The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, January 21, 1938, Image 7
THE SUN, NEWBERRY, S. C-, FRIDAY, JANUARY 21, 1938
THE SUNNY SIDE OF LIFE
Clean Comics That Will Amuse Both Old and Young
THE FEATHERHEADS
Refund
—You MEXlJ To
SAY VoU SEMT
\T BAC< To
THE STORE—
AND THEY
EVEK) SENT
For it?
v
OF COURSE/ IT
wasn't vi hat They
ADVERTiSEP —
SO I SET MV
MONEV BACK
See
THAT
MOVIE, 9
today f
Yes, and
IT WAS
TERRIBLE/
S’MATTER POP— Eloquent Finger., Huh?
weuu- i suppose You sot
Your, money back— i saw
THE TRAILER AND ACCORDING
TO THAT IT WAS SUPPOSED
be The best show of
the year.
y/-
Vt STORE y
never.
KNOWS
WHETHER
THE 7
OR THE
BLUES (>KS)
HAVE WON
UNTIL ALL
rug ReW
ARE /W
By C. M. PAYNE
MESCAL IKE b t s. l. huntley
\
\
Cj
/
/
Let Joy Be Unrefined
j
f
FINNEY OF THE FORCE
—MEB6E THIM PRETZBUS-
BS NO dOOO PER KIDS—
BUT HOW KIN YEZ KAPe
-^THIM FBUM BATIN' THIM?
Br Ted O LoufUin
Another Twist
l know one
way—WATCH
me/
-and if ioj
THROW THAT
AWAY I'LL
<Sl\JE YOU A
PENNY-
OKAY'
WHEBEi
Tri ' ^
CENT?
MICA BI6A DA PBBTZ'
PER WANNA PENNY ,
tXhks,
HAD/
StbuT
athletes
To set
IN Tfe/M
MUST
po oft DIET
POP— A Real Protector
man’s best friend,
COLONEL/
By J. MILLAR WATT
ot
SUBURBAN HEIGHTS
By GLUYAS WILLIAMS
]D
ERNIE PLUMBR, WHO HAD BEEN SETflN6 NOWHERE WHH
HIS SO66EST1ONS THAT THE BOYS SHOVEL TrtE FRONT
"WALK, WAS AMAZED HOW GOICKLY THE SHOW DISAP
PEARED When one of them dropped a dime
ALL THE DIFFERENCE
“Do you think there is any truth
in the theory that big creatures are
better-natured than small ones?”
asked the intellectual young woman.
“Surely!” returned the young
man addressed. “Just look at the
difference between the Jersey mos
quito and the Jersey cow!”
Take That!
“Can you drive with one arm?”
“Sure.”
“Okay, have an apple.”—George
town.
HE LEFT HIS MARK
Camouflage
Waiter—Customer says his steak i
is too small.
Manager—Putiton a smaller plate. I
“The man who occupied this
room,” said the landlady, “was an
inventor. He invented an ex
plosive.”
“I suppose those spots on the wall
are the explosive,” said the roomer.
“No,” said the landlady. “They
are the inventor.”
“IT’S TOPS!”—Say Millions
about Pepsodent with IRIUM
PEPSODENT Tooth Paste and Powder Alone Contain
This Thrilling New Luster Discovery
• What a thrill i... To see your own smile
reveal teeth that flash and sparkle with
all their glorious natural luster! Use this
modernized dentifrice twice every dey —
and see how quickly your smile glistens
and gleams as it naturally should! You
sas, that’s “The Miracle ot Iriuml” . . .
And Pepsodent containing Irium is Safe!
Contains NO GRIT, NO PUMICE, NO
BLEACH. It reveals dazzling natural lus
ter in record timet See how Pepsodent
containing Irium shows up any other
dentifrice on the market —
BAR NONBI Try it and see 1 , s -
DORIS DEHE'S
column
Happiness Depends on
Honesty in Marriage,
Writer Advises.
1
TYEAR DORIS DENE: I am
J-' twenty-nine years old and am
in love with a girl who is more in
telligent than I am in many ways.
She is very sensitive and I respect
her and love her deeply. We have
known each other (or three years
and I have often been unfaithful to
her. She now wants to know the
truth and I am afraid to tell her
since I think I may lose her. She
is absolutely obsessed with the idea
of fidelity and something has put a
suspicion into her mind. I don’t
know how to handle the situation
and want above everything else not
to lose her.—R. H. M.
ANSWER—If the girl is sensitive
and imaginative, the odds are
against her being kept in complete
ignorance as to the wild oats you
have sown. She will meet friends
of yours who may be in a remini
scent mood, and if you’ve deceived
her with some artistic lying, the
shock may be greater to her nerv
ous system than you have any idea
of. Even in this day and age there
are women who are idealists about
love. They wou’t accept half-meas
ures. They won’t believe half-truths.
They carry around with them a glo
rious vision of perfect love and the
breath of suspicion corrodes their
happiness and shatters their dream.
There are dozens of times when the
truth is far better left unsaid when a
calm acceptance of the facts of life is in
order and when deception is kinder than
cruel fact.
But if a woman is so constituted that
knowledge of her future husband’s infi
delities is absolutely necessary to her
happiness—it is wiser to take no chances
about reading her a book of pretty white
lies.
