The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, August 05, 1949, Image 6
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, S. C,
'MARRYING' ENGEL MAY BE FREED . . .
N. Y. Reds Didn't Register as Man and Wife
BY SUPREME COURT 5-4 DECISION
By H- I. PHILLIPS
The Garble Sisters
“What a lot of exciting news
there’s been lately! Alger Engel
marrying all those women! Judy
Palmer being found goilty of lying
about that typewriter! And the
attorney general suing the Yanks
to make them break up DiMaggio!”
“Yeah. And ain’t that Engel a
tioney? What’ll they do with him?”
“The government may have
to put back controls to stop
operations like that. He has a
good chance of getting free on
one of them supreme court
five to four elections. Look
what the court did in that lone
ly hearts case . . . they threw
• the case out because there was
no quorum present.”
“I wish the high courts would
agree on what is the law like the
T'k L L1 VuTCT \ TvTv SS VL'T
Seed for the Springtime
Y HEART was heavy with its load of care:
So much to do, so many clamoring
needs!
I quit my task and walked out where the air
Was clean and sweet to cull my garden seeds.
Seed for the springtime! Hope was in the sound.
And gladness lifts through every singing word.
I gathered the shaken seed from stem and ground.
And quite distinct .were the clear words that I
heard:
"I will not leave you comfortless ...” This pod.
Dark as it seems, will someday blaze with light.
"Except a grain of wheat falls to the ground ..
Here is the golden cosmos, here the white:
Seed for the springtime—seed for a new dawn.
That life and love and beauty may go on.
\I±
-J-S3S
low courts do. When a girl meets
a Russian agent in New York and
she is carrying a bag loaded with
secret papers from government
files why should it make any dif
ference whether she worked for the
Carnegie library and took a rug
from some auto dealer?”
“It’s like that trial of the eleven
Communists in New York. They all
deny they registered in Baltimore
as man and wife and say that
when they were arrested on that
bus they were just getting material
for a novel.”
• • •
“I can’t see why President Tru
man named Perle Mesta to that
supreme court vacancy anyhow
when Wagner stepped out with
Justices Palmer, Murphy, Musial
and Waitkus dissenting.’’
“It was all on account of the
Taft-Hartkins law.”
“Where does that stand now?”
“The part requiring anybody
to answer yes or no has been
cut out but everything else is
left in, including the agenda
which lets both sides bring
their own referee and puts the
coal miners on a three day
week.”
• * •
Ima Dodo says he read the ver
dict in the case but couldn't find
out whether Judy Coplon retained
the custody of the microphone.
• * «
The writer of this column
does not claim to be the sev
enth son of a seventh son, but
the following chapter from a
book by him, “Private Purk-
ey’s Private Peace” (the orig
inal and much more apt title
was “Peace, Wearing Purple
Tights”), published a few
weeks after World War II
ended, revealed distinct pow
ers of prophecy. In the story.
Private Purkey and several
companions crashed a peace
conference in Paris, a feat
duplicated in a way by Garry
Davis a few weeks ago. And in
a chapter headed “Discord in
the Dovecotes” ye ed pictured
the collapse of peace hopes,
the friction between the great
powers, etc. thusly:
Months have now elapsed since
the peace. And except for the lack
of actual gunfire and bloodshed
there seemed to be as much fight
ing going on between the nations
as ever. A Hollywood movie czar
had in fact put in a bid for pictures
of the peace conference thinking
he was bidding for fight pictures.
Representatives of Russia, France,
England and the other nations on
our side—brothers all—were stand
ing toe to toe in many arenas, no
punches barred, and not even
bothering to go to a neutral corner
after knockdowns.
There were rumors that Anthony
Eden had come out of a council
meeting with the “Shiner of the
Year," that an American peace
conferee had been seen rolling on
the floor with a Russian brother,
and that Big Three meetings were
being opened with demonstrations
in jiu-jitsu. The spirit of mutual
distrust was rampant.
The assorted peace committees
and sub-committees were giving
evidences of heading for the rocks
and discord, and some of them
were less inclined to try dynamite
than to upholster the rocks for
comfort. Tossing in the heavy seas
of conflicting interests in small
boats, they seemed at times bent
on attempting to cure seasickness
by resolution and plug up leaks by
amendment.
