The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, January 12, 1945, Image 6

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THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, S. C. Bulletin Board for Juniors or Seniors H ERE is an all-purpose bulle tin and blackboard that will be welcomed by juniors and sen iors. Its gayly stenciled or painted top and bottom trim makes it quite handsome enough for front hall, kitchen, sewing and rampus room or nursery. The main part may be made of plywood or composition board and is finished with a special black paint mixture. * * • NOTE: Pattern, which is available to readers, gives actual size cutting guide for scallops; paint formula; illustrated directions for decorations with stencils which require no special skill for per fect results. Color guide is included. Ask for Pattern 267 and enclose 15 cents with name and address. Send to: MRS. RUTH WYETH SPEARS Bedford Hills New York Drawer 10 Enclose 15 cents for pattern No. 267. Name Address UI*BSaS l&aSnrSE YOU OWI YOUR CHILD muim chert rub used when QBINTUPUR CATCH COLD Wondarful tar Grown-ups, Toel Whenever the Dionne Quintuplets cmteh cold — their chests, throats and backs are immediately rubbed with Musterole. Mustero'e brings such prompt relief from coughs, sore throat, aching muscles of chest colds because it’a MORE than just an ordinary “salve.” It’a what eo many Doctor* and Nunes call a modem eonnUr-irritant. It actually helps break up connection in upper bronchial tract, nose and throat. Buy Musterole for In 3 STRENCTHSi Children’s Mild Musterole, Regular and Extra Strong. Musterole TO WtS/GW* . OR MRS. GM"L And Fatigue Am Often ! Of Constipation I For constipation take Nature's Remedy (NR Tablets). Contains ns chemicals, no minerals, no phenol de rivatives. NR Tablets are different —net different. Purely vegetable— • combination of 10 vegetable in gredients formulated over 60 years ago. Uncoatcd or candy coated, their action is dependable, thorough, yet S tle. Get a 25f£ Convincer Box, itaon: Take only as directed. NR TO-NIGHT/ TOMORROW ALMIGHT ALL-VEGETABLE LAXATIVE TABR.ET»-MR. ('ONE WORD SUGGESTION') FOR ACID INDIGESTION— ^SURVEYfSHOWS^ Many Doctors Recommend * HELPS BUILD STAMINA * HELPS BUILD ACTUAL RESISTANCE TO COLDS Try good-tasting Scott’s Emulsion t Coo- tains natural A ft D Vitamins that help bring back energy and stamina if there b dietary deficiency of these elements. SENATORIAL CIGARETTE INVESTIGATION Senator Wibbie—As I stand here doing my part in the great battle for the preservation of that thing which is so dear to America, the cigarette, I sometimes wonder if my colleagues fully appreciate the part played by it in the life of our glori ous country. What, I ask, would civilization be without it? What would democracy be with no smoke-rings curling above it? What would a free world be with no ashes on the rugs? Senator Bunkem—Does the Sena tor contend that the world could not survive on the old-fashioned clay pipe of our forefathers? Senator Wibbie—We have passed beyond the era of pipes. They are a relic of the days before mankind, and womankind, reached that stage of development where the very home was built around the cigarette. With the last drop of my blood I will hold the fort against those re actionaries who would plunge our wives, mothers, and sisters and kiddies back into those dark ages when nicotine-stained fingers were the privilege of princes and prelates, when the great blessing of blowing smoke through the nose was un known to the masses, and when that great blessing to all mankind, the ashtray, was almost unknown. Senator Toopsey—In my grand father’s time they had to use old saucers for trays. Senator Bunkem—I remember my grandfather going around the old home looking in vain for something to empty his pipe into, and finally using grandma’s ginger jar. Senator Wibbie (resuming) — My friends, this is one of the gravest hours in history. This country must face that great question, can our people get all the cigarettes they need, and upon which their lasting happiness depends. Deprive us of our cigarettes and you strike a blow at the very foundation of liberty. Would Thomas Jefferson stand idly by today and watch long lines of mothers and daughters waiting pa tiently before the store offering but one pack to a customer? Would Jackson submit to cigarette ra tioning? Would Lincoln, Cleveland, McKinley and the great Teddy Roosevelt have stood unmoved by the suffering involved when thou sands of our school children were obliged to reduce their cigarette quota by as many as two smokes per day? Senator Toopsey (getting into the spirit)—The important place of the cigarette In our civilization is plain to all. With it we conquer, without it we fail. I have a few