The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, November 26, 1937, Image 3
THE SUN, NEWBERRY, S. CU FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1937
Cuddle Toys from
»
Pattern 5932.
Fun to sew—inexpensive to
make—excellent .for Christmas
gifts is this collection of cuddle
toys. Two pieces with just the
necessary “trimming” of ears,
mane and tails extra. The kiddies
love them! Use up those odds
and ends and make your toys as
colorful as possible—in short ir
resistible. In pattern 5932 you will
find a pattern of the three toys;
directions for making them; ma
terial requirements.
To obtain this pattern send 15
cents in stamps or coins (coins
preferred) to The Sewing Circle,
Household Arts Dept., 259 W.
Fourteenth St., New York, N. Y.
Please write your name, ad
dress and pattern number plainly.
'Odds and Ends” ★ STAR i
f DUST I
* M.ovie • Radio $
★ *
★★★By VIRGINIA VALE★★★
W HEN motion picture pro
ducers wander away from
their office desks, they get the
most promising ideas for pic
tures. For instance, it might
never have occurred to the head
man of the 20th Century-Fox
studios to cast Shirley Temple
and Sonja Henie in a film to
gether if he hadn’t happened to
pass the ice rink where Miss
Henie practices.
At first he was horror-stricken to
find the company’s precious child
risking her neck try
ing to learn Sonja’s
whirlwind capers,
but when he saw
that she learned
them as easily, and
safely, as she does
tap - dancing rou
tines, he decided
that she must do a
skating picture with
her teacher.
At Paramount, the
big boss heard sonja Henie
shrieks of hilarity
coming from the portrait photog
rapher’s studio, and on investigat
ing found W. C. Fields and John
Barrymore clowning around as Ro
meo and Juliet. Right away he was
inspired to cast them together in a
loony story called “Things Begin to
Happen.”
.—-¥■—
Grown-ups may well envy the
school children of today who learn
their history lessons through such
an exciting medium as the R. K.
O. motion picture, “Victoria the
Great.” Filmed in England with
Anna Neagle in the role of the
queen, this picture was made with
the hearty co-operation of govern
ment officials, so all the glory of
real castles and authentic royal set
tings make it a feast for the eyes.
Sixty years of her life are cov
ered in this story, so it is a series
of dramatic high spots. And so
skillfully has the story been told,
it is just the story of a woman’s
heart, a woman who was willful
and pathetic—with all her regal
splendor.
Lanny Ross was all ready to sign
a contract to make pictures for
M-G-M, when it occurred to him
that with Nelson Eddy and Allan
Jones already signing on that lot,
there wasn’t much room for another
singer. So, the shrewd Lanny hus
tled over to Columbia Pictures’ stu
dios and arranged to make pictures
for them instead. There he will be
sure to get all the good singing
roles.
Those folks you hear on Gabriel
Heatter’s “We, the People” pro
gram certainly enjoy the evening of
that broadcast. After the first
broadcast, Heatter takes the whole
troupe of visitors across the street
to dinner. Afterward, they return
to the studio for the repeat western
broadcast.
All the youngsters who were
thrilled over Dick Merrill’s ocean
flights will want to arrive for the
first showing and stay all day when
“Atlantic Flight,” starring Dick
Merrill himself comes to their local
theater. In the picture he is the
same engaging, modest, casual
young man that he was in the news
reels. And the picture boasts some
hair-raising stunt flying.
All three of the Lane sisters are
now working for Warner Brothers.
Priscilla, who with her sister Rose
mary, provided many bright mo
ments in Waring’s “Varsity Show,’ r
will do the same for the next. “Gold
Diggers” in support of Dick Powell.
And Lola, who has been in pictures
much longer than her sisters, will
be seen in “Hollywood Hotel.”
Turning down several coast-to-
coast radio programs offered him,
Henry Hull, the dis
tinguished stage ac
tor, is going to try
motion pictures
again. He will play
a prominent role in
M-G-M’s “Marie An
toinette” in support
of Norma Shearer.
About the time that
picture is ready for
the screen, another
Marie Antoinette
will be competing
for attention. Dean
na Durbin is going to play the role
in a story written' around her more
tender years.
