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THE NEWBERRY SDN, NEWBERRY. S. C. jTHm ficnoM comR Chivalry Complex By GARRET SMITH B Y NOON forlorn hopera in the employment manager’s ante room at Cromby & Co. boiled down to Jimmy Wheeler and the "Plucked Chicken.” They had simmered since nine, waiting to be hired or to hear, "We’ll file your application and let you know if anything turns up." Jimmy put the first of these chances at less than hundred-to-one shots. Odds had reversed on him since that independence day two weeks ago when his ex-boss had spoken overwarmly and Jimmy’s free soul chased Jimmy off the payroll. As for the Plucked Chicken, Jim my considered the Old Run-around formula a sure thing. He hadn't given her a second look for fear he’d feel sorry for her. No name to put to a maid in distress, the formerly chivalrous Jimmy admitted guiltily. But he’d seen too many such lately. He’d soured on the sex anyhow since his boss’s secretary lied her self out of a jam and him into one after he’d stood up for her. “That chivalry complex of yours is a nui sance!" the boss had roared. Old Fletcher needn’t worry. Jimmy agreed with him now. The assistant manager gave Jim my a blank to fill and turned to the Plucked Chicken. Elizabeth Bond was her name actually. Someone’s private secretary once, would grab a typist job now. "We have a long waiting list. I’m afraid it isn't worth while calling again” was all she drew. Not even the Sid Run-around! Jimmy handed in his blank. "Thanks,” said the assistant “We’ll file your application—” “—And let me know if anything turns up,” Jimmy finished. He won dered how many such days his hun dred-buck reserve would stand, as he followed Miss Bond’s wake. The girl was waiting for the ele vator, a fragile arm braced against the wall. The dim light here softened the cheek-bone, hid worry- lines and ash-grey bleakness. Why she was class, a beauty once, be fore she began starving to death! The elevator came and she swayed toward it, would have fallen if Jimmy hadn’t caught her. "Thank you. I’m clumsy!" Her face lit and Jimmy looked Into deep violet eyes. Then face and eyes went dead again. She’d keel over on the street, he worried. No breakfast probably. He must do something quick. At the street door Jimmy clutched the germ of an idea. "Pardon me. Aren’t you Miss Bond—in Cromby’s just now? They said you might do a letter or so for me. I’m James Wheeler. Publicity man. With the Fletcher bureau once. Cromby had another good typ ist on their list but couldn’t reach her. Leaves me in a jam.” Her eyes widened warily then turned eager. "Yes. I’m free this afternoon.” "Got a date then,” Jimmy im provised. "Have to dictate at lunch. Mind going to Mike’s place around the comer?” He hoped she wouldn't cave in and have to be carried. But she made it and dropped in a chair with a sigh that sounded contented. Jim my mumbled something about phon ing and hunted up Mike himself. Jimmy knew the answers for too much food and drink. But how did they treat a gal all out of practice? And not let her know it? He told Mike all. “You start her easy, Mr. Wheeler. Leave it to me." Jimmy returned to their table as Mike brought cups of golden bouil lon. "Won’t you try our new special on the house?” Mike invited. "Shall I fix up a nice little lunch as usual, Mr. Wheeler?" Jimmy deferred to Miss Bond. She was already sipping her bouil lon blissfully. "Aren’t bumps fun to look back on!” she laughed. She could laugh at bumps only one meal and a couple of bucks away! She’d walk out of his life and begin starving again. Jimmy al- mlghtily didn’t want her to starve. Jimmy almightily didn’t want her to walk out of his life. How could he help it? The query fuddled his bogus letters to theoretical publicity pros pects as Betty pot-hooked them like a streak on paper Mike furnished. She had to tinker his sentences. Suddenly a thought popped up like an unexpected check. Why not really mail those letters? He might land free lance work