The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, November 29, 1946, Image 3
THK NEWBERRY SUN
NEWKERRY. S. C.
New York Heartbeat:
Silhouettes About Town: Fannie
Hurst, the newest dramatic critic,
has listeners wondering. Was that a
slip or a slap when she referred
to the male star of a new comedy
as “the leading lady”? . . . Rex
Ingram, using a 44th street drug
store doorway (as shelter during
the drenching rains) even if he did
play De Lawd in “Green Pastures.”
. . . Gromyko has been buying N. Y.
houses for the Russian delegates
and Bob Hawk wonders if the win
dows will have iron curtains. ... A
swank men’s shop in Miami
Beach is being sued by a jewelry
firm there, which claims it owns
the name Swank. Isn’t it a word in
the dictionary?
Broadway Torch Song: (By
Don Wahn): So in the dusk I
light a cigaret. And read a
scrapbook filled with slender
rhymes. And what is there to
reckon or regret? When one has
been in lo\e with other times?
. . . This is the price that chil
dren always pay. Who cannot
cope with times that twist and
change. Who chant the golden
songs of yesterday. . . . Before
the world grew perilous and
strange. . . . There are new
inns with strangers at the door.
There are new songs (hat I
could never learn. Where are
the silken garments that I
wore? Where are the fires that
had so long to burn? . . . Here
in the lovely dusk I sit apart.
. . . And soothe the ghosts that
sob within my heart.
The fancy quill pens on the desk
of each U. S. Supreme court jus
tice are “Made in England.” . . .
Perhaps Mrs. Truman really want
ed to see a Demmy congress elect
ed. She made a contribution of ten
bux to the Dem. Nat’i Comm. . . .
If the ban on parking here spreads,
it’ll be a misdemeanor to take your
car out of the garage! . . . The
Bill Robinsons expect a little Bo-
jangles. He’s way past 60. . . .
Bricker, who hopes to be the 33rd
president, has his offices on the 33rd
floor in Columbus. ... It isn't a
handful of sleeping pills that al
ways kills pill-takers. It’s taking one
at a time that keeps you from
waking up one day. It takes up too
much space to explain that one.
Just don’t take any if you care
about living.
New York hotelmen expect walk
outs again after New Year’s,
unless they get taller pay and a 40-
hour week. ... A youthful movie
star is marrying a fellow she thinks
is rich. He thinks she is loaded
with coin, too. What a shock both
will get when the rent is due. . . .
Many wealthy Cubans (and Yanks
there; have fled to New York and
Miami because of the many kid
naps. The ransomers collected
oodles, already. . . . Furs may come,
down in price again. One big drop
recently—another expected. . . .
Woim has turned dep’t: Now whole
salers are phoning cafes, restau
rants and hotels asking what they
need!
The National Press Club
(board of governors) issued a
memo reading: “Halt banging
of glasses with spoons, belting
walls with pool cues and other
childish actions.” ... A Long
Island town (where the Bund
ran things) has changed all
Nazi street names back to
American. Too late. . . . Rich
ard Alton, a doorman at the
Winter Garden, is listed in the
Chicago Social Register!
The Press Box: Hairy Hop
kins’ widow, Louise, may become
Mrs. Winston Frost. He’s the Mid-
dleberg, Va., barrister. . . . Bing
Crosby now discovers his transcrip
tion victory has its drawbacks too.
Petrillo’s new transcription scale
will shave Der Single’s profits in
half. . . . There has been an epi
demic of window-breaking in side
street parked curs (at night), the
work of vandals. . . . Ginger Rog
ers’ press agent has a terrific job
—to keep newsmen “away” from
her. . . . The rehearsal of a re
nowned radio program was inter
rupted when a former vocalist
dashed in and told the star of the
show: “If I ever catch you near
my wife again, I’ll split your skull!”
. . . Alan Gale hopes he chokes if
it didn’t ackchelly happen. A re
porter, he alleges, went up to an
ex j at an ad agency and said: “Do
you think the advertising business
is as overrated as ‘The Hucksters’
paints it?” “I dunno,” shrugged the
ad exec, “I can’t read.”
