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