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THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, S. C. New Type Sharpener Usable in Fields Will Sharpen Mower Blade While on Bar A new type of hay mower blade sharpener which makes it possible to sharpen the ordinary mower sec tion right in the field without even removing it from the cutter bar, thus saving time and labor and making it possible to cut more hay faster, has been placed on the mar ket by the New England Carbide Tool Company, Inc. The black tip of this new type mower blade sharpener is made of carboloy cemented carbide, hardest metal commercially avail able. Mower blades can be sharp ened quickly and easily in the field with this sharpener. The sharpener consists of a steel shank one-half inch square and about 5” long, chrome plated against rust and having rounded edges so that the tool can be carried safely in the pocket. The tip which does the actual sharpening is made of ultra-hard carboloy cemented car bide metal, which is attached se curely to the steel shank. To sharpen mower blades with this "carbide tipped” tool, the edges of the blade to be sharpened are uncovered. The sharpener is held in the hand, palm down. The car boloy tip is placed on the mower blade at about a thirty-degree angle, and drawn from back to front on the blade three or four times. This pro duces an extremely sharp edge. Any small burr which many develop on the blade may be removed by drawing the carbide tip across the bottom of the blade. Horses Are Dangerous Never approach a horse with out speaking to him. As a rule, farmers do not con sider horses as especially dan gerous animals, yet they account for more accidents of a serious nature than any other farm animal. According to the National Safety Council, approximately three times as many accidents occur with horses as with any other farm ani mal. Farmers should always be cautious around these animals, the NSC continued. One phase of this precaution is a thorough check in the spring of all equipment to be used on or by horses, particularly harness. Only strong harness should be used and these should be inspected regularly and kept in good repair. Dry leather has low tensile strength and it should be cleaned with mild soap and warm water and treated with oil. Attention to equipment such as neck-yokes, tongues, single trees, double-trees and evieners is also very necessary. The NSC suggests that many seri ous farm accidents can be prevented by following these simple rules: Never approach a horse without speaking to him. When cleaning a stall, making no sudden movement. Enter the stall on the left side of the horse. When driving or leading horses, never wrap the lines around { body. Male Youngsters Drink More Milk Than Girls Results of a recent study should be of interest to dairy farmers. Hie study revealed that teen-age boys drink more milk than teen age girls. Eating habits of school boys and girls, 15 years of age and over, in both city and rural high schools were studied for three days. It was found that 39 per cent of the boys and only 22 per cent at the gills drank a quart a day. MIRROR Gambling Is of your ® ® ® Self Destruction MIND By Lawrence Gould KATHLEEN NORRIS One of the Millions .Bell Syndicate—WNU Features By KATHLEEN NORRIS Do people who gamble always hope to win? Answer: The average person who takes an occasional “flier" may jnly be trying to forget life’s harsh rule that you do not get something (or nothing. But psychiatrists say the “neurotic gambler” — the chap who will play the horses or shoot dice with his employer’s money even though he knows there’s bet ter than an even chance that he will oe disgraced and ruined—is uncon- iciously the victim of a secret urge to self-destruction. It is this that will not let him quit when he’s ahead but makes him go on till he's "cleaned out.” Answer: Literally, no. As I have laid before, such treatments must be given by a physician. But a correspondent notes the interesting fact that now and then, when she Is deeply depressed, she will uncon- iciously get herself into trouble or danger (she once "accidentally" set her house on fire, for instance) and be jolted bacx to a more nor mal frame of mind. Like “insan ity,” depression often represents a wish to punish yourself for some real or imagined offense, and al most any kind of shock may