ODDS AND ENDS—Helen Menken,
long-suffering “Second Wife" of the radio
serial is going to make a motion picture
for Warners . . . Clark Gable, weary of
hero
Rare Book
There are estimated to be only
about 45 Gutenberg Bibles in the
world and in 1884 one sold for
$15,000. At that time, many of
the books were privately owned.
Today, with most of the Bibles
permanently retired to museums
and thus off the market, the price
should be higher.
The Gutenberg Bible is valuable
not for its scarcity alone. It is a
curiosity because authorities
aren’t even sure Johann Guten
berg printed it. In fact, some ex
perts claim the Fifteenth century
German wasn’t a printer at all!—
Washington Post.
CARDUI
In this modern time something
wonderfully worth while can be done
for practically every woman who
suffers from functional pains of
menstruation. Certain cases can be
relieved by taking Cardui. Others
may need a physician’s treatment
Cardui has two widely demon
strated uses: (1) To ease the Im
mediate pain and nervousness of
the monthly period; and (2) to aid
in building up the whole system by
helping women to get more strength
from their food.
Purposeful Day
A single day in the life of a
learned man is worth more than
the lifetime of a fool.—Posidonius.
No matter how many medicines
you have tried for your cough, chest
cold, or bronchial Irritation, you can
get relief now with Creomulslon.
Serious trouble may be brewing and
you cannot afford to take a chance
with any remedy less potent than
Creomulsion, which goes right to
the seat of the trouble and aids na
ture to soothe and heal the inflamed
mucous membranes and to loosen
and expel the germ-laden phlegm.
Even if other remedies have failed,
don’t be discouraged, try Creomul
slon. Your druggist is authorized to
refund your money If you are not
thoroughly satisfied with the bene
fits obtained from the very first
bottle. Creomulslon is one word—not
two, and it has no hyphen in It.
Ask for it plainly, see that the name
on the bottle is Creomulslon, and
you’ll get the genuine product and
the relief you want (Adv.)
LARGE SIZE
$1.20
AT ALL GOOD DRUG STORES
HELP KIDNEYS
To Get Rid of Add
and Poisonous Waste
Toar kidneys help to keep yoa-weH
by constantly filtering waste matter
from the blood. If your kidneys get
functionally disordered and fail to
remove excess impurities, there may be
poisoning of the whole system end
body-wide distress.
Burning, scanty or too frequent uri
nation may be a warning of some kidney
or bladder disturbance.
You may suffer nagging backache,
persistent headache, attacks of dizziness,
getting up nights, swelling, puffineas
under the eye*—fed week, nervous,- ell
played out.
In such cases it is better to rely on a
medicine that has won country-wide
acclaim than on something lem favor
ably known. Use Doan’s P1U9. A multi*
tude of grateful people
Doan’s. Ask your neiohoorl
DOANS PILLS
Norma Shearer
being a swaggering, wisecracking
wants to play in a tense drama about the
yellow fever in the tropics
, . . Carole Lombard is wearing a black
wig in “Food for ScandaF’ and she is not
sure it is a good idea. Her best friends
don’t recognize her . . . Bob Hope, radio
comedian, is such a hit in his first Para
mount picture that he has signed to do
more.
• Western Newspaper Union.
Scenes and Persons in the Current News
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1—Ray Hanson of Minnesota, newly crowned national corn-husking champion, shows how he husked 21.30
bushels of corn in 1 hour and 20 minutes at the national contest at Marshall, Mo. 2—King Carol of Rumania
bestows a fatherly kiss on his sixteen-year-old son, Prince Michael, after the crown prince was made a sub
lieutenant in the army. 3—Lord Cecil, chairman of the First National Congress of the International Peace
Campaign as he listened to discussions at the opening of the congress in London, recently.
-
Tomato Barrage
for Swarthout
in New Picture
Gladys Swarthout, opera star and
actress, wipes tomatoes from her
features following a barrage of frnit
tossed at her during a scene from
80 Million Year Old Footprint
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Dr. Barnum Brown, curator of fossil reptiles of the American Mu
seum of Natural History, is pictured with the largest reptile footprint
fossil ever discovered. Found in a coal mine near Cedaredge, Colo., on
his recent expedition, the footprint of this monster dinosaur, estimated
to have lived 80,000,000 years ago, is 34 inches wide and 34 inches long.
r
her newest picture. She was playing
the role of an unappreciated ama
teur. Note tomatoes on Miss Swar-
thout’s $2,500 dress which she wore
for the scene.
