The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, January 05, 1945, Image 6
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, S. C.
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OFCOUGHING
XCkCOLDS
I Up all night with
J those dreadful
1 coughing spasms
. that come with colds
|.. .Why don’t you
I try the well-known
I Vicks VapoRub
! steam treatment?
i Just put a good
_ , ^ spoonful of Vapo*
Rub in a bowl of boiling water ...
breathe in the vapors.
Grand rdief comes with every breath
you take, as the soothing medicated
vapors penetrate into the cold-irritated
upper bronchial tubes. How wonder
fully VapoRub helps loosen phlegm,
ease coughing, relieve upper bronchial
irritation... inviting the restful sleep
you need so much. Time-tested,
home-proved VapoF
known home remedy a
for relieving mis- 1
cries cfcolds. Try It 1 V VapoRub
How Sluggish Folks
Get Happy Relief
WHEN CONSTIPATION nukes yon feel
punk as the dickens, brines on stomach
upset, sour taste, gassy discomfort, taka
LAUNDRY SOAP FREE
With every CASH ORDER for 2 dozen
25c pkss. of Washing Powder, we include
as “set acquainted” sift, i dozen 6c bars
laundry Soap. Mailed postpaid for $6.00.
ML CALDWELL'S is the wonderful senna
laxative contained in seed old Syrup Pep
sin to make it *0 easy to taka.
MANY DOCTORS use pepsin preparations
in prescriptions to make the medicine more
palatable end agreeable to take. So be sure
poor laxative is contained in Syrup Pepsin.
INSIST ON DR. CALDWELL’S—the favorite
of millions for SO pears, end feel that whole
some relief from constipation. Even flnickp
children love it.
CAUTIONt Dee onlp as directed.
ML GUM'S
SENNA LAXATIVE
coNumxo in SYRUP PEPSIN
Druggists recommend
RAZO-‘.PILES
Relieves pain and soreness
For relief from the torture of simple
Piles. PAZO ointment hue been famous
for more than thirty years. Here's why:
First. PAZO ointment soothes inflamed
areas, relieves pain and itchiaf. Second,
PAZO ointment lubricates hardened,
dried parts—helps prevent cracking and
soreness. Third. PAZO ointment tends
to reduce swelling end check bleeding.
Fourth, it's easy to nse. PAZO oint
ment's perforated Pile Pipe makes ap
plication simple, thorough. Your doctor
can tell you about PAZO ointment.
Get PAZO Today! At Drugstores!
Relief At Last
For Your Cough
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 bronchial 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
Try gnat Tiaie Maaj Doctors AMso
See bow good-tasting Scott’s Emulsion
helps tone up your system: helps build
up stamina and resistance against colds—
if there b a dietary deficiency of A ft D '
Vitamins. It’s easy! Simply take Scotty
daily throughout the year. It’s great! Buy
at your druggist’s todayl
2 7" SCOTT'S
ft EMULSION
I— Great Year-Round Tonic
Yamashita and the
Snore Threat
(“General Yamashita, new com
mander-in-chief of the Japs against
General MacArthur, often closes his
eyes and anores, even in the midst
of important business. This gives the
impression that he is not alert and
fools people.’’—Japanese radio.)
e
This introduces another new weap
on into the global war. A snorer
can be quite a threat, and Yama
shita is no ordinary, low gauge,
one-tube snorer. He gets volume and
power, not to mention distance.
•
It may herald the launching of an
all-out Japanese snore attack.
•
The Yamashita “horror weapon’*
may be the robot-grunt or even the
jet-propelled snore. We may have
to combat a nasal blits any mo
ment, now!
•
America does not include snoring
among its major weapons. It is not
a nation of top snorers. It has never
gone in for snoring as an instrument
of aggression, nor even of defense.
•
But that may be because it has
never been challenged in this re
spect by any world conquering
snorers.
♦
Washington seems undisturbed.
Secretary Stimson expressed the
opinion that while we are not much
as a snoring nation today, we led the
world at it between 1919 and 1941.
“And that was unintentional snor
ing,” he said. “Once we set our
minds to snoring aggressively, the
results will be amazing."
