THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, S. C.
WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS
Big Business Flayed in T-H Row;
Unemployment Increases in U.S.;
Soviets to Keep Prepared for War
EDITOR'S NOTE: When opinions are expressed in these columns, they are those ot
restern Newspaper Union's news analysts and not necessarily of this newspaper.)
BIO BUSINESS HEARD ON T-H LAW . . . Charles E. Wilson (right)
president of General Electric, testifies at Senate labor committee
hearing on Taft-Hartley bill. With him, at left. Is L. R. Bool ware,
rice-president of General Electric. Their conclusions: The law is a
“good law with wise safeguards in labor-management relations.” That
labor thought otherwise is shown by the placard Wilson holds.
LABOR LAW:
Trouble, Trouble'
In the field of liberal—or, as some
would term it, even “left wing”—
Republicanism, the OOP’s Sen.
Wayne Morse of Oregon was con
ceding nothing to no man.
THE SENATOR was vocally and
vociferously hurt. The defense of
the Taft-HarUey law by “big busi
ness” was giving the senator no rest
and he meant to let everyone know
about it
With little originality but much
vigor, the senator was crying that
the attitude of many defenders of
the Taft-Hartley law was a “Judas
betrayal of the capitalistic system.”
IN A SUDDEN onslaught against
many of the business men who have
appeared before the committee in
defense of the measure, the senator
declared their attitude is “shocking
. . . selfish . . . class-conscious . . .
un-Christian."
In contrast, he praised Senator
Taft (R., Ohio) whose name the law
bears, for his “fair-minded objec
tivity” in considering testimony on
the “shortcomings” of the act.
Morse declared he and Taft are
“much nearer together on the need
for a law less drastic against labor”
than they were in 1947 when the act
was passed.
MEANWHILE, sentiment was
growing among congressional ob
servers that with every day of delay
on legislative consideration of Taft-
Hartley law repeal, there increased
the probability of labor’s failing to
get as many of the law provisions
outlawed as they might hope to do.
A major battle was shaping up on
the proposal, with many legislators
evidencing a dawning conviction
that perhaps it would not be wise to
scrap the Taft-Hartley law in its
entirety and replace it with some
version of the Wagner act.
JOBLESS:
3 Million Out
At present count the number of
jobless in the United States stood
at three million.
However, according to the ex
perts, there was no cause for im
mediate concern. Commissioner
Ewan Clague of the federal bureau
of labor said the time to become
alarmed would be when the un
employed total reached five mil
lion and stayed there.
Would it reach five million?
THAT WAS A POINT on which
the experts disagreed.
Those who were loudest in point
ing to the possibility of a depres
sion pointed out that in just three
months the jobless total had jumped
firom 1.8 million to the present
three million. That was a rate of
acceleration which, they claimed,
should cause everyone to be
alarmed.
Time was an element, Com
missioner Clague contended. Wait,
he said, until the March and April
begins to revive the construction
business and Easter trade and then
“we’ll be able to tell better just
where we’re going.”
The federal official noted there
was a drop of 1.75 million workers
in non-agricultural jobs between
mid-December and mid-January.
Part of this was seasonal, he said,
GETTING HOT IN FLORIDA •
Fraternity Man Chooses
Mind Over Gastronomies
Culture had won a minor
triumph.
At Ann Arbor, Mich., Paul H.
Smith, University of Michigan
Junior, was about to have at it
with a hog for eating capacity
honors.
Thinking better of the idea, he
changed his mind.
Reason, it appears, had raised
its awesome head.
Smith declared that, on second
thought, it occurred to him that
the contest might be a “reflec
tion” on himself and his frater
nity.
Fraternity men from high
above Cayuga’s waters to the
Rose Bowl breathed easier, buck
led anew to their academic tasks.
but the overall decline was greater
than normal.
SIGNIFICANT was a report of
Robert G. Goodwin, director of the
bureau of employment security,
who said that the number of people
receiving jobless benefits increased
by 62,000 to a total of 1,784,000 dur
ing the week ending February 12.
In the same week in 1948, there
were 1,030,000 such claims.
