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THURSDAY, DEC. 11, 1924. THE BARNWELL PEOPLE, BARNWELL, S6UTH CAROLINA. PAGE SEVEN I \ f t IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL Lesson <By R*V. P. n FITZWATER, D.U.. Dean of the Evening School, Moody Bible In stitute of Chicago.) (©, 1924, Western Newspaoer Union.) Lesson for December 14 RAISING LAZARUS (©, 1924, Western Newscaper Union.) A man, to be greatly good, must Imagine Intensely and comprehen sively; he must put himself In the p?ace of another and of many oth ers, the pains an,d pleasures of his species must become his own. The great Instrument of moral good la the Imagination.—Percy P. Shelley. DISHES SEASON LESSON TEXT—John 11:1-45. GOLDEN TEXT—T am the resurrec- | tlon, and the life.’’ PRIMARY TOPIC—Jesus Comforts a j Family in Trouble. JUNIOR TOPIC — Lazarus Raised From the Dead. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC— Christ’s Power Over Death. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC —Christ, the Resurrection and the Life. I. The Revelation (vt. l-.’W). of Christ's For those who cannot eat rich pastry, hut enjoy the filling of a pie, ! the following will?! be enjoyed: Pump!<in Rame kins. — Take one and one-half cup- , fuls of steamed strained pumpkin, adn two-thirds of a cupful of brown The Bethany family held a peculiar sugar, one teaspoonful of cinnamon. ; 11if i f i n.i ii tut j tv Him when this 1 ilicrt- li'inie.. Those i to place in the affections of Jesus. When the doors of other homes were closed against Him, the door of this home flung wide open to receive Him. 1. Lazarus Sick (vv: 1. 2). Even those wim arc in close fellowship with the Lord are n<d immune from sick ness. 2. Martha and Mary Send for Jesus (v. 2). Because they had come to know Jesus more than a mere man they instinctively turned shadow fell across tli ,who receive Jesus into their homes, when all are well and happy, can be sure of His love and sympathy when sickness and death overtake them. ;{. Jesus’ Strange Delay (vv. 4-10). Martha nftTl Mary sent for Jesus be cause He loved Lazarus. Now, Jesus ’’abode in the me place’’ because He "loved Lazarus and bis sisters.” Mere A human sympathy would have moved Him to hasten to the home of trouble, but Divine love, which rests upon per fect knowledge, caused Him to tarry. d. Jesus Meets Mat’ha and Mary (vv ’JOlvT). Martha and Mary knew the peril to which He would be exposed and there fore did not request that He come, but merely uave Him notice. They were willing that His coming should be left to Him. ' (1) Martha Met Jesus (vv. 20-27). As He was nearing the village, Martha, who with her sister had passed through tlie awful ordeal—of the sick- ness ttnd death of a dear brother, met Him will) a complaint for His delay. Because of His love He ignored her complaint and taught her concerning the resurrection and life. Martha, like many today, had a vague belief that God would raise Lazarus some time in the remote future. To her came the compelling declaration, “1 am the res urrection, and the life.” The great truth to be apprehende.d Is that tx’re and now we are united to the living Christ, the source of life, and that this is tin* pledge of bodily resurrec tion and eternal reunion. (2) Mary Met Jesus (vv. 28-3.1). Mary came with the same words, but with a different voice and attitude. She fell down at His feet,. She had been sitting at )tls feet in the days of sunshine. Therefore she knew where to go when sorrows cast their shadows across her path. Her words were an swered by His tears. “Jesus w4*pt.” .11. The Resurrection of Lazarus (vv. 38-44). The groat sympathy now expresses Itself in supernatural power. Sym pathy would be valueless without its connection with divine power. In this stupendous miracle we see an illustra ; tion of the quickening into life of thos4* dead in trespasses and sin. Observe: 1. He Was Dead. Tills is a type of the sinner, dead in trespnssr^s and sins, even morally corrupt (Kph. 2:1). 2. The Stone MnM Be Boiled Away. This Is the part the human must play. 3. In Unbelief Martha Frotests Againkr the Stone Being Removed. She Insists that Lazarus had already undergone putrefaction. 1 4. Christ's Intimacy and Fellowship With the Father as Revealed In His Prayer. fi. His Manner of Dealing With Lazarus. It was by a call. He is call ing men and women today by His Spir it, His Word and His providence. 