•
General Marshall spoke with simi
lar confidence. “Let Yamashita
bring on his Burping battalions, his
grunting Grenadiers,” he said calm
ly. “I understand Yamashita snores
from the toes up, the effect being
heightened by a bad ease of hali
tosis. But we will take him on, grunt
for grunt.”
»
General MacArthur was equally
passive. “I will spot the general two
deep inhalations and make him cry
for help. We can lick him at any
thing, including any noises he cares
to make,” he declared.
"He is very deceptive,” we warned
MacArthur. “He can snore while
awake.”
“That makes him an ideal foe,”
was the reply.
“He sonpetimes does his deepest
planning between grunts,” we
pointed out.
“We will keep him grunting,”
smiled MacArthur. “Is he a straight-
front snorer or a side-wheeler? Any
how we will look for an all-around
snorer. Do you know if he snores
with his mouth open?”
“Our scouts so report,” we said.
“That kind are a dime a dozen,
even when made in Japan,” said
MacArthur. “It is the man who
snores with his mouth closed who is
really dangerous.”
e
MacArthur went on to say that,
anyhow, America had been experi
menting with a new snore of great
er range and velocity, a snore that
would go anywhere.
“We fear no enemy snorers,” he
added. “Kaiser Bill was a better
than fair hostile snorer and look at
his finish! Hindenburg was tops.”
•
General Eisenhower admitted one
fear from the snore technique. “If
Hitler, Goering, Himmler and Goeb-
bels should all snore at once, that
would be a disturbance!” he ad
mitted.
e o e
Justice on the Home Front
“Coincident with the distribution
to all private lending institutions of
new regulations covering housing
loans for war veterans, the Federal
Housing administration today urged
the setting up of full safeguards
against veterans being victimized
through the purchase of Jerrybuilt
houses.”—News item.
e
One of our yens is to see a tough,
seasoned veteran return from the
wars, get one of those modem
houses with walls that wobble in the
breeze, and chase the realtor across
country with a bayonet. Getting, of
course, his money back.
o o e
Portrait of a Self-Confident Man.
(Our Fuehrer stands like a rock
amid the surging tide, holding
fast to his conviction Germany will
win this war.”—Herr Goebbels).
There stands Adolf
Like a reek
While tiie breakers
Roughly seek
He’s not worried.
He’s not wet;
He’s not shaken....
Wanna bet?
o o o
Secretary Ickes was aboard a
train derailed at 60 miles an hour.
Unhurt, he says he didn’t even know
about it. And it will do no good to
show him the reports because he
says he doesn’t believe what the
newspaper says.
o o o
“I am not fond of dancing on a
narrow stage,” says General Yama
shita, Japanese commander-in-chief.
After a time yon will find it amaz
ing, Yammio old thing, how easily
yon can do it to the tone of the
'Stars and Stripes Forever.”
edda
Looking at
XT O MATTER how grown-up we
•*- ’ look or are, we all remain kids
at heart. Deep down the child in
people remains alive, even though
on the outside they grow old and
gray. That’s the reason folks never
lose their taste for fairy tales.
In wartime we particularly want
to believe goodness always tri-
umphs, that
Prince Charming
invariably slays
the ogre and res
cues the Princess
Beautiful.
The fairy tale
In films has nev
er been more pop
ular than it is to-
Evelyn Keyes
Cornel Wilde
0O
Sugar Substitutes
Come Into Limelight
After the Holidays
mmm
S - . xL
day. Columbia is
basing its most
pretentious pro
duction of the
year on “A Thou
sand and One
Nights,” a techni
color fantasy of
old Bagdad.
They’ve taken the
Aladdin and his lamp story and are
giving it a sophisticated twist, with
Cornel Wilde playing Aladdin as a
crooney, the Frankie Boy of an ear
lier age, Evelyn Keyes as a jive-
mad jinniyeh.
