The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, October 20, 1944, Image 3
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, S. C.
*
Large -Sized Vestee
By Popular Request
Pattern No. 5640
CO MANY readers have asked
^ that I design a “large-size”
vestee which could be easily
knitted that I’ve done this one spe
cially for sizes 38, 40, 42 and 44.
Made in maroon or wine-colored
yarn it’s just the sort of winter
vestee which is most popular.
Button the lapel over for added
warmth under your coat—wear
the vestee for comfort in a too
chilly house. And it will make a
wonderful Christmas gift for the
woman who is too busy to do her
own knitting!
To obtain complete knitting teatructlc-a
for the Urge sized vestee (lizet 38. 40,
42. 44 Included) (Pattern No. 5640).
Send 16 centa In coin, your namu, ad
dress and the pattern number.
Due to an unusually large demand and
current war conditions, slightly more time
to required In ailing orders tor a tew of
the most popular pattern numbers.
Send your order to:
SEWING CIRCLE NEEDLEWORK
S30 South Wells St. Chicago.
Enclose 15 cents (plus one cent to
cover cost of mailing) for Pattern
No
Address —
To Relieye Bad
Cough, Mix This
Recipe, at Home
Big Saving. No Cooking. So Easy.
i
‘TT wasn’t always this way,” Billy
* Southworth of the Cardinals said.
"Maybe a lot of people have forgot
ten, but from the start of the Na
tional league in 1876, St. Louis had
to wait 50 years before breaking into
the pennant class. That's a long time
for any one to wait, much less a
rabid set of baseball fans.”
This happens to be true. It was
not until 1926 that the Redbirds un
der Rogers Horns
by finally flew into
the promised land,
flowing with milk
and world series
honey.
“Bat it’s been dif
ferent in the last 18
years,” Southworth
continued. “Start
ing back with the
1926 club the Cardi
nals have won eight
flags, not overlook- Grantland Bice
ing four world se
ries titles with a pretty good chance
to make it five out of eight. I’m not
predicting anything, but it will take
gome high class baseball to knock
us off.”
“In looking over the record,” 1
said, “The Cardinals so far have
played in 41 world series games,
winning 19 and dropping 22.”
“Yes,” Billy answered, “and a big
? art of that was due to those
’ankees with Babe Ruth and Lou
Gehrig who beat St. Louis four
straight. Anyway in four world se
ries games with the Yankees the
Cardinals have won two and lost two
for an even break, which isn’t so
terrible when you consider all that
Yankee power and pitching.
“There’ve been a lot of great ball
players on that Yankee club—Ruth,
Gehrig, Dickey, Ruffing, Gordon
and several more. But we’ve had a
few pretty good ones on our own.
Hornsby, Frisch, the two Deans,
Pepper Martin, Terry Moore, Med-
wick, Marion, the two Coopers, to
make up a short list and I’m not
overlooking Lon Warneke.
“At least you never saw a Cardi
nal club that wasn’t packed with
spirit and action and color—one
that wasn’t always hustling. You
couldn’t find more color than Dizzy
Dean and Pepper Martin carried
along.”
Billy Southwofth
You'll be surprised how quickly and
-easily you can relieve coughs due to
-colds, when you try this splendid re
cipe. It gives you about four times as
much cough medicine for your money,
and you’ll find it truly wonderful.
Make a syrup by stirring 2 cups of
granulated sugar and one cup of
water a few moments, until dissolved.
No cooking needed—it’s no trouble at
all. (Or you can use com syrup or
liquid honey, instead of sugar syrup.).
Then put 2% ounces of Pinex (obtain
ed from any druggist) Into a pint bot
tle. Add your syrup and you have a
full pint of medicine that will amaze
you by its quick action. It never
spoils, and tastes fine.
This simple mixture takes right hold
cf a cough. For real results, you’ve
never seen anything better. It loosens
the phlegm, soothes the irritated mem
branes, and eases the soreness.