6. The Response of Lazarus Shows That’His Cull Was With Authority and Power. With the call goes 'the power to hear and obey, even though one be dead in trespasses and sin and therefore helpless. • * 7. The People Are Commanded to Remove the Grave-Clothes and Set Him Free. They could not make Lazarus alive, but they could remove the grave- clotiietL—uhieh bound the man whom Christ made alive. HI. The Effect of This Miracle (w. 45-47). This mighty work caused division of sentiment. Some believed on Jesus and some went to the Pharisees with the news. one-half cupful of cream, one-half tea spoonful of salt, two eggs and one and one-half cupfuls of milk. Mix the in gredients ’and till ramekins, which have been rinsed in cold water—fill two-thirds full. Bake in a moderate oven and wfhen a golden brown cover * . will) a meringue an<f brown, bT sefve with whipped cream. Cranberry Jelly.—To one quart of « ranberries add just enough cold \va- I ter to float the berries. Cook until the berries swell and burst; take from he tire and pur through a sieve. Re turn ,to the pah“Tfh(ParJTpTw(> cupfuls of sTTjuir, cook five minutes and turn into a mold. Serve cold. Fruit Cocktail.—Take one large grapefruit, two large oranges, one can of sliced pineapple, one-half cupful of white grapes,* one cupful of white cherries, one small bottle of maraschi no cherries and one cupful of sugar. Remove the seeds from the grapefruit and oranges and scoop out the fruit with a spoon. Cut the pineapple into small pieces, remove the seeds from the v l.ii^ cherries, cut grapes into half and remove the-seeds. Pour over the sugar and let stand in an earthen dish at Uuist twenty-four hours before serving. Creamed Celery.—Remove the out side stalks, scrape find cut into inch lengths. Let stand in mid water for fifteen minutes. Drain and drop into boiling water; cook until tender; drain and add to a well-seasoned white Sauce, using one ( upful of sauce to one cupful of the celery before cooking. A little hum b ft from baking, or broiled ham. put through the, meat cliopper and added to an omelet just .before it is folded to serve, makes a lieur’y disli for a luncheon or supper. No dissertation on furs is ever com plete unless it contains some refer ence to the fact that the fur coat is something more than an ornamental luxury—that it is a decidely utilita rian article and over a period of years may even develop into an eco nomical acquisition. Constant repe tition of this thesis, writes a Paris fashion correspondent in the New York Hem,id, lias borne fruit in re cent years, and ‘the fur v rap, which once graced only the shoulders of the affluent few, is today a conventional part of the moderately inromed ward robe. Fven the prevalence of fur trimmings on cloth coats and dresses lias not sated the steadily increasing feminine appetite for the all-fur cloak. The popularizing of this essentlar, 1 Item of the winter outfit has subject ed it to the whims of the mode. It , was not always so. In the not so > distant .past, the fur coat was dis tinguished per se—the mere fact that a coat was fashioned from some fine j pelt overshadowed all other consider-} afions. It mattered not whether die wrap was long or short and there was no set dicta concerning the kind | of fur or its color. only its sil-j houette conformed —and that some- ; what vaguely—io the mandate of the i mode. , The preseil; situation is entirely' different. (’oat# of mink, seal, er mine, ehfbcliilln and even sable are no longer epochal acquisitions, and tlx* rhic'‘of the fur cloak is quite as dependent up' u style as it is upon fabric a mil. ..d consequence of the widening vogue for this type of dress. Choose Flaring Model. The most difficult problem—if you are contemplating the acquisition of a new.fur wrap this winter- is to de cide upon the silhouette. Paris has enthusiastically risen to accept the flared outline in every type of cos tume this winter, but there is admit tedly a wide divergence of opinion concerning the lines of the fur coat.' The potency of the widened knee and hemline as a factor for this win ter'and next spring is unquestioned, but the hesitancy of the fourreur in adapting this innovation is due to the fact that the average woman ex- prriv her fur coat to conform to the fashions of more than a single year. As a consequence, the models offered arc mixed-—sbme are straight, some are'moderately flaring and some show a strikingly distended effect legin- nirg at either the knee or, the hem- The niannpr of achieving the fur coat flare is quite different from the methods employed on dress4*s. The godet—of paramount Importance with cloth models—is