The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, September 24, 1948, Image 3
THE NEWBERRY SUN. NEWBERRY. N. C.
Gems of Thought
Our deeds determine us as
much as we determine our deeds.
An ounce of vanity spoils a
hundred weight of merit.
Men that are greatly guilty
are never wise.—Burke.
A man doesn’t learn to under
stand anything unless he loves it.
—Goethe.
All men are poets at heart.—
Emerson.
Try //eaMfu/ lemon /n Wafa—
The juice of a lemon in a glass of
water, when taken first thing on aris
ing, is all that most people need to
insure prompt, normal elimination.
No more harsh laxatives that irritate
the digestive tract and impair nutri
tion I Lemon in water is good for you!
Generations af Americans have taken
lemons for health—and generations
of doctors have recommended them.
They are rich in vitamin'C; supply
valuable amounts of Bi and P. They
alkamize; aid digestion.
Net toe sharp ar sour, lemon in water
has a refreshing tang —clears the
mouth, wakes you up. It’s not a
purgative — simply helps your sys
tem regulate itself. Try it 10 days.
WSf CALIFORNIA SUNKIST LtMONS
BUSHMAN SAW']
With Swedish Steel Blode^
Thousands of progressive farmers
know and appreciate the numerous
uses of this all-purpose saw. Fine fot
cutting firewood, fence posts, tree
trimming and general rough work.
Razor sharp blade cuts smooth at
high speed, stays sharp longer. 24.
30, 36, 42. 48 inch lengths.
*inaMaa Bushman," aorhlap stsa campons.
AT IIAPIM6 HAliWAlI STOKH
GENSCO TOOL DIVISION
GENERAL STEEL WAREHOUSE CO INC
, 1330 N. Kos'n. r Ay. CEvcaao 3« L
Fhe Ads Mean Money
Saving to Readers
Yodora
checks
perspiration
odor
*« Soom/tf&sf
Mode with a foes ertam bast. Yodora
is actually toothing to normal skins.
No harsh chemicals or irritating
salts. Won’t harm skin or clothing.
Stayi soft sod creamy, never gets
OR SPREAD ON ROOSTS
Kidneys Must
Work Well-
For You To Feel Well
24 hours every day, 7 days every
week, never stopping, the kidneys filter
waste matter from the blood.
If more people were aware of how tha
kidneys must constantly remove sur
plus fluid, excess acids and other waste
matter that cannot stav in the blood
without injury to health, there would
be better understanding of why the
whole system is upset when kidneys faul
to function properly.
Burning, scanty or too frequent urina
tion sometimes warns that something
is wrong. You may suffer nagging back
ache, headaches, dizziness, rheumatie
pains, getting up at nights, swelling.
Why not try Doan'* Pills! You will
be using a medicine recommended the
country over. Doan's stimulate the func
tion of the kidneys and help them to
flush out poisonous waste from the
blood. They contain nothing harmfuL
Get Doan’s today. Uae with confidence.
At all drug stores.
Doans Pi lls
WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS
1948 Election Campaign Hits Stride
As Democrats, GOP Vie for Labor;
Soviets Aggravate Berlin Situation
By Bill Schoentgen, WNU Staff Writer
(EDITOR’S NOTE: When opinion, mrc ezproooed In these colomne. they are those of
Western Newspaper Union's news noalysts and not necessarily of this newspaper.)
THE GOLDEN KEY . . . Trygve Lie, secretary-general of the United
Nations, beams as he accepts from former French Premier Robert
Schtunan a golden key as a symbol of France’s temporary surrender
of sovereignty over the Palais de Chaillot, where the U. N. general
assembly opened on September 21. What treasures of peace that
key might unlock this year is a question that gives panse to the
entire world.
CAMPAIGN;
Trumpets Sounded
Politicians cleared their throats
as with the sound of trumpets, and
the 1948 presidential election cam
paign swept into motion.
The first skirmish between Demo
crats and Republicans featured
President Truman and Harold E.
Stassen, who carried the word of
their respective parties into the
great industrial area around De
troit.
THAT INDICATED that, for the
time being at least, the pivotal fac
tor directing the policies of both
GOP and Democratic campaigns
would be the labor vote.