Pinex is a special compound of proven
Ingredients, in concentrated form, well-
Icnown for its prompt action in coughs
and bronchial irritations. Money re
funded if It doesn’t please you in
every way.
Southworth is a quiet, modest
type off the field but he has plenty
in the way of fire in action. His
proudest memory is that in the last
three years his ball clubs, though
losing some 27 men to war service,
have yet won over 300 games
since 1941.
“That shows we must have been
pretty well stocked with talent,”
he said with a slight grin.
“It won’t hurt you a lot,” I said,
“when this talent returns to the
Redbird roost after the war is over
—such men as Moore, Slaughter,
Johnny Beazley, Howie Pollet, Bra
sil and some five or six others.”
It the war should happen to be
over in a year or so he would have
as many stars returning as the
Yankees, and possibly a few more.
For the Cardinal stars are younger,
and youth is a big factor as far as
the future concerns those now in
service. Southworth knows this.
CLEOPATRA, glamorous
•QUEEN OP EGYPT, SO
CAPTIVATED-MARK ANTONY
THAT HE OFFERED HER HIS
WHOLE ROMAN EMPIRE/
This famous
MODERN MAID
IS A SYMBOL OF
THE PURITY AND
WHOLESOME
GOODNESS OF
NU'MktO, THE
ONLY MARGARINE
CERTIFIED BY ITS
MAKER TO BE
table-grade:
Atyevr tabt«,m« only aorgorlM KmIY plainly
labnlnd “Tobln-Grodn." That’s NU-MAID.
As fine a
spread as
money can buy
Series Features
“You’ve seen a flock of world se
ries,” Southworth said. (Now we
were being interviewed.) “What
would you rank as the high spots?”
That happens to be a big order
when you look back to 1905, some
39 years ago.
The first was Christy Mathewson’s
triple shut-out against the Athletics
in 1905 when Matty limited a hard
hitting club to 14 hits in three
games.
Another concerned the Cardinals
in 1926 when Grover Alexander, Old
Pete, strolled from the dugout after
a hard fight and fanned Tony Las-
zeri with the bases full to pull the
Cardinals through.
The third was Babe Ruth’s call
ing a home run against Root of the
Cubs—and then delivering the same,
almost flattening the ball on a line
drive.
Then there was Harry Hooper’s
catch of Larry Doyle’s almost sure
homer in 1912 against the Red Sox.
Hooper dived over the wire in the
fifth inning of the eighth game to
make one of the greatest and most
important catches of all time. This
miracle play won the series. And it
was 90 per cent miracle.
Bill Dickey’s home-nm blow
against Mort Cooper last fall wasn’t
any part of an anti-climax.
Almost every world series has its
spectacular parts.
Greatest Backs
The debate was—“Who was col-
legiate football’s greatest backfield
star?”
This is covering quite a lot of time
and territory. Rip Miller, former
Notre Dame star, and now a navy
coach, picked Buzz Borries of the
navy—“A back,” as Rip put it, “who
could do everything brilliantly.”
“What about George Gipp of
Notre Dame and Jim Thorpe of
Carlisle?” I asked the Ripper.
“I never saw either play college
football," he said. “I don’t know.”
IMAGINARY INTERVIEWS—
ADOLF AND THE KAISER
Wilhelm—Yoo hoo, Adolf! How’s
you doing?
Adolf—Keep quiet! Don’t you know
you’re dead and done for?
Wilhelm—Yes. D& you?
»
Adolf—If I never hear another
word from you it will be great.
Wilhelm—I can’t help laughing.
You harped so much about me not
knowing how to lick the world!
Adolf—Forget it; I’ve got troubles
enough.
Wilhelm—You’d better get your
self a bucksaw.
Adolf—Nobody will ever see, me
using a bucksaw.
Wilhelm—What’s good enough for
me will be good enough for you.