For the type of love which is built
on a dream—and which asks abso
lute perfection of that dream may
be insubstantial—may depend en
tirely for its maintenance on com
plete truth and understanding.
Therefore, disillusionment to this
kind of love means not only misery
and suffering but an actual depar
ture of the grande passion.
And so, R. H. M., if your lady de
mands the whole sad story, give it
to her now. Let her know the truth
before you’ve both crossed a bridge
it’s difficult to recross. Since she
has insisted on this confession, you
have no real right to decide that
she’d much better be lied to.
HPOM: It would be a happy expe-
A rienee for me If I could hand
out a recipe to people like you
whose lives have become eomplete-
ly tangled up with a series of mis
takes if I could say comfortably:
“Do this and that and you will sud
denly find yourself divorced from
the wrong girl and married to the
right one.” Over and over again
these piteous stories come in—of
misunderstandings and lack of faith
which led to hopeless marriages.
And then of reconciliation and love
too late. And then the eternal ery:
“What shall I do? How shall I get
out of my marriage which has last
ed 14 years and resulted in several
children, so that I can marry the
girl I’ve always wanted?”
Believe me, we always have
to come back to the same old
theme song, however dreary the
sound of it: that unless two people
married to the wrong mates, can
break away cleanly, secure a divorce
and start life over again, there is no
happiness nor any hope for the love
they bear each ether.
Men and women undertake more
than just living with each other,
when they marry. They uncon
sciously sign a contract which is
far more binding than it looks when
you read the divorce statistics. They
form associations and habits togeth
er—they are bound by a million in
finitesimal ties, even though they
have never loved each other truly
and when the time comes for a
great break, it isn’t only the chil
dren who stand in the way of the
divorce. It’s their deep unconscious
dependence on each other—their un
willingness to break up a married
life which has become almost an
institution to them.
And so, even when they’re blinded by
• great love and dazzled by a radiant
hope of happiness they stand back, fear
ful to make the great break; and too
weak to give up the new hope of happi
ness. And the result of that is miserable
uncertainty for two lovers and the utter
demoralization of two households.
Since affairs of this kind don’t
stand still, Tom, I should advise you
to take some step yourself. Your
infatuation and hers has reached a
pitch where very little will be hid
den from the world in a few weeks.
You must be strong in one direc
tion or the other. You must give
up this dream of a new life, or else
you must give up entirely the old
established order of things—prepare
to do without the life which has
meant respectability and compara
tive contentment for so long.
Once before you made up your
mind to be brave and put memories
behind you. That was when you
married the wrong girl. Now you
can be strong again and put away
your hopes and dreams forever.
That wrong girl you married has
made an excellent wife insofar as
she was capable, and perhaps you
can find with her some semblance
of happiness if you will cut out of
your life the possibility of another
great romance.
6 Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service.
Advantage of Advertising
VYOU will find the advertising
1 merchant carrying the larg
est stock of merchandise, main
taining the most attractive
store, employing the most ef
ficient sales force, and by
spreading his overhead costs
over the larger volume of busi
ness attracted by advertising,
offering the lowest prices for
quality merchandise. In these
ways advertising serves both
merchant and consumer.
THE FOIST
SIGN OF SPRINGS
ferryT^
Thk red-and-silver Ferry’s
Seeds display in your neighbor
hood store is the first real sign
of spring. It’s a reminder, too,
that you can grow more lus
cious vegetables and more glo
rious flowers than ever if yon
rely on Ferry’s Seeds. For the
Ferry-Morse Seed-Breeding In
stitute has developed many fine
new varieties and even im
proved old favorites.
In the Institute’s experi
mental gardens, seed experts
develop and test Ferry’s Seeds—
breeding and gradually perfect
ing carefully selected strain*.
Choose your seeds from the
Ferry’s display this year. All
have been tested for germina
tion and trueness to type—your
assurance of a successful gar
den. 6c a packet and up. 1938
novelties too! Ferry-Morse
Seed Co., Detroit, San Francisco.
FERRYS SEEDS
Aid in Battle
Kind looks, kind words, kind
acts, and warm handshakes—
these are secondary means of
grace when men s e in trouble,
and are fighting their unseen bat
tles.—John Hall.
Get the fm recipe for SWEET RICE
FRITTERS at your grocer’s where
yea boy your JEWEL SHORTENING
SWlU
Je
S HOP TEf
FAVORITE OF THE SOUTH
Heedless One
But how can he expect that oth
ers should build for him, sow for
him, and at his call love him, who
for himself will take no heed at
all?—Wordsworth.
Slain Foes
The sweetest honey comes from
foes we slay.—Tracy de Land.
BLACKMAN
Stock and Poultry Modkinos
Are Reliable
• Blackman’s Medicated Lick-
A-Brik.
• Blackman's Stock Powder
• Blackman’s Cow Tonic
• Blackman’s Hag Powder
• Blackman’s Poultry Tablets
• Blackman’s Poultry Powder
• Blackman’s Uce Powder
Highoat Quality-Lowest Price
Satisfaction Guaranteed or
your money back
BUY FROM YOUR DEALER
BLACKMAN STOCK MEDtCINE CO.
Ti