and keep on using Betty! "Look here,” he said. “How about a regular job, if we’re satisfied after swapping references? My office is under my hat yet, but I’ll find a cubby-hole.” Betty's former employer told him over the phone she was as good as Jimmy thought, lost her job only be- “She swayed and would have fallen if Jimmy hadn’t caught her.” “I’ve a feeling anything here’ll be good,” she agreed and s’t down her empty cup. “I’m a pig! Just couldn’t help it,” she added wist fully, with a blush. Jimmy grinned. “Won,’t have ste nographers who aren’t good feed ers.” She laughed. Jimmy heard silver bells. Her bouillon worked fast. Vio let eyes stayed alive now. Jimmy would like to spend a week feeding this girl. He had learned she was called “Betty.” Jimmy thought "Betty” was his favorite name. By the time Mike brought second aid, he had her talking. He liked it. No whining. She was alone and on her own like himself, flotsam and jet sam from small towns. Jimmy told job-hunting yams, too; made them light, set them in a remotish past. She loved the one about the boss’s secretary who balled up her letters which Jimmy corrected until a prize bull slipped by and the boss got wise. “And I was the cne the boss bawled out,” Jimmy added. "Called it my fault for coddling the girl and spoiling her.” That was while they sipped demi- tasses. CROSSWORD PUZZLE Horizontal 1 Person with out gentle manly instincts 4 To confuse 9 Folding bed 12 Eggs 13 Mole gray 14 Poetic: to unclose 15 To arrange in battle ». position a-l'to 'mbue 19 Slang: brisk energy 20 To bringdown on oneself 21 To stimulate 23 Part of "to be” 24 Ancient Anglo-Saxon chariot 27 Rowing implement 28 European mountain system 30 Prefix: half 31 Japanese measure 32 Stupidity 34 French i conjunction 35 Principal member of a theatrical company 87 Widemouthed pot 38 Insect 39 Giant 41 Thus 42 To release 43 To divert 45 Siamese coin 46 Belgian King in World War I 48 Tropical American wildcat 51 Edible seed 52 More certain 54 Female sheep 55 Snakelike fish 56 To habituate (var.) 57 Russian Vertical 1 Important food fish Solution in Next Issue. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 ' 8 9 10 IT 12 13 14 15 »6 n 17 18 19 sNNNN 20 21 22 | 23 24 25 26 n 28 2.9 30 31 H 32 33 n 34 y 35 36 f|| 37 38 39 40 H 41 42 <* * ’ ' 43 44 n 45 • 40 47 48 * 49 50 51 52 53 A 54 1 55 56 57 2 Hail! (Latin) 3 Spruce 4 On the summit of 5 To bark 6 Symbol for gold 7 To revolve 8 Consequently 9 Part of a meal 10 Goddess of the harvest 11 Golfer’s mound 16 To allow 18 Finical 20 Spontaneous inclination 21 To defeat 22 West Indian island 23 Female sing ing voice 25 To rectify 26 The aforesaid thing 28 Molten lava 29 Place for storing fodder No. 38 32 Baseball: an inning 33 Symbol for tantalum 36 Kettledrum 38 Deer’s horn 40 Doctor’s assistant 42 Shoshonean Indian 44 To stupefy 45 Land measure 46 Simian 47 Confederate general 48 Poetic: above 49 To be obliged to 50 Man’s nickname 53 Symbol for ruthenium Answer to Pnzslo Nsmber SI OlO OlP 1 H □ □□ LlSJ olo B]R X □ □□□ El nnnn nan BBnnn nnnEi an rrnnnn nncnnn BE HBOB □□□□□ BEEi ennn mnnp n Bonn □□ □□ □□ onranirinran |P|0|R|T Mo A 0 [iMl. A ’ IHmMT oj TTfirlB w| Strles H-M cause the company failed. Jimmy persuaded her to take expense money and a week’s salary in advance, by pretending he’d be away on business most of the week. Betty had a feeling this was all the reference she needed from him. Jimmy didn’t argue. Old Fletcher might say something sour if Jimmy referred her to his ex-boss. f But, at parting, qualms began to wriggle around in Jimmy. "Look here,” he said. “If you get a chance at a better job, take it!” “I’ve a feeling you may back out if I don’t run," said Betty. A FTER Betty ran, everything went greyish. The impossible didn’t seem as possible. It seemed plain impossible later, after long hours of hammering at his best pros pects. The only spark he struck was “Come and see us after business picks up." By five Jimmy hit bot tom. He started