Employment or its lack has al
ways been a major factor of indi
cation in an evaluation of the na
tion’s economic condition because
of the simple fact that in past re
cessions general unemployment has
always preceded periods of national
depression.
RUSSIANS:
Big War Talk
The Russians must keep prepared
for war.
That was the message of Soviet
Marshal Nikolai A. Bulganin, Sov
iet minister of armed forces, in a
statement in an order of the day
marking the 31st anniversary of
the Red army.
The Marshal named the possible
enemy—the Upjted States.
Bulganin added that the “ruling
circles of the United States which
seek to establish their world domi
nation by force pursue a policy of
aggression and of unleashing a new
war.”
The language was strong, even
for the Russians. Was jt the begin
ning of a campaign by the Soviets
to prepare the mass Russian mind
for conflict?
It could be. Bulganin played on
fears and prejudices which might
well lay the groundwork for calling
the Soviet people into war. Intima
ting the possibility of attack, he
assured the Russians that the
“Soviet people may rest assured
our army, air force and navy will
vigilantly stand guard over their
socialist homeland.”
THE UNITED STATES was the
only western power singled out by
the marshal in his order of the day.
But there was a naive element
of braggadocio in all the anniver
sary statements. It seemed Lt.
Gen. S. S. Shatilov, deputy chief
director of the political board of
the armed services, was trying to
“whistle past the graveyard” when
he stated that in its early days the
Soviet army had “routed the hordes
of 14 powers.
DEATH SPRAY:
Nazis Had It
Out of Mountain View, Calif.,
came one of the most chilling,
awesome post-war tales of what
might have been in World War U.
It was about a “death spray”—
a spray so fatal that if a spot of
it the size of a dime lay on a per
son's skin, that person was doomed.
THE SPRAY was described as
being potent enough to knock out
whole divisions of men in exposed
positions.
A dime-sized spot, unless wiped
off quickly, would kill a man in two
minutes. It would penetrate ordi
nary clothing and some types of
gas masks.
Authorities for these statements
were U. S. army engineers who
destroyed 125,000 tons of the spray
where it was stored in carefully
hidden caves in Bavaria.
Maj. James M. Graham of the
engineer corps said the Germans
called the chemical “tabun,” a
combination of the scientists who
invented it. According to Major
Graham, who had charge of the
disposal of the chemical, “tabun”
was t? military secret until about
six months ago when some informa
tion concerning it leaked out to the
American public. One thousand
tons were spared from destruction
and shipped tq the army proving
grounds at Aberdeen, Maryland.
THE MAJOR said the stuff is
nearly odorless that a person has
to know exactly what he is smell
ing before he can detect it with
his nose. It has a faint fruity
flavor and looks like crankcase
oil.
Then the Major said something
that would add no comfort to those
who fear a war with Russia. He
said that the scientists who de
veloped “tabun” were in Berlin
when the Russians took over and
probably became subject to Soviet
controL
Speculation was that it was not
used by the Germans because of
a reluctance to engage in chemical
warfare for a lack of knowledge
of what weapons in this field might
be possessed by the Allies.
OLIVER TWIST:
Fagin Is Issue
Intelligent Jews would draw little
consolation from the violent acts
of their fellow men in multi-torn
Berlin.
With the world on tenterhooks
over the possibility of a third world
war and with the issue of Palestine
not yet completely settled as it af
fects the Jews, a mob of Berlin
Jews saw fit to demonstrate over
the showing of a British-made film.
THE FILM was “Oliver Twist,”
a story familiar to almost every
English-speaking schoolboy and, ap
parently, familiar to a great many
Jews as well.
The Berlin Jews, it seemed,
couldn’t stomach the Dickens crea
tion, Fagin, one of the major char
acters in the story. Fagin, depicted
as a Jew, is an unlovely character
who teaches children to steal for
him and accords them brutal treat
ment.
The charge that the film was
“anti-Semitic" was hurled by the
Jewish demonstratorsi Their demon
stration was effective. It resulted
in temporary withdrawal of the film.
German police hospitalized some of
the rioters, but said they could not
continue to protect the theatre.
