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■* THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, S. C. GARBLE GIRLS DISCUSS WORLD AFFAIRS . . . So It Was Mickey Rooney Lost That Uranium! . . . AND FIND ITS ALL VERY CONFUSING By H. I. PHILLIPS THE GARBLE GIRLS ... “Do you think they’ll pin any thing on Mickey Rooney for losing that bottle of uranium in that fight with Scott Lucas over American aid to the Taft-Hartley act?" “It's an even bet. Mickey had no business giving that jug to Mrs. HVhittaker in the first place, even for the honorary degree. By the way, what do you think of Mar- gareto’ Vickers marrying the Ago Lilienthal?” “Yon mean the Aly Acbeson, don’t you?” "Oh yeah. I read so many papers so fast. I can understand it in the Aly’s case because he is a Moslem but she is supposed to be a strict ’Pdtures> OraceNpliOroweJl j UT of the noise and clamor of the town I have come down To this green pafture land where sheep Graze in the golden light. Where shadows creep As deliberately as they across the grass. The slow hours pass. And I am one with the rhythm and the rhyme Of this Still land, this quiet time; Even my hurrying heart has Stayed its pace Within this quiet place. Time is nothing here—the sun, the moon. Come neither late nor soon; There is no change in the ways of sheep. They have kept Step with the ages, hurrying not at all. And no relentless call Bids them keep Appointment with the hours. If I could Say Day after day Here in this clean green land, perhaps I, too. Could be more true To the movement of the years; could inarch with time Until the far sublime Music of the spheres Would reach my ears. And I could keep the tempo my life through That sheep and shepherds do. 5 vegetarian and there is no evidence that when she got on that bus with the top secret documents he got on at the same time, anyhow." * “I don’t see why Martha Brien got so excited about it.” “She didn’t think either of ’em should have fled the country as stowaways.” * “Did you read where Judy Hick- enlooper admits having kept all those Columbia library books?” “Yeah, but they’ll never convict Hickenhiss of anything, even in an extra session. It was a mistake to give either of them free scholar ships.” “I get awful depressed the way things are going. Truman is too late to save Hong Kong, I’m afraid, even with Stan Musial and Johnny Mize offer ing to do it with 230 planes. Bob Porterfield and Harry Bre- cheen ain’t doing so well with that Atlantic pact, either.” “What’s the Atlantic pact?” “It’s the one to keep anybody on our side jumping to the Mexican league without a passport and loyalty test.” m “Do you think the country’s fac ing a big slump?” “You never can tell so early in the season. The standing on Fourth of July is what counts. I think con gress should vote for economy like ex-president Olympia recom mended in the Capot report to General Symington.” “How are things going over there with the Big Six in Paris?” “Ernie Durocher is causing trouble and they’re still cross- examining Lee Shubert, but I think everybody will get pensions at the age of 45 before they get through, unless Vishinsky gets back into the lineup.” “What’s the matter with him?” “He’s got a spur in his left heel.” • “What’re you doin’ for fun these days?” By IftEZ GERHARD D AN DURYEA (real name) has made his reputation on stage and screen as a h e e L He has slapped Joan Bennett, Lizabeth Scott and Yvonne De Carlo. In “Manhandled,” his latest film for Paramount, he twice delivers a short right to Dorothy Lamour’s chin. As an actor no one can be slicker or slimier. In real life he's one of the nicest guys you could ask to meet, devoted to his wife and two young sons, active in PTA DAN DURYEA And with the Boy and Cub scouts. He played a cur on the stage in “Missouri Legend," which set him for a similar role in “The Little Foxes” on stage and screen. In some 25 pictures he has given such excellent performances that some one’s description, "a heel with sex appeal,” will probably type him forever. If Alexander Knox doesn’t like his role in “The Judge Steps Out” it will be his own fault; he col laborated on the screen play. A reporter for 12 years before taking to the stage, he starts his 10th year in films with this one. Ben Johnson, star of “Mighty Joe Young,” was the favorite stunt man of Gary Cooper, Errol Flynn, Johnny Weismul ler and most of Hollywood’s oilier male stars before John Ford and Merian Cooper dis covered him in “Fort Apache.” He was doing stunts for the picture on location at Monu ment Valley, Utah — now he’s starring In titeir new picture. In one of the biggest deals in radio history ABC has arranged with Ted Collins for a new series of shows, “Kate Smith’s Music Room.” Kara and Collins will play records, discuss songs and com posers and present nationally known guest stars. Said to be a $5,000,000 deal. The show will run from 9 to 11 p. m. beginning July ^ 4, but will not affect Kate’s two MBS shows. “Oh. I go to the races and base ball and the movies. I loved Spen cer Tracy in The Peter Pan Handi cap. And that pennant race between the Dodgers and Potsdam was a thriller. I thought for