home deciding he’d just tear up those letters Betty had agreed to send over by messenger. But the letters weren’t there, the hall man reported. Jimmy thought that over, feeling as if somebody had kicked him. Stung again! Neat lit tle game! That reference he called up, a plant, of course. He ought to have seen she came out of her dumps a little too fast! He was a fine judge of women! Jimmy’s phone was ringing as he stumbled into his apartment. "Mr. Wheeler?" a remote voice said. "This is Mr. A. B. Fletcher’s secre tary. Could you see Mr. Fletcher here tomorrow morning? He didn't tell me to call you but he 'spoke about you today. Said he’d hoped you’d be over your grouch and back on your old job before this. I’m just tipping you off.” “Well!” Jimmy exploded. "Uh— say—you’re not Miss Moseley?” "Mr. Fletcher’s old secretary? No. She’s left him. I got a feeling from things I heard at luncheon to day there might be a vacancy where you said you used to work. And I got a feeling you’d be relieved if I found another job. I bought bar gain clothes and tried it.” The voice trailed off in silver bells that could not be disguised. Jimmy was beyond speech. "Please don’t be mad, Mr. Wheeler. You saved my life. I’ll pay back your money." “The devil with the money!” Jim my suddenly felt all right. "I’ll be around if you think Fletcher will have the fatted calf ready—and you’ll have luncheon with me." "Maybe we’ll have Mike cook the fatted calf,” said Betty. Poets and Their Garlic Homer had a sincere respect for garlic, to which he attributed the estimable property of "dispelling en chantments." With us, the Roman poet and bishop, Sidonius Apolli- naris, bom at Lyon in 403 and known also as Caius Sullius, held garlic in such contempt that he wrote: “Happy the nose that is nev er exposed to the poisonous exhala tions of this plant.” By the same token, an order of chivalry, ignor ing ribaldry, exacted in its regula tions the agreement that each member should abstain from garlic and onions from January to Decem ber if he valued companionship. This strange order existed in Cas tile about the middle of the 14th century and the ban on garlic and onions was said to have been placed by the king. SCRIPTURE: I Peter; Daniel 1. DEVOTIONAL B READING: Psalm 24. A Call to Right Living Lesson for November 9, 1947 Dr. Newton S UNDAY'S lesson is based on the First Epistle of Peter and the first chapter of Daniel. It is a tem perance lesson. It is suggested that we read the 24th Psalm, in which we find this question. Who shall ascend into the hill of the Lord? And the an swer, He that hath clean hands and a pure heart. Peter gives us the spiritual basis of temperance. Daniel gives us a shining example of temper ance. And the 24th Psalm gives us a dramatic concept of what it means to face God in the right attitude of life. • * • How to Grow Strong /"A UR doctors tell us how to grow ' strong, sound bodies. We are to eat the right food, sleep regu larly, breathe deeply, etc., etc. Dan iel did all of these things, and some thing more—“Daniel purposed in his heart that he would not defile him self with the portion of the king’s wine which he drank; therefore he requested of the prince of the eu nuchs that he might not defile him self," Daniel 1:8. Daniel was challenged by the prince of the eunuchs. He predict ed that Daniel and his companions would become pale and weak if they refrained from eating the king’s meat and drinking the king’s wine. Finally he agreed for them to refrain from meat and wine for ten days, and at the end of the ten days, behold, Daniel and his companions appeared fairer and fatter than those who had eaten intemperately. • • • Every Youth Must Choose A S DANIEL chose to grow strong A*- through temperate habits of eating and drinking, so must every youth choose between right living and lustful living. We have laws against drunkenness, for example, but legislation alone cannot produce a generation of temperate young men and women. Each boy and each