*â– '
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY. S. C.
ONE AUTO CLUB LAUNCHES CAMPAIGN ...
Some Drivers Act Late for Their Accidents
... AGAINST THE SAFE AND SANE DRIVER
By H. I. PHILLIPS
ALL DONE BY DAWDLERS
W ATCH OUT! You’re apt to get
hit by a careful automobile
operator, bub! You can never tell
what those drivers who are in no
hurry may do next. Whammo! I
knew it ... . another smashup
due to one of those scourges of the
highway, the cautious autoist!
The Automobile Club of New
York, through William J. Gott
lieb, its president, issues (with
a straight or nearly so, face)
a statement saying that dawd
ling drivers are a menace to
safety, and urging that some
thing be done about them.
“While it is commonly be
lieved that irresponsible, speed
ing, intoxicated or reckless
drivers cause most accidents,
many may be traced to those
who drive cars too slowly,’’
says the statement.
^ The Greater Love
sf THE sight of others' suffering hurts me so.
How can God bear it, he who knows so well
The innermost recesses of the heart
That hold the secrets tongues can never tell?
I wonder at it often as I see
Some child in pain, some aged one in distress—
When my heart aches with pity, how can God
Restrain a hand with power to heal and bless?
I question it, and then I know, I know!
I learn it in this school which I attend:
Whatever hurts us, hurts his great heart more;
Whatever else may fail, he is our friend.
He does not send our grief, or pain or loss,
But if we wait and trust him as we should,
I am quite certain his great love will turn
Ultimately, all things for our good.
GRACE NOLL CROWELL
“When these slow drivers move
out of the right-hand lane,” says
Mr. Gottlieb, "they create perils
for faster drivers.” (Ya don’t say!)
“This is utterly selfish and pro
vocative of accidents,” he adds.
(How about some traps for slow
drivers?)
• • •
However, “Anything to make the
highways safe?!” is our motto.
So let’s rush up the following cau
tion signs at once:
DRIVE FASTER
for
SAFETY’S
SAKE!
KEEP YOUR FOOT
ON THE
GAS!
IT SAVES LIVES
DON’T DAWDLE!
.SCHOOL
ZONE
AHEAD
• • •
Or perhaps a few reading
“SLOWPOKES CAUSE ACCI
DENTS,” “TAKING YOUR
TIME FORBIDDEN," “ARE
YOU DRIVING FOR PLEAS
URE? SHAME ON YOU” and
“DON’T RISK LIFE AND
LIMB BY PROCEEDING
WITH CAUTION.”
• • •
Of course, it is just possible the
auto club is looking for some pub
licity. Auto associations are like
that. But it is dangerous stuff
these dizzy days on the highways
to belittle the slow driver and
classify him with the drunk, the
roadhog and the speed maniac.
• • •
The dawdlers are mighty
few and you never hear of one
running over a child, crushing
a baby carriage on a crowded
sidewalk or going through a
drugstore window. And who are
those rough, tough, inconsider
ate schmoos who may be seen
tearing down our crowded high
ways at homicidal speed in
trailer trucks? Just dawdlers
out for a pleasant dawdle, eh?
• • •
(Note: At this point this article
had to be concluded. The writer
heard a terrific crash and rushed
out to see what had happened. He
found a truck, a bus and two sedans
full of picknickers in a tangled
mass. Well, that’s what comes oi
caution.)
• • •
Anne Notre, the Jersey gal,
who won that “Hollywood Call
ing” gets among other things
a trip abroad, an ermine coat,
a diamond ring, a sedan, two
poodles and a year’s supply of
dog food free ... That stirs
ye ed.
• • •
“There is no need for anyone tc
intervene between the businessman
and the government in procuring
government contracts. Let me
repeat, there is no need to have
any broker between the business
man and the government to do
business.”—Louis Johnson.
Well, we’d like to see some news
paper send a businessman to
Washington about doing business
with it and record his progress try.
ing to see the right man.
• • •
"Ignorance and uncertainty on
the part of the businessman as to
how he should proceed and whom
he should see have been the basic
causes for his succumbing to the
five percenters,” added Mr. John
son. Never was a truer word spok
en. And the bureaucratic red
tapers, whose chief delight is play
ing hard-to-find and whose motto
is “Never do anything in a half
hour that can be stretched over a
month,” would die rather than re
lieve the ignorance and uncertain,
ty.