statistics here marking the extent of the crisis now confronting us. In 11 of the northern states 60 per cent of the women and children haven’t been able to inhale in weeks. In 8 west ern states over 80 per cent of the wives and mothers do not know where their next smoke is coming from. In 4 border states the nico tine stains are fading fast.” A strong Democratic senator— Let ns here and now place the blame for the cigarette shortage where it belongs, at the door of Herbert Hoover. A Left Winger—Right! But let us not forget that the forces of re action as represented by Wall street, the capitalistic system and the United States chamber of commerce are also to blame. A Republican—There was no ciga rette shortage under Hoover! Senator Earake—There probably was, but it was concealed by the Tory press. • Senator Bunkem—Are we sure there is a shortage? I Usten to the radio and all the big cigarette com panies are filling the air with sales talks for their product. Why do they do this if they are out of ciga- reties? , , Senator Earake—They are build ing up good will. Senator Duffer—Wonld it be pos sible at this time for the senate to take np the arms shortage on the western front? It seems to me to be more important. (Cries of “Throw him out” and “Nol No!) Senator Duffer — Is it not ad visable that we look into the mat ter of getting more shells to Gen eral Patton, stopping the drift of workers from war factories and fo cusing the attention of the American public on the more vital aspects of the world situation? Chorus of Voices—What! And make cigarettes a secondary issue!! (The session ends in disorder.) • * • The Gotham Taxists Don’t See: To this writer's mind one of the sights of New York worth seeing, yet seldom men tioned by the guides, is Washington Mar ket. A combination county fair, food show. Elks picnic, carnival and home town “gen eral store,” it is one of the town’s big shows. During the noon hour, when thou sands crowd into it to lunch at Us unique clam, sandwich, fish and quick-lunch bars, it is at its best. Pete’s Chili Bar . . . Hotloafs Seafood Bar . . . Charlie's Oyster Bar ... The Hot- loaf Bakery Bar . . . and many others . . . with, in most cases, the five-cent cup of coffee still reigning like something out of bygone days!-. , I 'O a small group in Hollywood A the year 1945 means the begin ning of fame; for movieland, al ready jammed with stars, is plan ning to feature some new names in big lights during the coming year. There will be many surprises not in the cards at present, but from where I sit on the side lines these are the stars you’ll hear from in a. big way during the coming year: Bill Eythe, at 20th, landed smack in the lap of Lady Luck. This means that the lad from Mars, Pa., un known to movies two years ago, will be right up at the top in the cast of charac ters. Eythe’s high pressure person ality won him the lead opposite Tal lulah Bankhead in “Royal Scan dal.” When Pro- Lanren Bacall ducer Lubitsch saw the rushes he said, “Eythe is the greatest star material I’ve run into in 20 years.” So they rushed Eythe into the lead in “Colonel Effingham’s Raid.” Watch his dust in 1945. That Uncertain Something Lauren Bacall, that glamorous menace whose pussy willow face and half-mast eyes are her trademark, is familiar to every magazine read er, although she’s appeared in only one picture, “To Have and Have Not,” with Humphrey Bogart. So what? Warners sent her right back into double harness again with Bogie in “The Big Sleep.” She’s decorative and provocative. Quite a different type is Univer sal’s Ella Raines. A girl with clean blue eyes and a well washed look. You saw her in “The Invisible Lady” with Franchot Tone, and again with Eddie Bracken in "The Conquering Hero.” But "Tall in the Saddle,” with John Wayne, really got ’em. Moody Gail Rnssell is Para mount’s ace find of the last year. Dark, mossy soft hair, eyes full of dreams, and a trick of project ing the intangible put Gail Rus sell into a class by herself. She’s valuable, and proved it in “The Un» invited.” Home Town Boy Type When Metro found Van Johnson they hit a rich vein of talent ore. Metro has a second Van Johnson in Tom Drake, a dark type with the same direct, homey appeal. He’ll make the register ring at the box office. Faye Emerson has had all along what it takes to make a young star. Already she’s been stepped into the lead role in “Happiness,” and if she wants to keep on making pic tures she’s set. Faye has real tal ent as an actress, but it took a marriage to a Roosevelt to make Warners recognize it. You might keep your eye also on red - haired Lncille Bremer, M-G-M’s most promising young dancer. She gets star billing in “Ziegfeld Follies.” Then there’s Met ro’s Gloria De Haven, hailed by the GI Joe as just