The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, December 15, 1944, Image 6
/
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, S. C.
This Jumper-Frock
A Figure-Flatterer
Jumper Frock
'T'HE jumper dress is a figure-
-*■ flatterer for every age. This
attractive model has broad shoul
ders and trim waist to give you
that popular new T-square look.
Use novelty buttons for the clever
shoulder treatment and side-but
ton closing. A smartly tailored
blouse is included in the pattern.
• » •
Pattern No. 8712 comes in sizes 11, 12.
13. 14, IS and It. Size 12, jumper, requires
1% yards of 54 inch material; blouse,
short sleeves. 1% yards of 35 or 39 inch
material.
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
530 South Wells St. ChlcafO
Enclose 25 cents in coins for each
pattern desired.
Pattern No Size
Name
Address
For Joyful Cough
Relief, Try This
Home Mixture
Saves Big Dollars. No Cooking.
This splendid recipe is used by mil
lions every year, because It makes
such a dependable, effective medicine
for coughs due to colds. It is so easy
to mli—a child could do It.
From any druggist, get 2H ounces
of Pinex, a special compound of prov
en ingredients, in concentrated form,
well-known for its soothing effect on
throat and bronchial membranes.
Then make a syrup by stirring two
cups of granulated sugar and one cup
of water a few moments, until dis
solved. No cooking needed. Or you can
use com syrup or liquid honey, in
stead of sugar syrup.
Put the Pinex into a pint bottle and
add your syrup. This gives you a full
pint of cough medicine, very effective
and quick-acting, and you get about
four times as much for your money.
It never spoils, and Is very pleasant
—children love it.
You'll be amazed by the way It takes
hold of coughs, giving quick relief. It
loose "ji the phlegm, soothes the Irri
tated membranes, and helps clear the
air passagea Money refunded if it
doesn't please In every way.
ham insurance
GUARANTEED
SKIPPER
PREVENTATIVE
IN CURED MEAT
Aik Year Dealer
or Write
N.J.BODDIE
DURHAM. N.C.
In COLD WEATHER
ARE YOU TROUBLED BY?
I I. HIAD COLD STUFF1NKSS □
2. CHAPMD SKIN □
3.0.00010 UP NOSTRILS □
4. CHIST COLD TlOHTNISS □
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6. NASAL IMITATION □
7. SOU, ACHING MUSCLIS □
S. WINDBUSN □
9. NEUKALOIC H1ADACHI □
10. DRY NOSTRILS □
M—IfcahN— reisves not just
one, but all ten of these discom
forts. That’s why so many thou
sands keep cooling, soothing
Menthols turn always on hand.
In convenient jan or tubes, 804.
■ MENTHOLATUM
m NMti miu tit run m
RHEUMATISM
NEURITIS-LUMBAGO
MQNEILS
MAGIC
REMEDY
5RINGS BLESSED RELIEF
i Lerze Bottled Swell Size SOcI
» UITMI: IK tllT IIIIIMIU « I
iiiu tin mu Hitts« it ua m iKtqi «i pin I
UMUL MM M. In. MtniWRtt 4, TMtittl
THE TAX TREE
(“In his speech Mr. Roosevelt,
quoting from the poem ‘Trees,’ told
of a town in Germany which had a
great forest which for 200 years had
been so profitable to the community
that nobody had ever had to pay any
taxes.’’—News item.)
I think that I shall never see
My taxes paid by any tree;
A tree that knows the net and gross.
And on the fifteenth comes across;
A tree that shields me in the storm
And understands that tax-blank
form;
Each branch a leafy helpmate gay—
And every leaf a CPA.
But how I wish I had a tree
That I could count on quarterly:
A tree that always could be found
Each time the fifteenth came
around,
Botanically quite a wow
With Einsteins swinging from each
bough,
And all cash worries dark and grim
All nestled in some upper limbi
How swell indeed to have a tree—
No forest (one smart tree for me);
A tree that I could point to when
They sent around those tax-force
men
1 And say “I’m busy I Get it, pest,
From underneath that robin’s nestl”
And if for further facts you grope
The woodpecker will have the dope.
But, ah, I feel I’ll never see
A tree that lifts the job from me.