They were good men, kindly and
well meaning, in these postwar
world huddles, but they were in
one of the hot spots of history, and
it made them jumpy.
• • •
“There is no need for any busi
nessman to seek assistance from
any five-percenter to do business
in Washington.”—President Tru
man.
Wanna bet?
• • •
A committee of New York
theatrical producers proposes that
box-office men and theater treas
urers be licensed to handle all
ticket sales. Suspensions could
then be made, we take it, for ex
ceeding the greed limit.
BY INEZ GERHARD
R UTH HUSSEY may some day
get the kind of roles she de
serves in pictures; until then she’ll
probably continue to do her best
work on the stage. Her new pic
ture is Paramount’s “The Great
Gatsby”; her current play, “Good
bye My Fancy,” in which she has
the role created by Madeleine
Carroll. She has moved her fam-
RUTH HUSSEY
fly—husband, two small boys and
q dog—to New York for its dura
tion. Lunching with three mem
bers of the press, she could hard
ly get in a word until they finished
telling her, at length, how won
derful she had been in “State t>f
the Union,” and how much they
hope that Hollywood will soon do
right by her.
That same day Betty Field
lunched at an adjoining table. She
and Miss Hussey hadn’t seen each
other since they worked together
In “Gatsby,” in which Miss Field
and Alan Ladd star. MacDonald
Carey and Barry Sullivan are
featured.
Off-stage atmosphere: Two
deputies of the Hollywood sher
iff’s office stood guard for two
days over the machine gun
used in RKO’s “Follow Me
Quietly.” The law demands
that such guns be constantly
under the eye of a law enforce
ment officer while in use in a
picture, and that it be in the
hands of an officer of the law
between tr k?s. No unscheduled
shooting allowed!
Jay Livingston and Ray Evans,
who wrote “Buttons and Bows”
for Bob Hope’s “The Paleface,”
have done such a good job on
“Fancy Pants,” .written for his
“When Men Are Men,” that he
thought that would be a good title
for the picture. However, the other
title sticks. Meanwhile Evans and
Livingston, authors of "To Each
His Own” and other hits, are
writing a second song for him.
The
Fiction *
Corner
THE RIGHT LOOK
By
Richard H. Wilkinson
T RACY clawed his way up over
the slippery ledge, threw his skis
and poles on the ground and sat
down panting. Generva laughed
merrily.
“That’s what city life does
to y o u," she
chided. “S e e?
You can’t take
it any more.”
“For a fact
I can’t,” h e
grinned. “Phew! What a climb!
Skis are no good up here. If we're
going to the top we’ll have to hob
nail it up.”
“We can quit and go down,” she
said. Her voice held the barest hint
of a taunt. She hated herself for it.
“Quit nothing! Just because I’ve
been away for two years you needn’t
think you can stump me." Tracy’s
eyes flicked over the girl’s slim,
wiry figure. "Boy, you always could
take it,” he admired. “Ever since
we were kids I’ve had to hump to
keep up with you.”
The reference to their childhood
escapades brought on a flood of re
grets.
Two years ago he had left
her with a brotherly clap on the
back and a firm handclasp. She
had almost hated him. He had
gone down to the city to become
an architect. Then he’d written
about Jessica. She was a sing
er in a night club. He had fall
en madly in love with her. His
letters had been full of their
romance.
Generva had wanted to tell him
to stop writing his everlasting prat
tle about a silly night club singer.
Didn't he know that every word was
a knife thrust in her heart?
“You know,” he said suddenly,
"you’re growing more lovely every
year, Gen. Some day soon a man’s
coming along and—”
She laughed out loud and
scrambled to her feet. “Come on.
City Man, we’ve got to get going
if we want to make the top and get
back before dark.”
Tracy grinned and yanked him
self up the first steep ascent. Before
he had gone 10 feet he realized that
it was a foolhardy business. With
out ice picks and ropes climbing
was hazardous.