what the doctor or dered for a soldier with the blues. Twentieth’s June Haver has danced her way into star roles after 18 months’ experience on the screen. Of Jane Allyson, another Metro baby, you might say “once seen, never forgotten.” “Destination Tokyo” gave us three boys that hit the popularity target dead center—James Craig, Bob Hut ton, and Dane Clark. Craig has some of the quality that put Clark Gable among our fabulous few. Hutton is a sort of composite Jimmy Stewart and Bob Walker, and Dane Clark is a natural. Never Too Young Peggy Ann Garner was the child prodigy in 1944. But Elizabeth Taylor will be in 1945. Remember “Lassie Come Home” and “White Cliffs of Dover,” and a little girl with black hair and sooty Irish eyes? She played a scene with Rod dy McDowall that made the big boys sit up and take notice. In “National Velvet” Elizabeth Taylor rides right into your heart. You’ll simply love her. You can shout and scream about the great discoveries of the year, but for my money Bob Walker tops ’em all. He has the homey, shy, sweet boyishness of your own son. The year 1945 should be a lucky and a happy one for these Holly wood stars. Six GirU Turn the Tables Six Goldwyn girls had so much confidence in Allan Dodd, former collegiate wrestler from Tulsa, Okla., and recently discharged from the army, that they signed him up. He had no agent, nor influence, didn’t know where his next job was coming from. Now Frank Ross and Mervyn Leroy are going to use him in “The Robe,” and if he clicks they will add another contract to the girls’. I’m told he’s definitely dreamy and strictly swoon stuff and the picture they sent me proves it. BUI Eythe Crisply-Coated Fish Takes It Easy on the Budget (See Recipes Below) Serve Fish Often As civiUan meat supplies grow leaner, fish wiU again come to the rescue as a good protein food. Fish is easier to pre pare than meat, and it bakes, broils, fries and cooks quickly. Fish is at its best when it’s perfectly cooked. By that, I mean, the bones sepa rate from the delicate flesh, and the coating is crisp and golden brown if che fish is pan-fried or broiled. This delectable food is available in large quantity now, and it’s wise to plan to serve it not once a week, out several times, to lessen the drain on red points. When served with a garnish of lemon and parsley or one of the exceUent sauces, fish Can become a regular family favor ite. Condiments should be used wisely so that fish can take on an agree able flavor. Their flavors should oe subtle rather than pronounced so that the delicate flavor of thp fish is not completely lost. Baked Whitefish. 3 pounds whitefish 2V4 caps bread crumbs (dry) 2 tablespoons bacon, minced 1 teaspoon green pepper, minced Onion, large, minced 5 slices bacon V4 teaspoon salt Pepper Mix bread crumbs, minced bacon, green pepper, onion and seasonings and lay on fish. Place a slice of bacon on this and fold over fish. Place on rack in open pan and lay remaining bacon over top. Bake 35 minutes in a very hot oven (450 degrees), basting often with fat in pan. Serve with green pepper and lemon slices. For sauce, mix to gether the following: 3 teaspoons minced green pepper, 3 tablespoons catsup, and 5 tablespoons mayon naise. BroUed HaUbut. Anchovy batter or lemon HaUbut Salt and pepper Wipe fish with damp cloth. Brush with melted butter and season with salt and pepper. ^ Arrange on broil- / *• er pan and broil •/S' » until fish re weU 0 \f browned. Spread *\. 4? with anchovy but- a ^ ter when ready to serve or garnish with lemon. Baked Fish With Mustard Sauce. IVi pounds fillet of haddock 2 tablespoons melted batter 1 tablespoon flour 1 cup boiling water 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1 tablespoon prepared mustard Vi cup dried bread crumbs Salt and pepper Lynn Says: Have Sances with Fish: Com bine melted butter with lemon juice and chopped parsley. Serve at once. Take 1 cup hot white sauce (medium) and mix with 2 hard- boiled eggs and 1 chopped dill pickle. Keep hot until served. Mix mayonnaise with an equal amount of sour cream and then add drained, chopped cucumber to it. Season with salt and pep per. Mayonnaise may also be mixed with scraped onion, parsley, chopped pickle and chopped pimiento. Add grated American cheese to heated tomato soup and blend lightly. Serve over baked fish. Mix one cup of mayonnaise or white sauce with the finely chopped whites of two eggs. Put the yolks through a sieve and sprinkle over the top of the sauce. Mix % cup finely chopped and drained cucumber with one cup of sour cream. Sprinkle with pap rika or minced parsley before serving on fish. Lynn Chambers’ Point-Saving Mena * ' J ’Baked Fish With Cheese Sauce Baked Carrots Mashed Potatoes Whole Wheat Rolls Green Bean Salad Orange Chiffon Pie