YE GOTHAM BUGLE & BANNER
Tobacco Road reached London the
other night .... British stamina con
tinues to get a rigid test.... Western
Union reports a deficit of nearly four
million .... Those "Having a won
derful time; wish you were here?’ tele
grams must have been cut to "Arrived
Okay. Toots." . . . And nobody wants
a singing telegram unless it’s delivered
by Ezio Pinza .... Ginger Rogers is
divorcing her third husband . . ,
Love is like that.
The
1 IMPHItf ey
V II II UIL.JI. Richard H Wilkinson
Fiction ACTING 01
Corner
By INEZ GERHARD
M ARIE WILSON, in New York
to help publicize the hilarious
screen version of “My Friend Ir
ma,” was probably the most co
operative actress Paramount has
worked with in a lortg time. Also
one of the nicest. “I want to go on
making comedies,” she said, “But
with the radio ‘My Friend Irma’
going on, I won’t have to take just
anything that’s offered.” Pre-views
MARIE WILSON
of the picture have been so en
thusiastically received that a se
quel, “Irma Goes West,” is being
prepared, to be made with the
same cast. Three members of it.
Miss Wilson, Dean Martin and Jer
ry Lewis, the comedians, have been
signed for “That’s My Boy.” So
she’s back on the screen to stay.
More about the pretty Marie. Ar
riving on one of New York’s hottest
days, she posed on a load of ice for
news photographers. Her dog, a
true lens hound, promptly scram
bled up beside her and gazed into
the cameras.
If you have a Mark Wamow
Victor Record (No. 27868-BO) of
“The Music Goes Round and
Round” you may be able to get
$10 for it. Mark Goodson and Bill
Todman, producers of CBS’ “Spin
to Win,” use it as their theme song,
and they’ve worn their disc thin.
So they will pay that sum for the
first 10 records they receive—in
good condition, of course.
Tipsters and radio column
ists cannot cne listeners to the
"Kate Smith Calls” show about
the week’s Mystery Personali
ty. Each broadcast features a
new celebrity, and a contestant
must do some on - the - spot
guesswork.
Betty Hutton, whose “Red, Hot
and Blue” will be released before
the end of the year, will make
“Annie Get Your Gun” for MGM,
then will do “The Life of Theda
Bara” and another story based on
the life of Mack Sennett.
##TT’S ABOUT TIME.” said Uncle
Ralph, “that you, my dear
T
Constance, were married. You’re
nearly 25, which is the verge of the
ineligible age. Don’t let popularity
turn your head, my dear, it won’t
last forever.
One of these
days you’ll find
yourself seeking
a man, instead
of being sought
after. And that,” Uncle Ralph add
ed, “often means disaster.”
Connie Brigham wrinkled her
cute little tumed-up nose, closed
one eye and stared soberly at
Uncle Ralph with the other. Uncle
Ralph cleared his throat and began
to let his gaze wander about the
room. He felt guilty.
“Which,” said Connie, with the
slightest of twinkles, "is a polite
way of suggesting that I accept
Bob Merrill, and forget all about
Don Baxter. She stood up and ruf
fled Uncle Ralph’s hair, an act
which he resented delightfully. And
Connie went on: “Uncle Ralph, just
why is it that you dislike Don so
much? I think he’s fascinating.”
Uncle Ralph snorted. “Don
ald Baxter,” he said, “Is not
a fit young man to become the
husband of any girl. He’s
flighty, unreliable, impulsive,
. and out of a job. You never
can tell what he’s going to do
next.”
“He’s romantic,” said Connie.
“He’s after your money,” said
Uncle Ralph.
“And he’s so good looking,” said
Connie.
Uncle Ralph coughed. “On the
other hand. Bob Merrill is depend
able, honorable, manly, steady.
You can count upon him to make
you a good husband.”
‘That’s just the trouble,” said
Connie.
"What’s just the trouble?” said
Uncle Ralph.
“He’s steady and dependable. So
easy to read. Life with Bob would
be safe, yes, but it would also be
monotonous.”
Despite his outward jovialness
Uncle Ralph was worried,
while conversing with Connie.