He started ahead again and then
stopped. Above him, maybe 30 feet
away, he could make out the blurred
form of Generva.
The blurred outline stopped. He
listened for her reply, but if she
called the wind drowned it. For an
instant her hobnailed boots were
clawing against the ice. Then she
came coasting down the incline,
reaching frantically for bushes that
slid through her hands. Tracy
made a lunge. His hand caught at
her ski jacket as she whipped past,
held, felt it slip through his fingers.
A strangled cry escaped his lips.
Horror-stricken, he watched her
reach the ledge and flip over its
edge, disappear. In a moment he
was back on the flat ground looking
over the edge, not daring to hope.
Fifty feet below he made out a
green patch, like a wisp of cloth
caught in the gnarled branches of a
hardwood shrub.
I T SEEMED like hours before he
found footing against a rock 10
feet from where Generva clung to
the hardwood shrub. Directly be
neath her was a 200-foot chasm.
Tracy slipped the handle of
one pole through the wheel of
the other, tightened the strap
on his wrist and cast out across
the ice. At his second attempt
Generva grasped the slim bam
boo.
“Take it easy,” he called. “You’ll
have to swing down like a pendu
lum, then slowly upward.”
She nodded and released her
grip. The impact of her 112 pounds
almost caused him to lose his grip.
But he held on. The moment she
was below him he began pulling
upward, hand over hand. In a mo
ment their hands touched and she
was safe on the rock.
Tracy’s hand reached for hers.
There was a queer light in his
eyes. “It just came to me,” he said,
"what this old world would be like
without you, Gen. I mean—” he
gulped—“I never realized it before.
Her eyes were misty. “Darling,
you don’t have to. I’ve been wait
ing for you to look like that for 10
years.”
1
CCU!
On DII77IC tAST WKKS
J
5j¥V
HU IullLL answer 9
ACROSS
1. Garret
6. Species of
grass
11. Bog
12. Fertile spot
in the desert
13. Girl’s
name
14. Wayside
tavern
16. Noah's boat
17. Sour
substances
19. Wooden
pegs
22. Stick
together
26. Weight
(Turk.)
27. A panacea
28. Landed
estate
(Eng.)
31. Entertain
32. Most distant
point
34. Winter
month
(abbr.)
35. Surveyed,
with a
miner’s
compass
36. For fear
that
37. Finished
39. Sack
42. Norse god
43. Fuel
46. Fiber-
producing
plant
48. People of
Ireland
50. Greek poet
51. Silly
(colloq.)
DOWN
1. Wine
receptacle
Kind
of cap
Attempt
. Part of
“to be"
Stylish
Boat used
on Venetian
canals
Sun god
King of
Judah
Russian
village
Question
City (Fr.)
Like
A thin
piece
of wood
used to -
raise a part
19. One of a
wandering
tribe
20. Giraffe-like
mammal
(Afr.)
21. City (It.)
23. Trickle
out
24. Lifts
25. Upright
29. Eye
30. Come in
again
33. Whirlpool
36. Lord
(abbr.)
38. Goddess of
discord
39. Exclama
tion
40. Past
Answer to Puzzle No. «
41. Herd of
whales
43. Cheat (var.)
44. Viper
45. Timid
47. Norse
god
49. Radium
(sym.)
* ★ ★ *
HOVStHOlO
memos...hjf,.
Serve Juicy ’Burgers on your Picnic!
(Set Recipes Below)
Picnic Plans
W HEN YOU PLAN an outing,
good food that will please
everyone has to be part of the pic
nic plan. In addition to this, have
a "packable” lunch that you can
carry in a shopping bag, string
sack, bandana or hamper.
The less preparation you have at
the picnic grounds where everyone
will be famish
ing, the better
will be the
lunch. If you
want to cook the
hamburgers or
ribs or frank
furters on un
outdoor grill,
that’s all to the good, since this
whets appetite to a tantalizing
sharpness. However, if you have to
wash fruits and vegetables, and
pare or scrape them when you get
there, this may seem like some
thing of a chore. These are things
that can be done much more easily
at home.
...