Sounds in the Night: At the China
Doll: “Florida and California may
fight over who grows the biggest
oranges but Missouri certainly pro
duces the biggest lemons.” ... At
the Latin Quarter: “She had a face
that would stop a clock. I know, be
cause I threw one at her.” ... At
Gracie Allen’s: “The first thing I
notice about a man is whether
George is around.” ... At the
Stork: “Inflation is what turns a
dollar into a question mark.” . . .
At Weyne’a: “Nowadays dollars-to-
doughnuts is an even money bet.”
IN THESE UNITED STATES
Tiny Vermont Town Picked
As Symbol of World Peace
WNV Features
POWNAL CENTER, VT.—For the first time in its history,
Pownal Center is on a map larger than that of its own township.
A few weeks ago Pownal Center was not even considered a wide
place in the road—today it is internationally famous as the
epitome of the deep and abiding peace the United States hopes to
achieve for the whole world.
Selected as a typical quiet rural scene to symbolize peace, a
picture of Pownal Center recently was reproduced on the back
cover of the United Nations Weekly Bulletin.
' If the U.N. had appointed a learned committee of experts
to search the world over for a serened
and peaceful community as a world
model, it could not have arrived at
a more perfect choice than Pownal
Center.
Peaceful Community.
The old, white New England
church lifts its octagonal steeple
above a community in which there
is neither juke box, pool hall, hot-
dog emporium, comer drugstore or
motion picture theater.
Its handful of old homes, its
church, a one-room schoolhouse,
a garage, a couple of filling sta
tions, a little grocery store, a
roadside souvenir shop, some
neat tourist cabins, a crumbling,
pre-revolntionary cemetery and
an ancient inn strung along the
highway — these comprise the
center.
No one is very rich in Pownal
Center and no one is very poor. It
is essentially a farming community.
The township meeting is held an
nually in March. People from all
over the township crowd into Pow
nal Center’s union church, built in
1789. There the citizens of the {own-
ship elect the three selectmen, who
govern the whole community, as
well as all other elective officers. In
open meeting, they thresh out the
matter of local taxes, road improve
ments and school matters.
Peace Is Unmarred.
In the six years he has been sher
iff, Arthur H. Bourke hasn’t had to
jail anyone.
While the rest of the world is
plagued with juvenile delinquency,
Pownal Center with her 150 inhabi
tants sits back and wonders why the
center has never had a case of ju
venile delinquency.
It would be quite true, in one
sense, to say that nothing ever
happens in Pownal Center. Noth
ing, that is, but the ebb and flow
of the seasons and the ebb and
flow of life itself, of births, mar
riages and deaths.
Nestled in Hoosic valley and
hemmed in by mountains on both the
east and west, Pownal Center is
linked with postwar realities only
through the rushing traffic of Ethan
Alien highway.
Servicemen Return.
But there is no isolation in the
world today, even for a community
that epitomizes peace. Out of the
community’s 150 inhabitants, 11 men
and one young woman served in the
armed forces during World War II.
Now all the men are home again,
the community rejoicing that all are
safe, and the girl, married to a na
val officer during the war, lives in
Virginia.
Few residents of the center be
lieve that the atom bomb will ever
shatter the peace of their own little
valley. What really worries them is
what the bomb will do for the rest of
the world.
IMPROVED
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
UNDAYI
chool Lesion
By H
Of The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.
Released by Western Newspaper Union.
Lesson for December 1
Lesson subjects and Scripture texts se
lected and copyrighted by International
Counc.il of Religious Education; used by
permission.
Scientists To Note
A-Bomb Anniversary
WASHINGTON.—Tke Atomic Age
was born December 2, 1942, accord
ing to official decision of the army.
On that day, under the west stands
of Stagg field at University of Chi
cago, scientists in the Manhattan
project’s metallurgical laboratory
made a nuclear reactor work for
the first time, proving that man can
release and control energy.
As a result of the army’s deci
sion, December 2 will be observed
as the anniversary of an event
“which was a milestone in the ad
vancement of science,” according to
Maj. Gen. Leslie R. Groves, direc
tor of the Manhattan project, the
army’s atomic energy organization.