Fantasy de Luxe
Director Alfred E. Green assures
me that the picture will have all the
fairy tale fixings—magic carpets,
giants, a subterranean river with
crocodiles which change into lotus
flowers just in the nick o’ time,
harem beauties by the dozen, and
an under-water ballet that promises
to make the old Annette Kellermann
subsea movies made during the first
World war look like flotsam and jet
sam.
Even before World War I, fairy
tales were popular on the screen.
As early as the turn of the century
Georges Melies, in France, discov
ered that movies could show magic
in a way the stage never could man
age.
It wasn’t long before America
showed feature length fairy tales
and fantasies. One of the earliest
was Mary Fickford in “Cinderella.”
Owen Moore, Mary’s husband at the
time, played the prince, and while
the “transformation” scenes were
crude beside those in “A Thousand
and One Nights,” they made people
gasp when the pumpkin became a
coach and Mary’s rags turned into
royal glad rags before their eyes.
Lavish in Old Days, Too
It was Annette Kellermann, one
time champion swimmer, who made
the biggest splash of that period in
an elaborate fantasy called “Nep
tune’s Daughter” and another, “A
Daughter of the Gods.” Annette
brought the one-piece bathing suit
to fame, and gals have never dis
carded it since. These films were
made on location in the Bahamas
and Cuba under Herbert Brenon.
William Fox starred the Fox Kid
dies in elaborate versions of fairy
tales, with youngsters playing both
junior and adult parts. Remember
blonde Virginia Lee Corbin and
Frances Carpenter in "Babes in the
Wood” and “Jack and the Bean
stalk”? Those movies cost fortunes.
Doug Fairbanks knew the dream
of youth better than any one else.
In “Robin Hood,” “The Thief of
Bagdad,” and “The Black Pirate,”
he gave us some of the best fairy
tales the screen has had.
Walt Disney, bless him, really
brought the fairy tale to full flower
with his magic brush. “Snow White,”
which is now revived, is a lovely
thing for kids of all ages. And now,
thanks to a special campaign on my
part, it will be revived each Christ
mas.
Try, Try Again
“Alice in Wonderland” came
along, too, just at the time the
screen was learning to talk. Para
mount made the mistake of cov
ering such famous faces as those of
Gary Cooper and W. C. Fields with
masks.
Shakespeare’s “Midsummer
Night’s Dream” was given a spec
tacular production by the late Max
Reinhardt.
Judy Garland played Dorothy in
“The Wizard of Oz,” based on the
Baum books, and you certainly
haven’t forgotten her singing “Over
the Rainbow.”
Yes, there’s no end to fairy tales,
and we’re all happier because of
them. It’s good to be able to adopt
the faith and eyes of a child on oc
casion and sail through a thousand
and one nights of romance and ad
venture on a magic carpet.
• • •
Democracy Still at Work
Where else could it happen but in
America? Only a few short years
ago I was talking like a mother to
a tall handsome youngster, scared
out of his wits about playing a scene
in “Children of Divorce.” Yet the
other night that youngster, Gary
Cooper, bid $100,000 in war bonds for
one of my silly hats, and quipped:
“I just wanted to get the durned thing
off the market.” That same kid is
not only starring in but producing
his own picture. And in many ways
he’s still the shy, reticent lad.
Lynn Says:
Sugar-Savers: When stewing
fresh or dried fruits or making
fruit sauces, add sugar or syrup
just a few minutes before cooking
is finished. Don’t forget to add a
pinch of salt to the fruit while it
cooks. Both these little tricks will
help make the fruit seem sweeter
without using up a great deal of
sugar.
Dried fruits are rich in sweeten
ing and may be made into fruit
whips without any sugar. Simply
stew the fruit, cook and put
through a sieve. Beat two egg
whites until stiff and use % cup
of dark com syrup beaten into
them. The amount of fruit puree
required for this amount of egg
white-syrup mixture is % cup.
Since powdered sugar is more
readily obtained than the granu
lated type, use it in icings. Pow
dered sugar is especially good
when mixed in the proportion of
one cup to a three-ounce package
of cream cheese and flavored with
orange juice.
