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* 4 # Tht Baniwll People-SentiweU Barnwell S. C« Thmtday, Fcbnury 4, 1937 SUCH IS LIFE—Mean Man! By Charles Sughroe \MMNY AW pie ■reRRi8ie%* i MUST HAVE. LEFT 0UT sqmctw^ It I •nteRcf norms ytu comp leave oar -nwrl VAJUtOAAAKE rr. TASTE THATj WAV* it Murr f/l0E SOMZTUIHG [you IM Construct Socket for w Eye of Giant Telescope Workers Busy on “Bones” to Hold Huge Mirror. Philadelphia. — Lester, a tiny community just beyond Philadel- p h i a ’ s southwestern boundary, basks in the glory Corning, N. Y., reflected upon itself when it built the giant 200-inch mirror for Mount Palomar observatory, high up in the mountains above San Diego, Calif. Here scientific eyes are observ ing, step by step, construction of the intricate socket in which the 16-foot, 8-inch “eye” can roll in comfort as it scans the heavens. Work on the mounting began six months ago and is not expected to be completed before next Septem ber. Work on Steel 'Bones’. Laboriously and with the great est care, workmen in the Westing- house Electric and Manufacturing company’s factory here are fasten ing together daily the steel bones and ligaments which will support, rotate and focus the massive tel escope mirror and its subordinate mirrors, all now being ground to proper curvatures in California. Sci entists estimated four tons of glass must be removed from the first one. After completion the telescope can be ridden at both ends and along either side, while the huge yoke in which the cage-like tele scope tube will swing is to be a fully-equipped four-room apartment, with electric lights, hot and cold CENTENARIAN Photo shoes Henry R. Gibson, old est living former member of con gress cutting himself a piece of his birthday cake as he celebrated his one hundredth birthday anniversary in Washington. running water and probably air con ditioning. In spite of its million - pound weight, scientists say, the telescope will roll easily and be under ex cellent control. Engineers have the friction problem so well in hand that the giant tube can be shifted by the pressure of an infant’s hand. They are, however, installing a small electric motor to accomplish this task. Rage Bearings. Only a fraction of the strength of a one-horsepower motor is re quired to move the great instru ment, the biggest bearing of which will be forty-six feet in diameter. This is the split-ring or horse shoe-shaped piece which constitutes the north support. The outer sur face will be machined glass-smooth and will rest on two patented oil pads, floating and sliding on a film of oil three one-thousands of an inch thick. The oil is fed under pressure. Westinghouse’s executives, who are used to the bigness of turbines, condensers, generators and the like, say they know of nothing similar anywhere to compare in size with this. When the telescope tube is fin ished, the fabricated pieces will be carried by ship to California and thence overland to the summit of Mount Palomar, in special over size trucks used in the Boulder Dam construction and over specially- built, wide turn roads. U. S. Navy engineers in charge of the observatory construction es timated three additional years will be required before the great 'scope is ready to take its wide turn in the heavens, reaching out through eight times more space than the current largest 'scope at Mount Wilson. My Neighbor Says := Sour milk and buttermilk can be used interchangeably in recipes. • • • Creamed yellow cheese added to boiled dressing is very good served over fruit or vegetable salads. # • • To clean isinglass in an old stove rub it with a damp cloth on which baking soda has been shaken. To turn out jellies quite whole from the mold, grease the mold with butter and when the jelly is to be turned out, plunge the mold into hot water and remove at once. • • • A delicious snack for Sunday night’s supper is made as follows: Take 2-inch squares of biscuit dough and wrap around cooked sau sages. Hold in place with toothpicks. Sprinkle with grated cheese and bake 10 minutes in moderate oven. Serve on long toothpicks or canape stick. C A«aociated Newspapers.—WNU Servlc#. AMAZE A MINUTE SCIE NTT FACTS ~ BY ARNOLD Ocean sunburns- Ocean vovagers*severe SUNBURNS RE* SUIT AS MUCH FROAA SKIN c IRRITATION BY WIND AND FINE SPRAY AS FROM SUNUGHT. A Living museum Lake Omred, IN THE MIDDLE OF Europe, by being an old isolated body of water, HAS KEPT ALIVE MANY FORMS OF LIFE LONG EXTINCT ELSEWHERE. WNU Service. The Permanent Thing By LEONARD A. BARRETT The things most common among us are subject to the law of change. Our customs change. Habits of life in vogue a quarter of a cen tury ago are not practiced^ today. The garments worn by our g r a n d p arents seem almost gro tesque beside the present fashions. Archite c t u r a 1 changes have been very pro nounced in all types of build ings. The modernistic or futuristic mode of architecture prevails today. When we compare this interpreta tion of beauty in the field of struc tural designing with the