A special anniversary meeting will
be held in Chicago December 2 by
the Argonne laboratory, successor
of the Chicago metallurgical labora
tory, and 25 participating universi
ties.
Police Join Collection
Craze; Seek Collector
BALTIMORE, MD. — Some peo
ple collect stamps, pipes or war
souvenirs. Someone in south Balti
more apparently collects hub caps.
As the latest addition to his collec
tion, he collected eight in a single
block cne night. Now police have
served notice they may become col
lectors themselves. They plan to
collect a hub cap collector.
Christmas Club Fund
Reaches Peak Figure
NEW YORK.—Christmas club de
positors will receive a record total
of $124,557,464 from their accounts
in mutual savings banks this year,
according to the National Associa
tion of Mutual Savings Banks. The
total, representing accumulations of
1,761,377 depositors, is 13 million
dollars higher than in 1945. Average
distribution this year is $70.72 per
account.
AVIATION NOTES
AIRPORT CHATTER
Former combat fliers in the Phila
delphia area have formed a pilots’
club. Purposes of the club are to
give veterans an opportunity to keep
abreast of latest aviation develop
ments and to participate in hangar
flying, air carnivals and barnstorm
ing tours. . . . The word “Glenwood”
has been painted on top of the Glen
wood, Iowa, armory for benefit of
air traffic. The sign includes nu
merals giving distances to the near
est airport, Council Bluffs, and the
nearest paved landing field, Omaha.
. . . Using materials salvaged from
two barracks on an old civilian con
servation camp site, Montrose, Colo.,
is constructing a new hangar at its
municipal airport. The hangar’s
specifications are designed for stor
age of eight planes. . . . The airport
operated at Clarinda, Iowa, by Ray
Schenck has been approved by Civil
Aeronautics commission, and 10 stu
dents are learnn g to fly under the
G.I. Bill of Rights. . . . Sundance,
Wyo., has completed its air marker,
the first in that section of Wyoming
and third in the state for non-com
mercial airports. The marker has
the name “Sundance” in letters 10,
feet high and information indicating
direction and distance to the Sun
dance airport. . . . Nevada, Mo.,
dedicated its new municipal airport
hangar with an air circus sponsored
by the Junior Chamber of Com
merce. Prizes were awarded the
oldest and youngest visiting pilots
and the pilot coming the longest dis
tance. Spot landing and paper cut-,
ting contests were other attractions.
» • •
When Clayton Myron and
Pearl Westerman of Seattle de
cided to get married, it was
only natural they should want to
exchange vows in a plane 2,500
feet above Lake Washington.
They met while working in the
Boeing plant; their first date
was a plane ride.
• • •
RECREATION CENTERS
Development of airports as rec
reation centers for small towns and
rural America is envisaged in an
analysis of building trends in air
ports.
With 3,050 new airports and 1,625
improvements already planned from
a program of federal aid, in addi
tion to almost an equal number ?
be built from private capital, vir
tually every rural family will be
within easy distance of an airport.
To make their airports self-sup
porting, airport operators are seek
ing out every possible source of rev
enue. Additional attractions, ac
cording to present trends, will in
clude bowling alleys, retail and serv
ice stores, and amusement conces
sions, providing recreational activi
ties for the entire family.
The survey also revealed an ar
chitectural trend toward construct
ing airports on the “open” plan,
large window areas providing spec
tators with an unbroken view of field
operations. By encouraging specta
tors, the small town airport will add
to its concession revenue.
A LETTER ON CHRISTIAN
LIVING
LESSON TEXT—Acts 19:23-30: Ephesians
6:13-18
MEMORY SELECTION — Finally, my
brethren, be strong in the Lord, and In the
power of his might.—Ephesians 6:10.
NEW TRAINER . . . Represent
ing the greatest advancement in
naval primary trainers since
World War I, the Fairchild
XNQ-1, the navy’s newest primary
trainer, made its first test flight
at the Fairchild Aircraft division
in Hagerstown, Md. Built along
the lines of a fighter, it embodies
several major improvements.