serve this purpose for the moment. Did war tragedies warp children’s mind? Answer: Yes, reports a Swiss psy chiatrist who treated child refugees in Warsaw, Poland. Children who had been driven from their ho.nes and in many cases seen their par ents sent to the gas chamber be came smart in some ways, but de veloped the belief that nothing is important but self-preservation and that only fools try to be kind or honest. This “false image of real ity” (which for so long was true as far as their experience went) ir hard to erase and makes it difficult to teach them to adapt themselves to normal living. * LOOKING AT RELIGION By DON MOORE KEEPING HEALTHY “•jiHIS IS NOT a letter of com- plaint,” writes Rena Janzen, 19 years old. “It is to ask you a question. Is there anything ahead in rjy life that will make today’s difficulties and humiliations worth while? "We live on the fourth floor of a New York City apartment house far downtown,” the letter goes on. “It is one of the thousands of high, crowded brick ten* ments that form more than half of this city. The ones down our way are old er, dirtier, more crowded. We have four rooms: parlor, kitchen, two bedrooms, bath. There are eight of us: my young brothers of 17, 13 and 7, a sister of 11, Grand ma, Mother and Dad. Joe and Matt sleep in the parlor; Henry with Mother and Dad; Grandma, my sister and I have a room so small that there is no space for a phair. Grandma’s mattress is under the three-quarter bed, and under the bed are also my brushes and make up, a box with spare blouses, Anya’s school-books, and Grand ma’s black valise. Live in the Kitchen “Of course we all live in the kitchen. It is smelly and noisy in summer, and hot as only city kitchens get hot; in winter it is t melly and noisy and hardly warm er than the rest of the house. Only the halls are warmed. “I will leave to your Imagination what chance a girl has of beauty, leisure, rest, hospitality in a life like mine,” writes Rena. "Papa is an angel, he works steadily, he has the tired look of an old saint. Mother works hard. They would move us to some better place, but . . . the look of a tired saint . . . we pay $80 now, and can afford no more. Joe wants to be a doctor; the nearest he gets is being an or derly in a hospital. “Now my problem isn’t what frightens me,” the letter ends, "but the terrible, the overwhelm ing fact that so many thousands of lives all about me are as utterly hopeless as mine. Girls crowding into subways, punching time- clocks, snatching sandwiches and cokes at lunch, wearing cheap clothes to Coney on summer Sun days or waiting in line at cheap movies on winter nights. Why are we here, what are we doing all this for, how do we get out of it? I dream of a little country place, flowers, space, cleanliness—but what good are dreams? Parents Knew Poverty “Mother and father are Aus trians. They knew poverty and ter ror in the old world. They escaped —to this. Mother revels in her electric light, radio, telephone, gas stove, washing-machine. Dad never complains. But I look about me and sometimes I despair.” • • • Treating Ailments of Old Age By Dr. James IV. Barton T'HERE are so many elderly men -*■ and women today that many large houses, once so hard to sell, now are being bought by registered nurses’ or practical nurses and es tablished as "rest homes” for el derly people and invalids. Some of these larger rest homes not only have a graduate nurse living on the premises, but also a physician calls once a day. This specialty, geriatrics, is the natural result of the length ening of the life span. As we grow older, we may not develop any special disease or diseases, but there is naturally a gradual loss of strength, and so symp toms and also diseases often come with age. We have been thinking of this new ipecialty mostly in terms of treat ing diseases of old age. Dr. C. Ward Brampton, however, states that geri- atrics is concerned less with treat ing the ills of those already old than with preventing, postponing and eas ing the aging processes and guar- Twenty-flve out of every hundred people who have blood in their urine have been found to have cancer somewhere in the kidney, bladder or other part of the urinary tract. Do not think that when such bleeding stops, the progress of the underly ing cause also stops, for we know aow that once cancer starts, it pro gresses till death