A tree that looks at .Frank all day
And lifts her leafy head to pray
That it can understand what he
Will ask in schedules B and C
A tree that may in summer wear
An addograph within its hair. . . .
Tax forms make fools of men like
me—
I wish that God would make that
tree!
• • •
Huh!
General Franco says Spain has
never been a Fascist state, nor has
he ever been a Fascist or Nazi sym
pathizer. How in the world did an
idea to the contrary ever get
around.
• • •
The racing season in many parts
of the country will soon be over and
we wonder about the millions of
people who jam the tracks day after
day. Where do they go? What be
comes of them? Do they crawl un
der a pile of old mutuel tickets and
hibernate through the winter
months?
• • •
It surely seems good to have an
election over and get back to civil
ized habits and Christian behavior.
• • •
“Donald Nelson Ordered Back to
China to Form WPB There”—head
line.
•
How wonderful it must seem to
Donald to think back on those com
paratively easy days with Sears-
Roebuck!
• • •
New York hotels are considering
limiting the stay of any guest to
five days. That’s silly. It takes
that long to get into an elevator.
• • •
No Time to Rest
"For Sale—Bees and hives; also
rattan furniture. 651 Main. East
Haven.”—New Haven Register.
No thanks: we’ll fight ’em stands
ing up.
• • •
Germany Speaks.
Vas is los
It eannot be—
Someone is
Invading ME!
Sotch an act
Is mos unsoundt;
It’s der odder
Way aroundt.
Ach du lieber!
Don’t dose fools
Know dot it’s
Against der rules?
• • •
Henry Ford is making gliders, a
Detroit item says. Even if we had
one we would keep looking for the
noise in the engine.
• • •
So many Japs are joining their
ancestors these days that no reser
vations are being taken except a
year in advance.
• • •
We assume it is over the prob
lem of current scales. The men want
two more “clams” a week, per
haps, and "no coddling.”
•
It is one of our ambitions to see
Washington step in and try to seize
a fish market, just as the eel ship
ment arrives!
• • •
An air line says it will soon make
flights from New York to Miami in
four hours. Think of that! It’s a lit
tle less time than it takes the horses
to get from the paddock to the post
down there.
• • •
George Trevor says that in the
Philippines yon can’t call it a case
of too little and too Leyte.
• • •
We understand Japan’s admirals
have discarded binoculars. They
don’t want to see the enemy fleet
any sooner than necessary.
HOVStHOlV
■SMI
mmm
Roast Pork Rings in a Merry Christmas
(See Recipes Below)
Yule tide Plans
Merry Christmas and the best of
Yuletide greetings to you!
Christmas has always seemed to
me one of the most interesting sea
sons of the year
as far as food is
concerned. It’s
then that you can
bring out the best
recipes for your
favorite foods and
put on the best
feast your table
has seen.
Your choice of
meat may be roast pork, roast beef
with Yorkshire pudding, or one of
a beautifully roasted fowl. Rel
ishes add color and spice to the
meal, vegetables will beautify the
table, and desserts can add the rich
finishing touches to a fully satisfying
meal.
*Crown Roast of Pork.
Select the ribs of a young pig and
have the crown
prepared at the
market. Wipewith
a damp cloth and
sprinkle with salt
and pepper.
Dredge with flour
and place on a
rack in a drip
ping pan so that
the rib ends are
down and the meat part up. If this
is not possible have meat part
down and wrap each of the rib ends
in salt pork or thick slices of
bacon. Cook in a moderate oven, al
lowing 30 minutes to the pound.
When ready to serve, place the roast
on a large platter and garnish each
rib end with a plump cranberry.
Fill the cavity with buttered string
beans and julienne carrots. Ar
range candied sweet potatoes
around the outside of the platter.
Place potatoes alternately with cin
namon apples.
If rib roast of beef is your choice
and points are low, get one of the
utility grades of beef and cook it
until tender:
Rib Roast of Beef.
Select a 2 to 3 pound rib roast, wipe
with a damp cloth and season
with salt and pepper. Place the
roast, fat side up, in a roast
ing pan and bake in a moderate
oven until tender and easily pierced
with a fork.
Forty-five minutes before roast is
done, prepare the pudding:
Yorkshire Pudding.
