The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, September 10, 1948, Image 7

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I THE NEWBERRY SUN. NEWBERRY. S. C. AWRY IMPORTANT FEATURE IS THE WONDERFUL OLD LIGHTNING RODS WHICH HAVE SEEN OFFERING PfHf- TecrtOM TO TH0 PLACE FOR SEVENTY FIVE YEARSi" “THCY’Re CUTE ALLRIGHT —BUT WHO CAN AFFORP THEM?" NANCY (I'LL HAVE A LARGE LEMONADE By Ernie Bushmiller NANCV—-HOW ABOUT SHARINO DAT WITH ME ? OKAV. SLUG0O I LL FIX A STRAW FOR YOU LITTLE REGGIE By Margarita MUTT AND JEFF AINTYOU . MAKING A YWHO ME ? ' GARDEN THIS GO IN FOR VEARP-V' farming? By Bud Fisher I HAD MV SHARE OF \ FARMING.' UP AT THE v ,CRACK OF DAWN, WORK IN THE HOT SUN ALL DAV UNTIL SUNSET/ . NOT ME/ NOT FOR A MlLI-i«~- ITS AWFULLY SWEET OF YOU TO DO THAT FOR JITTER THIS TREE WILL. look Setter v* THE DEAD UMBS TRIMMED OFF REG’LAR FELLERS DID I EVER TELL VA HOW I SAVED A FELLER'S LIFE AT TH' BEACH ONCtT ’ By Arthur Pointer By Gene Byrnes NEVER Ml NO TH' BUILD-UP— WHOSE LIFE. Dio ya save? SUNNYSIDE by Clark S. Haas -By >A.WNU6EN-rii ,iP//V7- r//£S£ ID) Eight letters /a/ the EMPty Boxes so that the COAUB/A/EjD letters will spell s/x THREE-LETTER WORDS, READING ACROSS A AID DO WAS. ■JL3*t 'V&3 '3/5 ~A/M0<7 •Its3 '3H' ’A*3d sroj/lts JE/P>ny a duck AND AN ei ephant's he a d bv adding a pew LINES TO THE SQUASH AND THE TURniP. JlRST CONNECT THE DOTS, FROM ONE TO THIRTY. 12 i9» n f e !*>. w 21 zO I '5 V.- e 2i 24»C 25 ,a H 26 * T *A 27, . /a.w.mkocnty '7. M 3 ^ <4T 29 ’M JHEN read the LETTERS in NUMER (CAL ORDER ( IDDJE CORNER rK^RAW ME liy STEP BY STEP. wmu 4036 ACROSS 1 Resorts 9 Asterisk 9 Begin 10 Made of oak 12 Immense 13 Marsh bird 14 Permits 16 Bite-off 17 Turn to the right 18 Full of ore 20 Norse god 21 Musical instrument 23 Goddess of death 24 Eating utensil 27 Silk fibers 29 Metal fastener SO Information 32 Like 33 Sea gull 34 Cebine monkey 37 Mix 39 Watch tower 42 Fashions 44 American explorer 45 Slant 46 Scolds 47 Killed 48 One of the bears. (Astron. DOWN 1 Not fresh 2 Parley 3 Constellation 4 Boil slowly, as meat 5 Distress signal 6 Tasty 7 Related wmu vr>4 SdnUon la N«xt Isnt. i i 3 S 4 1 5 h 7 8 w 9 10 II a '3 14 ■ 5 m '4 *7 fe M, >8 •9 26 I 1 21 22 1 13 14 26 ///, 37 38 39 i 30 31 | I 33 'ssy % 33 I n 34 35 36 37 38 yy/< 39 40 41 A3- 43 4i 45 vl Ai i I A& d/xy % 8 Paves again 9 Dress of metal 11 Stairway posts 15 Weep 19 A float 21 Sign of infinitive 22 Unfasten 23 Exclamation 24 Paroxysms 25 Small firearms 26 Ahead No. 34 28 Music note 31 Warp-yam 33 A crinkled cloth 34 Scrutinizes 35 A large artery of heart 36 Covers with ink 38 Heathen image 40 Beige 41 Like a wing 43'Stitch Answer to Paul* Number S3 SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS Smartiit ^tuied and \JeFiatiie a ^rroch 'j: '..|j . l- * Daytime Wear CTOR your busy daytime activi- 1 ties—a smart, comfortably fit ting frock with diagonal lines softly accented with scallops. The neckline is high and young, sleeves are brief or slightly longer. Pattern No. 1806 Is for sizes 12, 14, IS, 18, 20; 40 and 42. Size 14. 