occurs unless treat- ment Is begun immediately. anteeing one a vigorous old age In order to learn the exact physi cal, mental and emotional condi tion of the elderly, a thorough a complete examination is given, di vided into three parts: First comes the “data gathering visit, or “pilot” examination, in i search for any “aging” tissue o process. At the second visit, as the phy sician has studied the whole sit uation—blood pressure, strength of heart, urine, blood—he now prescribes a program of living —and any medicine that may give energy or slow up aging processes. At the third visit, two or thre weeks later, the results of the healt program are checked and a fu health program for six months or : year given. This study and examination of ih elderly man or woman to learn wha he or she needs, and then prescril ing the necessary health prograir is good common sense. In New Jersey at the present tim there are now in progress five di ferent studies on vision in various h dustries. By these studies much vah able material is being collected fc the purpose of improving our presei knowledge of vision of industrii workers. This will mean more an better production and at the sani time conserving the vision of tha it dustrial worker. Rena, in answering you I am going to begin by warning you against a dangerous error into which you have fallen. The prob lems of the hundreds and thou sands of fellow-workers that you see about you, caught as you think in this same industrial and social treadmill, are not yours. Yours is one problem; that of Rena Janzen. Sweep all the others out of your mind, concentrate up on your own. Fix your thoughts upon that little country home with the flowers and open spaces about it, and it will begin to take shape and move toward you as steadily as tomorrow’s dawn. Out of just such sordid, crowded, noisy, squalid, odorous environ ments as the one you describe have come thousands—yes, mil lions, of our men and women who now occupy suburban homes, who have flowers, a car, fresh suitable clothing, pleasant plentiful meals— in a word, happy, busy, useful lives. Some have risen to actual wealth and power, but you will be satisfied with less than that, and you can win it. In 10 or 15 years many of these neighbors you pity will be busy in important work: Secretaries, buyers, superintendents, politicians, dress designers, movie and radio performers, living the kind of life you now consider unattainable. What your father and mother and grandmother have, after their terrors in their o - n country, their suffering and privation, seems to them riches. Good food, light, amusements, education for their children, clinics and shops and movies accessible—these to them represent luxury. ★ HEALTH NOTES ★ SCRIPTURE: Mark 10. DEVOTIONAL READING: Mark »:33- 37. * ★ * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ it it HOUSEHOLD mimos...hJt n i : --- -v.-. Range oi Religion Lesson for April 10, 1949 /■^NCE THERE WAS a farmer who owned a large farm. Its wide acreage was divided into pas tures and fields and a garden and orchards and hog- lots and chicken- yards and so on. But whenever any one would ask the farmer about some particular part of the farm, he would answer, "That's not my business— that’s only the or chard, it isn’t the Dr. Foreman farm;’’ or "—That’s not the farm, that's a flock of sheep,” or a rye field or whatever it might be. Of course such a fartner never lived, or if he did, he should have his head examined. What Does Religion Cover? Y ET THAT FARMER is not a bit more idiotic than a Christian who, when asked about this or that activity or aspect of life, answers, “That’s not religion. I have no in terest in it.” Religion isn’t a little fenced-off pasture for lambs, a tiny garden plot behind thick hedges. Religion covers the whole farm, every bit of life from end to end. Jesus knew this very well. He never once refused to discuss anything on the ground that it was not religions. He cast light on everything that touched him. He called his followers the “light of the world.” Not flash lights, shining in one narrow beam! Not flashlights, but lamps, set on a lampstand and “giving light to all who are in the house.” The Light Of God A GOOD cross-section of Jesus’ methods and ideas can be seen in Mark 10, into which one chapter Mark packs his whole account of a number of weeks which Jesus