1 cup sifted flour
V*. teaspoon salt
1 cup milk
3 eggs, well beaten
Sift flour and salt together. Add
milk and eggs and beat vigorous
ly with a whip beater. Place a
spoonful of drippings from the
roast into muffin pans and pour bat
ter into them. Or, pour around the
roast in the roaster and bake about
15 minutes at 400 degrees F. This
pudding puffs up just like popovers
and must be served immediately. It
must be beaten thoroughly as the
lightness of the mixture depends
upon the air which is beaten into it.
Vegetable Platters.
There are many vegetable combi
nations that make up the colorful
platters that are so desirable at a
big holiday dinner.
Suggestion I. Arrange cauliflower
in center of platter and surround
with French style green beans and
julienne carrots.
LYNN SAYS:
Platter Suggestions: Use large
platters to prevent overcrowding.
Garnishes or food should never
hang over the edge of the plat
ter.
Tomato wedges, cucumber
slices and radish roses are old
stand-bys for garnishing. Fringed
celery, stuffed celery sticks,
pickled orange or onion slices,
gherkins cut in fan shapes, car
rot curls, stuffed olives or green
pepper halves filled with cream
cheese help pretty the platter.
Christmas Dinner.
Cranberry Fruit Cup
•Crown Roast of Pork
Julienne Carrots and
Green Beans
Candied Sweet Potatoes
Cinnamon Apples
•Potato Rolls
Pink Grapefruit and Onion Salad
Assorted Relishes and Jam
Beverage
•Mincemeat Fruit Cake
•Recipe given.
Suggestion II. Make a spinach
souffle in a ring mold and serve
creamed mushrooms in center and
browned mashed ' potato rosettes
around the outside of the ring.
Suggestion HZ. Make a green pea
ring and serve creamed onions,
carrots or parsnips in center.
Suggestion IV. Serve carrots or
green beans in a mound on center
of platter, and al
ternate parsleyed
potatoes and beet
around the cen
ter vegetable.
If you require a
sauce to serve
with vegetables,
here is a good
tangey one:
Mock Hollandaise Sauce.
2 egg yolks t
1 tablespoon water
1 tablespoon lemon juice
Vi teaspoon salt
!4 teaspoon pepper or paprika
1V4 tablespoons butter
1 tablespoon flour
1 eup boiling water
Mix and stir well the first five
ingredients. Set aside in top section
of double boiler. Melt butter, add
flour and when it bubbles, add water
slowly, stirring constantly. Pour in
egg mixture and cook in double boil
er until smooth and thickened, stir
ring constantly to avoid curdling.
Serve hot rolls with your favorite
jam or jelly:
•Potato Rolls
1 cup potato water
Vi cup mashed potato
14 cup water (lukewarm)
14 cup sugar
1 yeast cake
1 teaspoon salt
414 cups sifted flour
14 cup shortening
Crumble yeast, add salt, sugar
and water. Add potato and potato
water. Stir in flour to make a soft
sponge. Blend in melted shortening.
Add remainder of flour and knead
until smooth. Place in an oiled or
greased bowl. Let rise for 2 hours.
Knead. Let rise until double in bulk.
Shape into rolls. Placed on oiled
sheet or muffin pans. Let rise again
until light, about 30 minutes. Bake
20 to 30 minutes in a 400-degree
oven.
If you forgot to make your fruit
cake early this year, here is a
simple one that does not require too
much fruit since it is made with
mincemeat. Good, too!
•Mincemeat Fruit Cake.
14 cup shortening
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
3 cups prepared mincemeat
I cup raisins
14 eup candied lemon peel
14 cup candied orange p*.el
1 cup currants
1 cup chopped nutmeats
3 cups sifted cake flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
14 teaspoon salt
Cream shortening and sugar, then
add lightly beaten eggs and beat
thoroughly. Add mincemeat, fruit
peel and nutmeats. Sift dry ingre
dients together and fold into the
mixture. Pour into paper-lined angel
cake pan and bake in a very slow
(275 to 300-degree) oven for 2 to
214 hours. This makes a three pound
fruit cake.