conspicuously miss ing. The effect is frequently arrived at by merely cutting the coat slightly wider toward the bottom at the front. The coat may then be held by the wearer so as to create the impression of a straight line from shoulder to hem, or it may lie permitted to hang in its natural position, in which case the flare becomes apparent. For the lady who still is skeptical over the future of the 'wider silhouette, the flaring flounce or peplum L v P efi nre suggesteil, as from 4‘itber of these , models a change? back to the straight- line can be accomplished with com paratively little remodeling and with out a great deal of expense. Considering next the actual pelts, their most significant characteristic is suppleness and this lias encouraged ensemble costumes which are based on fur a* a ke\noto. In some In stances then* is a fur coat and a dress partly of fur and partly of silk or wool while in others a. fur-trimmed coat < f fabric will have an accom panying dress in which an almost fuil- Do He what thy manhood bids the.e do, from none but self expect applause; noblest lives and noblest dies who makes and keeps his self-made laws. GOOD THINGS TO EAT t Lacking Something Some men are all man except heart, bruin and “backbone.”.—:j American ' Evangelist. Citizenship A Christian citizenship can spell out nothing but "clean citizenship.”— American Evangelist. ^ No Apology A three-foot rule does not Nave to apologize for being thirty-six inchea lOOff .—American Evangelist. It is hard for the busy mother, who has everything to do, to find time to vary her cookery by garnishing or variety in combi nations^ when ex pense is one of tile all-important items, which it is in most house holds. Some time wlic’i the Thtldren are clamoring for cinnumcr. mils try mak ing tbent with a baking powder bis cuit dough, rich enough to be whole some and digestible. Roll out, spread with butt4'r and sprinkle thickly with cinnamon, brown sugar and raisins or currants. Roll up and cut into lialf- incli biscuit by slicing with a sharp knife. Biike in a hot oven and serve hot. When making bread or rolls, the sponge used for einnamon rolls makes a more palatable roll. Turkish Rolls. -Work one-fourth of a cupful oS almond paste into one cupful of ladled cooled water, add a tahlespoonful of butter, one-half tea spoonful of salt, one cake of com pressed yeast, softened in one-fourth of a cupful of lukewarm water, and • add three or four cupfuls of flour. Mix all together and knead to ;i soft dough. Let stand in a-warm place to double its bulk. Shape into rolls. When light, brush over with milk and bake in a hot oven. Cup Cakes.—Take one-third—cupful of shortening, add one cupful of sugar, | creaming the, mixture ,well. Add two eggs well beaten, one and two-thirds cupfuls of pastry flour sifted with two teaspoonfuls of baking powder; alter nate the flour with.one-half cupful of milk, beating the batter well. Bake in gem pan'- ami frost with: Seven-Minute Frosting. -Put one egg White, unbeaten, sevt^i-eidiths of a cupful of sugar. »hre<* tablespponfuls of water over rapidly boiling water I Begin t< bent Immediately with n Dover egg beater and bent constantly for seven minutes. Remove from the hear, add a teaspoonful of vanilla and twelve marshmallows cut into small pieces. Beat until the marshmallows are Tdlssolved, then spread on the cakes. Prune and Almond Salad.—Stew large prunes, remove the stones and stuff with shredded almonds. Ar range on tender lettuce and serve with a French dressing. Prunes or dates added to sections of orange and served on lettuce .wi^li French dress : ing is a good salad cqmbination. Black Cloth Ensemble, Separate Tunic of Ermine, Matches Collar, Cuffs. line. All of these are cn regie this season and the responsibility for se- lecting the silhouette which shall 1m* | equally modish next season rests en- i tirely with madanie. Tin* first outline to be eliminated in the ques't for the new fur coat is the strictly srraiglitline model which j is dearly nearing the end of its cycle. Little exposition is needed on tills ■ point. Straight simplicity lias served its purpose and seen its day, :gid ; while the effect of the new silhouette nmv,not be radieallv different, it will * .i ♦ ■j-nevertheless vary enough in concept to force tjfie old outline out of the picture, s' The (extremely flared treatment should also be avoided. While such a silhouette will very probably lie adopted during 1325 for dresses, an exaggeratedly wide hemline is always awkward in eotits and particularly in