spent in the region called Perea. Observe the variety of situations which con fronted Jesus. First there was a question about divorce. When they brought that question up to Jesus, he did not dodge it. He did not call it a personal matter in which he, as a teacher of religion, had no in terest. He did not say it was strict ly a matter for the civil courts. You may read what he did say in Mark 10. You will note that first of all he brings God into his answer. Religion And Little Children T HIS CHAPTER includes the fa mous story of the little children who were brought to Jesus—evident ly quite small children, for Jesus lifted them into his arms. We do not hear Jesus saying, “Children are too small for me to take any interest in them. Wait till they are older. What good can religion do these tiny tots?” On the contrary, Jesus not only blessed them, but held them up as models for older people. Is your church following Jesus here? Is your church interested in the little children as much as it is in the “paying” members? Or are the little ones shoved off into some damp comer of the church basement? In your state or province, do the Christian people take an interest in the children? Do children in your section get as good attention as pure-bred cattle do? As Wide As Life T HEN THERE WAS a question about eternal life. Of course Jesus answered that one, it was obviously a religious question. (Ex cept that he gave it what some people even today would consider a not very religious answer!) Jesus went on to talk about money and the effect it has on a man’s prospect of eternal life. Jesus would be the very last person to imagine that a man’s bank account has nothing to do with religion. Some people to this day don’t like to hear a preach er mention money in his sermons. Well, such people might have been offended by Jesus, for he often preached about money and prop erty. Keep your Cookie Jars Filledl (See Recipes Below) Delicious Cookies MOUTH WATERING while they bake, mouth-melting when you taste them, that’s the way we like our cookies! Remember, too, you should always have them on hand if you want to keep the family happy or for on-the-spot entertain ing. With youngsters raiding the cookie jar, it’s sometimes hard to keep it filled, so bake in large quan tity. If you re serve cookies for entertaining, make two or three of your best varie ties and pack them in those at tractive tins, be- tween layers of waxed paper, and serve right from the tin. They’ll be pretty enough. \ « • . ’Walnut Dreams (Makes about 36 squares) First Layer: H cup butter or shortening M cup confectioners’ sugar 14 cup sifted cake flour Cream butter until fluffy; add sugar and flour and mix until thoroughly blended. Pat mixture in to a baking pan, about 12”x8”xl”. Bake in a moderate (375*) oven un til golden brown. While still warm, top with the following: Second Layer: 2 eggs, well beaten 1% cups brown sugar 1 cup moist shredded coconut 1 cup chopped black walnuts 2 tablespoons pineapple mar malade 2 tablespoons flour 1 teaspoon vanilla Mix these ingredients in order given. Top first layer and bake in a moderate (375°) oven until golden brown, 20-25 minutes. Remove from oven, let cool slightly, then frost with Third Layer: 1 cup confectioners’ sugar 1 teaspoon butter H teaspoon grated orange rind 94 cup finely chopped black wal nuts Orange Juice Blend together sugar, butter, orange rind and enough juice to spread easily. Cover layer two, then sprinkle with walnuts. Press wal nuts into icing lightly. Cut into squares. Do you like chewy, butter- scotch brownies? Here’s the easy recipe which makes them: CHILDREN will particularly like these rich, peanut butter cookies which go well with anything: ’Peanut Butter Cookies (Makes 5 dozen) 94 cup shortening 1 cup granulated sugar 1 cup brown sugar 2 cups peanut butter 2 eggs, well beaten 2 teaspoons soda in 94 cup boiling water 294 cups sifted flour Cream shortening; add the sugars. Add peanut butter and blend well. Add eggs, then flour alternately with water. Form into balls and LYNN CHAMBER’S MENU Boiled, Sliced Tongue Creamed Potatoes Buttered Spinach Carrot-Pineapple Salad Rolls Beverage Stewed or Canned Fruit Cookies •Recipe Given flatten on an ungreased cookie sheet with the tines of a fork, making a cross design. Bake in a moderate (375°) oven for 10-12 minutes. If desired, these may