture and not just
misceHaneous discarded pieces. Es
sential as the bed itself are a chest
of drawers for odds and ends, a
smart vanity for the feminine visitor
and a bedside lamp and table.
A chaise longue and some good
books and magazines will help take
care of those in between moments.
Most important of all, for comfort’s
sake, are a good mattress and a
good spring.
Logs for the Apartment
There are now fireplace logs suit
ed to the apartment dweller. They
are compressed under great pres
sure out of sawdust and shavings so
that each log is bone dry, clean,
uniform in size (4 by 12% inches),
and has no splinters. There is al
most no storage problem, as each
log burns for four hours, and a
month’s supply can easily fit into
the closet along with the umbrella
and galoshes. These logs give off a
colored flame—blue, orange, purple
or green—very much like fires made
from driftwood.
Dining Bay Excludes Flies
If you want to eat outdoors in
warm weather, but the flies make
the meal a nuisance, how about add
ing a bay to your living or dining
room? You can sit with windows on
practically three sides of you, but
by screening them, banish the an
noying and unsanitary little insects.
Sealing Jellies
Paraffin used for sealing jellies
should be "smoking” hot, since it
sterilizes as well as seals. Tilt the
glass in order that the melted par
affin may form a seal around the
side of the glass as well as a cov
ering for the top.
IMPROVED
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
SUNDAY I
chool Lesson
By HAROLD L. LUNDQUIST. D. D.
Dean of The Moody Bible Institute
of Chicago.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
Lesson for July 16
Lesson subjects and Scripture texts se
lected and copyrighted by International
Council of Religious Education; used by
permission.
REHOBOAM: A MAN WHO MADE
A FOOLISH CHOICE
LESSON TEXT—-I Kings 12:1-5, 1217, 20.
GOLDEN TEXT—A man's pride shall
bring 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 sim
plest 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, especially since God
is willing to give it without money
and without price even to the hum
blest believer.
Men and women, let us not follow
the foolishness of Rehoboam. Let us
seek first God’s kingdom and His
righteousness, and then we are as
sured that everything else shall be
added unto us (Matt. 6:33).
The picture before us is astonish
ingly up-to-date. People were cry
ing for relief from tax burdens. One
group of leaders counseled modera
tion; another group, said in effect,
tax them all you can and keep on
spending. The king, who in a mon
archy 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 (vv. 1-
5).
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 soon
er or later the people rise to over
throw 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
happen elsewhere if men who rule
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 quite unable to
make immediate answer to their re
quest. Incidentally, we note that
much of the folly of Rehoboam is
chargeable to the neglect of his fa
ther to rear him properly. May
that terrible thing never be said
about you and me regarding our
children.
11. 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 excel
lent opportunity to show young peo
ple 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 kind
ness, love, and tact seek to help
them choose the right way.
111. 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 re
volted, others have followed him,
for it is still true in the world that
the rulers “do evil” because “they
prepare not their hearts to seek the
Lord.”
Rehoboam, who had awaited the
arrival of this crucial hour in an
ticipation of taking his place as the
king of the ten tribes, was ready,
and was at once chosen as the lead
er of those who withdrew from the
rule of the house of David. Reho
boam’s sin brought this about, but
it was also in the counsels of God
(v. 15). As Alexander Maclaren ex
presses it, “. . . the historian draws
back the curtain. On earth stand
the insolent king and mutinous peo
ple, 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 responsi
bility 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 th*
less.”
ASK ME O
ANOTHER (
The Questions
1. Why is the speaker of the
house of representatives so called?
2. What country is the Land of
Cakes?
3. How big a trunk did the Char
ter oak have?
4. What is the oldest parliament
in the world?
5. Is there a word descriptive of
the feeling of annoyance one has
in a noisy place?
6. About how much of the
world’s habitable land surface
does the British empire cover?
Chintz-Covered Lamp
Shades You Can Make
By RUTH WYETH SPEARS
‘‘T}EAR MRS. SPEARS: I have
a pair of lamps for my
dressing table, and I would like to
use some of my curtain material
to cover plain shades. Can you
tell me how this is done? C. H.”
Here is a method that is shown
for a living room lamp in Book 1.
Use top and bottom rings from old
lamp shade. A cardboard founda
tion is cut to fit these, and the
chintz or other fabric is pasted to
the edge of this.
The AB line in the pattern dia
gram is as long as the diameter
of the bottom ring. The dotted
vertical line is approximately as
long as the depth of the shade.
* 'pattern to
FIT
& t
OUTSIDE \ V. ■
/ POIDED \ j Sx ksn
( \. •
q q \
TO RINGS^j.
The CD line is as long as the
diameter of the top ring. Draw
the diagonal lines to touch the
ends of the AB and CD lines.
Place a tack where they meet at
E. Place a pencil through a loop
in a string, as shown, and draw
the bottom line of the shade mak
ing it as long as the measurement
around the bottom ring plus a
half inch. Shorten the string and
draw the top to fit the top ring
allowing for a half inch lap.
NOTE: Book I—SEWING, for
the Home Decorator, and No. 2,
Gifts, Novelties and Embroider
ies, are now 15 cents each, or both
books for 25 cents. Readers who
have not secured their copies of
these two books should send in
their orders at once, as no more
copies will be available, when the
present stock is sold. Your choice
of the QUILT LEAFLET showing
36 authentic patchwork stitches;
or the RAGRUG LEAFLET, will
be included with orders for both
books for the present, but the offer
may be withdrawn at any time.
Leaflets are 6 cents each when or
dered without the books.
Everyone should have copies of
these two books containing 96 How
to Sew articles by Mrs. Spears.
Send your order at once to Mrs.
Spears, 210 S. Desplaines St., Chi
cago, 111.
WHY BE SATISFIED WITH
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341 TRUST CO. OF GEORGIA BUILDING ATLANTA, GA.
A Quiz With Answers
Offering Information
on Various Subjects
A GREAT BARGAIN
VESPER TEA
PURE ORANGE PEKOE
50 Cups for 10 Cents
■ Ask Your Grocer
Easy to Understand
A good example is the best ser*
mon.—Old Proverb.