To win the election this Novem
ber Mr. Troman probably will need
the same proportionate amount of
the labor vote that turned out in
favor of Roosevelt in the 1932, 1936
and 1940 campaigns. Whether he
will get it is very much open to
question at this stage.
Truman
Launching his battle for re-elec
tion in the Detroit area over the
Labor Day week-end. President
Truman fired at will.
AT GRAND RAPIDS. Lansing.
Detroit, Pontiac and/Flint he ex
horted all the “little people" of the
U. S. to register and vote in the
November 2 election.
If a heavy vote turns out, he In
sisted, not only will he be re-elected,
but the Republican majority in con
gress will be replaced by a Demo
cratic one.
"IF YOU STAY home next No
vember and keep these reaction
aries in power, you will deserve
every blow you get and you can
expect a barrage of body blows,"
said Mr. Truman. This was a repeti
tion of an idea—that “you’ll get
what you deserve”—which he had
expressed earlier in the year and
which, at the time, was received
with some animosity by the people
to whom he addressed it.
"You can elect a reactionary ad
ministration and go into an era of
fear, or you can elect a congress
and an administration that stand
ready to play fair with every elem
ent of American life and enter an
era of new hope. We’re in a hard,
tough fight against shrewd, rich op
ponents. They don’t count on your
vote; they just don’t want you to
vote.”
Judging from his Labor Day
speeches. President Truman is
planning to shape his campaign
around these contentions:
1. THAT THE MAIN issue boUs
down to Republican special privi
leges as against Democratic con
cern for the little man.
2. THAT THE “DO-NOTHING
80th congress, under GOP control,
has done nothing to justify its re-
election.
3. THAT ANYTHING EXCEPT
an all-out vote by labor on election
day “would be a betrayal by la
bor of its own interests.”
4. THAT IF THE MASS of the
nation's voters go to the polls on
election day a Democratic victory
is assured.
Stassen
Just a step and a half behind Mr.
Truman came Harold E. Stassen,
striving valiantly to scatter the
coals of the bonfire the President
had kindled in Detroit.
Apparently blessed by Thomas E.
Dewey. GOP presidential candidate,
Stassen’s speech in the motor city
was billed as the official kickoff of
the Republican campaign.
Employment Record
The U. S. rounded the turn from
summer to autumn with its civilian
employment at the highest fevel in
the history of the nation.
Approximately 61.5 million work
ers are employed, while the unem
ployed number only 2,227,000 as
compared to more than 12 million
during the gloomy depression years
of thr early 1930s. Personal pros
perity ^iow depends, however, on
the impact of infiation.
STASSEN SPARED no words in
taking President Truman to task,
referring to him as a “complain
ing" failure who had resorted to
“demagogic appeals" in seeking re-
election.
Specifically, he charged that Mr.
Truman had “dishonored labor
with an extreme demagogic appeal
to set clas$ against class.”.
In thus resorting to the time-hon
ored political device of attacking
and reproaching the opponent from
a personal standpoint, Stassen had
gone Mr. Truman one better. In
his Detroit addresses the President
did not even mention Thomas
Dewey.
THE DEFEATED GOP aspirant
for the party’s nomination declared
that Mr. Truman had come not to
laud labor for its record, but “as a
complaining candidate for election
seeking labor’s vote.”
“His scolding, threatening, com
plaining speeches" indicated that
he lacks the leadership “in affairs
at home and abroad so vitally need
ed in these next crucial years.” said
Stassen.
“He failed when he had a Demo
cratic congress to work with.
“He failed when he had a Repub
lican congress to work with.”
TURNING TO THE poliUcal foot
ball which the election year has
made of the issue of Communist
activities in the U. S., Stassen as
serted that the Republican party
is “driving the red herring out of
the official waters of the Potomac”
by means of congressional inquiries
into the Communist problem.
“Too many red herrings have
been in Washington for too long a
time,” he blasted. ‘The President
should help man the red herring
nets instead of complaining against
the fishermen.”
BERLIN:
More Trouble
i There was, it appeared, no end
to the Russian-sponsored trouble in
Berlin, and it was having its grimly
detrimental effect on the fiber of
the peace.
Latest incident piled atop many
other instances of petty Soviet en
croachments, needed little more
than a small flame to turn into a
funeral pyre for what is left of
world harmony.