also be shaped with a cookie press. ’Butterscotch Brownies (Makes 16) 94 cup butter or shortening 94 cup dark corn syrup 94 cup brown sugar 1 egg 94 cup flour 94 cup chopped pecans or wal nuts Cream together butter and sugar; add corn syrup, well-beaten egg. Fold in flour and nuts. Pour into a square pan and bake in a moderate (350°) oven for 20-25 minutes. Cut in squares. Dust with confectioners’ sugar if desired. These icebox cookies are good with a glass of milk or a dish of ice cream and simply wonderful for parties or des serts: Butterscotch Icebox Cookies (Makes 5-6 dozen) 1 cup butter 2 cups brown sugar 2 eggs 94 teaspoon soda 94 teaspoon salt 394 cnps flour 1 cup chopped nutmeats Cream the butter and sugar.' Add soda to eggs; mix with butter and sugar. Add salt, flour and nutmeats. Work into a roll. Wrap in waxed paper and let stand in refrigerator overnight or until needed. Slice thin. Bake in a moderately hot (400°) oven for 10-12 minutes or un til golden brown. •Tutti-Frutti Cookies (Makes 5 dozen) 94 cup chopped maraschino cherries 94 cup chopped candied pine apple 2 tablespoons chopped candied orange peel 194 cup sifted cake flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 94 teaspoon salt 94 teaspoon cinnamon 94 teaspoon cloves 94 cup butter or shortening 94 cup brown sugar, firmly packed 2 eggs, unbeaten 94 cup chopped walnuts 94 cup milk Combine cherries, pineapple and orange peel Let stand in a tightly covered jar for 24 hours. Sift flour, add baking powder, salt and spices. Sift together three times. Cream butter, add sugar and cream until light. Add eggs, one at a time, beating thoroughly after each addi tion. Add fruit and nuts. Fold in flour alternately with milk. wiv thoroughly. Drop from a teaspoon on a lightly greased baking sheet and bake in a hot (400°) oven for 10 minutes. Then there was the question of ambition, the audacious re quest that James and John made of him. He had some strong re marks to make about that. And finally at Jericho, not long before Palm Sunday, there was the blind beggar Bartimaeus. Jesus did, not say to him, “Health is no affair of mine. I cure souls, not bodies." (Copyright by the International Coun cil of Religious Education on behalf of 40 Protestant denominations. Released by WNU Features. LYNN SAYS: Handy Tips Make Homework Easy Use only spinach leaves if you like to have your spinach free from strings. After cooking spinach, use kitchen scissors to mince it fine, then fold the vegetable into thick white sauce and season with a dash of nutmeg. Another delicious roll consists of small rolls of dough dipped in melted butter or fat, then tossed in a sugar-cinnamon mixture before baking. Dry the leaves from your stalks of celery, store in a glass jar, then use to flavor soups, stews and stuf fings for meat and fish. Salmon, tuna, lobster, crabmeat and shrimp need only some chopped celery and mayonnaise for a de lightful salad. You can round out the salad plate with sliced toma toes, black olives, potato chips, sliced hard-cooked eggs or deviled eggs. Ground cardamon seed gives yeast rolls and sweet breads a de licious, unusual flavor. classified; PE P A R T M E If T| BUSINESS & INVEST. OPPOR, TOURIST COURT On U. S. 41, cabins, trailer park, store, license, gas station, living quarters. Room for expansion. West Villa Court. SKIPPER A NEBRASKA, Tampa. Florida. BE INDEPENDENT Go into Business and have a steady income with “POLAR PETE'* SNOW KONE ma chines. A PENNY will GET YOU A DIME. 100 PROFIT. For more information write BEVERAGE EQUIPMENT CO.. M. D. Mer- cur, 40 N. W. 2nd Avenue, Miami 82, Florida. LUMBER YARD WELL-ESTABLISHED CONCENTRATION* YARD. LOCATED IN CHATTANOOGA. CITY LIMITS ON SOUTHERN *. R. S ACRES land. 4-car siding, for milling te transit purpose, good conn ictiops with local saw mills; one 6x15* heavy duty Wood* planer, ball-bearing with Jones & Orth heads; 1 circle resaw, 1 Corley double end trimmer, blower system, all machinery in good working condition and electric driven: 3ne 1941 Ford truck with new motor; tenant nouce and small office building on property^ also sufficient pile bottom stock for 1,000.009 ft. of lumber, all free from encumbrance, for quick sale, $20,000 cash takes all. For further information or appointment write . P. O. BOX 14S5 CHATTANOOGA, TENN. FOR SALE — Chair plant manufacturing popular-priced upholstered rockers, vanity benches and children’s chairs. Plenty of ma terial and labor available locally. B. A L. CHAIR CO.. Hurtsbero. Alabama. BENDIX LAUNDRY Going good business. Splendid location. 