Adolf—That’s ridiculous. I gave
the German people a leadership it
will never be able to forget.
Wilhelm—You said it!
•
Ad«If—Be sarcastic if you
wish, but history will prove you
were never in the same class
with me as a warrior.
Wilhelm—I hope so!
Adolf—As leader of Germany
I bad a much bigger program
than yon ever dreamed of.
Wilhelm—I’ll give yon no ar
gument on that. But look what
happened to it.
Adolf—I had a lot of bad hick.
Wilhelm—Yah, and it came
from the same places mine
came from, England and the
United States. It always puzzled
me that yon didn’t profit from
my mistake in drawing in Amer
ica.
Adolf—U it puzzled yon think
what it does to me. I had the
English as good as knocked ont
early hi the war.
* Wilhelm—The English are nev
er dangerous except in the final
round*. 1 could have warned
you.
Adolf—Why didn’t yon?
Wilhelm—Every time I tried
to reach you you were climbing
into a microphone. They didn’t
have mikes In my day.
Adolf—Wbat a break tbat was!
I think maybe I went too far on
the radio.
Wilhelm—Why the “maybe”?
•
Adolf—Don’t rub it in. We both
made big mistakes.
Wilhelm—You took all my mis
takes and did them over in techni
color!
» _
Adolf—I still can’t see how It hap
pened. It all seemed so easy. France
was a pushover, England was an
Old fogey, America was just a deca
dent race of softies.
Wilhelm—You sound like one of
my old phonograph recordings.
Save time. Grab a saw and get
busy!
Adolf—The Allies won’t let me saw
wood. And no country will let me
set up a woodpile.
Wilhelm—Are you sure?
Adolf—I have it in writing!
Wilhelm—Well, I’m sorry, old man.
The world isn’t what it used to be.
Adolf—You’re telling me!
• • •
WPB and the National Housing
agency have decided to permit the
release of materials for alterations
and remodelings of buildii\gs to pro
vide more flats where extreme hous
ing crises exist. “But first a com
munity must be declared a critical
area,” the announcement says.
Watch for the rush of politicians in
cities all over the country to have
their towns declared critical areas.
Oh, man!
• • •
It was bound to happen!
We talked to a Miami Beach man
by phone yesterday and asked why
he didn’t make his proposed trip
north this year.
“I ain’t up to it,” he replied,
“Those northern hurricanes have me
scared.”
• • •
NICE GOING
John Kieran Jr., was given the
bronze medal for meritorious
achievement the other day. In the
cold language of army awards the
medal was for “outstanding lead
ership and ingenuity in efficiently
using enemy materials against its
former owners in North Africa from
July 10th to August 16th, 1943.” In
simpler language, the younger Mr.
Kieran, facing a tough question, an
swered it even more rapidly than
his old man.
• • •
Restaurant Observation
In my passage throngh life
I’ve distinctly observed
He stands—and he waits—
Who expects to be served!
Amy Grief.
• • •
PRIVATE PIFRKEY MAKES
A DISCOVERY
Dear Ed!
I just had a close call inside Ger
many. I noticed so soon as I in
vaded the place that nobody run out
to shower me with kisses, and at
first I get sore. Well, know what hap
pens?
A good-looking Nazi girl throws
a kiss at me, and the next thing I
know I am in a ambulance.
Them Germans even mine their
kisses.
By VIRGINIA VALE
Relrawd by Western Newspaper Union.
I T’S news when Elaine Car
rington writes a new radio
serial. So “Rosemary,”
heard over NBC at 11:15 a. m.
EWT, is certainly news. Mrs.
Carrington sort of regrets
“Rosemary’s” schedule, be
cause she liked “Vick and
Sade,” which it replaces. Mrs.
Carrington was known as a brilliant
ly successful fiction writer before
she turned to radio; her “Pepper
Young’s Family” and “When a Girl
Marries” are tops in daytime
serials. But she is essentially a
family woman; her two children and
her husband are far more important
to her than her career. That may
be one reason why her serials are
so beloved.