Beverage •Recipe given. Cut fillets in six servings. Season lightly with salt and pepper. Lay in shallow, well greaaed pan. Make sauce of 1 tablespoon butter, flour, water, lemon juice and mustard, stirring constantly until thickened. Add remaining tablespoonful of but ter to bread crumbs and sprinkle over fish. Bake in a hot oven (400 degrees) for about 20 minutes. When much fish is served, it is good to vary the method of cooking and serve it as a souffle occasional ly: Fish Souffle. (Serves 6) 1 package flounder or similar fish 14 cap boiling water 14 teaspoon salt 9eavy cream ‘M tablespoons flour ! tablespoons butter or substitute 14 teaspoon pepper I ogf yolks, stiffly beaten 1 egg whites stiffly beaten Cook the fillet of flounder in boil- ig, salted water until tender. Drain, reserving liquid. Add the cream to make 1 cup. Sep arate fish into fine flakes. Combine butter, flour, salt - _ and pepper. Add cream and cook BLayu} until smooth and ■Bli thick. Add fish 1 cool. Blend in beaten egg yolks, ring well. Fold in beaten whites, m into buttered casserole. Place a pan of hot water and bake for 1 ir in pre-heated 350-degree oven, tuffings add interest to any typo fish. Bread stuffings or those h celery, mushrooms, or chest- s may be used. In the following, s stuffing is suggested with pike: Fish With Rice Staffing 1 3-pound pike 2 tablespoons butter Vi pound mushrooms, chopped 2 tablespoons ehopped onion Vi cup bacon drippings 1 cup cooked rice Salt and pepper Vi teaspoon poultry seasoning 2 beaten eggs Place fish in shallow pan and broil under moderate heat for 15 min utes, basting with the 2 tablespoons of butter. Turn; broil 10 minutes. Season with salt and pepper. Cook mushrooms and onions in bacon drippings until tender. Add rice, seasonings and eggs; mix well and mound the stuffing in center of serv ing platter. Place fish, skin side up over stuffing. Fish may also be baked with stuffing, in a moderate oven for 45 minutes, basting with butter. Garnish with lemon slices. Cheese sauce is an excellent ac companiment for fish as in this case: •Baked Fish With Cheese Sance. (Serves 4) 1 chopped onion V4 pound sliced cheese 1 2V4-ponnd pike, halibut or perch 1V6 teaspoons Worcestershire sance 1 teaspoon dry mustard 1 teaspoon salt Vi teaspoon pepper 1 cop milk Place onion and half of cheese in fish cavity. Place remaining cheese on top of fish. Add remaining in gredients and pour over fish. Bake in hot oven (400 degrees) for 25 minutes. Get the most from your meat! Get your meat roasting chart from Miss Lynn Cham bers by writing to her in care of Westem Newspaper Union, 210 South Desplaines Street, Chicago 6, HI. Please send a stamped, self-addressed envelope for your reply. Released by Weatern Newspaper Union. IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL S UNDAY I chool Lesson By HAROLD L. LUNDQUIST, D. D. Of The Moody Bible Institute of Chieaffe Released by Western Newspaper Union. Lesson for January 14 Lesson subjects and Scripture texts se lected and copyrighted by International Council of Religious Education: used by permission. JESUS BEGINS HIS MINISTRY LESSON TEXT—Matthew 3:13-4:11. GOLDEN TEXT—Tnou shalt worship ths Lord thy God. and Him only shalt thou serve.—Matthew 4:10. Ready for service—this is the next scene from our Lord’s life which comes before us in Matthew. Thirty years had passed since His birth, but these are hidden in silence, save for the one glimpse of Him in the temple which is given only by Luke. These were not years of idleness or luxury. He was obedient to Joseph and Mary. He worked in the carpen ter shop. He fellowshiped with God’s people, and best of all, with His heavenly Father. He showed obedi ence and faithfulness in life’s ordi nary things. And then, all at once, the day of His public ministry was at hand. . His baptism and temptation were a part, the opening event, of that ministry. We find Him: I. Identified With Sinners* (3:13-15). John, the fiery forerunner of Jesus, had come with a burning message of repentance, and sinners were coming to him to be baptized as a sign of their contrition. Suddenly Jesus appeared. John pointed to Him as the “Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world” (John 1:29). When He offered Himself for baptism, John demurred. There was no sin in Jesus that He should need baptism. There was no occasion for Him to express in a special act His obedi ence, for He always did the will of God. (Heb. 10:7). Why then was Jesus baptized? We find the answer in the central pur pose for which He came into the world, namely, to save sinners. Here at His official entrance upon that work He, who though He knew no sin was to become sin for us, took the sinner’s place in baptism. It was not because He had Himself sinned, but