Gothic de signs of medieval times, we see BASEBALL CHIEF C J^/oUSQ(xof6 By Lydia Le Baron Walker Rev. Harold J. Martin, Catholic priest who is president of the Cana- dian-American league, having been elected at a meeting in Montreal re cently. Father Martin played base ball with Frankie Frisch at Ford- ham university, and a few seasons ago he pitched twelve consecutive victories for the Ogdensburg team in the defunct Northern New York league. He spends most of his spare time teaching youngsters the fine points of the game. a marked change. The field of mu sic has undergone processes of creation quite different from the genuis of the old masic masters. Much of the really fine music has been replaced by cheap jazz. The phonograph, the only apparatus we have for permanently recording sound, has been relegated to the at tic. Now in our homes, the radio bleats out the modern musical whims composed overnight, save for an occasional symphonic hour. Reading has also felt the changing inclinations o< a hurried people. The popular demand , today is for the short story that creates a thrill, rather than an inspiring ideal. Most of the books written today will not be read twenty-five years hence. People want change. Our bodies are constantly undergoing changes. Every seven years we are told that we have a new body, even though we are unmindful that the process is going on. We are not conscious of the physical changes because of the permanent element in personal ity; that element is Love. The objects upon which love is centered may change, but not love itself. A mother’s love today is the same as it was centuries ago when it was so wisely tested by Solomon. The loyalty of the family relation ship is the same today as when Ruth pledged her filial devotion to Naomi. No, love does not change, but its modes of expression and the objects upon which love is bestowed may change. Love is the only per manent thing in the world. Indeed, Henry Drummond, whose scientific writings caused a tempest in the philosophic thinking of his day, said: “Love is the greatest thing in the world.” Love is more than animal passion, for it is not that at all. Love is more than affection; more than mere attraction between two people. Love is the yearning for the priv ilege of expressing one’s deeper spiritual self in adoration of that which is recognized as the highest T AKING a bath can be one of the enjoyable acts of cleanliness. So many of these are just work, the measure of pleasure consisting in the qfter knowledge that dirt, dust and impurities have been ban ished. So it is good to realize that personal comfort can be coupled with the bath in cold weather, and not eliminated when the joy of sea bathing must be abandoned for a season. The zest of salt water bathing can be imparted in minor degrees by putting a good sprinkling of sea salt in the water in the tub. Salts of various kinds • re beneficial when thus added, and if these are perfumed, one of the luxuries of tub bathing is im parted. Epsom salts are a base for these de luxe salts. To them are added ingred ients chief among which is the per fume. The salts themselves are cheap, especial ly when bought in five pound quantities. This makes it possible for everyone, who so wish es, to enjoy the benefits of the salts, even though they prefer but must forego the delicate aroma which rises from perfumed bath salts which are not present in the plain salts. Bath Soaps. The matter of bath soaps is one for each person to decide for him self, unless advised by a physiciaa of some particular kind best suited to his skin. Some persons choose a soap that floats. This can be home made as well as purchased. Sel ect the one which by experiment suits you best. These soaps are seldom of the exotic variety, but this is not so important to some persons, as being able to pick the cake up without searching for it when the soap slips out of the hand. The majority of persons, however, delight more in the fragrance of the soap when, with this pleasant el ement, is coupled a quality con genial to the skin. Those who like to use a nail brush for fingers and toes while in the bath, do well to choose a brush that floats, as will all those with bristles secured in wood. A towel rack above the tub, or a rack so conveniently placed that the face cloth and the ample bath towel can be reached from the tub without a far stretch, or having actually to get out of the tub, adds decidedly to bathing comforts. And be sure to have a soap dish that fastens over the edge of the tub. • • • Sleeping Comfort. Blanket sheets or sheet blankets, whichever you prefer to call them, possible ideal in either the infinite or the human personality. . - Love is the only permanent thing in the world. “And, love is the strongest thing in the world— stronger than hate, stronger than evil, stronger than death.” • Western Newspaper Union. have again put in their appearance as a recognized household linen clos et furnishing. They help solve the problem of sleeping in luxurious warmth now, as in