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/ / THE SUN. NEWBERRY, S. C- JANUARY 8, 1943 ON THE E FRONl D RIGHT blue is the color key- ■*“' note in this bathroom. Blue is used for towels and bath mat stripes and for a painted box cor nice. The curtains are of coarse white muslin tufted with old-fash ioned candlewicking in bright blue. Cut the curtains the length and width desired with ample allow ance for shrinkage and baste the hems in. Next place the material 3at on a table and mark diagonal Vi STITCHES WITH CANDLE WICK NEEDLE AND 4 STRANDS OF* COTTON YARN DOUBLED MRS. RUTH WYETH SPEARS Bedford Hills New York Drawer It Enclose 10 cents for Pattern No. 207. Name Address NOTHING CAN DO MORE FOR YOU in the entire field of aspirin than &. Joseph Aspirin. None faster, none safer. The world's largest seller at 10c. Also sold in economy sizes — 36 tablets, 20c, 100 Ablets, 35c. Demand St. Joseph Aspirin. Crime’s Punishment Crime is not punished as an of fense against God, but as prejudi cial to society.—Fronde. F SURVEY SHOWS 1 Many Doctors Recommend SCOTT’S/ For Vitamin A & D Dietary Deficiency WANT TO HELP build stamina and resistance to colds? Then try good-tasting Scott’s Emulsion- containing the natural A and D vi tamins. Look for the world-known trademark. All druggists. Honorable Labor Labor is in no way disgraceful. —Hesiod. wCOLD , 444, TABLETS, SALVE, NOSE DROPS, COUGH DROP$. Try "tsb-My-Tlw"—a Wonderful Llnimon. Vr S° * JOIN the C.B.C./ (CmlUn §omb Corps) -tkrt- *SIH «br Smia* fea* istmps Dip) ® IN WATER ft TO SHRINK lines on the goods with a yardstick and pencil, spacing the lines four inches apart to form the plaid pat tern. Now, thread a tufting needle with four strands of candlewick yam, and work along these ruled lines using the thread double, as at the upper right. Also, sew the hem in this manner; then clip the stitches, as shown at lower right and dip in water. Spread out smooth to dry but do not iron. Fin ish the tops with a rod casing. • • • ' NOTE: It Is easy to give all your windows a professional finish with box cor nices; and they prevent light from show- ing at the top. In a blackout. Pattern 207 which gives directions for making cornices will be mailed for 10 cents. Address: Released by Western Newspaper Union. ‘Last Shot of the Confederacy’ 'TPHE War Between the States end- ed with Lee’s surrender on April 9, 1365, but a part of the Confed eracy—in fact, a very important part of it—is still fighting. How ever, this time it’s fighting the Ger mans and the Japs — not the “Yankees.” That part of the Con federacy is the city of Selma, Ala. Back in 1864 when Union Gen. William T. Sherman started his fa mous “march to the sea,” he sent the leader of his cavalry, Gen. James Harrison Wilson, on a raid into Ala bama to destroy stores and harry the horsemen of Confederate Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest. In the spring of 1865 Wilson’s troopers started for Selma, then the Confed eracy’s principal storehouse for mu nitions. He was confronted by For rest’s forces but they were too small to hold back the bluecoats. On April 1, 1865, before the city fell to the invaders, the Confeder ates rounded up all the heavy ord nance, shipyard equipment and other materiel they could find and dumped it from a high bluff into the Alabama river. There it lay, almost forgot ten, for more than 70 years until a party of high school boys, working on a history project, dug up a 700- pound cannon. So when Uncle Sam sent out his nation-wide call for scrap metals, the citizens of Selma remem bered the cache of iron and brass and steel in the bottom of the river. They dug up aged and yellowed maps which marked the location of this store of metals and started sal vage operations. Already several thousand pounds of scrap have been recovered and soon, somewhere in the Pacific, or possibly in the Medi terranean theater of operations, the Japs or the Germans will receive the “last shot of the Confederacy.” The fighting around Selma back in 1865 brought into conflict two of the outstanding cavalry leaders of the Civil war. Of the two Na than Bedford For rest was undoubt edly the greater. Most Americans remember him because of the formula for win ning battles that is so often attrib uted to him “Git thar fust with the mostest men.” Whether Forrest ever said it in just that way is doubtful, but the fact re mains that he was one of the most successful cavalry leaders in Ameri can history. Gen. Robert E. Lee had a great leader of mounted men with his forces—the dashing “Jeb” Stuart. But