H SAVORY, well-seasoned meat
** should be the main interest of
the lunch, however. For some this
may be old-fashioned picnic
’burgers, roasted frankfurters or
barbecued ribs. These are easy to
serve on buns which can be pur
chased ready made, and then
simply split and buttered and even
toasted while the meat cooks.
Picnic ’Burgers
(Makes 12 ’Burgers)
V* cup chopped onion
2 tablespoons fat
1 pound ground beef
!4 pound ground veal
W pound ground pork
1 teaspoon salt
% teaspoon pepper
2 tablespoons soy sauce
% teaspoon dry mustard
1 dozen hamburger buns
Brown onion in fat in a large
skillet. Add meats, salt, pepper,
soy sauce and dry mustard. Cook
over low heat for 45 minutes, stir
ring occasionally. Split hamburger
buns and fill with meat mixture.
Top with picnic sauce:
1 cup tomato sauce, catsup or
chill sauce
M cup cider vinegar
6 tablespoons sugar
K cup chopped onion
% teaspoon cayenne pepper
Y* cup chopped green olives
2 teaspoons Worcestershire
sauce —
Mix all ingredients together in a
saucepan and cook gently over low
heat for one-half hour, stirring oc
casionally. This makes two cups of
sauce.
Is it barbecued ribs that you like
on your picnic? Here’s a delicious
and easy way
to prepare
them: cook the
ribs in a pres
sure saucepan
at home to
speed the pro
cess and * then
finish in the
oven or at the picnic grounds in a
skillet, basting them with the
sauce.
*Barbecued Spareribs
(Serves 5-6)
3 pounds spareribs, cut in
pieces
1H teaspoons salt
Y* cup water
LYNN SAYS:
Fresh Air Chefs
Need Tips
If you are burning charcoal,
start the fire an hour ahead of
cooking time. For coal, allow one
and one-half to two hours. Use
enough fuel to build a thick bed of
coals.
Getting fancy with the picnic
table? Use windprooi decorations
such as a tray of the fruit for des
sert, or low flower arrangements
set under a glass or plastic cake
cover.
LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU
•Barbecued Spareribs
Boiled New Potatoes
Buttered Broccoli
•Summer Cabbage Slaw
Bread and Butter
Sliced Peaches with Cream
•Butterscotch Bars
Beverage
•Recipe Given
*4 cup catsup
Yi cup light molasses
1 teaspoon Worcestershire
sauce
1 small onion, chopped
Arrange ribs in pressure sauce
pan; add salt and water. Cook at
10 pounds pressure for 25 minutes..
Remove and place in a shallow
roasting pan or skillet. Combine
remaining ingredients and bring to
a boil. Pour over the ribs and baste
with sauce. If baking, cook for 30
minutes. If using the skillet, cook
for 35 - 40 minutes.
• • •
Hashed Potatoes
(Serves 6)
8 potatoes, cooked in jackets
4 tablespoons butter
1% teaspoons salt
% teaspoon pepper
1 cup light cream or top milk
Peel and dice potatoes and cook
in butter until slightly browned.
Add seasonings. About five minutes
before serving, add the cream and
heat thoroughly.
Summer Cabbage Slaw
(Serves 6)
3 ripe tomatoes, diced
1H cups finely shredded cab
bage
1 cup sliced green onions
% teaspoon salt
% teaspoon pepper
5 tablespoons light cream
1H tablespoons vinegar
Lettuce
Combine ill vegetables in salad
bowl. Add seasonings. Blend to
gether cream and vinegar and
pour over salad. Toss lightly and
serve on lettuce.
• • *
A THOROUGHLY CHILLED
watermelon makes delicious
picnic. How
ever, any of
these other
fruits, washed
and well chilled
before being
wrapped, are
excellent for a
eating at a
dessert choice: peaches, pears,
apricots, cherries or other berries,
grapes or melons.
One or two kinds of cookies make
an appetizing accompaniment for
the fruit. You’ll like either this.