* • *
AIRMAIL POST OFFICES
From a single unit operated by a
lone clerk in 1927, the list of United
States airmail field post offices has
multiplied to 31 with 1,013 clerks. It
was less than 19 years ago that
the first field station on record
opened its doors at Cleveland for
the purpose of expediting flow of
airmail, then a comparatively new
domestic service although the gov
ernment had been experimenting
with it since 1918. Additional air
mail field post offices soon were set
up in other strategic cities.
The war is never over for the
Christian. He is called to a con-
sfant strife against the world, the
flesh and the devil, which knows no
armistice or peace conference so
long as he lives or the Lord tarries.
Paul, who had now set out on his
third missionary journey, was this
time permitted of the Holy Spirit to
witness and minister in Asia.
For three months he spoke in the
synagogue, as was his custom, but
when his ministry resulted in many
converts others hardened them
selves in opposition. So he withdrew
(a bit of strategy in this spiiiiual
warfare) to neutral ground in the
“school of one Tyrannus,” where he
could teach and reason with them
daily.
Paul knew by experience that this
could not go on, for he had learned
as we should learn to
1. Expect Opposition — It Will
Come (Acts 19:23-30).
The comfortable and contented
Christians of our day whq just want
to be let alone to carry on their
worship art certainly not related to
the real Christians of Paul’s type.
The enemy of our souls is often
content to let us go on in compara
tive peace as long as we do not
bother him unduly, but once we put
up the banner of a holy life and
service in God’s army, he begins a
terrific counterattack. Paul had felt
it already in the hardening of lis
teners’ hearts (v. 8).
1< Selfish Opposition (w. 23-27).
One way to bring a violent reaction
against spiritual truth is to let it
interfere with business. Demetrius
and his fellow silversmiths pro
fessed to be concerned about the
threatened destruction of the heath
en worship of Diana.
Many of the enemies of the gos
pel in our time are fighting against
God’s Word because they are in
a business which is condemned by
it.
2. Senseless Tumult (w. 28-30).
Knowing that their opposition was
without true foundation, they in
spired and agitated a wild demon
stration.
Shouting a slogan which had no
real meaning, they lent their voices
to the tumultuous agitation against
God. Finally, one sensible man,
fearing the punishment of city of
ficials, quieted them (Acts 19:35-41).
The Ephesians were' just like
many in our day who fear man
more than God. But, may we ask,
if you fear the judgment of men, how
think you to escape the judgment
of God? After all, it is God and
His Word you oppose, unconverted
friend. Do you think He will hold
you guiltless?
Paul was not afraid (v. 30), for
he had also learned that the servant
of the Lord can
II. Count on God—He Will Deliver
(Eph. 6:13-18).
Writing to the church in this very
city where the Lord opened “a great
door and effectual” for Paul (I Cor.
16:9), he admonishes them and us
to make full use of the provision
which God has made for victorious
warfare.
There is a complete armor, and a
mighty weapon, the sword of the
Spirit, but none will do us the slight
est good unless we put it on and go
into battle. If we think we can do
without the breastplate of righteous
ness (and some Christians and
church workers seem to think they
can), or neglect to carry and use
the shield of faith, we can only ex
pect defeat. We fight great spiritu
al enemies (see w. 11, 12 of this
chapter) and we need the best in
both offensive and defensive equip
ment.
The girdle of truth binds up the
warrior and eliminates the hin
drances to rapid movement. The
breastplate is righteousness, not his
own but Christ’s, but it must be
appropriated and used.
The soldier must be well shod for
the long rough journeys and to give
him a good foothold in the day of
battle. Peace in the heart provides
such a firm vantage point in the fight
for God.
Faith is the quickly moved shield,
catching all the fiery darts. Here
again it is not my faith or yours
alone, but our faith in God, put
ting him between us and our ene
mies.
The sword of the Spirit, which is
the Word of God, is our all-powerful
weapon. Let us not neglect to use it.
We are s? prone to talk about the
Bible, to defend it, to argue for its
truths. Talking about a sword does
not make it effective. Let’s really
use it.