Gijon’s Conquerors Stage Victory Dance
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PRIZE WINNER
Here’s the Original “Big Apple”
This is the picture that won hot!
the class prize of $500 and the grand
prize of $1,000 in the newspaper na
tional snapshot award, for Edgar
T. Clewell, bakery machinist of Al
lentown, Pa. A picture of his little
daughter, it was adjudged the best.
Dancers everywhere are doing the “Big Apple,” but few know about
the original which happens to be this unique country cafe and ballroom
near Wathena, Kan., the capital of the apple country.
IMPROVED
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
S UNDAY
chool uesson
By REV. HAROLD L. LUNDQUIST,
Dean of the Moody Bible Institute
of Chicago.
® Western Newspaper Union.
Lesson for November 28
CHRISTIAN FRUITFULNESS
LESSON TEXT—John 15:1-18.
GOLDEN TEXT—Hereto U my Father
glorified, that ye bear much fruit; ao (hall
ye be my disciples.—John 15:8.
PRIMARY TOPIC—Jesus - Rule of Love.
JUNIOR TOPIC—The Loyalty of Love.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC—
What May We Expect to Achieve?
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC—
How Christiana Become FruiVfuL
Dancing and singing through the battered streets of Gijon, the Nationalist rebel troops of General Franco
are hailed by women of the city as they celebrate their victorious march through the Asturias to capture this
important Loyalist stronghold.
Thanksgiving day has just afford,
ed each one of us a special oppor.
tunity to return praise to God for
the fruitfulness of America’s broad
acres. It is appropriate that we
think today of the Christian life as
manifesting itself in the bearing of
fruit.
Christian work of which we spoke
last Sunday may (at least in a meas
ure) be imitated, but fruit cannot be
imitated. It is the result of life and
only those who know the new birth
bear the fruit of Christianity.
The chapter before us is a portion
of Scripture which has been the pe
culiar favorite of God’s children in
all generations. It is at the center
of our Lord’s words with his disci
ples immediately before his death
on the cross.
Many are the expositions of this
passage, but a beautifully simple
one which came to the writer from
Dr. W. Graham Scroggie is suggest
ed as most helpful.
I. Life and Fruitfulness (w. 1-8).
Life results in fruit and there can
be no true fruit where there is no
life. Christ is the vine, the Fa
ther is the keeper of the vine. We
who aie Christ’s are the branches
abiding in him, that is, living our
whole life in and for him in such
close union with him that his life as
the vine brings forth fruit in us as
the branches. That is real Christian
living.
But, alas, there are branches that
seem to belong to the vine but they
lack the one indispensable evidence
of life which is the normal bearing
of fruit. These the Father must
take and cast away to be destroyed.
While we must not read into these
words more than our Lord intended,
let us beware lest we explain away
their serious import. These are
grave words of warning to false pro
fessors of Christianity, but they are
not spoken to distress and disheart
en true followers of the Lord Jesus
Christ.
Fruit in the Christian is undoubt
edly first of all the fruit of charac
ter but that character is also to
show in conduct. Note the progress
—“fruit” (v. 2), “more fruit” (v. 2),
“much fruit” (v. 5). In order to
bear more fruit there is need of
pruning and cleansing (w. 3).
Pleasant? Not always, but always
profitable. Let us thank God for
even the pruning knife when its work
is needed. ^
Do not miss the prayer promise
in verse 7. It is an unlimited prom
ise with a closely limited condition.
Let us meet the condition and claim
the promise.
II. Love and Friendship (w. 9-16).
“This is my commandment that
ye love one another.” In verse 10 we
read that to abide in the love of
Christ we must keep his command
ments and now we learn that it is
his command that we love one an
other. We are not to await the
impulse prompted by the beauty or
kindness or propinquity of someone,
but we are to love one another.
Many a Christian who has obeyed
the commandments against steal
ing, adultery, and blasphemy has
never noticed that he is commanded
to love.
The joy of Christ was fulfilled on
the eve of Calvary by the love of his
disciples for one another and for
him. He rejoices today when we
love the brethren and love him, for
thus we enter upon the beautiful
relationship of friends.