a time that Old Rockport would win.” • Mary Margaret at Stadium The Yankee stadium was hired the other day for an anniversary party thrown for Mary Margaret McBride, famous radio star. More than 42,000 people attended. That’s more than half the rival Yankee baseball clubs draw. * It was a sensational affair and Miss McBride scored standing up. It wasn’t necessary for her to slide, although it would have pleased the fans no end. • And if she had had to slide she could have done it. Mary (Happy) McBride has the base ball spirit. She can hit and field. No position is beyond her. If you take note of the countless commercials the lady has delivered for dinner-table edibles you have to admit no body has been more versatile "behind the plate” over so long a period. • Mary is in her way a pitcher, too. She has never had to be yanked off the mound in her career with the NBC club. Her greatest asset is her control. There is almost no wind up in her delivery. Smoothness marks her style. • Mary has a “chuckle ball,” also, that is the talk of the league and her “nonchalant curve” is a wonder. She can fan ’em all with either. • The lady is a good all-around player, too. Shortstop taxes her, but every other position is duck- soup—and she will name the brand of ^nok soup and tell you where to get it. The Fiction MISTER GILL By Richard H. Wilkinson Corner A T FIRST Mr. Otis Gill had seemed to take a liking to young Arthur Forbes. But he changed his opinion when the Champion began to buck the choppy seas of the open Atlantic. She was not a large liner, and the waves were running high. Arthur Forbes turned away suddenly and, clutching the deck rail for sup port shaped an unsteady course for the companionway. Mr. Gill burst into guffaws of laughter. “SeasickI” he said, addressing a young couple nearby and nodding toward the companionw a y. 3 'Minute “Should have Fiction sta j yed , ?\ om , e and tended to his knitting.” The young couple smiled politely but with a lack of enthusiasm. Neither of them felt equal to the task of getting up and following on young Arthur Forbes’ heels. The dining salon was located be neath the forward deck; Mr. Gill’s table was at the extreme end, near that section where the vessel’s bow began to narrow. He had hardly seated himself when he saw that young Arthur Forbes was placed two tables away and slightly be hind. There was a plate of food on the table before the youth, but it was untouched. Like one in a trance Mr. Forbes was sitting with eyes widened greatly beyond their normal size, cheeks as pale as death. After a time Mr. Gill saw that the youth at the other table was staring toward a port-hole, and his grin broad ened. The port-hole was lo cated far forward, and with each dip of the vessel one could see the entire slope of a wave, from trough to crest. Then for a space there would be nothing but open sky. It provided a sensation similar to riding on a roller coaster. Mr. Gill knew that as long as young Forbes continued to stare through the port-hole his seasick ness would steadily grow worse. And he chuckled at the thought. After a while Mr. Gill found it was easier to stare straight ahead than to sit half-turned in his chair in order to watch young Forbes, who, after all, wasn’t the most pleasing sight in the world. And in staring straight ahead Mr. Gill found that he was looking directly through the porthole at the swish ing seas. H E WATCHED idly for a few mo ments and then looked away, conscious of a feeling in his stom ach not wholly normaL The sen sation passed and he looked again at the port-hole, feeling more com fortable in this position. Instantly the same strange sensation at tacked him again. Mr. Gill was sober now; his face pale; his eyes glassy. Realization of what was happening to him came like a shock. He was seasick! Helplessly, miserably ill. Never in his life could Mr. Gill remember feeling so utterly at the mercy of anything. Miraculously Mr. Gill reached the doorway and dis appeared up the stairs. Instant ly the dining salon was a bed lam of laughter. Up toward the bow young Arthur Forbes was wiping some white substance from his cheeks and grinning broadly. Several men came over and spoke. “I’ll change your order, sir. Bring you some hot food.” Mr. Forbes smiled. “Thanks. And say, steward, that was a smart idea of yours—asking me to play the role of the helplessly seasick passenger and placing GUI at that table directly opposite the port hole.” The steward nodded, eyes a- twinkle. “We have a man like Mr. Gill on board every voyage, sir. And we have that table placed there for just his type. No one else is asked to sit so far forward.” Mr. Forbes chuckled. “Think of everything for the comfort of your passengers, eh? WeU, if you didn’t I’m afraid this voyage would have proved almost intolerable—with GUI talking the way he was.” CROnriD EM LAST WEEKS ANSWER p ACROSS 1. Strong, sharp flavor 5. Spotted 9. Affirm 10. Measure of land 11. Degrade 12. An owner of an estate (Scot) 14. Man's nickname 15. Little child 17. Biblical name 18. Primary color 20. Caps 23. Neuter pronoun 24. Bone (anat.) 26. Pleasantest 28. Art of drawing with pastels 31. Medieval dagger 32. Music note 33. Mountain (abbr.) 34. An aromatic perennial herb 36. Epoch 39. A long, bench-like seat 41. Weep con vulsively 43. Sloth 44. Pry •47. Drawoff, as water 49. A knot 50. Precious metal 51. Sums u k 52. Fenale sheep DOWN 1. Piece of furniture 2. Topaz hum ming-bird 3. A bird’s home 4. Vast 5. Chum 6. River (So. Am.) 7. One of the Great Lakes 8. Member of a Moslem order 11. River (Switz.) 