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COME TO CHURCH SUNDAY ST. JAMES EPISCOPAL Main St. at Eighth Ave. Rev. James P. Burke, rector. First Sunday after Epiphaney. 8 a. m.— Early communion. , 9:30 a. in.—Church school. ,11a. m.—Morning service. 7:30 p. m.—Y. P. S. L. meet ing. . • BETHEL WESLEYAN (Tracey Grove) Rev. L. A. Harvey, pastor. Sunday school, 9:45 a. rn.; Ed-, gar Duncan, superintendent. Morning worship, 11 o'clock— J Sermon subject, "The Man of Sin." W. Y. P. S„ 6:30 p. m.—Edgar Duncan, Pres. Subject, "What Do : I Know .About Prayer." Leader. Clelon Hoots. ( Evening service, 7:30 o'clock— evangelistic. PRESBYTERIAN Hr. L. T. Wilds, pastor. Sunday school at 9:15 a. m.— H/.rold K'ana'.ian. superintend *nt. Morning worship. 11 o'clock— sermon subject, "The Greatest Work in the World." The olLccrs and teachers of the Sunday school as appointed by the Session for ( this year will be installed at the ] close of this service. These will sit together as u body in the cen- . tral section of the church. All members and parents especially are urged to attend this service. Vesper service, 5 o'clock—ser mon subject. v Steadfast." Christian Endeavor: Juniors at 2:30; Intermediates and Seniors at 5:45. Circle meetings: Monday at { 3:30. except No*. 1 and 7 at. 7:30. i Places of meeitntr: No. 1 with: Mrs. Harry Fry mover (1203 5th Ave. W.>; No. 3. at the church hou?e; No. 4 with Mrs. O. Y. Brownlee (320 6th Ave. W.): No. 5 with Miss Elizabeth Cannon! (6th Ave. W.); No. 6 with Mr George Wing (Skyland hotel);: No. 7 with Miss Sara Hudgens [ (Tracey Grove road). Men of the Church — Tuesday evening. Supper will be served at | 7 o'clock and followed by a pro- j gram to be announced later. These j meetings are well attended and a I most interesting meeting is expect-1 cd this week. Frayer meeting—Wednesday at 7:30. in the church house. A cordial welcome to all vis itors. | The musical program at thei Presbyterian church for Sunday I is as follows: MORNING SERVICE— Send Our Light—Gounod. Quartet—In the Cross of Christ I Glory—Heyser—Mesdames Sta-! ton and Allen. Messrs. Sudduth and Brown. VESPER SERVICE— Duet—The Lord !s My Shep-j herd — Smart — Mrs. Staton and, Allen. I CHRISTIAN SCIENCE '•Sacrament" will ho the sub ject of the lesson-sermon in all . churches and societies of Chri<t Scientist, on Sunday. Jan. 13. The golden text will be from , John 13:34,35. "A new command ment I give unto you. That ye love J one another; as I have loved you; that ye also love one another. By ! this shall all men know that ye; are my disciples, if ye have love ( one to another. Among the citations v. hich com-: prise the lesson-sermon is the fol- ■ lowing from the Bible: "Ask, and; it shall be given unto you; seek. J and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you. For every one that a^keth receiveth;! and he that sceketh tindeth: and j to him that knocketh it shail be opened." Matthew 7:7,8). The lesson-sermon also will in clude the following passage from the Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures " by Mary Baker Eddy: '"What we most need is the prayer of fervent des':*e for. growth in ;4race, expresseu in pa tience, meekness, love and good deeds. To keep the command ments of our Master and follow His.example, is our proper debt to him »nd the only worthy evi- j dence of our grat'tude for all that He has clone. Outward worship is not of itself sufficient to express loyal and ehartfelt graitude, since He ha.- said: 'If ye love Me, keep My commandments.' .... Long prayers, superstition, and creeds clip the strong pinions of love, and clothe religion in human forms. Whatever materialized worship hinders man's spiritual growth and keeps him fror.i dem onstrating his power over error." (page 4). FIRST BAPTIST Rev. I'ioadu.s K. Jonos, Pastor !>:•! » m. .Sunday school. W. I!. Sinclair, superintendent. Moning f?rv!c-\ 11 a. m., with sermon hy t^c pastor on 'Believe in the Beyond.*' Iv.vnir r serv>-». 7*.'!0 p. m. Seimon theme. ' Why i Believe in the Bcvc-nd." B. Y. P. I*, r i ! >ry ho ::-, 6:""i p. m. Monday, 9?30 m. The W. at. S. will aaoct la tic Ho.fcrtrcH Pi ble cl:i3s room. Tuc .l-v, •: p. n The Mother's 15,' le r'r. r v/ill m?ct in the cradle roll room. Wednesday, 3:20 r. pi.