elegant in fur coats. Distended Effects Differ. This leaves only the moderately distended silhouette, which is patent ly the most practical outline to select for this season’s fur coat. If is dis tinct from t|ie models of recent win ters and although the flare Is very evident.. It d«*es not interfere with the necessarily graceful lines of coat or wrap. It conforms to the present trend of the mode and It will conform as cell to the dictates of fashion dur ing the winter of 1025. RANGES M ADE of the famous rust-resisting Cop per-Bearing Iron— tested for over a quarter of a century—Nearly a million in use—your neighbor or someone near you uses one —known and sold every where. Then is an Allen Dealer near you—in your town or close ky. Write us foe catalog and where they may he bought. ALLEN MANUFACTURING COMPANY NASHVILLE TENNESSEE Don’t buy a pi^ in a bag You may waste materials costing much more by using baking powder of unknown reputation. Buy Davis-you £et no premiums but the full value in the baking powder Bake it BEST with DAVIS aM baking M-' POWDER EVERY INGREDIENT OFFICIALLY APPROVED UY U V FOOO AUTHORITIES What passion cannot mUsTc rise and I He lives who dies to win a lusting quell? I name. Black Broadtail Coat Having Circular Flounce, Dress of Black Satin. length tunic is developed entirely of fur while the underslip, which shows for only a few Inches at the hem line, is of fabric. In this case the coat of the ensemble is full length. Another kind of fur ensemble con sists of a knee-length coat of fur and an accompanying dress of doth bor dered with a deep band of fur to nmtd) tin* cape. Tlds hand is of a depth that readies to where the cape ends. The effect is that of an' entire fur garment. The cape is lined with doth in the same color as that of the dress anil narrow fur cuffs finish the long, tight sleeves. Dress and Coat, Black Cloth. With a ^ostume consisting of a dress and coat developed from black dofli, the latter having a high-stand ing collar and deep cuffs of summer enniiK, there is an accompanying tunic,’ developed from the ermine, -w of tin* dress. Another striking ensemble ipodel combines two-t.lrfTerelit furs. The coat is three-quarters yWiigth and devel oped from black broadtail while the dress is of black satin edged with lynx and embroidered in pearls. New natiu's and familiar names are j met among the pelts, of the present season. Sable, ermine and diinchil*' la-remain the triumvirs of the eve- 1 ning mode while mink is a dominat ing factor for occasions du jour and du soir. Astrakhan,, because of its, pliable texture, is one of. the most im- ! portant daytime pelts. Other modish j skins include barundukl, or chipmunk, , leopard, pony-skin—its first appear ance in several years—caracul, broad- i tail, seal, nlole, squirrel and gazelle. ! A straight line model of barunduki : is cut on perfectly straight lines as far as the silhouette is concerned, but a slightly flaring effect is achieved by the trimming consisting of bands of monkey fur which flare out when the rer walks. Dollar and cuffs are of monkey. Surplice closing and low waistline are important features. Brown is the smartest color for the Paris furs and even those skins that are naturally of a different hue are being dyed all tints of brown, ran/, Ing from be'ge to the more decided shades. The finer pelts invariably retain their natural colors and the dyeing process is confined to the more inexpensive skins.^ The length of the new models varies from three-quarters to full, and includes, of course, the seven- eighths coats. The short fur Jacket lias been comparatively neglected this year—only Premet makes a genuine feature of It and even with thl* de signer the longer types easily pre- 'dominate. Children Cry FOR MOTHER Castoria is especially pre pared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Constipation, Flatulency, T; allaying Feverishness arising there from, arid, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Absolutely Harmless - No Opiates. Physicians everywhere recommend it Nothing wins a man sooner than a good turn. There is a mode In plays as Well us clothes. SPjfflN SAY ‘‘BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross" on tablets you are not gettifig the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for Colds Headache Neuralgia Lumbago Pain Toothache Neuritis Rheumatism Accept) only “Bayer” package which contains proven directions. U U» Ua«r auk of Handy “B*y*r” boxea of 12 tablets Also bottle* of 24 and 100—Druggists. Kuateetera el i