Prayer is always to be counted on
and it is both a defensive and of
fensive weapon. It keeps us in
touch with the Cap’ain of the Lord’s
hosts. We call for help, get orders
and transmit news of victory
through prayer.
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SCOTT'S EMULSION
YEAR-ROUND TONIC
Serve Leftovers With an Eye to Color
(See recipe* below)
Glamorizing Leftovers
“Wouldn’t it be wonderful if we
never had to bother with leftovers,”
1 heard a home
maker say re
cently. Well, left
overs need not be
the PROBLEM
which many
women regard
them, for they
can really be made interesting. As
a matter of fact, many of my
friends welcome dinners made with
leftovers because they take so little
time to prepare.
Never let the leftover problem get
out of hand is my first bit of ad
vice, however, for then food will
spoil and will have to be thrown out.
Plan in advance what will be left
over and include it in the menu.
This is easy to do with roasts and
even vegetables.
It’s an excellent idea to check
the refrigerator systematically ev
ery day so that no bit of food es
capes notice. Combine several veg
etables in one jar and toss them
into a salad. Or, plan to cream
them and serve with bacon os toast
for lunch. After a bit of practice
you will learn to think of food in
this way and there will be no “left
over problem.”
Change the food to some extent
when it is served a second or a
third time, and it will become a
sort of fascinating game to see just
how much can be done with left
overs. Use a variety of seasonings
and watch the family take an in
terest in the food.
Here are several suggestions on
what to do with fowl:
Chicken Chow Mein.
(Serves 6)
2 cups cooked chicken
2 tablespoons fat
2 cups thinly sliced celery
m cups sliced, peeled onloiu
Ys teaspoon pepper
1 No. 2 can mixed vegetables, Chi
nese style
M-ounce can mushrooms
2 tablespoons cornstarch
3 tablespoons soy sauce
Scallions
1 small can fried noodles
Brown chicken slightly in fat. Add
celery, onions and pepper. Add
chicken broth (about 2 cups) and
cook covered until vegetables are
tender. Add drained Chinese vege
tables and mushrooms and heat to
boiling. Mix cornstarch with soy
sauce and add to mixture. Stir this
mixture and cook until thickened.
Arrange vegetable dish garnisr sd
with sliced scallions and pour mix
ture over them. Serve with fried
noodles.
•Turkey Pie.
(Serves 6)
3 tablespoons fat
4 tablespoons flour
1 teaspoon salt
?4 teaspoon pepper
2 cups milk
2 cups hot mash-sd potatoes
Leftover roast turkey, sliced
1 cup cooked, sliced carrots
1 cup cooked or canned peas,
drained
Melt fat, add flour and blend
in salt and pepper. Add milk grad
ually while stirring and cook until
mixture thickens. Sprer.d mashed
potatoes in a layer in a buttered
baking dish and cover with a layer
of turkey slices. Add carrots and
peas to sauce and pour over turkey.
Place in a broiler and broil until
LYNN SAYS:
Soup Serving Hints
A well cooker on your range is
another tip for making easy work
of cooking soup. The ingredients
can be placed in this and just left
to cook at low temperature while
you go out to shop.
When combining milk or white
sauce with tomato mixtures, pre
vent curdling by pouring the toma
to mixture slowly into the milk and
stirring constantly all the while. Use
a double boiler for heating.
LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU
•Turkey Pie
•Orange Sweet Potatoes
Harvard Beets
Asparagus-Green Pepper Salad
Biscuits
Apple Betty Sauce Beverage
•Recipes given.
the top is a golden brown. Serve
at once.
Chicken Casserole.
(Serves 6)
3 cups cooked, boned chicken
4 cooked sweet potatoes
2 cups chicken gravy, may be
leftover
4 strips of bacon
Arrange chicken and sweet pota
toes, sliced in alternate layers, in
a buttered bak
ing dish. Pour
gravy over all
and top with ba
con strips. Bake
uncovered in a
moderately hot
(400-degree)
oven for 30 minutes.
Slivered cheddar cheese may
be used on top of the above cas
serole in place of the bacon, if de
sired.
Vegetable Sonffle.