Butterscotch Bars
(Makes 3 dozen)
% cup butter
2 cups brown sugar
2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla
1H cups sifted flour
2 tearoo'—s baking powder
1 cup chopped nuts
Melt butter in a heavy sauce
pan. Add sugar and bring to a
boil over low heat, stirring con
stantly. Cool. Add eggs, one at a
time, beating thoroughly. Stir in
vanilla, then flour which has been
sifted with baking powder. Fold in
nuts. Pour into a greased and
floured 7x9 inch pan and bake in a
moderate (350°) oven for 30 - 35
minutes. Cool, then cut in bars.
When broiling meat on an out
door grill, trim off excess fat and
snip the edges so the pieces of meat
won’t curl. Let the fire bum down
to red coals, then set a grill three
to five inches above the coals and
start broiling meat before flames
die down.
When using a skillet on an outside
grill,' set it about 5 inches above
the coals.
If you are using sauces for the
meat, keep down the fat amount
and use more catsup or chili sauce.
The fat sputters!
NEEDLEWORK PATTERNS
Crochet a Pretty New Bedspread
Filet for Chair Set or Buffet
Stained-Glass Motif
A HANDSOME chocheted bed
spread with a stained-glass
motif in the center of the seven-
inch square — solidly crocheted
corner sections are combined to
create bedroom charm.
To obtain complete crocheting instruc
tions for the Crocheted Bedspread (Pat
tern No. 5808)
Send 20 cents in coin, your name,
address and pattern number.
Floral Design
F ILET is one of the easiest <
loveliest forms of crochet
and works up quickly. ' T
charming floral design makes a
nice chair set, or it can double as
a dining room buffet set.
Pattern No. 5935 consists of mat
requirements, stitch illustrations,
diagrams in easy-to-read dot and ■
and finishing direction.
Send 20 cents in coin, your
address and pattern number.
SEWING CIRCLE NEEDLEWORK
5SO Sooth Wells St. Chloago 7, HL
Enclose 20 cents for pattern.
No.
Address
T 1 ”
CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS & INVEST. OPPOR.
FOR SALE—Completely equipped motor
court and restaurant. Court has 8 cabins
■with 5 room cottage for owner. Restau
rant serving average 200 people daily.
Enjoying one of best reputations between
Atlanta and Macon. Propane Gas System
throughout. 5 acres of land one mi. N.
of Jackson, Ga. on State Hwy. 42. $18,000
down will handle. Balance monthly pay
ment. Glidewell Motor Court, Jackson,
Gm.
FOR SALE
COMMERCIAL HOTEL
Only modern commercial hotel, 27 rooms,
county seat Georgia, pop. 3000, mostly
white, located important corner in com
mercial section. Intersection two'heaviest
traveled highways of State. Center of
large agricultural district. Ground floor
occupied by modern restaurant, drug
store and three smaller stores. Price $90,-
000. See your banker or real estate
broker. Commission 5%. P. O. Box 1678,
New Orleans, La..
DOGS, CATS, PETS, ETC.
RAISE HAMSTERS: Clean, odorless, big
profits, large demand from breeders,
laboratories and Pet Shops. Also ideal
for agriculture or 4-H projects. Free
illustrated information. Gleenwood Hara-
stery, 309 Glenwood St., Mobile, Ala.
ENGLISH SETTERS ~
Ch. Stud’s service, puppies & youngsters.
Get your bird dog now.
ELTHCEAM KENNELS
Rt. 8. Box 478, Tampa, Fla. 38-2501.
" * \
FARM MACHINERY & EQUIP.
FOR SALE—1 new Holland hay baler,
practically new. G. H. Overton, P. O.
Box 709, Athens, Ga. Phone 3406 J. I.
1—W. C. Allis Chalmers Tractor. 1-8 disk
Athens bog harrow. 1-Turner sawmill
complete with edger. 58 h.p. Minneapolis
motor. Ail in good shape. Price $2,100.
Edward R. Grizzle, Route 1, Royston, Ga.
Near Sandy Cross.
CATERPILLAR—Diesel D-13000 Power
Unit for sale. 125 h.p. A-l condition.
W. R. Brittan, Sumter, S. C. Phono
1117-W.
FARMS AND RANCHES
DAIRY—Rent or sell Riverside Dairy,
Sycamore, Ala., 4 houses, barns, equip
ment pastures. Good location, plenty
water. Mayfield Britton, Talladega, Ala.