13. A little song 16. Perils 19. A puppet toy 21. Russian village 22. Mark of a wound 25. Scrutinize 27. Fencing sword 28. Lives temporar ily, as in a tent 29. Organ of sensation (zool.) 30. Tuber (So. Am.) 35. To jump aside 37. Sudden attacks 38. Hebrew letter □QQO □□□□ oaaa aaaa □□□□□ □□□am Answer to Paulo No. 4 40. Forest 42. Forehead 45. Strange 46. Foot like organ 48. Malt beverage i 2. 3 4 5 4 7 8 '1 9 IO p H '///. 14 ‘3 14 /svs 14 1 • 7 •8 19 /SY^ 20 Z» ZZ Y/y< 2i ' /// //ss 24 25 V// y/fr 24 27 26 29 So Wr 32 p P u i 34 35 5ft 37 33 39 4o m 1 4) 42 YZY< 43 44- 45 4^ I 47 48 49 1 50 1 i 51 52 /// MIRROR Of Your MIND Should Weigh Dad's Dislike By Lawrence Gould 41 Per Cent of Land In U. S. in Herbage Grass Top Resource, Cattlemen Assert Grass is one of the greatest re sources of this nation. In the United States there are approximately 779 million acres of land which wiU grow nothing but hay, grass and other herbage unfit for hu man consumption. This great acreage represents 41 per cent of the total land of the nation. About 9 per cent of the lands In the United States are plowable but are used also to pro duce pasture, hay or forage crops. It can be concluded, therefore, that about 50 per cent of the United States would not be used if it were not for meat animals. L Crop Rotation Good Pasture Increases Dairy Herd Production With 2.5 million fewer cows on farms now than in 1945, possibilities for profit in dairying are greater if labor-saving, high value pasture is the center of the production pro gram. Good pasture can increase milk output and cut production costs. That means a bigger profit margin. Getting bigger pasture yields is a matter of feeding the soil plant nutrients so it can feed legume grass mixtures. Should you marry a girl Answer: This might largely de- 1 pend on how the girl feels about her father, since your greatest danger in this situation is that her remorse at having married some one whom he disliked might in time have the effect of “turning her against you.” But most fath ers do not relish the idea of giving up their daughters and may take out their resentment on any man one of them wants to marry. If this is the situation, you can only go ahead on the assumption that “Dad” will eventually realize his daughter is a woman and entitled to her own life. This little fellow, obviously ■o well-started in life. Is sym bolical of what good pasturage can mean to cattle and just how much cattle depend on grass. In the United States there are approximately 779 million acres of land which can not grow anything but hay, grass and other herbage. Of the total feeds consumed by beef cattle 78.7 per cent is grass, hay and dry roughage. A minimum of grain is needed to bring feeder steers from 700 pounds to 1,000 pounds when the principal part of the ration is made up of hay, en silage or other roughage. The process of producing beef cattle normally involves the fol lowing steps: 1. The purebred operator who produces the sires and females which are the foundation of beef animal production. This branch of the cattle industry is one that re quires heavy investment and effi ciency in management. 2. The commercial breeder who produces the calves which are the offspring of commercial herds of female and purebred sires. 3. The pasture cattleman who grows the animal from the wean ing or yearling stage to two years old, taking his profit from the poundage gained on grass and hay. 4. The feeder who “finishes” the animal from grass stage to slaugh ter condition, disposing of a large percentage of roughage. Are normal children interested in sex? Answer: Of course, just as they are interested in all that goes on around them, especially if their parents make a mystery or secret of it. If you are worried over your child’s concern with this subject, read a new book, “The Normal Sex Interests of Children,” by Mrs. Frances B. Strain, whose father dislikes you? gives in simple language a true, scientifically-accurate picture of the natural development of a child’s sexual interests and feel ings, with sound advice as to how to handle real or supposed mis conduct. It’s a book I’ve wanted to see for years. Does anyone want to be neurotic? Answer, Yes. At bottom then can be no other reason for devel oping a neurosis. But because thi person does not know what he ii doing and cannot help doing it, ti blame him is as unfair as it is use less. A neurotic symptom—a pho bia, for example—represents the only way of getting satisfaction or avoiding danger the person can recognize with his emotions, what ever his “common sense” may tell him. And he’ll cling to it like the proverbial drowning man until he is helped to realize that the same goal can be attained by less pain ful methods. LOOKING AT RELIGION By DON MOORE Art UNIFIED BAPTIST CHURCH —■ -j/M 'JET THE 23 BAPTIST 1 QKX1PSINTHEU.