THE ENTIRE AFFAIR provided
a disturbing spectacle. Berlin, sup
posed to be the proving ground of
the ability of nations to work to
gether, has become, instead, the
malodorous corpse of that concep
tion.
People Are Funny
No Crystal Ball Needed
To Tell Needs of Soil
Tests Will Give Farmer
Answer to Question
You don’t need a crystal ball to
tell you whether your soil needs
A soil test will give you the yes
or no answer. Where a deficiency
exists, a test will indicate how
much lime your soil needs. County
agricultural agents, vocational agri
cultural teachers or agronomists at
state colleges and experiment sta
tions are glad to cooperate in
making such tests.
Testing is always the safest
course hi applying lime. Some soils
have plenty lime. Adding more
might be harmful rather than help
ful to crop production.
To soils that need it, lime is the
keystone of any well-planned soil
I building program. Lime adds needed
calcium. Lime boosts the efficiency
] -if fertilizers. It neutralizes acid
soils and makes possible the growth
| of sweet clover and alfalfa. These
deep-rooted legumes add precious
organic matter to the soil.
But lime by itself cannot do the
whole soil building job. It has to be
supported by the generous use of
phosphate and potash fertilizers, by
plowing under deep-rooted legumes,
by the return to the soil of all
possible animal manure and crop
residues.
Plowinq Under Organic
Matter Aids Oxidization
Plowing under some organic
matter in the field or garden is a
good way of disposing of crop resi
dues because the microbes “burn”
or oxidize them.
They do this slowly, yet the pro
cess of microbial combustion of
such materials may have disastrous
effects on a crop planted soon after
plowing, in which case it is said the
crop was “burned out.”
Microbes need more than energy
“go” foods. They need the “grow”
foods, too, just as humans do. They
do not demand that the nitrogen be
given them in the complete proteins
or the more complex compounds of
this element as humans do; never
theless, they are just as exacting in
their needs for nitrogen, at least, in
its simpler forms.
Dr. William A. Albrecht, chairman
of the department of soils, Univer
sity of Missouri college of agricul
ture, in discussing how soil microbes
get their food, points out that they
get it before growing crops get
theirs.
$732 Turkey
Governor Warren Runs 'Bookies' Ragged
All was not sunshine and soft
breezes in Florida. It was hot
enough but at this writing there had
been nothing to call off the heat
imposed by Gov. Fuller Warren’s
edict against bookies. “Bookies” to
the initiate are those who take race
bone bets off the tracks, usually in
rear rooms of public establishments
—in more sumptuous instances in
thsir own establishments.
B appeared the governor's crack
down was going to stick. The book
ies “went underground” and it was
reported that a telegraphic news
service supplying results of horse
races had suspended.
Most reports emanating from the
state were to the effect that bookies
were out of work except for a few
trying to do a small business by
runners and telephones. The out
look didn’t appear toe rosy.
And, people are funny, in many
of the things they do. This
woman, Charlotte Kierstein, 23,
on probation for a check swindle
verdict, conldn’t keep a job. Sus
picions employers fired her 14
times. Then, jailed at her own re
quest, her story hit the papers
and now she’s been deluged with
jobs. Her past will make no dif
ference.
A-BOMBS:
Whom To Tell?
Government officials were being
frank, but futile. They said they
hadn’t figured out how to tell Ameri
cans ways in which to protect them
selves from A-bombs without letting
the whole world in on the "know
how.”
Their dilemma, A-bomb officials
said, is how to disseminate this in
formation at home and keep it at
home. No defense plans exist, for
area defense.
Elwood Swanson of Turlock,
Calif., with his grand champion
turkeys at the Far West turkey
show. The 24-lb. hen on the left
was grand champion and sold
for $30.50 a pound. The 41-lb. tom
on the right was reserve grand
champion and sold for $10.75 a
pound. The birds were finished
on a grain and mash ration to
which pelletized milk product was
added.
SCRIPTURE: Mark 5; 6:31-44; Luke
7:18-23; 19:1-10.
DEVOTIONAL READING: Matthew
25:34-46.