—Junior ^r. A.'s, Group 2. v'iN net rt the lome of Mrs. Fr<*d Bowman. F!nt Rock drive. Cars will be at both ;cl> >ols to carry children. 7:30 p. n.—Prayer jneetiny. FIRr.T MF.THODIST Rev. Claude Mcser, p:\stor. Sunday school. 9:45 a. in.; L. R. dc!,' trcneral superintendent; I!. cn. teacher Men's Bible j i*!a:'.«; Miv. -I. F. Stokes, teacher Susannah Wesley Bible class; Miss j Be.^ e Mien, teacher Phi'athen B; b!<* ill-- ; Mrs. .Mabel Banghman. Yoawr Vonm's Bible] chvs: Bert Colt, teacher Young, Men's Bib'e rlas-;. Every member j »f the chuich nreds the Sunday -chool and the Sunday school | needs every member of the church, j 1 i a. m.—Morning service. Ser- j mon by pastor. Theme. '"The Call: ;>f God." 5 p. m.—Evening service. Ser- j mon by pastor. Theme. "Charac-. ter." | Monday evening at 7 :'50 o'clock I'iicle N'o. 5 will meet in the home !>f Mrs. J. P. Wcddell, on Florida ivenue. « Wednesday evening: at 7:30: j'clock—Mid-week prayer service will be held :n church hut. Th«i! general theme for discussion will be "Jesus' Appeal to the Irreli gious." Thursday evening at 7:30 the young people's meeting will be. field in the hut. The general theme 1 for discussion will be. "The Essen tials for the Making of a Success-' ful Life." All the young: people) of the chinch are urged tt> attend' these meetings. The publ ic rs cordially invited ; to attend the services of the! c hurch. You are a stranger here j only once. Organist and directress; Mrs. ! Piul English. GRACE LUTHERAN (A Church with a Message) Rev. A. W. Linpard, pastor. Sunday school. (J:45 a. m.; B. G. Brown, superintendent. Morning worship and sermon! t>y Kev. J. A. Linn at 11 o'clock, i Intermediate Luther League—| Sunday afternoon at 2:30. Senior League at 6:30. GROVE STREET GOSPEL (The Ch-urch of the Open Book) Rev. F. G. Mackenzie, pa.-tor. j Sunday school at 0:15 a. m.,' n charge of C. S. Fullbrlgh?.1 Classes for all. Preaching service at 11 o'clock. | Sermon by the pastor. During the afternoon the Gos pel groups will be engaged in taking the Gospel to various sur rounding communities. At 6:30 p. m. the Young Peo ple's society will meet. At 6:45 the prayer group will meet. At 7:30 o'clock the evening service. The pastor will continue his series on the book of Daniel. On Wednesday evening at 7:30 the prayer meeting will be held. On Thursday afternoon at 2:30 the ladies prayer and missionary Ten Yards of Earth Just a Bite Ten cubic yards of earth is just a good gulp for this walking bridge dredge operating: along the route of the £33,000.000 All-Ameriean canal, from the Colorado river to California's Imperial Valley. Tow ering far into the air, it is an outstanding attraction in Arizona where it is shown at work north of Yuma, foljowing recent dedica tion of the project. WEEKLY SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON PETER'S GREAT CONFESSION By HIGHT C. MOORE Sunday, Jan. 13. I.uke 9:18-26; I Peter 2:5, 6. | Colden Text—And Simon Peter answered and said, Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God. Matthew 10:1(5. , Peter's jtrreat confession of faith in Fesus as the Son of God was made in the autumn of 29 A.D. during the \ isit of Jesus ?nd his di cinlcs to the region of Caesarea Philippi near the sour ces of th" Jordan. In his first btter written about 02 or 03 A.D. from Babylon to tilj persecuted Christian? in Asia Minor the cnostle declared Jesv.:-. to bo the chief corner-stone of the spiritual house built up of lho?e who believe in bin and un a«han-ed hear his name. CHRIST CONFESSED (Luke 9) The Confession of Faith ack nowledges and accepts Christ as our divine Saviour. Jesu~. was with his disciples away from the crowds and the critics, having just left Capfrrnaum. They were (|uite alone among the foothills of Mount Hermon, somewhere on the highway, or in a ?ecluded | .nook or out upon a mountain-j side overlooking upoer Galilee.: Here Jesus engaged in prayer, and then turned to his disciples to ask a very pertinent ouestion. t But first there was a preliminary j im uiry: "Who do the multitudes i say that I am?" The disciples re sponded: Some reeraided him as j John the PaDtist brought back to life: »some identified him with Elijah, the most .spectacular seen | in the days of old; some thought that he was one .of the old proph ets risen again—Jeremiah whose) ministry spanned the fall of Jerusalem, or Samuel who laid the mud-sills of the Hebrew mon archy, or Isaiah whose serphi( strains forecast the Messiah. It is remarkable that in the popular' mind the«e illustrious ancients all crystallized in Jesus and yet fell short. Then Jesus put to his dis ciples the main question: "Who sav ye that I am?" Everything depends on conviction as to the person of Christ. The dis?iples had from Jordan followed him as the Messiah. After these two vears were they rijfht in the faith they professed under the guid ance of the Baptist? Peter for the company declared Jesus to be "the Christ of God." So it was that Jesus reached what has been called "the most critical episode in his life." CHRIST COMMANDING I (Luke 9) The Challenge to Faith receives end recognizes Christ as our di vine Lord. There is call for faith in a commanding Christ! for he charged and commanded them to repeat this incident to no man for the time. There must be; faith in an atoning Christ: for he must suffer many things and be rejected by the Sanhedrin as a whole and by each of its three classes (elders, chief priests and: Scribes) and finally be killed. There must be faith in a conquer-; in" Christ who thourh cruellyj crucified was to rise from the dead on the third dav. There must be faith in a guiding Christ since cnv one who desires to I come after him must renounce i self and take up his daily cross and follow his Lord. There must be faith in a saving Christ; for without him life is a total loss, destined for the eternal discard. I There must be faith in a reckon-1 ing Christ; for he will hold us ac countable, knowing also whether! we are ashamed of him and his! words in our generation. Finally, j there is call for faith in a re-| warding Christ, for he is coming' airain and his reward will be with ! him. CHRIST CONSTRUCTING (I Peter 2) The Consecration Through Faith involves glad submission! and service to Christ as the di-; vine architect of our lives. In; character Christians are describ ed as living stones; that is, stones' that are not dead and lifeless, rock but vital, living. They are| i group will meet. On Friday evening at 7:30 the second meeting of the Land of the Sky Bible school will be held. ' A hearty invitation is extend- j cd to all of these services. WESLEYAN METHODIST • Rev. M. It. Harvey, pastor. I Sunday school. 9:45 a. m. Pleaching. 11 a. in. and 7 n. m. i W. Y. r. S.—6:?0 p. m. Prayer meeting—Wednesday at ■ ! 7 :.'J0 p. m. j Rev. C. S. Fullbright will fill j th? pastor's aopointments Sunday, j j the' pastor has' an attach of flu. j COLORED CHURCHES STAR BETHEL BAPTIST Kev. G. R. Levant, minister. The pastor announces that the Sunday morning message theme will be "The Demand for Fruits ; <»r Righteousness." And' the ser mon subject in the evening wor- j •^hip will "A Mistaken Idea' Corrected." Prayer meeting Wednesday at 8 P- m. We are a church that lovo our i visitors, so come ard worship with, us. v 5 " , ST. PAUL A. M. E. ZION Uev. II. A. Keaton. pastor. 10:15 a. m.—Junior rhurch ser vice. 11 a. m.—Sermon by the pas tor on "Therefore and Foras much." 7:30 p. m.—Sermon by pastor on "A Pilgrim to Heaven." Everybody is invited to attend our service. Come and bring your friends, thus like Christ who himself is the "chief corner stone, elect, prccious." Those who are united to him who was "laid in Sion" and who are like him because they believe on him "shall not b<' confounded." In construction Christians are built up a spiritual house. The divine Architect is not usin'-? lifeless materials; lis is building: a spiritual structure., Therefore in capacity Christians are a "holy priesthood," each hav ing: th? privilege of offering1 up spiritual sacrifices and of know ing that such devotion is accept able to Go'l through Jesus Christ. • WHAT THINK YE DF CHRIST?" (1) He Is the Christ of I'rayer. "As he was alone praying." He frctiuented h;s own mercy seat., He led his