I wish, thought Uncle Ralph, I
only wish something would happen
to open her eyes. Drat that Don
Baxter, you never could tell what
he’d do next
Two days later Uncle Ralph had
come no nearer to solving the prob
lem.
He had considered every
possible plan to make Connie
see the light, and discarded
them alL In the end he reluo-
tantly decided to interview Con
nie again.
W ITH THIS in mind Uncle Ralph
rose from the veranda chair
in which he was sitting, only to
see Connie coming slowly up the
walk. He sat down again, and
picked up his newspaper. Connie
came on, doleful and sorrowful of
expression. She sighted Uncle
Ralph, stopped and smiled whimsi
cally.
“I guess you were right,” she
said.
“About what?” asked Uncle
Ralph.
“Don.”
“Don? How was I right about
Don?”
“About never knowing what he’s
going to do next.”
“What’s he done, now?”
“He’s married. Decided to last
night about 6 o’clock. At 6:30 he
was a married man.”
“Oh, Hum,” said Uncle
Ralph. He was not one to gloat,
hence suppressed his delight
with a masterful effort. He
merely said mildly, “Well,
that’s that. Sort of turned out
like I said it would. Well, you’ll
be happier with Bob. He’s a
man in a million.”
Connie shook her head. “I can
never marry Bob, Uncle Ralph.
That’s what makes me feel so bad.”
“Tsck, tsck. That’s no way to
talk. You’ll get over Don soon
enough. Bet a thousand the girl he
married isn’t worth one-tenth of
you.”
“Yes,” said Connie, "she’s worth
all of me. I’m the girl Don mar
ried.”
SSWORD PUZZLE
LAST WEEK'S
ANSWER
ACROSS
1. Trust
5. Alms
box
9. American
Indian
10. A fuel
11. Boils
on
eyelids
12. Honorary
title
(Turk.)
14. Fasten
15. Slipped
16. Land-
measure
17. Close, as a
hawk’s eyes
19. Undivided
20. Paused
22. Scrutinize
23. Feminine
pronoun
24. Wild ox
(Tibet)
25. Set-tq
27. Kind of
pine trete
30. Sprite
31. Dwelling
32. Greek,
letter
33. Provide for
payment of
35. Little
girl
36. A drawing
room (Ft.)
37. Railway
station
39. Afternoon
receptions
40. An
astringent
material
4L Serf
(Anglo-
Saxon)
42. Tablets
DOWN
1. To go to
bed
2. Ireland
(poet.)
3. Falsehood
4. Affirmative
reply
5. Dismay
(var.)
6. Harvest
7. Clerical
dress (pi.)
8. Great
Olympian
deity
11. Mast
13. British
colony, SW
Arabia
15. Guided
17. Let it stand
(print.)
18. Ever
(poet.)
21. Mixes,
as cards
22. Auction
24. Sweet
potato
25. River
bottoms
26. A salt of
oleic acid
27. Youth
28. Proverbs
29. Fog
31. A merchant
guild
(Hist.)
34. Low-grade
sheep-skin
Answer to pnzzle No. 15
35. Potato
(dial.)
3?. Skip, as a
stone
over
water
38. Guido’s high
est note
PUZZLE No. 16
HOUSSUOID
mtmos. I
Have your Meat Tender, Delicious, Juicy
(See Recipes Below)
Meat Magic
•pHERE DOES SEEM to be a
* magical quality about meats
which are cooked to juicy, tender
perfection. How
ever, it’s not a
mystic magic
which all aspire
to, and few
achieve. If
there is a
secret, it’s
available to all.
It is no secret that you should
have a good cut of meat with which
to start, if you want to have a de
licious cut to set on the table. But
once you have a good cut, do cook
It properly instead of ruining it.
This latter statement may sound
a bit far-fetched, but every day
there are thousands of women who
go to a great deal of trouble find
ing a perfect roast, then cook it
like a pot roast which is practically
stewing it. Then, too, there are
other thousands who lose pounds
of meat by using old-fashioned
methods such as high temperature
for "browning” the meat. This is
not necessary because meat
cooked at constant low tempera
ture will brown enough to be at
tractive to the most discerning eye,
and will not shrink and lose juice
as well as waste meat.
If you have a covered roaster,
resolve right now to discard the
cover and invest in a rack for a
roast. A true roast is not, at any
point during roasting, cooked with
a cover. It should sit on a rack, fat
sidp up, at low to moderate tem
perature in the oven, to roast per
fectly.
