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t V The Barnwell People-Sewtincl. Barnwell 8. C~ Thoraday, Febmary 11, 1937 - of mtsi to W MEWIff When laundering sweaters or knitted blouses let dry on cloth or bath towel placed on a flat surface. No ironing is required. • • • Tablecloths that are no longer in use make good cot covers, bed spreads, or curtains if they are dyed to match the color scheme of the room. » • • Pie crusts will be flakier if a tablespoon of cornstarch is added to the flour used for each pie. • • • Leather book bindings can be preserved by periodic treatments with an equal mixture of castor oil and paraffin. • • » Fairy Bread — Two cupfuls flour, one dessertspoonful sugar, one teaspoonful bicarbonate of soda, two teaspoonfuls cream of tartar, pinch of salt, one egg, half cupful milk (or a little more). Make into a nice light dough, and bake as a loaf in a slow oven. , r • • • To remove paint from cotton clothing soak the spot in a solu tion made of equal parts of am monia and turpentine. When spot disappears wash garment in soap suds. C Associated Newspapers-—WNU Service. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription Is a tonic which has been helping women of all ages for nearly 70 years. Adv. What You Use ‘Tt’s the ability you use that you are judged by—not the ability you possess.”—Ann Grace Chappie. AT LAST A C0S6H RELIEF—THAT ALSO SFEEIS RECOVERT Remember the namet It’s FOLEY’S HONEY A TARI Double-eetiac- One set of ingredieata qniekly soothes, relieves tickling, haclun«. eon* b - ing . . . coats irritated throat linings to keep you from coughing. Another set reaches the bronchial tubes, loosens phlegm, helps break up • cough due to a cold c«k tpttdt rereerrv. For muck relief and up rereerrv.ask your oruggist for double aetiag FOLEY'S HONEY A TAR. Idee! for children, loo. Gets botUs today. Big Task Philosophy’s chief duty is to rec oncile the contradictions of our ex perience. Miss REE LEEF says: CAPUDINE relieves HEADACHE quicker because Its liquid... a/uady (LiiclveJ. W Blackmon’s Msdkotsd Lick- A-Brik ar* Blackman’s Stack Powder wr Blackman's Cow Tank or- Blackman's Hog Powder wr Blackman’s Poultry Tablets or- Blackman’s Poultry Powder Highmt Quality— Lmottt Priem Satisfaction Guaranteed or your money back BUY FROM YOUR DEALER BLACKMAN STOCK MEDICINE CO. iTonn. Nervous, Sleepless? Ohio and Mississippi Valleys Devastated by Flood 1—Flood refugees load their possessions aboard a truck prior to fleeing to higher ground. 2—Cat is ma* rooned on a second story window ledge as Ohio river flood waters rise. 3—Flood sufferers at Portsmouth, Ohio, are fed by boatn?en who row about streets, handing bread to refugees above the water line. AUK YOU Mm. W. 0. SalUvan of 1S47—Dih Art Columbus tuflcrta from pain* In my bark end my tide and I headarhea all due to fu MB A' : M tiona! disturbances A real -w-- 9 rtH H night »** rsrs ^ I was adrtard to try Dr. Ficror'a Favorite Prmertp- tkB as g tonic After takJ. g cat bottle I had a ken appetite and 1 fek haaar la every way.** Buy of year dr egg.*. Haw Ma tabtett SOc, llqaid «L« ft «US. Tank Cars of Drinking Water for Flood Sufferers IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL UNDAYI chool Lesson By REV. HAROLD L LUNDQU1ST, Dean at the Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. • Western Newspaper Unioa. Lesson for February 14 JESUS THE GOOD SHEPHERD LESSON TEXT—John 10:1-18. GOLDEN TEXT—I am the good shep herd: the good shepherd glveth his Ufa tat the Cheep. John 10:11. PRIMARY TOPIO-A Good Shepherd. JUNIOR TOPIC—The Good Shepherd. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC- Ho v Jeaus Is Lika • Shepherd. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC— Jesus Our Good Shepherd. % 'ecipe Halon KaQar The blind man who had been healed had been cast out of the synagogue because he had given the glory for his healing to Jesus Christ, (see ch. 9). The door to that which stood for all that was sacred to him had been closed. Whither should he turn? Look! here comes someone seeking him. It is Jesus, who now declares that the door which men had closed was no true door at all, for he says, *T am the door of the sheep.” Those who pro fessed to be shepherding the flocks and who had cast this poor man out were but hirelings. Now he speaks to the One who says, ”1 am the good Shepherd.” Someone has suggested that the parable of the good shepherd pre sents the whole day in the life of the shepherd and his flock, morning, noon, and night, and typifies the ministry of Christ on our behalf in the varying circumstances of life. I. In the Morning (John 10:1-6). Flocks were sbmetimes kept in the field at night, as was the case Tank can, normally milk can, an shown being loaded with water in Chicago and started southward to tha flood scourged sufferer* in the Ohio and Mississippi valleys where water was ao contaminated that it was unsafe for human consumption. Coast Guard Rescues Flood Victims But Few Many men’s nature demands adoration and few are averse to it. Up in the Morning Feeling Fine! The refreshing relief so manj folks say they get by taking Blark- Draught for constipation makes them enthusiastic about this famous pure ly vegetable laxative. Black-Draught puts the digestive tract In better condition to act regularly, every day. without your continually having to take medicine to move the bowels. Next time, be sure to try black- draught A GOOD LAXATIVE Motive of Patriotism The noblest motive is the pub lic good.—Vigil. BLACKMAN STOCK one/POULTRY MEDICINES Are Reliable m Flood victims in coast guard boats shown arriving at Jeffersonville. Ind., across the river from Louisville, Ky., where they were placed on refugee trains and taken to safety further north. Floods on the Ohio and Mississippi rivers were the worst in the history of the country. More than 1,000,000 people were made homeless by the treacherous waters that rose over retaining walls, inundated cities and towns and covered rich farm areas. Damage of property exceeded half a billion dollars. Orphans of the Flood Find Refuge Refugee children from the flooded districts of northern and eastern Arkansas are shown asleep on the floor of a railroad station following their rescue With millions of acres of farm land under water and count less cities inundated, the Ohio and Mississippi valleys experienced the moot devastating flood in history. EVACUATION AREA Golden Gsta Salad. H pound of fresh marshmallows cut in halves. 2 nice oranges, carefully pealed and cut in small pieces. 2 bananas, cut in dicelike pieces. 2 thick slices of fresh pineapple cut in the same way. 1 large tart apple, exit fine. Mi pint bottle of red maraschino cherries, cut in half, with juice. % pint jar of french marrons, bivken up, with sirup. The delicate inner stalks of one head of celery, cut in small pieces. V< pound of fresh pecans or eng- lish walnuts. Mix nuts, fruits, celery together in dish and put in icebox. Dressing. Vi pint of thick mayonnaise. Vi pint of thick cream. Whip cream and mix with may onnaise and juice of half a lemon. An hour before serving mix dress ing lightly with salad and sprinkle with plenty of paprika. Serve very cold on crisp lettuce leaves. I like this salad very much. I ate it first in California, so I call it Golden Gate salad. It is best made of fresh fruits, but it can be made of canned fruits. At home we often serve it instead of dessert, with a little more whipped cream. Copyright.—WNU Sorvleo. on the* night when Jesus was born , , i • - in Bethlehem. But ordinarily the> Chinese Lady S Tiny Feet — “Lily” feet three inches long, beautifully tapered but painfully crippled, are still a curse of China despite 30 years of crusading against them. In Hankow, 90 per cent of all women over thirty still have bound feat. Map showing 100-mile wide strip along the Mississippi river from Cairo, 111., to New Orleans which the War department ordered evacu ated of all people in the most dis astrous flood in the nation’s history. Largest peace time removal' of civilians in history, the project was conceived to save the lives of more than 500,000 people. HEADS FLOOD RELIEF were brought into a sheepfold where many flocks gathered for protec tion. Thieves would climb the wall to steal sheep, but the shepherd, when he came In the meriting to lead forth his flock, entered in by the door. He called out his flock by name and