followers often to the Rather. In the atmosphere of prayer he taught his greatest les- j sons. (2) He Is the Christ of Fellow-, ship. "His disciples were with | him." Never has there been such. another magnetic personality. His. disciples were drawn close about j him. They found him the finest, comrade in the world. (3) He is the Christ of Revela tion. "John the Ilaptist—Elias—j one of the old prophets." Thru! the greatest of the past there had beo na down-flashing from heav en. We must think of them when' we think of him and vet he com bines in himself the total of all their excellencies and far sur passes them. (4) He Is the Christ of Deity. 'The Christ of God." He was the Christ promised and foreseen in the days of old He could not be i the hrist without being- God. The, recognition of him as divine was' therefore accurate. (5) He Is the Christ of Au-j thority. "He straitly charged them, and commanded them." j The disciples recognized his Mes siahship and at the same timei acknowledged his authority. He| therefore had the right to coir]-, mand their every action whether; of speech or of silence. (6) He Is the Christ of Attone- j ment. "The Son of man must! suffer." Calvary was not an iso lated isle in a stormy sea. It was part of the divine porgram upon earth. It was necessary for the . salvation of men from sin. (7) He Is the Christ of Sover-, eignty. "I>o raised the third day." The miracles of Jesus dur ing his ministry hinted something:' af his power in the material and j spiritual world. Hut his supreme ict of power was the conquest of I death in the stronghold of the j sepulcher. When he became vie- [ tor over the grave he was ready! for his mediatorial throne. j1 (8) He Is the Christ of Guid-[ ance. "If any man will come after me—built up a spiritual louse." We cannot thread our ,vay through this world without j following Christ. H is ready to1 BY MAKY K. DAUUL SEX Service staff Writer HOW atout a succulent light-as fcather little pie filled with cnion, mushrooms, cheese and other savory items to go along with the roast beef next time you have it? I've just this minute re tired with blushes from a near ovation staged by my family and guests on the occasion of such a lr.Pil and I want to set all the de tails on paper so that you my try the menu on your own household. A * 3ted chef calls these little pastries "Pizza Neopolitan." If he didn't invent them, -it least he in troduced them to Manhattan and vher. you taste them, you'll be fh.d he did. For dessert on this memorable occasion, nothing could be better than apricot souffle, made if you can possibly get hold of them of a rertain kind of Hungarian apricot conserve, otherwise of canned or ■rtewcd apricots. And be sure that thi.5 delicacy comes to the table piled high and fluffy in the dish, an edify'ng orange underneath its crown of snowy whipped cream. Pizza J.eopolitnn One good sized onion, 2 table spoons butter, 1 medium sized tomato, 2 tablespoons minced mushrooms. 1 tablespoon grated Swiss cheese, 1 egg, 1-4 teaspoon powdered mixed herbs, 1-2 tea spoon salt. 1-S teaspoon pepper. If you don't have the mixed herbs and only too few Ameri can hou&ewlves do. use a smidge of powdered sa£,e with celery pep per and parsley pepper. Of course yo'. don't get that indescribable flavor tli-it comes with the blend ing of the pungent pot-herbs, but you'll have something superior to plain spit and pepper. Mir.*/onion sn^. cok slowly in butter until tend jr. Peel tomato and remove seeds. Cut flesh into dice and add with mushrooms to onion. Cook five minutes and cool. Beat egg until light and add to first mixture with cheese and seasonings. Line individual muf fin tins with rich pie crust and fill with xmixture. Bake twenty >ninntps in a hr.t oven f400~'de Body Of Second I Victim Is Found Alleged HeWas Killed Ac cidentally in Hold-up DEWITT, Ark., Jan. 12. (UP). The body of John Bowen, second and allegedly accidental victim of a holdup January 3, was recover ed by searchers last night from the White River near here. Four youths were in jail as authorities delved into one of the strangest double killings ever re corded here. According to an account given sheriff's