The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, October 28, 1949, Image 3
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY. S. C.
Farm Show Schedules
New Machinery, Ideas
Modem Devices Slated
To Indicate Progress
New devices and machinery
Which are attracting the interest of
farmets generally will be on view
at the national farm show at Chi
cago starting November 26. The
show will be held in the Chicago
coliseum.
Prominent among new scientific
farming aids to be shown will be
the radically-different tractor-move
irrigation systems. Consisting of
long lines of pipe which can be
hooked onto a tractor and moved to
any section of a field, these sys-
Modern farm machinery, gnch
as this "damper-downer” in nse
in a North Carolina tobacco
field, will feature exhibits at
the National Farm Show to be
held in Chicago.
terns are said to be able to triple
acreage yield. Water, nitrogen, fer
tilizer, DDT or 2,4-D can be put
down through the sprinklers.
Vacuum unloaders, rotary hoes,
heated tractor seats and grain test
ers are included among the hun
dreds of items for the modern farm
and farm home which will be dis
played, and visitors will see a wider
range of implements and equipment
then has ever before been as
sembled under one roof.
The special events are likewise
shaping up into a program of un
usual interest. The second annual
invitational interstate 4-H poultry
Judging contest on November 29
will draw entries from at least 20
states, according to H. G. Ware,
director of judging.
Watch Footings
FOUNDATION
UNDERMINED.
NO FOOTING-
Farmers should always be at
the alert to the danger of run
off water washing away foot
ings under foundations, partic
ularly on outbuildings where
such caution, normally, might
not be exercised. When run
off water washes away footings
under foundations, the building
settles.
Reduced Grain Growing
Brings Seed Hold Need
Prospects of reduced grain-grow
ing. including com and wheat in
1950 and following years should
cause farmers to consider saving
more grass and clover seed, says
a statement from the college of
agriculture. University of Kentuc
ky. The seed, it was pointed out,
will be needed for the sod crops
that are to take the place of grain.
The bureau of plant industry at
Washington says that grain reduc
tion will mean at least 25 per cent
more grass and hay.
Barren Land Reclaimable
With Fertilizer, Know-how
Under proper management, worn-
out land can be converted into
grass legume pasture capable of
carrying one cow and a calf to each
one and one-half to two acres.
Three acres of good permanent and
supplementary pasture will carry
a cow and calf through the year.
Principal requirements are fertili
ser, willingness to grow something
beside the immediate money crops
and a knowledge of livestock.
MIRROR
'True Mates'
Of Your
" " * Don't Exist
MIND
By Lawrence Gould
Do “true mates” look alike?
Answer: There are no such
things as “true mates” in the sense
of people who have been “made
for each other," and the fact that
a man and a woman are of the
same physical type has no bearing
on their chance of being happy if
they marry. As a rule it is unwise
to marry someone whose appear
ance is unpleasant to you, but
whether you are attracted to a
person who looks like you or to
one who is as different as possible
depends upon your unconscious
feelings and standards of b'eauty.
"Physical affinity” is an exploded
notion.
Is classical mnsic good for
mental patients?
Answer: Different types of mu
sic affect mental patients very dif
ferently, report two psychiatrists
from Warlingham Park Hospital,
Surrey. England. Played to groups
of patients, the musical classics
roused a feeling of security and
group cohesion, where “romantic”
music tended to revive their indi
vidual problems. But the best ef
fect on patients, both in calming
their disturbed emotions and in
fostering group harmony came
from familiar airs and folk songs
—probably because these bring
back happy memories of child
hood.
. Do some men crave to wear
women’s clothing?
Answer: Yes. Every so often I
hear from a man who admits a
compulsive urge to dress like a
woman, either when alone at home
or (if he dares) in public. Called
“transvestitism,” this compara
tively mild perversion is said by
the psychoanalysts to express an
unconscious desire on the man’s
part to “identify himself” with a
mother to whom he was overly de
voted. The desire of girls or women
to dress like men— which is much
more common—is also essentially
neurotic but less deeply rooted and
involves no serious personality dis
order.