Gel the most from your meat! Get your
meat roasting chart from Miss Lynn
Chambers by writing to her in care of
Ifestern Newspaper Union, 210 South Des-
plaines Street, Chicago 6, III. Please send
I a stamped, selfaiddressed envelope for your
' reply.
Released by Western Newspaper Union
‘Bird Cage’ Holders
Gay and Unusual
‘Bird Cage’ Holders
TPHESE unusual bird cage pot
holders will add a gay note
to your kitchen. Each one is 714
Inches high, and they’re not a bit
complicated to make. One has a
yellow canary—a bluebird is in the
other “cage”—all in a single cro
chet stitch,
• • •
To obtain crocheting instructions for the
Bluebird and Canary Bird Cage Potholders
(Pattern No. 5799), actual size bird, color
:bart for embroidery send IS cents in
min. your name, address and the pattern
lumber.
SEWING CIRCLE NEEDLEWORK
530 South Weils St. Chicago.
Enclose IS cents for Pattern
No
Address
SNAPPY FACTS
ABOUT
RUBBER
Daman*! far military tents
has had a strong inflaenca on
the supply of cotton nsndnd
for the monufactura of tiros
and other rubber items.
Accurate tire Inflation moans
more now than aver before. Too
much pressure encourages Impact
breaks, too Uttla causes excess
flexing and heat—a heavy mile
age waster.
‘ A compliment to tho tech
nicians rosponsiblo tor tho
development of synthetic rub
ber is the tact that tires aad
tabes required by the U. S.
Ordnance Department aro
about R5 par cant converted
to a substitute for natural
rubber.
Ticamcz fieace
BEGoodrich]
PIRST in rubber
\torl
Get Your War Bonds ' ★
★ To Help Ax the Axis
Beware Coughs
from common colds
That Hang On
Creomulsion relieves promptly be
cause it goes right to the seat of the
trouble to help loosen and expel
germ laden phlegm, and aid nature
to soothe and heal raw, tender, in
flamed bronchia! mucous mem
branes. Tell your druggist to sell you
a bottle of Creomulsion with the un
derstanding you must like the way It
quickly allays the cough or you are
to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
IMPROVED
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
S unday! ,
chool Lesson
By HAROLD L. LUNDQUIST, D. D.
Of The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.
Released by Western Newspaper Union.
Lesson for December 17
Lesson subjects and Scripture texts se
lected and copyrighted by International
Council of Religious Education; used by
permission.
CHRISTIAN LIVING AT ITS BEST
LESSON TEXT—GaUtlans 5:22-6:10.
GOLDEN TEXT—If we live in the Spirit,
let us also walk In the Spirit.—GalaUanr
5:25.
Life and profession must be in ac
cord. To follow Christ means more
than embracing a creed, or following
a ritual; it calls for daily living of
the highest type.
Herein Christianity differs from
all other religions. It is a living
faith in a living Lord—which pro
duces a living testimony. Such a life
is:
I. Spiritual (Gal. -5:22-26).
The Christian receives his new life
through the ministering of the Holy
Spirit. Since that is true, “let us
also walk by the Spirit” (v. 25). Ev
ery child of God (not just a few, as
some suppose) is to live this kind of
spiritually fruitful life.
The works of the flesh, horrible in
their wickedness and lust, are listed
in verses 19-21, and then by striking
contrast we have the fruit of the
Spirit in the life of the Christian.
Note the distinction: work is some
thing we produce; fruit is something
that grows.
Walking in the Spirit the Christian
finds in his life the inward graces
of love, joy, and peace. These then
express themselves outwardly in
long suffering, kindness, goodness,
faithfulness, meekness, and self-con
trol. The Spirit-filled man is not
only a good man, he lives a good
life.
II. GenUe (Gal. 6:1).
Christiantity is not harsh and un
forgiving toward one who has
sinned. Certainly there can be noth
ing but stern condemnation of con
tinued, flagrant, impenitent sinning.
But toward the one who has failed,
the winsome attitude of loving res
toration should be the first reaction.
There is good reason for this, for
God is kind, and Christ would not
quench the smoking flax (Matt.
12:20). Then who are we, weak and
fallible human beings, to treat an
erring brother with hardness?
IH. Kind. (Gal. 6:7-5).