80V Magnolia Ave., Auburndale, Fla. Highway 92. KENNETH WILSON, 807 Magnolia Are* Auburndale, Florida. FOR SALE — Paramount Cafe, Tarpon Springs, Fla. Next to the Greek Church. P. O. BOX 932. TARPON SPRINGS. FLA. TWO DRYGOODS STORES FOR SALK— Inventory $10,000-$20,000, one located Adel. Ga., the other St. Augustine, Fla. C. J. GRAHAM 231 King St., St. Augustine, Florida. DRAGLINE—^ yd. P. & H., full Diesel: 19- ton 3-wheel Huber roller. Caterpillar Diesel engine used 200 hours; 201 Adams motor grader, equip, all practically new. Property, office and warehouse. H. E. READY, 248 S. W. 20th St., Ft. Lauderdale. - Florida. Phone 2-7275 or 2-3185. INVEST YOUR MONEY IN BEEF WE HAVE 3,000 acres of surplus grass pas ture in the Glades. You can buy cheap cat tle in North Florida where cattlemen must stop free ranging and fence pastures of their own. This opportunity to rent our pasture for your cattle offers an exception ally attractive speculation in Beef. SMITH RANCH RED 591, Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. NEW YORK STATE HOTEL FOR SALE— Doing around hundred thousand year busi ness, -on main highway. Write owner. GRACE B. LONG - - Hancock. N. Y. DOGS, CATS, PETS, ETC. DOBERMAN PINSCHER PUPPTE8 AKC reg. 16 champions pedigree $5J.. WCB ship anywhere by plane. OJUS DUCK FARM. 808 Grove Ave. Ojas, Fla. Phone North Dade 5794. FOR SALE 2 mos. old puppies, healthy dewormed largo type collies. English Shepherds, Toy Shep herds. Pitt Bulls, Toy Terriers. Males $20.00, females $10.00. Shipped C.O.D. KEMPERS KENNEL - Gray Court, 8. C. FARMS AND RANCHES 735 ACRES, 400 IN CULTIVATION 9 tenant houses, 2 big barns, 4 wells, on paved U. S. 82 (Ga. 50) 10 miles NW Albany, Ga. (40.000 pop. and fastest growing town in S.E.) Ideal farming, cattle raising. 100 acres peanut allotment for 1949. Total $17,740. Will subdivide. J. A. DULA Rt. 2, Leesburg, Georgfcb HELP WANTED—MEN WANTED—A-1 CLEANER AND DYER Must be sober and reliable. Good salary* FORD ODORLESS CLEANERS 108 N. Jackson St.. Mobile, Ala. MISCELLANEOUS LADIES’—MEN’S GENUINE WHITE ZIR CON RINGS. Solid Gold. 2 Genuine Side Diamonds % K. $39.50, 1 K. $49.50. Will send C.O.D. or send Money Order. Money back guarantee, 10 days. Brough, 932 N. 50th, Philadelphia ftt, Fu> BILLIARD EQUIPMENT 4 Anniversary pocket billiard tables. 1 snooker table, 5 fluorescent lights, 1 Progress icebox, 2 National cash registers, 1 six-foot showcase. 1 six-foot counter. 1 Npon bil liard sign, 5 groups of chairs (3 in a group)« Excellent condition. SPORTS CENTER - - - CAIRO. tlK Order by Mail. Brand New ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS Surplus paint . . . $1.89 gal. Inside, outside white only. Combat boots $6-75 yu USN Tee shirts .S9 USN Dungarees 1.88 pr. Send for 20-page FREE Catalog. Add lOjh for postage. C.f MONEY GRAND’S P. O. 1789, High Point. N. C. NAVION 1948 LOW time. In perfect condition. Under 108 hours. Latest hydraulic and Romec-Adel fuel system. All bulletins compiled with. Always hangared. TEX BOHANNON. P. O. Box *271 Municipal Airport, Orlando, Fla. PERSONAL WANTED—You to try, and know, how good STANBACK Headache Powders or Tablets are. Send this advertisement with self-ad dressed envelope to STANBACK COM PANY, Salisbury, N. C., for a free package. REAL ESTATE—HOUSES $7,000. SUNNY FLORIDA. Hwy. 1. Beautiful ly situated, 5 large rooms, open fireplace, S screened porches, landscaped, near business section, garage. OWNER. BOX 282. TITUSVILLE, FLORIDA REAL ESTATE—MISC. AMERICAN VIRGIN ISLANDS Two adjoining lots, each 50'xlOO'; permr- nent use of private beach; ten-minute walk away. Sell separately or together, $150 each. PRIVAR Box 142, Frederiksted, St. Croix, V. I, SEEDS, PLANTS, ETC. Porto Rican, Copper Skin, Golden Meated. Nancy Halls, Light Yellow Meated Plants. 300, $1.35. 500, $1.75. 1,000, $3.00. Prepaid. Prompt Shipment. Satisfaction Guar. Will ship COD. Farmers Exchange, Dresden, Tern*. WE OFFER COKER 100 DELINTED, re cleaned and treated, $8; 100-lb. sacks, $140 ton, high germination. CNS beans. $3.50 bushel, 2Vi bushel sacks. WANNAMAKER SEED FARMS. St. Matthews, S. C. Buy U. S. 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