because He was to become the substitute for the sinner. What mar velous condescension and grace! II. Approved of God (3:16, 17). The Holy Spirit, like a dove, rested apon Him. The dove is one of the symbols of the Spirit, and speaks of gentleness, meekness, purity, peace and love. Out of the eternal dwelling places in heaven came the voice of the eternal Father expressing His ap proval and pleasure in Kis son. The person and work of Christ bear their own commendation of Him to us as divine. Here we have the Fath er’s word, and the Holy Spirit’s com ing. Thus we have here the entire Trinity. IH. Tempted by Satan (4:1-11). A time of testing was ahead. Jesus did not fear it, but notice that He did not seek it either. He was led by the Spirit into this great conflict. We may learn that we must not seek nor put ourselves in the way of temptation, but when it comes we may meet it without fear. God is with us. He was tempted as the Messiah, and the Son of God, and it was a real testing, one from which we need to learn what to do when tempted. It was threefold: physical, spiritual and vocational. 1. The Physical Temptation. Forty days of conflict with Satan made His body hungry. Under such circumstances it was a terrific temptation to use His divine power to make bread. He could have done it, but He did not. One doesn’t have to live, but one does have to obey and honor God. Note how effectively Christ used Scripture (from Deuteronomy—have you read it lately?). It is the only sure answer to Satan’s temptations, but you must learn it if you are going to use it. 2. The Spiritual Temptation. Here Satan asked Him to presume on the grace of God. If he cannot get you to abandon your faith, he will urge you to go to some fanatical and unscriptural extreme in using it. God always cares for His own when they are in the place where He wants them to be, but He does not deliver us from foolhardy and unnecessary risks which we want to call “faith.” 3. The Vocational Temptation. Christ had come into this world to wrest from Satan, the usurper (who is now the prince of this world— John 12:31), the kingdoms of this world. Satan suggested to Him that He could accomplish this by simply bowing down to him—thus escaping Calvary’s cross. Satan is busy urging men to take spiritual bypaths. He has his own leaders who skillfully evade and avoid the cross. They have a religion without the offense of the cross, but, mark it well, it Is not Christianity, even though it bears that name. Jesus met and defeated Satan by the use of Scripture, and by honor ing God the Father. Jesus’ re sistance of the devil caused him to go away. It still works. Read James 4:7. Then came the angels to minis ter to Him. Victory over the enemy of our souls brings peacq and spiritual refreshment. ■■■ GROVE’S SNAPPY FACTS ABOUT RUBBER . : ! In »p!te of wartime restriction*, American motorists traveled 280 billion passenger miles In 1943, a drop of about 44 per cant frees the all-time high selln 1941.Steam railroad passenger miles traveled in 1943 war* 2000 par cant abov* 1941. Another proof of tho impor tance of rwbbor in tirnss 34 larg* citios In thn U. S. re ceive all thoir milk by i trucks. A single skid can taka as much at 100 milas all a tiro. Wartime spaed and careful driving will prevent this aga waste. ■ : lii$® Ik mw oz peace BEGoodrich] PIRST IN RUBBER ■'Aui&r -WAyS"^— Ml Will Mill Ml MIM W RHEUMATISM NEURITIS-LUMBAGO ., f.r,' MCNEILS MAGIC REMEDY BRINGS BLESSED RELIEF I , Large BeMelinmnnaalHiS-Small Stee » CMtlll: ME lilt It IIIIIIEI « n Ul MM ntt IIIUS SI It Mil ** rscityl si pkt ■••Ell llll Cl.. Its. MCltlMtUE 4. mil 3 iml AT FIRST ^ C®666 Cold Preparations as dixsetsd ^*To relieve distress of MONTHLY "> Female Weakness (Also Fine Stomachic Tonic) Lydia E. Plnkham’s Vegetable Com- pound Is famous to relieve periodic pain and accompanying nervous* weak, tired-out leelings—when due to functional monthly disturbances. Taken regularly—Pinkham’s Com pound helps build up resistance against such annoying symptoms Plnkham’s Compound Is made especially for women—it helps na ture and that’s the kind of medicine to buy! Follow label directions. LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEBETUlE ANTISEPTIC OIL INFECTION WORKS FAST! Don’t take chancea! Any cut or abrasion should be treated rompr/y by cleansing, followed _iy applications of Dr. Porter’s Antiseptic Oil. This wonderful aid to nature's healing proc esses has been a stand-by for years. In treatment of minor cuts, bruises, bums, chafing, sunburn, non-polsonous Insect bites, etc. Keep it on hand in your medicine chest always for emergencies and use only as directed. In 3 different sizes at your druggist! The GROVE LABORATORIES, INC. , . . ST. LOUIS 3, MISSOURI Makeri of GRUVi S COLD TABIFTS