God's Signature
Lesson for March 13, 1949
HOUSEHOLD
fill
Livestock Sanitation Gets
Credit for Avian TB Curb
Professor F. E. Mussehl of the
University of Nebraska poultry hus
bandry department credits the work
of the U. S. livestock sanitation as
sociation with doing much to re- ,
duce losses from avian tuberculosis.
The livestock sanitation group
comes into the picture, be explains,
because avian tuberculosis was
quite often found responsible for
condemnation of hogs. Swine reten
tions for tuberculosis are lower.
I N A STRANGE city you may sud
denly need to be identified. Some
suspicious clerk wants to know if
your signature is genuine. It is a
fair- challenge, for
too many liars are
in circulation. Je
sus himself had to
furnish identifi
cation. No less a
person than his old
friend John the
Baptizer had grown
uneasy. Are you
the One we are
looking for.” he in- Dr , Foreman
quired, “or shall
we look for some one else?” Jesus’
answer to John was not to discuss
the theology of the Incarnation, or
anything of that sort. He just went
about his usual day’s work.
In the course of that day he cured
a good many sick people, and
preached to some very poor people.
“Nodr go back,” he said, “go back
and tell John what you have seen
and heard.” What those men saw
that day was what Jesus at another
time called the “finger of God,” the
genuine ^vine signature.
Jesus wrote no book, no let
ters even; he wrote in action,
and his acts were the handwrit
ing of God. It is important to
see where Jesus underscored
that writing. It Is true, his heal
ings were what we call mira
cles. But Jesus did not even
mention that feature.
What he asked John to notice was
simply this: the blind see, the lame
walk; lepers are cured, the deaf
hear, the dead are raised, and (as
a climax!) the poor hear good news.
The signature of God. in short, is
not sheer power; it is using what
power one has, to help people in
trouble. That was the sort of per
son Jesus was.
* • •
Not By Bread Alone
T HE EXPRESSION, “needy peo
ple,” nowadays suggests people
who haven’t enough to eat or wear.
Jesus helped such persons; but he
knew well that men’s needs go be
yond well-cared-for bodies. There
was the poor man from the grave
yard, for example,—he was happy
enough. He didn’t want clothes,
and he was strong enough to steal
all the food he could eat. All he
wanted, in fact, was to be let alone.
But Jesus knew that what he need
ed above all was a sane mind, a
mind no longer run over and tramp
led by a regiment of devils.
When Jesus got through with him
he was clothed, but that was not
the best part of it. He was in his
right mind. So God’s signature is
not only written in a sound body, it
is in the sound rnlnd. Again, at Jer
icho when Jesus invited himself to
dinner with that pint-sized tycoon,
Zacchaeus, Jesus did not go just
for the meal. He went because he
knew that Zacchaeus needed some
thing.^
We do know that after dinner
Zacchaeus was a changed man.
He was going to give back every
dishonest penny, with interest;
and since he could not locate
every one he had cheated, he
was going to give away half of
his holdings for the benefit of
the poor.
What Jericho needed was a new
administration, an honest one; they
needed slum clearance; and Zac
chaeus was going to give it to them.
But first of all Zacchaeus had need
ed a new heart—and Jesus gave
him that. Again it was the gen
uine signature of God.
• * •
We Too
A LL AROUND us is a troubled
world. Some men, seeing it.
Infer there is no God. Others con
clude that if there is one, he must
be bad or weak. The truth is that
the signature of God is not to be
found in the evil and the confusion
of the world. It is to be seen wher
ever freedom is standing against
slavery, wherever truth is pushing
back ignorance, where diseased bod
ies are being healed, where sanity
replaces madness.
More people would believe in
God if they could see more
of the handwriting of God. Do
you want to help?
We cannot always do things as
simply as Jesus did. Curing the
diseased is not for us a simple mat
ter of saying, Be well. A Christian
woman, distressed by what she had
learned of the plight of the insane
in her backward state, was asking
the head of the state hospital (him
self a church officer), “What can
we Christians do?” “Get behind
the legislature,” he said.
(Copyright by the International Coun
cil of Religious Education on behalf of
40 Protestant denominations. Released
by WNU Features.)