officers by two of the prisoners, three youths robbed and killed George E. Perry on a roadside and accidentally killed Bowen, one of their own group. Perry's body was left where it fell and Bowen's bodv was haul ed away, weighted and thrown in to the river. The two who told the story, Eugene Eason, 22, and Ray Coit, 19, said the three alleged rob bers gave them a ride from De witt to England, Ark., on the night of January 3. They named the robbers as I.ouis Carl Mc Cowan, 23, Bowen, and an uni dentified vouth. Cecil Brown was arrested at Little Rock iast night, suspected of being the un identified third man in the case. McCowan is also in jail at Little Rock. GOV. SHOLTZ SIGNS 2 DEATH WARRANTS TALLAHASSEE, Fla., Jan. 12. (UP). — Governor Dave Sholtz yesterday signed the death war Vent for two men sentenced to die for murder in Duval county. The electrocution of Fred An derson and Thomas Jefferson, convicted of the murder of Carl Schuman of Jacksonville, was set for the week beginning January 21. The men were convicted Decem ber 12. An appeal was denied December 22. Since then, the condemned men have been await ing signing of the death warrent at Raiford prison. attend us and lead us every step of the way. We cannot find and fit our place in the spiritual structure of the good unless we are placed there fcy the Divine Architect. (9) He Is the Christ of Service. "Whosoever will lose his life for my sake." To serve our fellow Tien we must first serve Christ. Hut in serving our fellow men we may actually lose our lives, now under one fell stroke and now in long years of absorbed and ob scure devotion to duty. Hut the life that is lost for the sake of Christ will emerge into a larerer and better life that is not losable. (10) He Is the Christ of Sal tation. "When he'shall come." He is certainly coming: ajrain. And when he comes he will come in great glory and not in the leep humiliation of his sacrificial earth life. Then he will judjre .he world and complete the salva tion of his people. Marriage is the end of trouble —the first end. SISTER MARY'S MENU Tomorrow'6 Menu BREAKFAST: California grapes, cereal, cream, baked French toast, syrup, m{!k, cof fee. LUNCHEON: Oyster stew, salad of grated beets-t*rrots hard cooked eggs, Cinger bread, lemonade. DINNER: Consomme, roast beef gariiished with pizza Neapolitan, buttered broccoli, salad of French endive, apri cot souffle, milk, coffee. jrees F.). This, amount will fil two tins two inches In diameter Serve on a hot platter, arrang ing sliced roast beef in the cen ter, placing buttered broccoli ai opposite ends and balancing the whole arrangement with the Ital ian pies. This gives you a meat and veg etable platter for the dinner ser vice. With it serve Franconia po tatoes. A salad of French endivt with French dressing to whicl: brandy has bee*, flded makes s perfect salad to whet the appe tite for th? apricot souffle whicl: finishes the dinner. Apricot Souffle Four cups apricots or the suinc amount of stewed dried apricots 3 tablespoons bu'.ter, 4 table spoons flour, 1-3 tup sugar, l cui milk, i eggs, 1-4 teaspoon salt 1-2 teaspoon vanilla. Melt butter without discoloring Add flour and stir until thorough ly blended and smooth. Slowlj add milk, stirrinp. constantly Bring to the boiling point and poui on yolks of eggs beaten until thick and lemon colored with sugar, salt and vanilla. Cool. Beat whites of eggs until stiff and d"> and fold in yolk mixture. Turn into a buttered baking dish line<i with apricots drained from the syrup and cut in quarters. Bake forty minutes in a slow oven (325 degrees F.j. Serve at once with apricot syrup and whipped creaic sweetened and flavored with va nilla or use vanilla ice cream ir nlace of whiDDed cream. Call us when you need a load of dry kindling—$1 for load, or 20c for sack. Three can ride for the same as one—25 cents in city. JACKSON TAXI Phones 54 and 1 AFTER 11:00 P. M„ CALL NO. 1 SISTER MARY'S MENU BY MAKY .