IT WAS A FLAGRANT invasion
of American offices in the Berlin
city hall by armed Russian-con
trolled police who kidnapped 19
western sector policemen who had
sought sanctuary in the building.
What the purpose of the raid was
never became quite clear. On the
surface it looked like pure terror
ization carried out as part of the
overall Soviet plan eventually to get
control of the entire German capi
tal.
AN AMERICAN protest by Col.
Frank Howley, American comman
dant in Berlin, was rejected blunt
ly by the Soviet commander, Maj.
Gen. Alexander Kotikov, who flatly
warned the U. S. officials “not to in
terfere in matters which don’t con
cern them."
Kotikov’s letter followed rejection
of French protests that demanded
the release of another 19 anti-Com-
munist western sector policemen
who were kidnaped by Soviet police
while traveling in a French convoy
under a Russian guarantee of safe
conduct.
In the face of these intolerable
developments, how could East-West
negotiations for a Berlin agreement
continue? Apparently they couldn’t,
except under almost impossible
strain.
SECRETARY OF STATE George
Marshall charged that the Berlin
city hall kidnapings were aimed,
at least in part, at disrupting the
talks by the four military gover
nors who were, ostensibly, seeking
the road to a settlement of the Ber
lin problem and the issue of uni
form currency.
Thus, it was easy to understand
why U. S. diplomatic authorities
were concerned with the possibil
ity of an early collapse of the for
mal negotiations. It was likely that
the Kremlin would be the first to
flash the red light.
CABINET;
Sil Vous Plait
They couldn’t find a government
in France. As a political situation
that appeared slightly ludicrous
from across the Atlantic, but
Frenchmen were becoming sorely
worried for fear that they had losf
the ability or power to govern them
selves.
AFTER PREMIER Andre Marie’s
cabinet fell. President Vincent Auri-
ol appointed Robert Schuman as
premier and gave him the usual
instructions to form a cabinet.
Schuman duly gathered together
an administrative body and then,
64 hours later, watched it fall apart
when he was defeated on a techni
cal proposal to postpone questioning
of the new cabinet by the national
assembly. In short, he failed to gel
the necessary vote of confidence.
Desperate by this time, President
Auriol then named Henri Queuille,
veteran Radical Socialist to suc
ceed Schuman.
WHAT QUEUILLE could do to
produce some kind of order put of
political confusion and economic
travail no one knew. He is 64 years
old, a little known political figure
in France and was a wartime as
sistant of Gen. Charles DeGaulle.
The situation pointed up the
alarmed belief, becoming more pre
dominant in France, that no indi
vidual or group can command the
working majority that will enable
him to govern the ration success
fully.
It is a paradox that th$ parties in
the moderate center of the political
scale in France can speak for less
than 25 per cent of the people. Gen
eral DeGaulle, on the right, com
mands 45 per cent of the vote, and
Communist groups hold another 30
per cent.
Although the past few weeks have
not been conducive to a coherent
examination of the political situa
tion in France, the principal trend
seems to be toward a return of Gen
eral DeGaulle and his right-wing
beliefs to power.
ANYTHING NEW
Bloomin' Sage
That sagebrush is mighty pretty
when it blooms purple, and the song
writers can’t be blamed for mak
ing something out of it.
But out West they hate that sage.
It swathes nearly 96 million west
ern acres in a tough, resistant
blanket, and ranchers and federal
range managers alike consider it
an almost complete nuisance.
THEY WANT TQ REPLACE the
whole 96 million acres with nutri
tious grasses for cattle and sheep.
Some of the sage would have to be
retained to prevent erosion, but
most of it could go.
They were talking about the prob
lem of eliminating sagebrush at the
annual meeting at Fort Collins,
Colo., of the American Society of
Agronomists and the Soil Science
society.
Despite efforts to control or eradi
cate it, the sage continues to spread
and probably covers a greater area
now than before the pioneer settlers
went West.
MOST HOPEFUL development la
the new brush-land plow, 10 of which
are being built for further trial.
Also, congress will be asked next
year to provide more money for
range reseeding and improvement.
About five million acres of west
ern range already have been re
seeded. These pastures almost in
variably carry more ^nutritious and
abundant food for cattle than the
original prairie, according to U. S.
forest service officials. Animals
make better gains on it.