How long should a roast be
cooked? The most accurate way of
determining this is to insert a meat
thermometer into the meat as you
place it in the oven, and when the
temperature has reached its proper
point the roast is done. Insert the
thermometer through the center,
as deep into the meat as possible.
You may figure out the time to
roast by pounds, but this is not
nearly so accurate, especially if
yeu are cooking roast beef to med
ium rare.
• • •
W HEN PROPERLY PREPARED
corned beef can be a real
delicacy. The meat is muscular,
and needs to be cooked long and
slowly for real tenderness, without
which it is not a delicacy by any
manner of means. Here’s a novel
way to prepare it:
Glazed Corned Beef
d-f pounds corned beef
% cup canned fruit juice
fi cup brown sugar
M whole cloves
Spiced peaches
Wash corned beef under running
tvater to remove all traces of brine.
Cover with cold water and bring
to a boil. Drain and replace water.
Simmer, slowly, in a covered ket
tle for 4V4 to 5 hours or until meat
can be pierced easily with a fork.
Add more water if necessary.
Drain meat and place on a rack
in a roaster. Pour fruit juice over
meat and sprinkle with brown
sugar. Stick with cloves. Bake in
a moderate oven (350°) for % hour.
Serve, garnished with spiced
peaches.
• • •
H ARD AS IT MAY BE for you to
try roasting meat at low
and constant temperature, if you’ve
followed other ways in the past.
LYNN SAYS:
Know Cooking Tricks
For Variety Meats
Seldom-used lamb liver takes on
creole style when it’s braised with
some chopped fresh or canned
tomatoes, green pepper and a dash
of curry powder. Add some crum
bled bacon for flavor.
Pre-cooked sweetbreads may be
.sauteed in butter with mushroom
^aps and served on top of toasted
triangles of bread with a strip of
bacon for an exciting luncheon
dish.
LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU
•Roast Leg of Lamb
Mint Jelly
Browned Potatoes
Cabbage Au Gratin
Cloverleaf Rolls
Butter and Jam
Grapefruit-Shredded Carrot
Salad
Beverage
Butterscotch Sundae
•Recipe Given
do give it a try. You’ll never go
back to the old way because the
roasts are so much more delicious
and juicy. Besides, who doesn’t
want to get all the edible meat
possible for their money?
Pork Roast with Spicy Sauce
(Serves 6)
Fresh picnic shoulder
Salt and pepper
2 small onions, minced
1 tablespoon Worcester
shire sauce
1 tablespoon sugar
H teaspoon paprika
H cup vinegar
% cup water
2 tablespoons catsup
Have picnic shoulder boned ana
rolled at the market. Season with
salt and pepper. Place fat side up
on rack in an
open roaster.
Roast in a mod-
erate oven
(350°) until
t h e r mometer
registers 185°,
or allow 40-45
minutes per pound. Combine all
remaining ingredients in a sauce
pan and cook for 5 minutes,
•Roast Leg of Lamb
(Serves 8-10)
1 leg of lamb (5 pounds)
1 teaspoon ginger
1 clove garlic, if desired
Sait and pepper
H cup grape jelly
H cup water
Wipe meat with damp cloth. Do
not remove fell, the thin, papery
covering over the meat. Make
four gashes in the roast and in
sert a piece of garlic clove in
each of them, if desired. Rub
ginger, salt and pepper into the
meat. Place in roaster on rack,
fat side up, and roast in a slow
(300°) oven until thermometer
registers 180° for well done lamb.
During the last 20 minutes of
cooking time, baste the meat with
grape juice which has been melted
in the hot water. Remove garlic
before serving.
Veal shoulder or breast may be
stuffed with the following to give
a very tasty
roast. In roast
ing veal, use a
slow oven (300°
to 325° and cook
until the ther
mometer regis
ters 175*, which is about 40 minutes
to the pound.
Raisin Stuffing
(For about 5 pound roast)
4 cups soft bread crumbs
% cup melted fat
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup seedless raisins
% teaspoon pepper
Combine all ingredients and stuff
lightly into meat, allowing room
for expansion. Or, place stuffing to
the side of the meat or in a casser
ole and baste with juices from
meat. If you cook stuffing sepa
rately, bake for 30 to 40 minutes.