Lynn Chambers’
Point-Saving Menu
Calves’ Liver Baked
in Sour Cream
Buttered Spinach Fried Potatoes
Apple-Cranberry Salad
Rolls Jelly
•Ginger Pudding
•Recipe given.
Pears and other fruit may be
stewed or baked with very little ad
ditional sugar because the fruit is so
sweet in itself. Fruit desserts are
kind to low-on-sugar budgets.
Sugar-Shy Sweets
Have the holidays exhausted your
supply of sugar and sweets? Today’s
collection of reci
pes is especially
planned for the
low sugar budget,
for strange though
it may seem,
there are many
foods which can
be fixed with a minimum of sugar.
Try packaged mixes, dried fruits,
candied fruits, and the sugar sub
stitutes if the sugar canister is get
ting empty. There are many pack
aged fillings which will relieve sugar
from being used in pie and cake
fillings, and these come in a variety
of flavors.
Substitute as many of the fresh
fruits for dessert as possible, and if
they are baked, sweeten with maple
or corn syrup. If your favorite
cookie recipes call for one cup of
sugar, use % of a cup. They will be
just as good, if a little less sweet:
Marble Molasses Cake.
Vi eup butter or substitute
V4 cup sugar
2 eggs beaten
2 cups sifted cake flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
Vi teaspoon salt
Vi cup milk
2 teaspoons allspice
3 tablespoons molasses
Have all ingredients at room tem
perature. Measure out flour, sugar,
salt and butter in bowl. Beat for 2
minutes. Add eggs and milk and
beat for another two minutes. Take
out one-third of batter and mix with
molasses and allspice. Drop by
spoonfuls into greased loaf pan, al
ternating light and dark Rmixture.
Bake in a moderate oven for 1 hour.
Serve plain or frosted.
Ange’ Cake.
Wt cups light corn syrup
5 egg whites
5 egg yolks
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 eup sifted flour
1 tablespoon lemon juice
Vi teaspoon salt
Boil syrup until it forms a soft
ball when tested in cold water.
Beat egg whites
stiff but not dry,
pour syrup over
them slowly, con
tinue beating.
Add lemon juice
and vanilla. Beat
this mixture until
it holds its shape.
Fold in egg yolks,
beaten until thick
and lemon-colored. Fold in sifted dry
ingredients. Bake in large ungreased
tube pan in a slow oven (300 deg.)
until well browned and done, about
60 minutes. Invert on rack until
cake loosens. Ice with following:
Spread with the
Sugarless Icing.
1 egg white, unbeaten
Vi cup light corn syrup
Vi teaspoon salt
Vi teaspoon vanilla
Combine all ingredients in top of
double boiler. Beat with a rotary
beater until thick enough to stand
in peaks. Spread on cake.
A delightful spicy pudding can
easily be made from sugar substi
tutes, and these are guaranteed to
satisfy the family:
•Ginger Pudding.
(Serves 6)
1 enp hot eoffeo
2 tablespoons shortening
1 cup molasses
1 well-beaten egg
Vi cup sugar
2 cups flour
Vi teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon soda
Vi teaspoon cinnamon
Vi teaspoon each cloves, nutmeg,
ginger
Pour coffee over shortening and
stir until melted.
Add molasses and
mix thoroughly.
Add egg and beat.
Add sifted dry in
gredients, mix un
til smooth. Pour
into wax - lined
square pan and
bake in moderate
oven (350 deg.)
for 30 minutes,
following:
Orange Topping.
Vi enp sugar
2 tablespoons grated orange rind
2 tablespoons orange juice
Mix all ingredients and sprinkle
on top of pudding. Return to oven
which has had heat turned off, for
about 10 minutes.
Orange Fig Whip.
(Serves 6)
1 cap evaporated milk
1 enp broken fig-filled cookies
1 cap orange sections
Vi enp broken nntmeats
Whip milk and fold in cookies. Add
orange sections and nut meats then
chill thoroughly. Pile lightly into
sherbert glasses and serve.
IMPROVED
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
S UNDAY I
chool Lesson
By HAROLD L. LUNDQUIST. D. D.
Of The Moody Bible Institute of Chicafo.
Released by Western Newspaper Union.