at Appomattox, when somebody asked Lee who was the greatest sol dier in his command, he answered instantly “A man I have never seen, sir. His name is Forrest.” Lee’s opinion of Forrest was confirmed by General Sherman, who fought against him during the Western campaigns. Although Wilson had no such spec tacular career as Forrest’s, he was a soldier of out standing ability, as proved by the fact that he rose from second lieu tenant to major- general in four years. Soon after the outbreak of the Civil war he became a first lieutenant and fought at the bat tles of South Mountain and Antietam. General Forrest General Wilson Promoted to lieutenant-colonel In 1862, Wilson became inspector-gen eral of the Army of the Tennessee in 1863. Later that year he was ad vanced to brigadier-general. Wilson’s big chance came late in 1864 when he was assigned to the command of the cavalry corps of the Military Division of the Mississippi. He organized BP army of 15,000 cav alrymen and this force contributed largely to the success of the armies in the West under Generals Thomas and Sherman, particularly in the capture of Selma and Montgomery, Ala., and Columbus and Macon, Ga. In 28 days Wilson captured five forti fied cities, 23 stands of colors, 288 guns and 6,820 prisoners. It was a brilliant record but he is principally remembered as being the Union gen eral whose troops captured one par ticular individual among those 6,000 prisoners. That individual was Jef ferson Davis, president of the Con federacy. Perhaps the most brilliant achievement of Forrest was the way in which he covered the retreat of General Hood after that luckless Confederate officer had been defeat ed by General Thomas at the Battle of Nashville. With a force of 5,000, Forrest held off the pursuit of Thom as’ 10,000 cavalry and 30,000 infan try for 35 terrible days un Ml Hood’s army was safely across the Ten nessee river into Alabama. During this time Forrest killed and cap tured 5,000 of the Federals and armed and fed his men at the ex pense of the enemy besides! WHO’S NEWS This Week By Lemuel F. Parton Consolidated Features.—WNU Release. XT EW YORK.—That brief dispatch from Chile reporting that Ber lin had recalled Ambassador Wil helm Freiherr von Schoen is some- Von Schoen Recall ^^f as uaw May Mean Chilean in the wind c • . .1 All- ot World Swing to the Allies w a r p 0 1 i. tics. Baron Von Schoen has been so long and so deeply intrenched in Latin-American intrigue and so suc cessful in covering his tracks and staying on the job that this four- line news item may well indicate a powerful Chilean swing to the Allied Nations. His organization of subversion in Chile has been exposed and attacked time and again with out so much as jolting the bar on’s monocle. He has been most elaborately wired in, not only with double-dealing politicians but with a hemisphere complex of industrial and financial inter ests and German-based cartels. If it is true that they finally have ent him loose from these moorings it surely means that some of the scaliest and tough est Axis tentacles in those parts have been severed. His family is an old, established firm in international political con spiracy, in war and peace. His fa ther, the late Baron Albrecht, circu lated in Europe before the start of the first World war, trying to soften up the opposition, and Baron Wil helm carried on over here in the Mexican machinations which helped get us in the war. He did this so smoothly that a few post-war years passed before his role, as an aide to Count Bemstorff, was understood and his activities fully appraised. In 1914, he arrived in Wash ington, after several years as secretary of the German em bassy in Japan. In an inter view, which seemed to have been carefully premeditated, be told of Japan’s bitter hatred of the United States, and her de termination to annihUate ns, sooner or later. The interview stirred up much angry discus sion and brought the baron a sharp reprimand from President Wilson, with a hint that the state ments had been intended to pro mote enmity. He was married in 1916 to an American girl, highly placed social ly, and, as secretary to the em bassy, achieved deep penetration in the capital salon diplomacy at a time when our entry into the war was still in the balance. He re turned to Germany, after the failure of the Mexican conspiracy and lit tle was heard of him until the early days of the Hitler ascendancy. ft A S THE army and navy propose to take over the colleges, their plan to teach the young how to shoot meets considerable academic oppo- „ . n . sition. Presi- Prexies Disagree dents Wris _ On Army, Navy ton of Brown . . „ and Dodds Taking Colleges 0 f Princeton are in agreement, but other prexies throughout the country register dis sent on varying grounds. The main base of opposition is that liberal arts education and small colleges will be.casualties. Dr. W. H. Cowley, president of Hamilton college, an active ally of the armed forces in col legiate mobilization in the past, finds the plan “quite inade quate.” His is a college of about 450 students, and he has been a goal-keeper among college pres idents against drives threatening the humanities and liberal arts in the colleges. As an educator, he has opposed early and ex treme specialization and has stressed the importance of edu cating the “whole man.” With this strong conviction, he be lieved colleges, by proper adapta tion in teaching, could help meet the demands for youth in the war and at the same time hold their ancient cultural franchise. A year ago, he circularized 200 upperclassmen of his college with a letter urging them to join the navy and has served as a member of the educational commit tee working with the army and navy. He says this committee op posed the new plan, about a month ago, without success. Dr. Cowley became president of Hamilton in 1938, at the age of 39. As an expert and au thority on vocational guidance, and in educational research, he has concluded that an organized and adequate personality, and the ability to think must take precedence over special skills. If boys off to war can somehow cram a little sound education into their duffle bags, he thinks it will be all to the good—or, more pre cisely, he thinks it is urgently im portant that they do so. He is the most modern of educators, but has opposed such innovations as those of Dr. Hutchins and Stringfellow Barr, which would reduce the col lege course to two years. When he was graduated from Dartmouth, he was voted the “most likely to succeed.” He took his Ph. D. degree at the University of Chicago. RIGHT OF WAT Little Lunches Flatter Wartime Menus (See Recipes Below) Victory Lunches Mid-day meals with that go-and- get-it spirit are those that are prop erly balanced, and have plenty of eye-appeal. The days are gone when you can make a quick dash to the cor ner grocery and bring home lamb chops to broil quickly. Gone, too, are days when you had loads of left overs from yesterday’s roast. But, homemakers, you need not be foiled, rather let your ingenuity devise new ways of getting nutri tion requirements into your menus. Use protein foods like peas, beans, eggs, and vitamin B1 foods like ce reals as extenders to make up for meat. Your New Year victory menu parade starts off with a meat loaf “stretched” with oatmeal. Savory Meat Loaf. / (Serves S) 1 pound ground beef V4 pound ground pork % cup oatmeal 1 egg, beaten Vi onion, grated % cup milk 2 tablespoons chopped parsley 3 tablespoons catsup 154 teaspoons salt Combine ingredients in order giv en. Mix lightly until well blended. Place in a greased loaf pan, pat ting smooth. Bake in a moderate oven (375 degrees) about 1 hour. Makes approximately 2%-pound meat loaf. *LittIe Luncheons. (Serves 6) 2 cups sifted .enriched flour 3 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon salt 2 to 4 tablespoons shortening % to 94 enp milk 94 enp ground ham 6 poached eggs Creamy Cheese Sauce Sift flour, baking powder and salt together. Cut or nib in shortening. Add milk to form a soft dough. Turn out on light ly floured board and knead % min ute. Roll dough out into a long rectangle 8 inches wide and 94 inch thick. Cut in half lengthwise and spread each half with ham and roll jelly-roll fashion, sealing edges well. Cut rolls into 8-inch pieces. Form each piece into rings on baking sheet. Pinch ends together. With scissors, cut through rings almost to center, in slices about 1 inch thick. Turn each slice slightly on its side. Bake in hot oven (450 degrees) 10 to 12 minutes. Place a poached egg in the center of each ring and serve with Creamy Cheese Sauce. Creamy Cheese Sauce. 