*
It’s actresses like Betty Winkler
who are really right for radio; too
often, the famous ladies of . the
screen who take to the air sound
too mannered, too affected. Betty’s
a veteran; she played leading roles
BETTY WINKLER
in Chicago, then went to New York,
where she’s just completed a long
running part in “Just Plain Bill.”
Being picked to do “Rosemary” is
like being crowned with a laurel
wreath.
*
Ella Raines never did get all her
father’s present when she was
graduated from the University of
Washington. He said he’d pay all
her expenses for six months in New
York while she was trying to get
started on Broadway as an actress—
after four months Hollywood beck
oned, and Ella accepted. After
seeing her in “Hail the Conquering
Hero” we, the public, can be thank
ful it happened that way.
*
RKO’s “That Men May Live” is
the first camera record of the care
taken of a wounded man from the
time he arrives at a field hospital
in France until he is returned to
the United States; every step of the
way is shown—the first time it’s
been done visually.
*
Claudette Colbert is stringing
along with Gary Cooper, Sonja
Henie, Loretta Young, Edward G.
Robinson, Joan Bennett and George
Brent—in other words, she’s added
her name to International Pictures’
list of stars; she’ll do “Tomorrow Is
Forever.”
*
For the last few months John
Charles Thomas, who’s heard from
coast to coast on NBC every Sunday
afternoon, has been running what
amounts to a school for young sing
ers. Three times a week he holds
classes for youngsters from 13 to 18
years old, in the hope of developing
talented newcomers.
*
“Roughly Speaking,’’ starring
Rosalind Russell, will introduce to
film fans a man who’s likely to
land in a top notch with just that
one picture. He’s Arthur Shields,
who plays a minister, and he is the
older brother of the talented Barry
Fitzgerald. Like Barry, he achieved
fame as an outstanding actor with
the renowned Abby Players of Dub
lin.
Ted Malone, who’s heard tri-week
ly on NBC, is writing a book on his
experiences. It’ll be worth reading—
he goes right to the front lines to
interview the GIs for his “Top of
the Evening” broadcasts, and many
a woman here at home has been
made happy by gettihg direct news
of her man at the front in this way.
Malone has been overseas, working
without respite, since last April.
*
The newest of the radio programs
to spotlight youngsters is Mutual’s
“Steel Horizons,” which stars a
“Singing Cinderella” opposite Met
ropolitan Opera baritone John
Baker each Monday night. No screen
test is promised, but there’s a
chance to win national recognition.
—*—
ODDS AND ENDS—NBC will present
the most comprehensive program of re
turns, news and commentary ever offered
the public by radio on an election night,
November 7.,.. Jim Thorpe, world-famous
Indian athlete and actor, has been signed
for the role of an Indian chief in Warner
Bros. "San Antonio". . . Almost every
song Kate Smith has introduced has be
come a hit. .. . Cute Lorna Lynn, 10-year-
old who’s appeared in 10 Broadway stage
successes, is having fun with her new role
—that of “Beulah, the Calf’ on the Ed
Wynn show. . . . Bert Gordon, always fea
tured as "The Mad Russian," is now known
u “Our Russian Friend."
Smart, New Ideas About Curtains
And Draperies That Will Aid You
By Ruth Wyeth Spears
2-TO-l OP IOO*
FULLNESS FOR
RUFFLES. CURTAIN
TOPS, SKIRTS AND
FLOUNCES OF
MATERIAL WITH
CONSIDERABLE BOOV
2*-TO-l OR »50f6
FOR
LIMP
GOODS
MEASURE
SPACE
TO BE
FILLED
WITH
THE
FULL
FABRIC
THEN
MULTIPLY
BY 2 OR 2*
measuring, cutting, making and hanging
all types from the simplest sash curtail
to the most complicated lined over-drapery
or stiffened valance. Whatever your cur»
tain problem—here is the answer. Ordet
book by name and enclose 15 cents. Ad>
dress:
MBS. RUTH WYETH SPEARS
Bedford Hills New York
Drawer !•
Enclose 15 centa for book “Make
Your Own Curtains."