Lesson for January 7
Lesson subjects and Scripture texts se
lected and copyrighted by International
CouncO of Religious Education; used by
permission.
THE CHILDHOOD OF JESUS
LESSON TEXT—Matthew 2:13-23.
GOLDEN TEXT—Behold. I am with thee,
end will keep thee In all places whither
thou goest.—Genesis 28:13.
Use an nnbaked crumb filling for
pie to save fat. Filling can be made
of prepared padding mixes to save
sugar.
Cookies, too, may be made with
a pleasing combination of a sugar
substitute and only a small amount
of sugar:
Peanut Cookies.
1 enp shortening
Vi enp sugar
Vi cup honey
1V4 enp sifted floor
Vi teaspoon salt
Vi teaspoon baking powder
Vi teaspoon soda
Vi cap milk
2 caps quick-cooking oats
1 cup chopped seedless ralsim
1 cap chopped peanuts
Cream shortening, add sugar and
honey. Beat and add sifted dry in
gredients, alternately with milk.
Add oats, raisins and nuts. Drop by
spoonfuls onto a greased cookie
sheet and bake for 15 minutes in a
pre-heated (375 degree) moderate
oven.
Pecan Crispies.
1 enp shortening
IVi enp sifted floor
Vi cap confectioners’ sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla
2 cops pecans, chopped
Cream shortening, add sugar and
vanilla. Add pecans and flour. Make
rolls about 2Vi inches long and Vi
inch wide. Place on cookie sheet and
bake 15 to 20 minutes at 325 degrees.
When baked, roll in powdered sugat
and cool on wire rack.
Get the most from your meat! Get youi
meat roasting chart from Miss Lynn Cham
hers by writing to her in care of Wextern
Newspaper Union, 210 South Desplainei
Street, Chicago 6, III. Please send *
stamped, self-addressed envelope for yarn
reply.
Released by Western Newspaper Union.
On jrour favoritm IT. B. CL mtaHotk
•very Saturday morning
11:00 A. M., E. W. T.
WISE WSOC WFBC
WPTF WSJS
10:00 A. M.,C. W.T.
WSB WSM WAPO WROL WSTA
Matthew is the Gospel of the King
and His kingdom. It stresses the
fulfillment of prophecy in the com
ing of Christ, the King. After His
rejection, it tells us of the Church,
“the kingdom in mystery," and of
the death of Christ for our sins. His
resurrection for our justification,
and His glorious coming again.
This then is an important book
which we study for the next three
months. Teacher and student alike
should be enthusiastic and expect
ant.
The genealogy of the King, and
the story of His coming to earth as
the babe of Bethlehem (both impor
tant matters), ar^ covered in chap
ter 1. In our lesson we find Him
as a little child. Observe how man
received Him, and how God cared
for Him. Without assigning definite
verses to our points we note that:
1. Men Received or Rejected
Jesus.
It has always been so. Men, then
as now, were either for Him or
against Him. The world or today is
far different from that of the first
century, but the difference is all on
the outside. Almost breath-taking
have been the developments of mod
ern science, but these have not
changed the heart of man. He still
fears and hates and fights and sins.
His attitude toward Christ is un
changed. There are still only two
classes of people in the world—those
who have received Christ and are
saved, and those who have rejected
Him and are lost.
K Men Are Against Christ.
How do men show their rejection of
God’s Son? Just as they did at
His birth, by:
a. Fear. Herod was afraid lest
the coming of this One should result
in the loss of his ill-gotten gains.
His anger and fear made all Jeru
salem afraid.
b. Indifference. When the Wise
Men asked where Christ was to be
bom, the priests and scribes knew
exactly where to find the facts in the
Holy Scriptures, but having done so,
they relapsed into utter indifference.
They had no interest in the fulfill
ment of the prophecy.
c. Hatred. Herod poured out the
violence of his heart by killing the
first-born. He was the first of many
who have raged against the Christ
in futile anger.
I d. Sorrow. The tears of the moth
ers of Jerusalem but foreshadowed
the weeping and wailing which char
acterizes Christ-rejection both in
i time and eternity.