Outdoor Fireplace
Is Easy to Build
Oven
THERE IS NOTHING more warm
ing to cold spirits than to come
from the chilly
\ t / out - of - doors in-
» to a kitchen fra
grant with' the
baking of fruit
desserts. These,
served warm with
cream, make a
very special finish
to the ending of a meal.
Homemakers will appreciate be
ing able to use the oven for more
than just the main dish and vegeta
bles. When you bake your dessert
along with the meal, you save time
and last-minute preparation.
• • •
THIS SPECIAL rice pudding has
much- to offer since it’s combined
with tasty, apples and a delicate
butterscotch meringue as topping.
Apple Rice Pudding
(Serves 6-8)
cup uncooked .white rice
medium apples, thinly sliced
teaspoon salt
cup sugar
teaspoon cinnamon
cups milk
egg yolks w
egg whites, beaten
tablespoons brown sugar
teaspoon vanilla
Wash rice and cook in saucepan
With 1 quart boiling water and 1
teaspoon salt for 10 minutes; drain.
Place half the apple slices in a
buttered 2-quart casserole. Blend to
gether salt, sugar and cinnamon and
sprinkle % of (he mixture over
apples; add % of the rice and the
remainder of the apples and
sprinkle with second Vt of the sugar
mixture. Top
with remaining
\ rice and sugar
mixture. Pour in
milk which has
> been blended with
beaten egg yolks.
Cover and bake in
a slow oven
(300°f.) for about 2 nours, stirring
occasionally, adding extra milk as
needed. Uncover and cook, 30 min
utes longer to brown. To make mer
ingue for pudding: beat egg whites
until they peak; add brown sugar,
a tablespoon at a time, beating be
tween each addition and continue
beating until very stiff. Fold in
vanilla. Spread on pudding and re
turn to oven for 20 minutes or until
lightly browned. Cool. Serve with a
jug of cream.
• • *
LIKE THE ABOVE pudding, this
next one uses apples, too, and has a
buttery brown sugar topping with a
hint of spice:
’Raisin Apple Pudding
(Serves 10)
Batter:
Yi cup seeded raisins
2)4 cups sifted all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoons baking powder
% cup granulated sugar
5 tablespoons shortening
% cup milk
2 eggs
2 cups thinly sliced cooking
apples
Topping:
H cup melted butter or substi
tute
44 cup brown sugar (packed)
I teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon nutmeg
To make batter part, rinse raisins
and chop. Sift together flour, salt,
baking powder and sugar. Work in
shortening. Add milk and eggs,
beaten together, and mix well. Stir
in raisins -and apples. Pour into a
Serve Baked Puddings for Dessert!
(Set Recipes Below)
Magic
LYNN SA^S:
DeUghtful Salads
Please the Palate
Mix pistachio nuts with cream
cheese and form into balls. Serve
these on apricot halves and crisp
salad greens.
Small whole leates of spinach
toassed with a garlic-flavored
French dressing make a tangy
green salad for heavy dinners.
Pineapple spears spread with
cream cheese and garnished with
whole fresh strawberries are a
spring favorite.
LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU
Roast Leg of Veal
Baked Corn Pudding
Perfection Salad
Muffins Beverage
’Raisin Apple Pudding
•Recipe Given
well-greased baking pan (about
10V4x7x2 inches). To make topping,
blend all ingredients together and
spread mixture evenly over batter.
Bake in a moderately hot (375* f.)
oven 35 to 40 minutes. Serve warm
with plain or whipped cream.
• * •
PLAN TO SERVE your family
prunes frequently as they are eco
nomical, delicious
>and nutritious. A
good source of
ron which builds
ed blood, as well
jas^ an excellent
supply for thia-
in, vitamin A
a n f riboflavin
hich help safe-
'guard health,
prunes should find a welcome place
in menus.
Prune Bread Pudding
„ (Serves 6)
4 slices bread, buttered if de
sired
1 cup sliced, stewed prunes
2 eggs
•4 cup sugar
1% cup (1 can) evaporated milk
1 cup boiling water
14 teaspoon salt
Dash of nutmeg or allspice
Lay bread in a shallow baking
dish. Cover with prunes. Beat eggs
until foamy. Add V4 cup of the
sugar, milk, water salt and spice.