Name
Address.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
If you have a power machine
and have learned to use the at
tachments there is quite a saving
in making your own frilled cur
tains, dressing table skirts and
bed valances.
If you do not have a power ma
chine or the use of one, by all
means buy your frills. Sometimes
an extra pair of curtains makes a
skirt for a dressing table with very
little waste. Curtains that are ruf
fled all the way around may often
be split for bed valances. Also, it
is possible to buy ruffled material
by the yard. Avoid skimpy full
ness.
• • •
NOTE: Here to newt lot homemaker*.
This sketch to from a new booklet by
Mrs. Spears called MAKE YOUR OWN
CURTAINS. This 32-page book to full of
smart new curtain and drapery Ideas with
illustrated step-by-step directions for
Leave It to the Irishman
To Find a Bright Side
Two Irishmen, employed in ■
stone quarry, were blasting with
dynamite when one of them was
killed by an unexpected ex
plosion. His, mate was given the
unpleasant task of conveying the
news to the newly created widow.
Slowly and thoughtfully he
plodded to her home.
“Mrs. Flanagan,” he bepan
when she opened the door, “isn’t
it today the collector will be call
ing for your husband’s life insur
ance payment?”
“Sure it is, but what is that tr
you?” replied Mrs. Flanagan.
“Then ’tis yourself that can be
snapping your fingers at him.” the
man responded cheerfully.
At? /ftWOJe THE/ALL SW
tMU/CK/f
BERT.
Those rolls smell
so good, I Just can’t wait
for supper! Imagine a girl
as pretty as you being such
a wonderful cook, too!
ELLEN:
You’re Just a flatterer ...
and I love It! These are
’’no-kneadlng” rolls.
They’re made with
Fletochmann’s yellow
label Yeast, the '
extra vitamin
kind!
WHAT A GRAND WAY1Q
, GET MORE VITAMINS /
fleischmannS is the
ONLY YEAST FOR
CAKING THAT HAS
ADDED AMOUNTS OF I
both vitamins a and 0,
AS WELL AS THE
VITAMIN S COMPLEX!;
I*’’ •
And all thoce vitamins go right
Into your baking with no great
loss in the oven. Always be sura
you get Flelschnuum’s Yeast with
the yellow label A week's supply
keeps In the ice-box.
fl'M FREE! SEND FORME!
OVER 40 RAGES OP J
RECIPES IN THE NEW \
REVISED EDITION OP '
FLEISCHMANN'S FAMOUS
•THE BREAD BASKET.* ,
DOZENS Of WONDERFUL <
IDEAS FOR BREADS, ROUS* '
DELICIOUS SWEET BREADS-
WRITE FOR YOURS TODAY!
For your ir—
copy, write
Standard Branda
Incorporated,
Grand Central
Anna*, Box 477,
New York 17,
N.Y.
THIS SIGN will mean..
BETTER RADIOS
at Ho Gnoler Cost
:;; just as soon as your CLARION dealer is permitted tt
make civilian sales.
Then the lid is off, look for the CLARION emblem—
select the beautiful model you want—then proceed to enjoy
these advantages, made possible by CLARION’S precision
work for the armed forces:
Long life of your set, due to sturdy construction with msterisis
that so resist dampness ss to make reception possible unde*
the worst weather conditions.
Super-selectivity in tuning, so your local station will not be
drowned out.
Startling new developments in FM receivers with exclusive
Clarion features.
It will pay you to look for the radio dealer who can sell
you a CLARION.
WARWICK MANUFACTURING CORPORATION
4640 West Harrison Street, Chicago 44, Illinois