they knew his voice. It is said that only a sick sheep will follow a stranger, which may explain why ao many false isms of our day appeal to the sick and lead them away from the Good Shep herd. Do you know his voice? Have you responded to his call? Will you fol low him? Deckle now. H. la tfca Heat of Ike Day (w. 7-10). Perhaps the sheep need to enter the fold to rest, if ao he is the door. But they may wish to go out to the pasture—again ho is the door. Belonging to Christ is not bondage. If any man enter in by Christ, the Door, ho is free to go in and out, to find pasture, to live tor and to servo him. “The Door.” What a striking fig ure! It is • means of entry, the only way in. Every door has two sides and the aide we are on de termines whether we err inside or outside—saved or loet. Children used to sing, and still do: On* Doer and only on*. And y*t Its old** or* ft Inoid* and outside. On which aid* ar* you? HI. When Night Comas (w. It 16). The wolves come out as the shad ows gather. They come to kill and to scatter. Where is the shepherd? If he is only a hireling, serving for what may “be in it” for him, he will flee. How perfectly this pic tures religious leaders who, in spite of their swelling words and ingra tiating manners, desert the flock in the hour of adversity. Fair weather friends are they, who disappear when darkness and danger appear. In the darkest hour Jesus is near est at hand. He never fails. He has no fear, for has he not tested the bitter death of Calvary’s tree for you and tor me? He is the good shepherd. He giveth his life for the sheep. Those who have put their trust in him shall never bo put to shame. Because he has given his life for the sheep we must not forget nor neglect the truth found in verse 16. There are "other sheep” that have not yet been brought into the fold. They must be brought in, and we, in His behalf, must bring them, that there may "be one fold and one shepherd.” A Three Days’ Cough Is Your Danger Signal Bo matter bow away metIMtnm you hove triad for your eoagb.obMl 5^14 or bronchial Irritation, you COM get relief now with Borloaa troutolo may bo you cannot afford to tabs with anyUiinf leas than which goas right to the amt to trouble to aid natnra to and heal the! ae the od anf if otl don’t be Is authorieed to rion and to money If you aro not rmns front the very Get Croomukloo risht Harry L. Hopkins, WPA admin istrator who has directed the work of more than 50,000 federal relief workers in the flood -area. Besides rescue and first aid work, the toilero have begun the teak of rehabilita tion—a job which It is estimated will confront Ohio and Mississippi river cities for several months to coma. When love a gather, expect Ruskin. skill work to- RELIEF r«fiS The original Cellophane wrapped genuine purr aapmo st.Joseph GLNU1NE FLHL VSPIHIS Home and Virtues Home is the :hief school at hu man virtues.—Channing. Penitence and Mercy Man must not disclaim his brotherhood, even with the guilti- -St, since though his hand be clean us heart has surely been polluted >y the flitting phantoms of iniquity. He must feel that when he shall knock at the gate of Heaven no semblance of an unspotted life can entitle him to an entrance there. Penitence must kneel and Mercy come from the footstool of the Throne, or that golden gate will never open.—Nathaniel Hawthorne. DON T NEGLECT A COLD SORE, RHEUMATIC MUSCLES The Power of Prayer The greatest thing anyone can do for God and for man is to pray. When one understands about pray er, and puts prayer in its right place, one finds that it is the doing that grows out of praying that is mightiest in touching huoan hearts.—S. D. Gordon. . The March of Life In the march of life don’t heed the order of “right about” when you know you aro about right—<X W. Holmes. ■srswAwfcx Wr* to k« HM itefes _ d on >WT few hour effective. The new treatment for ■ore. acMoff Bioadci la AUeock’a Porooa Flaeter. that etasa on antil pain to all foae. Oao AUcoek'a Plas ter lasts day* and days wiihoot farther thought. The blood to scatly draws to tha rbconatla area, aad the i or attoky. AUcock'e to lliniM Bmr eacn^teatUY thsTAMoodi SORES. BOILS FOOT, SURMS. CUTS aad ITCHING SUM Vi * i in BOWSON S BA