<£, DAGUK NEA Pcrvlco Staff Writer STUFFING lamb chops sounds like gildhig the lily—for what is better eating than a platter of juicy, brown, perfectly broiled phops, each in its pretty paper frill, with green peas and French fried potatoes on the side? Yet, prejudiced as I am in favor of good food simply prepared and served more or less in its natural state, I must admit that there is a lot to be said for stuffed lamb chops. Maybe the thing I like best about them is the onion in the stuffing. Anyway, I like them and here they are: »iuneu J,a mo Chops Four Iamb chops, 1-2 cup minc ed onion, 2 cups' stale bread crumbs, 1 egg, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 1-4 teaspoon pepper, 1 tablespoon bacon fat. i Trim fat from chops and try o~t. Make a gash half way through meat on side away from bone. Slit almost to the bone and the entire length of the bone. Rub inside pocket thus formed with salt and pepper. Melt bacon fat md add onion. Cover and cook aver a low fire*for five minutes. A.dd bread crumbs which have been squeezed out of cold water. Remove from fire and season with salt and pepper. Add egg well beaten and mix lightly. Fill each :hcp with dressing and place in a hot dripping pan with several :ablespoons of the tried out drip pings. Put into hot oven and bake forty-five minutes or until lender. Serve on a platter and Tomorrow's Menu BREAKFAST: C!h 1JJ cranberry Juice c^c ^ ise crisp broiled bacon 7 ffee ions Parker House rolls, mar malade, apple ^Pioca pudding baked chew'pudding, milk, coffee. sprinkle with minced watercress. Another Oven Clu>p Recijto Pork chops are good, too, this way. It Will take about au hour for them to cook and at the mo ment of serving they should ho tender and moist, much iikc well cooked chicken. Veal chops take this savory stuffing well, toe, and you bake them until tender. An unusual way to fix chop ol almost any kind is to broil lightly on one side, then cover the un cooked side with a thick layer of well seasoned white sauce to which chopped mushrooms or minced ham and green pepper, cv all three, have been a^ded. Sprin kle with stale bread crumbs, dot with butter and bake forty to fifty minutes in a hot oven, depending on the thickness of the chops. While the oven is on, use the heat to bake the vegetable am! dessert. A little planning in this direction makes it possible to cj feet worth while ravines in fur! SAY I SAW IT IN THE TIMES-MkWfc UNDERGRADUATfl EXPOSE ON CRM NEW YORK. jTn. ,,l Modern methods in ,'.^1 cribbing yesterday v.,.'/| by a New York 1 1 graduate quartei I 1. Examine. note* pad with nn it up his sleev< U. Write n>te.< on m1( . £;! apefruit juic. an.i ' '* the glasses when :i a .u ! 3. Stick nut-- .n k , . .and if teacher ; it's a picture of - : ,V! / ENDOWS DOG HOSpf CINCINNATI ,n quest of $500 . ,s ... I of a free ho-pi*.,! antj*"' , dog> in connection v ' ciety for the Fri-vi-nt;,'. ! elty to Animals. v.a> n• the will of Ida M. ed here. Example of man by word: "Wei!. •;<> aiu-ad' thi' darned thinjr." ADMINISTRATRIX' J Having tiualifu-i ,fj, trix of the e.-uu< 7 rent, deceased. iau> n, Hendersonviih-, \. c-f , "notify all person- hav.: against estate fl them to the uwlir-^rj before .January 1:'. i: , notice will be !»!ea<M - recoveiy. Person infe said estate will ir.ak? at once with the nr/iorj This Januarv 12, 1 «.»:;• , MARY I.OLT.SI- l'ARi l-12-Sat-0tp Ad. :3 Follow The Straight Line] "A STRAIGHT line is the shortest distance be tween two points." That holds for any two points —your pocketbook and your list of wants, for ex ample. Follow the straight line, and you'll save yourself time, trouble and money. Use the advertising columns of this newspa per from day to day as guide posts. In them, you find late news of what's to be had in the markets of the world. No need for you to meander about from store to store, comparing, pricing, judging, guessing values. The advertisements tell you the names of merchants and manufacturers you can trust. There vou read what's new, what's fa vored what's offered confidently for your inspec tion. The advertisements in this naoer take vou into more stores than vou could visit in a month ' ' *r ; k 4 , 1 e - S 31 There's no high-pressure selling, no rush, no uncertainty to this daily review of markets. Form the good habit of shopping bv the STRAIGHT LINE method—vou'll buv with assurance, with economy and with satisfaction.