girl must choose for himself and herself between temperance and intemperance. And this lesson sets out the ways by which such choices can be made and sustained. I find a helpful word In I Corinthians 10: 31: “Whether, therefore, ye eat or drink or whatsoever you do, do aU to the glory of God.” As we make the choice between drunkenness and sobriety, let us re member that we are choosing be tween God and Satan—between the example of honorable parents and the example of people who have des ecrated every sanctity. This lesson is a call to right living. * * • Disciplined Lives ■^XTHICH calls into mind a word V V that we have not always treat ed fairly. I am thinking of the word "discipline.” Too often we have regarded this word as something very austere, when, as a matter of fact, it is one of the really fine words of our language. It means “one taught.” It is the word which, with slight difference in spelling, gives us “disciple." The immediate followers of Jesus were called disciples. They were young men, gathered up from the everyday pursuits of life. Most of them were fishermen— men who faced hardships every night as they confronted wind and wave. And yet these rough and tumble fishermen became "the taught” ones of Jesus. They yield ed to his discipline. They were pupils in the school of Christ. That is what this lesson is aiming at—to enlist many, many pupils in the school of Christ. * * • The Test of Time jV/f AKE this test in your commu- nity, whether you live in the city or in the country. Look at the lives of the men and women about you, and draw your own conclu sions regarding the worth of tem perate living. Study the lives of the drunkards against the lives of the men and women who have refrained from strong drink. Study the lives of the gamblers and see if they have really won. I appeal to the verdict of his tory—the test of time. Not only in the case of Daniel, but in the lives of the men and women in every community in America is dally borne out the truth of Sun day’s lesson—that God giveth us richly an things to enjoy, but we must use his gifts with disciplined minds. • • • (CopjTitbt by tb* Intwnit/ooii Council ot Religious Eduction on bebtll ol 40 Prtetst denomi notions. Relessed by WNU retutes.) ★ ★ ★★★★★★★★★★ HOUSEHOLD 'aisMuimi.jyk • w. ■ ■ • .'rfSib'. ■ ■ • • ?.'• '■ ■■■■. •... ■■■.. .... f ■ ■ -Xv ifecox»*.y.>x. Serve Fruit Desserts for Meal Contrasts (See recipes below.) Fruit Desserts Food studies show that people do not get as many fruits in win ter as in summer, and frequently this is thought to be a result of their lack of availability; but a good per centage of fruits available in their fresh form are canned, and thus made available for use. Then, too, there are a number of fruits more available in the cooler months than dur ing summer — apples are in their prime, and so are pears. Look to the cit rus fruits, also, if you want particu larly luscious fruits that are scarce in sum mer. Make good use of the dried fruits like primes and apricots for they have excellent vitamin and mineral values. This is the season to make full use of the canned fruits you stored during the warmer months. Serve them chilled with simple cookies for an easy dessert or make them into one of the many delectable pud dings such as the following: Deep Dish Plum Dessert. (Serves 6) 3 cops canned plums % teaspoon cinnamon 14 teaspoon nntmeg 2 tablespoons butter Pit and chop the plum's. Pour with % cup of their juice into a greased shallow baking dish. Sprinkle with the spices and dot with butter. Cov er with crust made as follows: 114 cups sifted flour 2 teaspoons baking powder 14 teaspoon salt 6 tablespoons shortening 14 cup milk 2 tablespoons sugar Sift dry ingredients; cut in short ening. Add milk to make a soft dough. Roll dough to 14 inch thick ness and make a few short slashes ,in it. Place over the fruit in the bak ing dish. Sprinkle with 2 tablespoons of sugar. Bake for 45 minutes in a preheated oven (400°F.) Serve warm. Princess