olden days. The necessity for blanket sheets in set tler homes, and even in much later periods, was such that household looms were kept busy weaving enough of these thin wool sheets to supply the requirements of the fam ily guest-room beds. By the use of these sheets, the weight of covers could be decreased on a bed without any lessening of warmth of the sleeper. Among the treasures of many a family are old-time blanket sheets. Two homespun sheets of wool, from sheep that grazed in the pastures of an ancestral farm in 1790, are among my prized possessions. What is more they still are used either for light weight summer blankets nr winter blanket sheets for com fortable warmth. The modern blanket sheets are not generally in plain natural colored wool, of a creamy hue approaching the color of linen sheets as closely as possible. More frequently than not, the sheets are colored and of wool finish cotton yarn or cotton and wool, instead of all wool. Plaid is a favorite design for them, al though there are other patterns and also blankets in beautiful pastel shades. A pair ef blanket sheets may be wanted, but one is apt to be used either as a top, Of under sheet, as preferred. Regulation cotton or linen sheets are not eliminated. The blanket sheets come between these, and may not be among the covers of the bed when made up, but be put on between the sheets should the night prove bitter cold at bed time. The warmth of the textile cuddles the body comfortably im mediately on getting into bed, while cotton and linen sheets have to ac quire warmth from the heat of the body. C Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service. DANCE FROCK A dance frock made of many lay ers of gray silk net. The short cape is trimmed with a full niching of the same fabric as the dress and cape. Civil War in Winter Setting smaitiitoi Urge of Ambition ) Ambition, like love, can abidt no lingering; and aver urgath m lia own success, hating nothing but what may stop them.—flfar P. Sidney. Keep your body free of accumulat ed waste, take Dr. Ptorca’s Pleaa- ant Pellets. 60 Pellets SO cants. Ada. Independence is one of the moat marked qualities of human beings, —John C. Merriam. RELIEF ..CMK The Original ^ Cellophane Wrapped Genuina Pure Aspirin ia LARGEST SCLLCJt AT St.josepti GENUINE PURE ASPIRIN Life’s Ups and Downs Life’s hardest ups and downs are keeping up appearances and keeping down expenses. DISCOVERED Way to Relieve Coughs QUICKLY It giTW quick nitt cad i ' ' Present Pleasures So use present pleasures thafi thou spoilest not future onea.— Seneca. Why Laxatives Fail In Stubborn Constipation! 24 hours lo too lo from oloMod I is nesdsd. tor itlso of bsctsrL Twelve to 24 hours la too Iona to Waft When relief from eloqqqd bewolo end constipation moue quantities or bacteria accumu late, causing GAS, Indioeatlea aaO many restless. sloaMoaa oTehte. If you want REAL, QUICK RELIEF, taka a liquid compound such as Ad* larlka. Adlsrlka contains aKVEN ea* thartle and carminative inaradlento that act Mt the stomach and BOTH bowtla. Moat “overnlaht'* laxatives contain ana ingredient that acts an the lower bowel only. Adlorika’e DOUBLE ACTION alvqa r eur system a thorough cleansing. ringing out old poisonous waato mat* tor that may hava caused GAS palna. ty sour stomach, hoadachas and alghta for months. Adlsrlka relieves stomach GAS at ones and usually removes bowel eon* eestion In lots than two hour*. No waiting for overnight results. This famous treatment has bean roeom* manded by many doctors and drug- R lata for M years. Taka Adlsrlka one* a If hour before breakfast or one hour before bedtime and In a short white you win feel marvelously rafraahsdi Aft all Loading Druggists. Modest Heroes Most of the heroes who get no publicity don’t want it. Strength During MIDDLE LIFE Strength Is extra-important for women going through the change of life. Then the body needa the very beet nourishment to fortify It egalnet the changes that are taking place. In such cases, Cardul has proved helpful to many women. It in creases the appetite and aids diges tion, favoring more complete trans formation of food into living tissue, resulting in Improved nutrition and building up and strengthening of the whole system. Severing Ties One outgrows homesickness- more’s the pity. MUSCULAR RHEUMATIC PAIN A rebel battery engaged in the attack on Madrid unlimbers its pieces in a snow-covered forest on the Novacerrada front, and begins to blast away at the Loyalists’ position. "Quotations" There is no art tg living every age has its moment Marias EOioC No modern nation thinks si going to war unless it is convinced of being on the winning side. — A. A. Milns. We make the government; it does not make tis.—Ida M. TarbalL The film ia a finer art than the novel, stage or opera.—H. C. Walla. A man of genius Is one who can transform a piece of the on think able into the thinkable.—Aldsata Huxley. Where we find echoes wo gsnsr ally find emptiness and hollowness; it is the contrary with the echoes of the heart—Bayes.