HELP WANTED—MEN
WANTED — A pharmacist at Western
State Hospital, Bolivar, Tenn. Attractive
position for man wanting to work only
a few hours per day. Nominal salary plus
full maintenance for man and wife. Con-
tact Dr, E. L. Baker, Supt.
HELP WANTED—MEN, WOMEN
White Teachers Wanted—Library, Jour
nalism, Spanish, Commercial, Home Ec.,
Art, Music, Girl’s PE, Math., Science,
1500 grade teachers. Vacancies in 13 west
ern states. Boulder Teachers Exchange,
Bonlder, Colorado.
CANDOR High School. Candor, N. C.
Open field in piano, voice, and high
school band organization. Possible 35
piano students or more. Private subscrip
tion and school studio.
INSTRUCTION
LEARN BEAUTY CULTURE—A paying
S rofession. positions plentiful and wait-
ig. Florida’s Beauty College, Jackson-
vifle, Florida.
MISCELLANEOUS
$1.25 PREMIUM FREE, One lady each
Neighborhood. Write
G. A. COOK, 23 East 5th Street.
Jacksonville, Florida.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
YOUR CHILDREN
Need to learn to play
some musical Instru
ment to help them
make a success of fifo.
Write for our list of bargains,
mentioning what kind of instru*
ment you need and you will
save money. Terms eas^. Used
pianos as low as $95, and new
Spinet pianos, $495.
•
• E. E. FORBES A SONS
PIANO CO., INC.
Birmingham, Ala.
Branches: Anniston, Deeatur, Gads
den, Florence and Montgomery*
REAL ESTATE—HOUSES
FOR SALE—About 1-acre on hi-wav jet
41 and 27—with 8-room dwelling and new
concrete block, 2-car garage with 2k
utility rooms, superb business corner,
west of Williston “on top of the hilPY
inside city limits. See—Angus M. Smith,
Box 152, Williston. Fla. Ph. 6402.
REAL ESTATE—MISC.
FOR SALE: Beautiful Camp Skylark in
cluding cabins, guest house and cottages
in mountain Lake Osceola. Boating, fish
ing, swimming. Close to city. Desirable
for church organizations or schools.
Money maker. P. O. Box 1178. Headersen-
vlllo, N.C.
TRAVEL
OSCEOLA LAKE INN. HENDERSON
VILLE, N. C. In the Blue Ridge Moun
tains. Private beach and dock—free use
of boats, fishing, bathing—all sports and
activities. Finest Jewish - American
Cuisine, Reasonable Rate.
healing SPRINGS HOTEL, Grumpier.
N.C. Ashe County, near Blue Ridge Park
way. Hotel and Cottage accommodations.
Famous healthful mineral spring. Coun
try Ham and Fried Chicken specialties.
Rates $6.00 per day including 3 meals.
FOR YOUR VACATION
SEA DUNES MOTEL COTTAGES #• the
Ocean, JUNO BEACH, FLA.
(Where Surf and Sun Meets U.S. one)
Ten Miles North of West Palm Beach
Both Overnight and Housekeeping Units
Informal—Private Beach—Surf Fishing
Reasonable summer rates—Restful
Reservations Desirable
Mail Addr.: RFD, Riviera Beach, Fla*
Mr. A Mrs. Carl Letsch, Owners A Mgrs.
Keep Posted on Valuos
By Readinc the ads
WNU—7
31—48
A SOOTH/M DRESS/MG,
MOROLINE
PETROLEUM JELLY
Gefd TurSo-JeMtenel
tio&meosnmanh^np
ak&u- "Mem H/w&*Mooe£S
Yes, » wing of genuine aluminum metal
inside every PEP package! Body of plane
printed in color on outside of package. Put
’em together ...ZOOM! Directions on
package. Set of 6. Collect ’em—swap ’em!
Urge Mom to buy Kellogg’s PEP today.
Start enjoying enspy, delicious flakes of
whole wheat. Get MODEL JET PLANE
WITH THE PACKAGE! Hurry!