4 1 ,L yards of 39-inch. Young Girl’s Dress HPHIS adorable little dress for, young girls will be perfect for parties. It is fashioned of a bright striped fabric used in contrast. Note the gay scallop trim, the pert bow. Pattern includes panties to match. Pattern No. 17S0 comes in sizes 2, 3, 4. S and 6 years. Size 3, dress, yards of 35 or 39-incb; panties, K yard. The new Fall and Winter FASHION contains 60 pages of sewing information for home dressmakers. Easy to make styles; special features—free doll pat tern printed inside the book. 35 cents. SEW 'NG CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 530 S mth Well* St. Chicage 7, DL Enclose 25 cents m coins for each pattern desired.' When you get paint on the win- dowpanes, or when somebody else does and you have to get it off, soak the glass with hot vinegar. Give the vinegar a few minutes to work, and then rub or scrape the paint off. A penny makes a safe, effective scraper. If you use a razor blade or something else that is sharp, be careful around the edges. A careless thrust may jab under the putty and eventually cause it to fall out. —•— Beer stains are usually as easy to get rid of as they are to acquire because beer is soluable in water. So, ordinary laundering will-work for washable fabrics. Sponging with a cloth dipped in soapy water will clean unwashables. If the stain is old, add a little ammonia to the wash water. s To clean if parchment shade, rub it with a fresh piece of white bread or an artgum eraser, or with a cloth dipped in milk. In any case, be sure to brace the inside of the shade with one hand while you rub with the other, or you may poke the rubbing hand right through. —e— If you’d like to avoid having to strain cranberry sauce, run berries through a meat grinder before you cook them. . —•— You can “richen” margarine by warming two pounds of it until it’s soft and then stirring in one large can of condensed milk. —•— If a hole in the wall becomes toe targe to hold the screw, take the screw out, pack the hole with steel wool, and put the screw back in. Or, poke a wooden match into the hole, break it off at the wall sur face, and then replace the screw. —•— Tenderize a steak that looks tough by soaking it in a pint of water and a tablespoon of vinegar for 10 minutes before you cook it. —•— If someone burns a hole in a leather-covered table top, hide it by melting candle wax of a matching color; pour it into the hole and smooth it out whije it’s soft. —•— Citron will stay, fresh indefinitely if you store in an airtight jar in the refrigerator. the Starch .! n the buttercup yellow box | HOT STARCH IlH 30 SECONDS MAKES WONtnC EASY aro soiurara TvosTicitrara Buy U. S. Savings Bonds!' 38% BRIGHTER TEETH in 7 days! ALOX 0TH pcwt;S p A MCKESSON A ROBBINS PRODUCT Finer, faster cooking with economy, deonliness, beautyl NCSCO ' •; \ m ~' 'r~irr^ r *AmM ^ . —1 ' inn " r V. • . KEROSENE RANGES “The oil tango that cook* Ukoaga* tango" • Burner* generate own gas, burn with d«an flame • Elbow Action Controls give fine flame adjust ment. No cogs or cams. • Roomy, insulated oven. • Porcelain top and front. NATIONAL ENAMELING A STAMPING CO. °.ri- Al, 270 N. Iltfc I*., Mltweelw. I, WI*.