We are to help the brother in need,
lift his burden and bear it for him
(v. 2). At the same time do not go
around expecting anyone to bear
your burden (v. 5). Ask God for
grace and bear it yourself. If your
brother helps you—good. If not, do
not be offended. Too many Chris
tians expect others to help.
Then there is the need for kind
ness in thinking of oneself, and one’s
neighbor. Pride is self-deception (v.
3) . It puts God against us (James
4:6). We will have no time or occa
sion to judge our neighbor if we
honestly appraise our own life (v.
4) .
IV. Honomble (v. 6).
While the Christian will not be
seeking any glory or reward for
himself, he will always be honorable
in caring for those who serve him
in the gospel. Salvation is free, and
no true preacher or teacher of the
gospel would set a price on it. But
the necessities of life must be pro
vided, and it is the obligation of the
one who is served to "communi
cate” of that which he has to his
teaching brother.
It need hardly be said that if the
church had obeyed this and similar
admonitions found in many places
in Scripture, we should not have the
disgrace of an underpaid ministry,
of an understaffed church, and of
missionaries waiting to go with no
money to send them. Let us be hon
orable about this matter.
V. Consistent (Gal. 6:7, 8).
There is an inexorable law which
brings only the harvest which is
planted. Too many Christians are
trying to reap the fruit of spiritual
ity when they have sown only the
seed of indifference and worldliness.
It can’t be done!
Self will is always struggling
against God’s will in the life of the
Christian. Sowing to the flesh means
yielding to self. And the result? Cor
ruption. Yes, even in the life of a
Christian. How much there is of
that, and how it hinders God’s work!
There is here the important truth
that the one who sows to the Spirit
reaps eternal life. That speaks of
salvation itself, but it also speaks
of spiritual development.
VI. Diligent (Gal. 6:9, 10).
It has been said that we have
three classes in the church—work
ers, jerkers and shirkers. The shirk
er does nothing. One wonders wheth-
er he is really saved, since there is
no sign of life. The worker is the
one upon whom one can always de
pend. The jerker is the one who
takes hold mightily, and then is gone
when you most need him.
Christian living at its best calls
for consistent, persistent, diligent
application to the work of God—not
only today, but tomorrow, and the
next day, and the next!
Note the suggestion of special
thoughtfulness toward our fellow
Christians (v. 10). Some folk oper
ate on the opposite principle. They
treat their fellow believers with a
little extra coldness—a special de-
gree of suspicion and criticism. That
surely is not Christian living at its
best.
iMfMrf
Relieve Miseries of Yoor
buys coin
As He Sleeps
Now most young
mothers use this
modem way to relieve
miseries ot a child’s
cold. Even as you rub
it on, Vicks VapoRub
starts to soothe irritation in nose and
throat, loosen phlegm, ease coug
Then, as baby sleeps, VapoRu
PENETRATES
to upper bronchial
tubes with its spedal
medicinal vapors.
ST/MUrCATAs
chest and back
surfaces like a
wanning poultice.
Often by morning most of the nriteiyo4
the cold is gone. Remember, Mother .. .
ONLY VAPORUB Gives You this spe
cial double action. It’s time-tested,
home-proved ...the best known home
remedy for reliev- — mm ** ^
ing miseries of 9
children’s colds. ▼ VAPORU*
EVANGELINE, symbol op
EVERLASTING LOVE,SEARCHED
FOR YEARS FOR HER LOVER-
FOUND HIM IN A POORHOUSE,
WHERE HE DIED IN HER ARMS.
This famous
MODERN MAID
IS A SYMBOL OF
THE PURITY AND
WHOLESOME
GOODNESS OF
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CERTIFIED BY ITS
MAKER TO BE
•table-grade:
At your toblo.utu only margarine that’* plainly
labuled ’’Tabl.-Grodo." That’* NU-MAID,
MARRIED 10 YEARS?
Happy, peppy and as full of vim and
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has making a home, raising a family
and hard work made you feel like an old
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system may be functioning under a vita
min-mineral deficiency. Try the Vlta-
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2,000 units of Vitamin B-l. No reason
why married folks shouldn’t be as pep
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married. Vlta-Berles only 51.00 at your
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AT FIRST
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~ov D
u 8 e666
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