Brains, after pre-cooking, make
a delicious dish when dipped in
seasoned flour, then browned in
fat and serve with creamy
scrambled eggs.
Hearts need v a lot of long slow
cooking to make them tender. Veal
hearts are especially good when
filled with prune stuffing, then
braised.
To shorten the cooking time for
heart, cut in in cubes and brown
in hot fat. Then fold into tomato
sauce used for spaghetti and bake
the. whole casserole for 30 minutes.
You Build It
Build Inexpensive Lawn Table
OTART a new life as a worker
with wood today. See how easy
you too can turn lumber into a
really comfortable set of lawn
furniture. The full size patterns
not only simplify construction in
a minimum of time but also pro
vide a purchase list of materials
that insures your buying only as
much material as is needed. All
materials patterns specify are
stock size and readily Available at
lumber yards everywhere. In
most lumber yards material for
two chairs can be bought for less
Cures Brain Tumors
Modem surgical methods have
changed the outlook for recovery
in cases of brain tumor, with com
plete cures quite common.
Gems of Thought
To the vulgar eye few things
are wonderful which are not
distant.—Carlyle.
• • •
Truth is such a precious ar
ticle, let us all economize its
use.
• • •
When in doubt, win the trick
« —HOYLE
than the cost of one chair pur
chased ready made.
• • •
Send 35c for Table Pattern No. 73 t»
Easi-Bild Pattern Company, Dept. W.,
PleasantviUe, N. Y.
Apply Black Leaf 40 to
roosts with bandy Cap
Brush. Fumes rise, killing
lice and feather mites,while
chickens perch. One ounce
treats 60 feet of roosts
—90 chickens. Directions
on package. Ask for Black
Leaf 40, the dependable
insecticide of many uses.
Tobacco Ir-Producta t Ctnarteal
Corporation • Richmond. VlrcMa
Yodora
checks
perspiration
odor
THE wav
Made with a )aee cream base. Yodora
is actually eoothmg to normal ahma.
No harsh chemicals or irritating
salts. Won’t harm akin or clothing.
Stays soft and creamy, never gets
l grainy.
; IVy gentle Yodora—,/eef the wonderful j
I difference! A
FOR YOUR
RECIPE FILE
/vcexwsnes
MA&muows&M&sf
% cup butter or margarine
V& lb. marshmallows
(about 2 Ms doz.)
% teaspoon vanilla
1 pkg. Kellogg’s Rice
Krispies (5(4 oz.)
mis
Cook butter or margarine and marshmal
lows over water until syrupy. Beat in vahliia.
Put Rice Krispies In greased bowl and pour
mixture on top. Mix well. Press into 9'xlS'
greased shallow tin. Cut Into 2)4' squares
when cool. Yield: 24 delicious Rice Krispies
Marshmallow Squares. Everyone love* ’em!
V A piercing shriek cut the silence as I lay in wait for deer in the Laguna
Mountains near San Diego. I dashed to Sam Reardon, my hunting com
panion. A 3 W-foot rattler had dug his fangs into Sam's ankle! Twice in
my own life, l‘d felt the rattler's sting. I knew what to do.
2 'T shot the rattler—opened
my snake kit. Night was
closing in. I needed light —
good, steady light. My flash
light with its ’Eveready’ bat
teries was the answer. By its
light, I made a tourniquet,
cut a cross incision and re
moved the venom.
3 “And those long- life
'Eveready' batteries gave
plenty of bright light as I
carried Sam and flagged a car.
1 thank my flashlight for sav
ing Sam’s life. Now I know
why ’Eveready’ batteries are
the batteries with 'Nine
Lives'!”
THE FLASHLIGHT BATTERY MTH
Just as an active cat...
takes a cat nap.
and bounces bad
with new pep...so
“Eveready” flashlight batteries
recover power* between uses
and bounce back for extra life/
•Technical »planationi du* to Hi*
•lactro-chamical regeneration of
the depolarizer. U \J CHS
"Bvenedy. ” "Sine Lhes. "tkecas symM ere trade merh •/NeMeael Certmt Cemtems. lee.
NATIONAL CAIteOM
COMPANY, INC.
ma—umeemn
t>rm Tort 11. N.T.
OmU ./ OrUm Cm-Udm art