Dr. Scroggie says, “We may be
God’s children without being his
friends; the one is based on his gift
of life to us; the other, upon our of
fering of love for him. Are you a
friend of God? You cannot have
God and the world for friends at
the same time. The friendship of
the world is enmity with God. The
world hates Christ, and therefore
will not love you if you are like
him.” '
But, oh! the sweet intimacy of
fellowship with him. Read verses
14 to 16. Chosen and appointed by
him, for “he first loved us,” we are
not kept in the distant position of
servants but are brought into his
circle of friends with whom he
shares the glorious secrets of
his Father, and our Father. It is
a great thing to be a Christian, a
friend of the Saviour.
WolV-P
■
■ul
Practical
“Would you like to go and heal
father preaching on ‘Love one ai>
other,’ Jack, dear?”
“Np, darling! Let’s stay al
home and practice what father’s
preaching!”
■
When some girls get soft soaped
they bobble over.
IN REVERSE
Rich Dad—If you marry this
fellow what do you expect to live
on?
Daughter—Live on what we ex
pect!
Oswald (to prospective stepfath
er)—“What are yoo like at home
work?”
Life’s See-Saw
Willie—Daddy, what do they
n.ean when they talk about the
ups and downs of life?
Daddy—The giving ups and the
paying downs.
Tommy Is Right
Teacher—What does the letter
“Z” stand for?
Tommy—’Cos it would be letter
“N” if it lay down!
HOW LONG CAN A
THREE-QUARTE1 WIFE
HOLD HER HUSBAND?
Y OU have to wort at marriage
to make a success of It. Men
may be selflah, unsympathetic,
but that's the way they're made
and you might as well realize It.
When your back aches and your
nerves scream, don't take It out
on your husband. He can t possibly
know how you feet
For three generations one woman
baa told anotto- how to go “smil
ing through" wi. V Lydia E. Ptok-
ham's Vegetable Compound. It
helps Nature tone up the system,
thuslessentog the discomforts from
the functional disorders which
women must endure to the three
ordeals of Ufe: 1. Turning from
girlhood to womanhood. 2. Pre
paring for motherhood, a. Ap
proaching “middle age.”
Don't be a three-quarter wife,
take LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND and
Go “Smiling Through.”
Faith and Logic
Faith is as much a normal func
tion of the human mind as is
logic.—William W. Keen.
A Good Laxative
The bad feelings and dullness
often attending constipation take
the Joy oat of life. Try a dose of
Black-Draught at the first sign of
constipation and see how much bet
ter It is to check the trouble before
it gets a hold on you. Black-
Draught Is purely vegetable and is
so prompt and reliable. Get re
freshing relief from constipation by
taking purely vegetable
BLACK-DRAUGHT
Wasted Treasures
Many a beautiful library is only
looked at and pointed at by the
owner.
“2-DR0P” TREATMENT
FOR HEAD COLD RELIEF
Just put 2 drops of Penetro Nose
Drops in each nostril and get relief
from the discomfort of miserable
head colds and sinus congestion.
Penetro Nose Drops contain ephe-
drine (openlng-up action) and cither
“balanced medication.” They help
to shrink swollen membranes,
soothe the inflamed area, make
breathing easier. 25c, 50c, $1 bottles
at druggists. Convenient purse size,
10c. Demand Penetro Nose Drops.
Intellect
Every man should use his intel
lect not as he uses his lamp in the
study, only for his own seeing, but
as the lighthouse uses its lamps,
that those afar off on the sea may
see the shining and learn their way.
The Past
Tne wise man must remember
that while he is a descendant of
the past, he is a parent of the fu
ture, and that his thoughts are as
children born to him, which he may
not carelessly let die.—Spencer.
47—37
WNU—7
MAGIC fABPET
It doesn't fflzttet what you're thinking of buy
ing—a Dtr-ptn or a baby grand, s new suit
for Junior ora setofdiniag-roomfurniturc—
the best place to start your shopping tour is
in an easy-chair. with an open newspaper.
The turn ofa page will carry you ua swiftly
as the magic carpet of the Arabian Nights,
from one end of the shopping district to the
other. Yon can rely on modern advertising
as a guide to good values, you can compare
prices and styles .fabrics and finishes, just as
though you wen standing in a store.
Make a habit of reading the advertisements
in this paper every week. They cau save yon
time, energy and money.