Pour custard over prunes. It should
be rather foamy to brown nicely.-
Bake in a slow (325° f.) oven until
set, about 1 hour. Remove from
oven. Sprinkle with remaining 14
cup sugar and set in a hot oven or
under broiler just long enough to
brown. Serve warm or cold.
• • * .
Peach Cheese Pie
(Serves 6-8)
Crumb Shell:
1 cup finely-rolled corn flake
crumbs
2 tablespoons granulated sugar
14 cup melted batter or sub
stitute
Filling:
1 tablespoon frlain gelatin
14 cup cold water
114 cups sliced canned cling
peaches
14 cup syrup from peaches
14 cup granulated sugar
2 eggs
14 cup lemon juice
1 teaspoon grated lemon rind
1 cup cottage cheese
14 teaspoon salt
Crumb Shell: Blend corn flake
crumbs and sugar. Add melted but
ter and mix well. Pack firmly into
bottom and sides of 8-inch pie pan.
Chill thoroughly.
Filling: Soften gelatin in C(/ld
water. Heat peaches, syrup and 14
cup sugar. Beat egg yolks slightly
and add gradually to heated mix
ture without stirring. Continue to
cook and stir until slightly thick
ened. Dissolve softened gelatin in
hot peach mixture. Blend In lemon
juice and rind. Cool. Force cottage
cheese Cirough sieve and add to
peach-gelatin mixture. Beat egg
whites until foamy, add salt and
beat stiff. Gradually add remaining
>4 cup sugar, beating after each ad-
uition. Fold into peach-gelatin mix
ture. Pour into crumb shell and
chill 3 to 4 hours before serving.
Chicken salad looks elegant when
garnished with apricots rolled in
toasted coconut, topped with whip
ped cream and a cherry.
Raw cauliflowerets tossed with
shredded raw carrots, blanched al
monds and lettuce hearts in mayon
naise are crisp and delicious.
Garnish individual salmon salads
with notched cucumber slices, mari
nated green beans, temato wedges.
Luncheon meat rolled with a fill
ing of finely shredded carrot mixed
with mayonnaise may be used witfc
any vegetable salad.
T-F YOU really want to enjoy
^ picnics in your own backyard,
build this fireplace. The Easi-
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step
Easy to understand, step
Instructions and clear assemb _
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can be purchased at any lumber
No special tools or previous
are needed.
ep by St .
nbly Ulustra-
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ard.
Send 25c for Pattern No. 73 to
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Constipated For 30
Years-But No More
*T suffered constipation over SO years
but got no help till I began to eat
Kellogg’S all-bran at every breadi-
fast. What a difference! I'm a ‘regu
lar’ now.”—A. C. Buethe, St. Cloud,
Minn.
If your diet
lacks bulk for nor
mal elimination,
this delicious
cereal will supply
it. Eat an ounce
every day in
milk—and drink
plenty of water.
If not satisfied
after 10 days, send empty carton to
Kellogg Co., Battle Creek, Mich.,
and get double youb money i
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CHEST
COLDSI
—^ tgUcvg cough*—■cfaim mmclt*
|| To keep them from los-
; ing interest in our town.
: Be generous with after
school and vacation jobs.
WNU—1
10-49
Watch Youk
Kidneys/
Help Them Cleanse the Blood
of Harmful Body Waste
Your kidney* are constantly* flltorfat
waste matter from the blood stream. Bat
kidneys sometimes lag in thsir work—do
not act as Nature intended—fail to ro»
move impurities that* if retained, may
poison the system and opest the whole
body machinery*
Symptom* may h* nagging bcckmeb*.
peralatant h«adacha, attacks of dlaslnom,
getting np nights, â– welling, pnWItiiM
under the eye*—a fooling of nervoon
anxiety and lorn of p*p and strength.
Other aigna of kidney or Madder din-
order ar* sometime* burning. —-ey or
too frequent urination.
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treatment I* wiser than neglocL Ug*
Doan’s PM*. Doan'* bav* b**n winning
new friends for more than forty years.
They have a nation-wide reputation.
Are recommended by grateful people thw
country over. Aik roar neighbort
Doans Pills