& KANE AN AGGREGATE MEMBERSHIP OF ALMOST I5-MILU0H- M0R£ THAN ANT OHER PROTESTANT I£ NOMINATION IN THE COUNTRY. BATTLE'AXBS! rue OLPEST LIVING ORGANIZED RELIGION IN THE WORLD \S> HINDUISM-DATING FROM 1500 B.C. ’BATTUE AXES*WAS THE NAME OF AN EAITLV AMERICAN RELIGIOUS STOUT? THEY OBSERVED NO SABBATH FOR THE REASON THEV BELIEVED EVERY DAY SHOULD BE PERFECTLY PEUGIOUS/ KEEPING HEALTHY House Dust Often Causes Allergy Crop rotation with deep-rooted legumes, plant food and good man agement methods are the “gas, oil and lubricants” that keep your soil's crop producing machine go ing on high. Each of these has a job to do. Each needs help from the others. They all have to work like a team. Valuable as a good rotation is in balancing soil-building legume crops against soil-robbing row crops, it has to be backed up by wise land management methods. Cropping in even the best rotation drains the soil’s supply of phos phate and potash. And even if your good manage ment program puts back every scrap of barnyard manure, plows under the legumes and returns straw, com stalks and crop after- math to the soil, you still ship away hundreds of pounds of plant food in the grain, beef and milk yoq sell every year. By Dr. James W E ARE familiar with allergy in which the tissues of some individuals (15 to 20 per cent of the population) react differently than most of us to certain substances that float in the air, are eaten in food, or injected under the skin. We see it in forms of hay fever, asthma, head colds, stomach up sets, hives and other skin erup tions. Allergists, specialists in allergy, tell us that there are many sub stances causing allergy that are still unknown or not suspected. One of the commonest causes is ordi nary house dust, to which one or more of the family are allergic but blame their symptoms bn pollen or similar substances. Some years ago a magazine men tioned a case of allergy in which the father of the household, af flicted with asthma, traveled ahead of his family to locate a district where he would be free of asthma. Finding such a place, he would send for the family. Shortly after the family arrived, his asthma HEALTH NOTES While all foods are nourishing, the foods that should be eaten daily in the usual servings (the protec tive foods) are meat, eggs or fish, milk and dairy products and green vegetables. • * * If all of us were to visit our physician and dentist regularly, many of us would not be afflicted with chronic illness in old age, as (« so often the case. New Flowered Aprons Make Happy Working Harvard research workers found that eating more sugar in training and during the Boston marathon race enabled the runners to finish farther up in the race and in better condition when they finished, than during the race the previous year when these same runners did not take sugar. » • • Cancer is the subject of the great est research work in history. UN :* £~~\A/UL AY aprons for pretty maidens! A panel of flowers, a splash at morning glories with leaf-pocket-, less than two yards for both! These will create a sensation as sifts, as bazaar items! Pattern 703; embroidery transfer; cutting guide. Our new, improved pattern makes needlework so simple with its charts, photos, concise directions. Sewinf Circle Needleeraft Dept. 14 W. Randolph St., Chicago 80, OL Enclose 20 cents f6r pattern. No. Name — Address Planning for the Future? Buy U.S.. Savings Bonds! -/Hd to W. Barton again would afflict him. It was only after several such movings that it was learned that it was the fur of the beloved family cat that was causing the asthmatic attacks. While allergists have found some cases of allergy to be caused by street dust, it is more often sub stances in the air of the home that are to blame. Some of these sub stances are the children’s toys stuf fed with wool or cotton lint, insect sprays, heavy curtains, mattress fillings or feathers or cotton, cer tain cosmetic articles, the odors of perfumes, and powders, hair dyes, eyebrow and lip pencils. The thought, then, is that where the cause of the allergic symptoms is unknown, and the usual test for foods and pollen have been made, the dust in the home—particularly in the bedrooms (mattresses) and in setting rooms (stuffed chairs and sofas)—should be carefully tested by an allergist The cause of al lergic symptoms can be found in the majority of cases if diligent search is made. 0&NKS* Antiseptic Ointment AM For Bruises, Burns, Cuts, For helpful antiseptic aid iA relieving the pain and discomfort of externally caused minor skin Irritations usd abra sions, superficial eats, minor snrfaco burns, sunburn and bruises, use Grays Ointment as directed. Medicated to ding. MCIAIC thaf nukesfolkr ■^twwO sleepaH night!.< Thousands now sleep undisturbed because of the news that their being awakened night after, m w fsswmicsv osiiva a sJUMty M potent Foley Pills must benefit you within 24 hours or DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK. Make 24-hour test. 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