2. Men Are For Christ.
Thanks be to God, there were
those in that day who were for
1 Christ and, like those who follow
Him today, they showed:
a. Spirituality. Men have mar
veled that the Magi knew of the
birth of Christ. They must have
studied the prophecies of the Word
and been responsive to the teach
ing and moving of the Holy Spirit.
Can we say as much for ourselves?
b. Interest. Not content to know
and to marvel, they shamed the
priests of Israel by their persistent
interest in this great thing which
had come to pass.
c. Love. They brought themselves
in worship and they brought rich
gifts from their treasures. You can
give without loving, but you cannot
love without giving.
d. Action. They came. They per
sisted until they found the Christ.
Then they listened to God and pro
tected His Son by not returning to
Herod.
n. God Protected and Prepared
Jesus.
The ruin which sin had brought
into the world could only be met by
redemption which Christ had come
to bring. Some men had already
shown their hatred for Jesus and
their rejection of Him. But God still
ruled, and for the sake of those who
received Him (and would receive
Him in all the centuries since). He
kept the Child Jesus from harm. We
find Him:
1. Protecting Jesus. Men may
hate and seek to destroy God’s Son.
Satan may inspire them with ingen
uity and cunning. But see how the
Eternal One spoke to Joseph in
dreams, how He prepared a place
of refuge in Egypt and ultimately
in Nazareth, where the boy Jesus
might increase in wisdom and stat
ure and favor with God and man.
2. Preparing Jesus. God knew of
the days of public ministry which
were ahead, and above all, of that
day when on Golgotha’s hill Christ
was, in His own body, to prepare
salvation for you and for me. God
is never taken by surprise. He
moves forward to the completion of
His plan with the stately tread of
eternity.
He took Jesus to Egypt. He
brought Him again to Nazareth. In
it all He was preparing His Son
for the days of ministry which were
ahead. All this was in fulfillment of i
prophecy (see w. 15, 17). God’s ;
Word is always sure.
SNAPPY FACTS
ABOUT
RUBBER
The popular flzo tire far
bombers is the 56-inch, tha
making of which takes an
much timo as tha balMlag of
savan larga track tires. And
an active homber may need
an entire now sot of tiros
each month.
Statisticians have Jove Inpad
tha fact that tha rubber need
by the U. S. in tha war np to
data averages about 145
pounds par man in aniform.
In World War I robhor con
sumption ropresented about
32 pounds par man.
\Ift urn oi peace
first in rubber
WHY QUINTUPLETS
always do this for
CHEST COLDS!
Te Promptly Relieve CongMaf—
Sore Throat and Aching Mascha
Whenever the Quintuplets catch cold—-
their chests, throats and backs are rubbed
with Musterole. Powerfully toothing—
Musterole not only promptly relievee
coughs, sore throat, aching chest muecleo .
due to colds—but ALSO helps break up
congestion in upper bronchial tract, noao
and throat. Wonderful for §TOKn-np*.teal
In 3 "
Strengths
MUSTEROLE
mi aim mui mi run <
RHEUMATISM
NEURITIS-LUMBAGO
MCNEILS
MAGIC
REMEDY
BRINGS BLESSED RELIEF
Urge Bottle!: mu namti*l*S- 5
» Clltltl: HE till It HltCTEI H
mu ihi nit stuitMii un n mti»t it fries I
nctiit tttt ci. im. jttuMimi «. nitml
Buy War Savings Bonds
dR.PORTERs
ANIMAL
ANTISEPTIC OIL
STOCK OWNERS’ STAND-BYI
Smart stockmen have relied
for years on soothing, effective
Dr. Porter’s Antiseptic OU. It’e
soothing ... tends to promote
natural healing processes. Keep
It on hand alwaya for emer
gency use for minor cute,
burns, saddle galls, bruises,
flesh wounds, and use only as
directed. Ask your veterinarian
about it . . . your druggist
has it.
The GROVE LABORATORIES, INC.
> ST. IOUIS 3, MISSOURI
M akert of CgOVis (010 tABl'ITS