IN THE LONG RUN that could
mean more and cheaper meat
Lip Service
First frothy by-product of the
fermentation of the 1948 presi
dential campaign is the “Dewey
duster," a false, Deweyesque
mustache to tickle the fancy of
stiff-upper-lip Republicans. Soon
to appear on store counters across
the nation, the gadget consists
of a bit of black chenille clipped
to the upper lip in true-blue GOF
style.
POLIO;
Mice Cured
Columbus university has an
nounced the development of a new
sulfa-type drug, called Darvisul,
that cures one kind of infantile
paralysis in mice and is also a suc
cessful preventive to the disease
in mice.
Despite extensive tests during the
past summer, it is still not known
whether the new drug will prove
effective against polio in human be
ings.
Nourishing Boxed Lunches Are Hard to Resist
(See recipes below)
Lunch Box Magic
WHILE THE YOUNGSTERS
struggle with readin’, writin' and
’rithmetic, mother frequently has
her problems with the lunch boxes
which she must fix for the family
that totes its own.
. The lunch box preparation is a
steady grind now that school has
started, and it’s
a wonder that
more women
don’t go into the
doldrums about it
more often. You
have to supply
nourishment plus
food appeal to
keep the family
happy with their
meals out of a box. so here are
ideas aplenty.
If you have several lunches to
prepare, have jara of filling ready.
All lunch box equipment can be
kept handy on a tray to that you
don’t have to scurry around for
waxed paper or a knife while you
try making sandwiches in the midst
of breakfast preparation and serv
ing.
Leave butter or spread out the
night before so that you can smooth
it on immediately. Fruits can be
washed, puddings made in advance,
and reliihes such as carrot and
cucumber sticks and pickles can
be wrapped in waxed paper ready
to tuck in the box in the morning.
• • •
BE KIND to the budget and make
the whole thing as simple as pos
sible by making several jara of fill
ing beforehand so they can be
slick :d on the sandwiches easily.
Here are several ideas tailored to
your needs.
Special Sandwich Filling
2 hard-cooked egga
1 can pimiento
1 small onion
4 stalks celery
Salt and pepper to taste
2 packages cream cheese
Chop eggs and pimiento fine. Put
onion and celery through food chop
per, then mix all ingredients with
cream cheese and season to taste.
Let stand 15 to 20 minutes or long
er before using. Thin to spreading
consistency with mayonnaise.
Beef-Tomato Filling
1 pint hot tomato pulp, strained
2 tablespoons qnlck tapioca
K pound grated cheese
V* pound dried beef, ground fine
Vi teaspoon pepper
Vi teaspoon mustard
Add tapioca to hot tomato and
cook over low fiame for 15 min
utes. Add cheese gradually and
cook slowly until melted. Rkmove
from heat, add beef and season
ings. Cool and' store.
Corned Beef Spread
4 ounces cooked corned beef
Vi cup minced sweet pickle
2 tablespoons mayonnaise
1 teaspoon prepared mustard
2 teaspoons minced onion
2 ounces sharp American cheese
Salt and pepper
Cut cheese into tiny pieces and
blend with mayoimaise. Add shred
ded corned beef and remaining in
gredients. These sandwiches can be
made up with sliced tomato and
lettuce, if desired.
Cheese-Bacon Spread
3 ounces cream cheese
3 ounces Old English cheese
Vi cup chopped, cooked bacon
Vi teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
Vi teaspoon horseradish
2 tablespoons milk
LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU
Baked Lamb Loaf
/ Broiled Peach Halves
with Mint Jelly
Baked Potatoes
Spinach with Cheese Sauce
Oatmeal Bread or Muffins
Baked Apples Beverage
Blend ingredients together thor
oughly and store until ready to use.
Liver Spread
Vi pound calves’ liver
1V4 teaspoons salt
2 enps boiling water
8 slices cooked bacen
Vi cap soared cream or salad
dressing
2 tablespoons prepared mustard
2 tablespoons minced onion
Dash of pepper
Simmer liver in salt and water
until tender. Cool and put through
fine blade on food chopper. Run
bacon through chopper. Mix all in
gredients, place in jars and chill
until used.
• • a
HERE ARE OTHER well-liked
fillings:
Frizzled dried beef browned with
onion in the skillet, then mixed with
cream cheese.