Custard. (Serves 6) 2 large bananas, diced 114 teaspoons orange rind, grated 6 tablespoons orange juice 3 tablespoons sugar 2 tablespoons cornstarch * 14 teaspoon salt 114 cups milk 2 egg yolks, slightly beaten 2 egg whites 2 tablespoons sugar • 14 cup sweet crumbs (cake, cookie, graham cracker or vanilla wafer crumbs) / Combine bananas, orange rind and juice. In a double boiler, com bine sugar, corn starch and salt. Add milk gradu ally and cook un til it thickens. Slowly stir into egg yolks. Cook « until thick, ^ •' 2 to 3 minutes, Remove from fire and fold in fruit mixture. Chill. Gradually add sugar to stiffly beat en egg whites, fold into custard. Place in sherbet glasses and sprin kle with crumbs. LYNN SAYS: Save Food Dollars By Using Everything Edible Celery tops may be dried in the oven, then crushed to a powder and kept in a jar. They add a pungent flavor to soups, stews, casseroles, dressings and salads. To increase the volume of egg whites, add a tablespoon of water before beating. Do not add more water than that Slightly longer beating Is required when water is added. Lynn Chambers’ Menu Broiled Hamburgers Baked Potato with Cheese Topping Buttered Broccoli - Carrot Curls Toasted Buns Chili Sauce Baked Grapefruit with Peppermint Topping Beverage Apricot Manhattan Mousse. (Serves 8) 2)4 cups apricots, sieved 6 tablespoons lemon juice )4 cup sugar 3 teaspoons gelatin 2 tablespoons cold water 1)4 cups whipping cream )4 cup confectioners’ sugar 1)4 teaspoons vanilla Add lemon juice and sugar to ap ricots and stir until dissolved. Soak 1)4 teaspoons of gelatin in 1)4 table spoons water. Dissolve over hot water and add to apricot mixture. Pour into two refrigerator trays and place in refrigerator. Whip cream until it holds its shape then add sug ar and vanilla. Soak remaining gel atin in water, dissolve over hot water. Cool and add to cream. Spread whipped cream mixture over apricot mixture and freeze. Prunella Pudding. (Serves 6 to 8) 1 cup whipping cream v. 1 cup milk 1 cup sugar 3 tablespoons cornstarch % cup milk, cold Y* cup butter 1 teaspoon vanilla extract 12 slices soft bread 1)4 cups prunes, cooked, pitted and chopped )4 cup shredded coconut, toasted Combine cream, milk and % cup of sugar in saucepan and bring to a. boil. Moisten cornstarch with cold milk and stir into hot mixture. Cook until thick ened. Add butter and vanilla. Cool until lukewarm. Remove crusts from bread, cube and toast, under broiler. Combine prunes with bread cubes and re maining sugar. Arrange half in bot tom of a large pudding dish. Spread one half of crusted mixture over the prunes. Add remaining prime mix ture, top with custard and toasted coconut. Chill 8 to 10 hours. Caramelled Apples. (Serves 8) 8 apples 16 marshmallows 1 cup butter 1 cup brown sugar )4 cup nut meats, almonds preferred Arrange layers of apples, cut in eighths with marshmallows cut in to thirds, butter cut into pieces, brown sugar and nuts in a buttered baking dish. Bake in a moderate oven (350°F.) basting occasionally. CooL Serve with whipped cream. This may also be served as a side dish with pork, turkey or chicken. Released by WNU Features. Did you know that baked grape fruit makes a lovely refreshing des sert, especially after a heart cas serole or roast? Bake them just as you would potatoes, for one hour, then halve and top with any of the following: 1. Sprinkle each half with a heap ing teaspoonful of sugar and dot with butter; or, top with teaspoonful of jelly. 2. Sprinkle each half lightly with salt and )4 teaspoonful of worces- tershirs sauce. Cancer Surgery On Cleveland Told Two Secret Operations on President Disclosed By Surgeon. ST. LOUIS, MO.