(Serves 6)
1 cup cooked leftover vegetables
1 cup thick white sauce
1 tablespoon lemon juice
2 tablespoons minced onion
V4 teaspoon salt
teaspoon pepper
34 teaspoon Worcestershire sance
4 eggs, separated
>4 teaspoon cream of tartar
Press vegetables through a sieve
or chop fine before using, dom-
bine them with white sauce and sea
sonings. Add well-beaten egg yolks.
Cool. Fold in beaten whites mixed
with cream of tartar before beat
ing. Turn into a greased casserole
and bake in a moderate (325-degree)
oven for 1 hour. Serve at once.
•Orange Sweet Potatoes.
(Serves 4 to 6)
6 cooked sweet potatoes
1 cup orange juice
2 teaspoons grated orange rind
1 tablespoon cornstarch
3 tablespoons melted butter
34 cup brown sugar
34 cup granulated sugar
Remove skins from potatoes.
Combine remaining ingredients in
saucepan and
cook, stirring un
til thickened. Ar
range sweet po
tatoes in a bak
ing dish and pour
sauce over them. Cover and bake
in a moderate oven for 20 min
utes; uncover and bake 15 minutes
longer. •
Lima Beans With Tomatoes.
(Serves 4)
2 tablespoons minced onion
2 tablespoons fat
134’ cups canned tomatoes
2 teaspoons granulated sugar
34 teaspoon salt
34 teaspoon pepper
134 cups cooked lima beans
% cup soft bread crumbs
Saute onion in fat until tender;
add tomatoes, sugar, salt and pep
per and simmer 5 minutes. Add
lima beans and heat thoroughly.
Add crumbs, heat for a few min
utes longer, then serve.
Released by Western Newspaper Union.
If you have leftover soup, espe
cially of the cream soup variety,
store it immediately in the refrig
erator after it cools, or it will spoil.
When you buy a roast that you
want boned and rolled, always ask
for the bone that goes with it. You
can use this as a base for very fine
vegetable soup.
Try combining canned soups for
variety. Tomato with green pea,
mushroom with chicken, etc., will
give your soup platters a good va
riety.
BALDNESS IS SERIOUS
and should be taken care of. It is youi
crown of Glory from God. Hair. People 8f
years old have grown their hair with oui
Hair Gro Gro Hair. 14 treatments foi
only $25.00. You just pat-a pat-pat in th«
liquid. Massage in the ointment, put on 4
warm wet towel and give it time to grow:
office proof Before and after pictures tf
full heads of hair.
LOREENE JOHNSTON
9200 Hough Ave., Cleveland. Okie.
Office Hrs. Mondays, Tuesdays*
Wednesdays. Tel. R A 377$.
COLDS'
DISCOMFORTS
Relieved by Modem Way
At the first sniffle or sneeze of a head
cold, many young mothers now rub on
PENETRO for quick-acting relief... so
clean and white, so pleasant to use—and
so effective! PENETRO’S modern-
type, medicated vapors release at once to
help open up the nostrils and soothe
upper breathing passages, clear the head,
help quiet coughing of colds.
PENETRO GIVES YOU the homo-
approved mutton suet feature; and sci
entific medication rube in to help break
up the local congestion and relieve
muscular soreness, if a chest cold devel
ops. And Penetro keeps on working for
hours, encourages restful sleep. Modem
mothers everywhere are changing from
old-fashioned remedies to dean, white
PENETROSRUB
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HE-MAN
It takes rugged strength,
quickness, intelligence and
courage to make a soldier in
America’s peacetime Regu
lar Army.
Young men who can mea
sure up to the Army’s high
physical and mental stand
ards are finding in it a wide
variety of interesting and
stimulating jobs.
The Regular Army is a
gigantic research laboratory,
constantly developing fresh
scientific discoveries in the
fields of aviation, medicine,
engineering and communica
tion, to mention only a few.
Qualified men are finding in
it the groundwork of a use
ful and valuable career, as
well as the opportunity to
help guard world peace.
Their abilities and achieve
ments deserve the respect
of every citizen of this
country.
★
YOUR REGULAR ARMY SERVES
THE NATION AND MANKIND IN
WAR AND PEACE
S'
?■
1