Peanut butter mixed with orange
marmalade.
Sliced cooked beef roast with chili
butter, made by mixing softened
butter with chili sauce to taste.
Chopped ham mixed with mayon
naise and shredded pineapple,
drained.
Grated American cheese mixed
with grated raw carrots, grated
raw onion and mayonnaise.
• • •
USE THESE TRICKS for the
lunch box when appetites fail, when
there’s an exam or some special
event.
Meat Pastries
(Makes 4)
1 cap pastry mix
1 cop ground leftover meat
V4 cap tomato soap
Roll out pastry one-eighth inch
thick. Cut into four squares. Place
a mound of
cooked meat on
each square. Top
with one table-
spoon of tomato
sauce. Fold pas-
) ^ ? try squares and
pinch edges together. Bake in a
hot (400 degree) oven about 20 min
utes or until browned. These can
be baked if you are making a hot
bread in the morning. They are
good even when cold and take the
place of sandwiches.
Lunch Box Eggs
2 hard-cooked eggs
1V4 inch slice liver sausage
1 ounce cream cheese
1 tablespoon milk
1 teaspoon prepared mustard
Remove shells from eggs and cut
in half lengthwise. Remove yolks
and mash. Mash liver sausage,
blend with cream cheese and milk
and egg yolks. Add mustard and
blend thoroughly. Refill, whites and
press eggs together. ,
Here are other sweets for packed
lunches: gingerbread topped with
lemon powdered sugar frosting: in
dividual upside down cake made in
a custard cup and left in the cup,
maple sugar candy, popcorn balls,
cookies or puddings.
Released by WNU Features.
LYNN SAYS:
Snacks Prove Popular
As Weather Cools
Toasted sandwiches are always
popular and t^ke but little time to
make with a regular toaster, grill
or skillet.
Hot toast can be spread with any
number of fillings kept on tap, and
served with pickles, relishes, po
tato chips, carrot sticks, cole slaw,
or munched with fresh fruit.
If you want a more nourishing
sandwich, dip it into a french toast
mixture and fry in the skillet.
Cream cheese mixed with pine
apple or orange marmalade, spread
on toast, is good when broiled until
bubbly.
Canned or cooked tongue, sliced
thin, can be spread with pickle
relish and toasted.
Salmon and tuna fish salad mix
tures make excellent toasted sand
wiches. Season the fish salad with
horseradish, mayonnaise and salt.
If you don’t want young fry or
Dad to raid the refrigerator, tack
up menus on the pantry shelf, tell,
ing what they can use.
New Unit Improves
Ventilation of Bam
Dairymen Find Device
Particularly Effective
Many of a cow’s troubles can be
traced to heat and humidity. A
cow, unlike a human being, can
perspire only through the mouth.
So when the temperature and hu
midity inside a bam get high, the
animal becomes uncomfortable and
stubborn, particularly at milking
time.
According to the department of
agriculture, an average cow gives
off almost a pint of water every
hour through breathing. In addi
tion to the high humidity caused
by this breathing, a cow has an
extremely high body temperature.
During the winter monthr, when
the cows are in the bam most of
the time, this combination results
in generation of an enormous
amount of water vapor and heat.
When the warm, moisture-laden air
comes in contact with the cold
walls, condensation occurs and
frost is formed.
The net result to farmers is rot
ting beams, joist and siding; a loss
of hay because of mold created by
moisture and frost; milk contami
nation, disease, particularly among
the young stock and reduction of
milk production because of discom
fort to cows.
A simple solution to all of these
costly problems is an automatic
cooling unit, which is proving pop
ular with dairy farmers.
These automatic ventilation units,
easily installed, reduce condensa-
Picture ou Vernon Julius farm
at Freeport, HI., shows Installa
tion of automatic cooling unit to
dairy bam.
tion to a negligible degree—less
than 2 per cent. This action, in
turn, decreases bam deterioration,
hay mold, milk contamination and
disease. It also provides much
more comfort for the cows and in
creases milk production. In addi
tion, working conditions for the
operator are much more pleasant
The cooling units are equipped
with an automatic “airswitch”
thermostat
Higher Yields Outweigh
Cattle Spraying Costs
An increase of $3.75 per head more
than covers the cost of spraying
beef cattle with DDT, it was re
vealed in a test of the value of fly
control conducted at the University
of Illinois college of agriculture.