—Details of two secret cancer operations performed on Pres. Grover Cleveland at a time when the nation confronted a grave economic crisis were disclosed here by Dr. M. C. Seelig. Dr. Seelig was one of six surgeons who boarded the yacht of a friend of the Presi dent’s to perform the operations. Writing in the medical journal. Surgery, Obstetrics and Gynecol ogy, he tells how the operations were performed. In June, 1893, the country was in financial near-panic and a special session of congress was set for little more than a month away. Made Hospital Ship. The economic and political conse quences of a disclosure that the chief executive had cancer of the mouth was impossible to predict. So, late on the night of June 30, the six doctors, the President and his secretary of war, Daniel La ment, came aboard the yacht. The craft had been converted into a hos pital ship. The next morning the President’s entire upper left jaw and a portion of his palate were removed in an hour-long operation as the yacht cruised lazily in Long Island sound. Dr. Seelig writes that, although President Cleveland was "a poor surgical risk,” everything went Well. Two days after the operation, he went home. The physicians deemed a second operation necessary, however, and it took place two weeks later under similar circumstances. Dentist Helps Out. Three days before the special con gressional session began, the Presi dent returned to Washington. A den tist had fitted a specially-construct ed vulcanized rubber jaw in place. As he opened the special session, his voice was firm and strong. Since the operation was entirely inside the mouth, there were no scars to mar his appearance and give away his secret. Cleveland lived for 15 more years and his death certificate recorded that he died of “heart failure com plicated with pulmonary throm bosis.” A short time after the operations the Philadelphia Press printed a story which, according to Dr. Seelig was “uncannily accurate in many respects.” The Press report was aagrily de nied by L. Clarke Davis, editor of the Philadelphia Public Ledger and a close personal friend of the Presi dent, and was generally disbelieved at the time. Boy Robber Is Disgusted To Learn Mate Is Girl ATLANTIC, IOWA — Bobby Wiggs, 12, was thoroughly disgusted after learning that the "fellow” who helped him rob a saloon recently was really a girl, Marjorie Marry- field, 17,.of Boston. “A girl?” he asked. “How can John be a girl? He was a real swell guy.” Marjorie readily admitted her identity when she was alone with a physician in the jail physioal exami nation room. She had been held in the Audubon county jail at Audubon, Iowa, for three weeks under the name of John Marryfield, aged 14. The doctor announced that Mar jorie was a girl as she went on trial with Bobby on charges of stealing $8 and 14 cartons of cigarettes last Labor Day. Marjorie is a slight, boyish-look ing girL She appeared in court in the same yellow sweater and dark blue trousers she wore when arrest ed. Her hair was clipped to a crew cut. The girl and boy were arrested at Audubon when authorities learned they were selling cigarettes for $1 a carton. Bobby, who was remanded to his parents’ custody because of his age, admitted he and "John” had robbed the saloon. Young Hunter Forces Pal To Dance to Tune of a Gun DETROIT, MICH.—PoUce in sub urban Lincoln park were searching for a youthful hunter who forced a playmate to dance to the tune of rifle shots because the latter refused to give him a duck he had shot Robert Ferguson, 15, Lincoln park, was wounded slightly in the foot, po lice said, when an unidentified friend fired four shots at his feet Ferguson told authorities he re trieved a duck his playmate had shot and that the boy fired at him when he playfully refused to give it up. Hiroshima Is Leading Most Cities in Reconstruction TOKYO. — Hiroshima is leading most other Japanese cities in re construction but in nearly two years it has restored only a fifth of the houses destroyed by the atomic bomb, Gen. Douglass MacArthur reported. A housing shortage Induced by wartime destruction of more than half the dwellings in Japan’s ma jor cities has been eased but slight ly, MacArthur disclosed in his first detailed report on reconstruction. 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