2 tablespoons butter or margarine Lynn Says: Cans and.Jars: You will have noticed that your grocery shelves present a different picture than in the past. Instead of all food being put up in cans, some food has been preserved in glass. In those foods placed in cans, the government has decreed three different sized cans. A number two sized can, one of the standard sizes yields 2 >4 cups and will serve four to five people. The number 294 sized can averages 394 cups and feeds six people. Largest food can is number 10, usually used by institutions and restaurants. This large size is not usually practical for a fam ily of less than eight since it yields 12 cups and would last for at least two meals. A few additional sized cans are allowed in the case of canned meats, fish, baby food, and citrus juices. This Week's Mena Hot Tomato Juice •Little Luncheons Cranberry-Orange Salad Celery Radishes •Date-Pecan Pie •Recipes Given. The man who was applying for a summons against the people next door was very angry. “What’s the trouble?” asked the magistrate’s clerk. "Every night this week they have been banging on the wall and yelling at me till two o’clock in the morn ing.” “Dear, dear! And does the noise keep you awake?” “No,” explained the applicant, “but I can’t enjoy my piano-playing with all that noise going on.” It Does Sound Dumb Bill—My granduncle is different He’s changing his coal burner for an oil burner. Jack—But I thought there was sup posed to be an oil shortage. Bill—Yeh. But you know the old -saying “There’s no fuel like an old uel.” Ride Her Cowboy Tillie—Pick me out a nice horse. Stable Boy—Ever ridden a horse before? Tillie—No, I haven’t. Stable Boy—Here’s just the horse for you—never been ridden before. You can both start together. 2 tablespoons floor 1 cup milk 94 teaspoon salt 94 teaspoon pepper 94 enp grated cheese Melt butter and stir in flour. Grad ually add milk, stirring constantly. Boil sauce until it thickens. Cook 2 minutes. Add seasonings. Add cheese and stir over low heat until cheese is melted. Baked Corn and Sausage. (Serves 6 to 8) 94 ponnd link or bulk sausage 94 cup chopped onion 94 cup chopped green pepper 2 tablespoons flour 1 teaspoon salt 94 teaspoon pepper 294 cups whole kernel corn and juice 2V4 cups canned tomatoes and juice 1 cup oven-popped rice If bulk sausage is used, form into shape of link sausages. Brown sau sage in heavy frying pan. Remove sausage and brown onions and pep per in fat remaining in pan. Add flour and seasonings and blend. Add corn and tomatoes and simmer until juice has partially evaporated (about 94 hour). Pour into casse role; arrange browned sausages on top like the spokes of a wheel. Sprin kle oven-popped rice on top. Cook in moderate oven (400 degrees) about 15 minutes until oven-popped rice is golden brown. As golden as sunshine and as wel come is this luncheon souffle. Rich in vitamin A carrots and cheese, this dish will boost your resistance to colds and infection this winter. Rice-Carrot Souffle. (Serves 6) 194 cups of cold cooked rice 2 beaten eggs 2 cups of milk 1 teaspoon of sugar 1 cup of grated cheese 94 teaspoon of salt 1 cup of cooked and riced carrots Make a thin custard of eggs, milk and salt. Add the cheese and, when melted, add the rice which has been boiled in salted water, drained and shaken dry. Pour into a buttered baking dish, cover with the riced carrots, a fine sprinkling of sugar, and grated chedse. Bake over a pan of water about three-quarters of an hour in a slow oven. •Date-Pecan Pie. (Makes 1 9-inch pie) Pastry for 1 9-inch pie 1 cup unbroken pecan meats 2 tablespoons butter 1 cup sugar 94 cup dates, cut 1 cup dark corn syrup 2 eggs, beaten 1 teaspoon vanilla 94 teaspoon salt Line pie plate with pastry. Ar range pecan meats over the pastry. Cream butter and sugar together thoroughly, then add remaining in gredients, beat ing well. Pour into unbaked pas try shell over the pecans and bake in a hot oven (450 degrees) 10 minutes, then reduce to moderate (350 degrees) and bake 30 to 35 minutes or until knife in serted in center comes out clean. Cool. May be served with whipped cream. Lynn Chambers can tell you how to dress up your table for family dinner or festivities, give you menus for your parties or tell you how to balance your meals in accordance with nutritional standards. Just write to her, explaining your problem, at Western Newspaper Union, 210 South Des- plainer Street, Chicago, Illinois. Please enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope for your answer. Released by Western Newspaper Union. GO ONE BETTER Ain’t It the Truth Accountant—Just be a good citl zen and pay your taxes with a smile John P. U. Blic—Yeah? Unfor tunately they always insist on cash V 9 77'* r Y‘ •J U S \ He Should Know Dolly—We women endure pain much better than men. Molly—Who told you that? Your doctor? Dolly—No; the shoe salesman. That Was Enough She entered the office of a noted di vorce lawyer. *7 want to know if / have grounds for divorce," she informed the attorney. “Are you married?" asked the lawyer. "Of