Protected cattle gained about 15
pounds more per head during the
pasture season than a group that
had not been sprayed. At 25 cents
a pound, an increase of 15 pounds
a head amounts to $3.75 a head, a
return that far outweighs the cost
of spraying.
Beef cattle should be sprayed
often enough to control flies, whether
it requires two or three sprayings
during the season or once a month.
Herds and Flocks
Use of 2, 4-D sprays for weed con
trol in pastures is not dangerous to
grazing animals.
A home-mixed spray of crude
benzene hexachloride powder and
water is more likely to taint eggs
in poultry_houses than a good com
mercial roost paint containing the
effective portion of the same chem
ical. '
Poultry houses with light colored
roofs are cooler in summer than
those with roofs painted black.
To get water to hogs in distant
pasture where there is no water sup
ply, pipes can be laid on top of the
ground. To prevent freezing in
winter, disconnect and drain the
pipes.
Benzene Hexachloride
Will Check Hog Mange
If hogs stand around and mb in
stead of eating, they may have a
touch of mange. Benzene hexa
chloride has been found to be more
effective than lime sulphur. Ben
zene hexachloride should be applied
when temperatures are up around
75 degrees, 'using one pound of 50
per cent powder to four gallons of
water. It is important to see that
j the animal is completely covered.
1 including the inside of the ears.
Handy Tool Sawhorse
Serves Dual ( Purpose
I F YOU have had difficulty find
ing a convenient place in which
to store your carpentry tools,
you’ll be interested in this dual
purpose sawhorse. It contains a
cabinet large enough to hold all
the tools every homeowner needs.
It also contains a nail drawer that
can be divided into three or more
sections. Besides keeping your
tools all together fti one handy
place, you have the added conven
ience of having a sturdily built
sawhorse. This can be carried to
the job and the tools will be on
hand to do the work.
The full size pattern offered above
takes all the mystery out of building
this clever piece of equipment. Only
stock size lumber Is specified in the pur
chase list of materials. All lumber need
ed is now available at your local lumber
yard. To build this sawhorse, merely
cut each piece of wood to exact shapo
and size of the pattern. Wherever two
I iarts are fastened together, the exact
oration Is indicated on the pattern. Even
location of screws Is shown. No special
tools or skills are required to bulla this
tool chest
Be sure to ssve the usttern. Once you
have started to use this sawhorse you
will realize what a convenient piece of
equipment It is. Before long you’ll bo
making additional ones for your friends.
You’ll save money and have fun making
the articles of furniture and household
equipment you need from these full size
woodworking patterns. ^
Send 35 cents for Sawhorse Tool Chest
Pattern No. 44 to Easl-Blld Pattern Co,
Dept. W, Pleasantvtlle, N. Y.
Zunis Swallow Swords
Sword swallowing, well-known
Hindu practice, is a ritual also per
formed by the Zuni and other
southwestern Indians. To them,
swallowing a feather sword is a
sacred religious expression.
Since time immemorial the
sword-swallower’s dance has been
regarded by these Indians as just
as essential in raising successful
crops as soil preparation and irri
gation are to our way of farming.
A SOOTHING DRESSING
FUN FWl
DHDMC
DUNKS
■ IMC-
pun
FOLEY PILLS
Relieve
Backaches
due to
Sluggish Kidnsys
-or DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK
BEWITCHING EYES
Long, coplus curled eyelashes can bo
obtained with
ORETf C if E 4 11
Black, blue, brown, green and natural.
It is due to this cream of rlcinus and
aroma blooms the beautiful eyelashes
of the Cuban women. Instructions with
the product. It lasts over 6 months.
COUPON
Peres y del Mazo. P. O. Box #2188.
Havana, Cuba.
Enclosed money order for $1.50 for a
jar of GRETA CREAM, delivered at
this locality.
Color
Name
Street
City State
HIGH-SCHOOL GRADUATES!
NURSING
ISA PROUD
PROFESSION!
— many opportunities for graduates La
fine hospitals, public health, etc.
•—> leads to R. N.
— a well-prepared nurse need never be
without a job or an income.
— open to girls under 35, high-school
graduates and college girls.
ask for more information
at the hospital where yon
I would like to enter nursing.
»
V