course." "Then," he replied, “you have grounds.” Man Grounds Dog “Hullo," said a voice, “is that the police department?” “Yes, madam.” “Well, there’s a nasty tramp sit ting up in a tree in my garden teasing my dear little dog.” That’s Progress “I am Brave Eagle,” said the Red Indian chieftain, introducing himself to the paleface visitor. “This is my son, Fighting Bird. And here,” he added, “is my grandson, Four-Engined Bombe^. ,, Smith—Can you see that fly over there on the roof? Jones—No, but I can hear the roof creak as he walks. Please Call Again Boss—Did anybody call while 1 was out? Steno—Yes, a man came in and said he wanted to kick you. Boss—And what did you say? Steno—I said I was sorry you were out! Not So Surprising Mr. Jones—And I saw him treating his wife in a way I wouldn’t treat a dog. Mrs. Jones—Oh, my dear! What was he doing to her? Mr. Jones—He was kissing her. These Are the Days Mr. Smith—Do you think they’ll ever find a substitute for gasoline? Mr. Jones—Well, I’m trying one out right now. Mr. Smith—You are! What is it? Mr. Jones—Shoe leather. Quite a Difference Hub—Quite a difference in the weather, eh? Bub—Yeah, makes me feel like a two-year-old. Hub—Do you mean a horse or an GIVE CHILD this cold-relief used when QUINTUPLETS CATCH COLD Whenever the Quintuplets catch cold— their chests, throats and backs are im mediately rubbed with Musterole. So Muster ole must be just about the BEST cold relief you can buy! Musterole gives such wonderful re sults because it’s MORE than just an ordinary “salve”. It’e what so many Doctors and N urses call a modem counter- irritant. It helps break up local congestion in upper bronchial tract, makes breath ing easier, promptly relieves coughing and tight, sore, aching chest muscles doe to colds. Get Musterole todayl IN 3 STRENGTHS: Children’s Mild. Regular and Extra Strength. MUSteroIE Koreans Ignore Wives In Chosen (Korea) if a man meets his wife on the street cus tom requires him to ignore her completely and pass her as though she were a stranger. Who Me? Not Me! Mrs. Brown—Where are you rush ing to? Mrs. Blue—I’ve got to hurry and buy a lot of things before the un patriotic people start hoarding them. But It’s Pleasant Mother—I’m wondering about that young man who qomes to see you every night. What are his intentions? Daughter—I don’t know, mother, keeps me in the dark. GOING TO COME Policeman—Hey, you just left hers a minute qgo. Driver—Yeah, but I went the wrong way and came back to turn around. Sleep Walking Teacher—What do you mean bj walking out of my lecture yesterday morning! Stude—I think I was moved by wht(t you were saying. • In NR (Nature’s Remedy) Tablets; there are no chemicals, no minerals, na phenol derivatives. NR Tablets are dif ferent—act different. Purely vegetable—a combination of 10 vegetable ingredients formulated over 50 years ago. Uncoated or candy coated, their action is de pendable, thorough, yet gentle, as mil lions of NR’s have proved. Get a 10* Con- vincer Box. Larger economy sizes, too. CANDY COATIP or REGULARI NR TO-NIGHT TQMORROW ALRIGHT Before It’s Too Late Bill—Love’s certainly grand. Mj feet are on the ground, but my head’s in the clouds. Tom—You’d better pull yourseU together. Working It Off Nit—You know Smith has it easy He lives off the fat of the land Wit—What is he, a farmer? Nit—No, he sells reducing ma chines. UNITED STATES BONDS AND STAMPS M|IF * ★ ★ ★ WNU—7 1—43 Home Loan Department Mr. Smith—Why I wouldn’t cast a check for my own brother. Mr. Jones—Well, you know youi family better than I do. Dates Need Stuffing Private—Did you fill your date last night? Sarge—I’ll say I did. She at< everything in sight. No More Puns Slow—How do you get such t healthy tan? Fast—I guess it’s just my sunny disposition! That Nag<?in<3 Backache May Warn of Disordered Kidney Action Modern life with its hurry and worry, irregular habits, improper eating ana drinking—its risk of exposure and infec tion—throws heavy strain on the work of the kidneys. They are apt to become over-taxed and fail to filter excess acid and other impurities from the life-givfcff blood. You may suffer nagging backache^ headache, dizziness, getting up nights^ leg pains, swelling—feel constantly tired, nervous, all worn out. Other rigns of kidney or bladder disorder are soma- times burning, scanty or too frequent urination. Try Doan’t PxlU. Doan'* help the kidneys to pass off harmful excess body waste. They have had more than half & century of public approval. Are recom mended by grateful users e Ask your neighbor! everywhere. Doan spills I J mmM