LOOKING AT RELIGION
By DON MOORE
,/( /,
‘fWE QUBZTION OF UFTN6THB
DANCIN60AN IN CHURCH
COUEOBS \$ BEING STUDIBP
BY (GROUPS. ON SOCIAL
PROBLEMS
'mere is a Shortage tf
IN WESTERN CANADA - BECAUSE THE
PEOPLE WON'T TRAVEL TO CHURCH, AND
THE MINISTERS CAN'T GET AROUND TO ALL.
MSRd
In far off New Zealand
the church is keeping
STRANGE LVSI LENT ABOUT
THE PENDING ISSUE OF
reAczriMe ccNjanmoh
KEEPING HEALTHY
A New Treatment for Psoriasis
By Dr. James W. Barton
r WRITE FREQUENTLY about
1 psoriasis, the skin disease in
which there are pearly white scales
on slightly raised white patches of
skin. On removing the scales with
the fingernail the underlying spot
bleeds slightly.
These little spots or patches of
scales may begin as tiny as peas
and increase to the size of silver
dollars. The little spots or patches
may rim together and form large
patches. They look like patches of
mortar. While there is . a small
amount of itching present, it is
primarily the appearance of these
unsightly patches on elbows, knees,
and head that causes embarrass
ment and distress of mind.
While an attack may disappear,
the disease is recurrent and up to
the present, skin specialists state
that they know of no cure, although
sunshine usually causes temporary
disappearance of patches.
In previous days arsenic intern
ally and a 5 per cent ammoniated
mercury ointment externally, was
routine treatment. Today cutting
down on fat foods, the use of vita
min B1 and various ointments, is
the usual treatment. Of course var
ious methods of treatment of psori
asis have come and gone, some oi
which still give good results in a
few cases. However, as there is no
special or specific treatment, there
is no reason why new methods
should not be tried.
In the “Journal of the American
Medical Association,” Drs. Harris
Perlman and Irving L. Milberg,
New York, state that their use of
undecylenic acid with a few private
cases of psoriasis, caused such
“dramatic” improvement that they
were prompted to use it in cases
of psoriasis in patients of the New
York skin and cancer unit. They
have treated 41 cases to date.
The undecylenic acid given by
mouth in capsules had no toxic
(poisonous) effects in 41 cases al
though slight disturbance of the
stomach occured in 19 of the 41
c^ses. These disturbances occured
it the beginning of the treatment
out disappeared within a few days
even with continuance of the treat
ment. Of the 41 patients 12 were
improved, 15 somewhat improved,
10 unchanged, and three were
worse.
It is worth much to those with
skins so sensitive to the sun they
:armot go swimming that they can
be desensitized by antihistaminic
drugs.
• • •
One of the latest methods of find
ing the actual condition of the liver
cissues is biopsy—examination of
a piece of living tissue removed
from the body.
Two outstanding discoveries of
recent years are that insulin will
prevent death in diabetes and liver
will prevent death in pernicious
anemia. *
• • •
The liver does more different
kinds of work than any other organ
of the body. Anything that inter
feres with its work upsets all the
body processes.
SPEAKS ^
ij^mTjJpj^^^Tnternahoniii" Uniforml
Sunday School Lesaons
Lesson for October 30, 1949
Dr. Foreman
I T HURT Isaiah's patriotism, and
his religion too, to see how fast
his country was going down hill.
Most of the troubles Isaiah saw
are with us today. Wealthy women
spending more and
more on them
selves; leaders who
are irresponsible,
self-seeking and in
competent; poverty
unprevented and
uncared-for; drunk
enness high and
low. Isaiah, and
other prophets as
well, saw in the sin
and drunkenness of
the times the sign
and symbol of national decay. To
the careless, the selfish and the
wild, to those who were “leaders”
but were leading in the wrong di
rection, Isaiah kept saying, in
many different ways. Choose the
best!
• • •
The Prophets’ Successors
T HERE WAS a TIME when th*.
church put most of her preach
ing emphasis on individual religion:
Get right with God! was the cry.
The church of today has not by any
means given up her emphasis on
personal religion, but we are learn
ing from the prophets what social
righteousness means. The church
in our time is the logical and actual
successor to the prophet’s work.
The church is doing more
than ever to awaken the con
science of society, in fact the
church Itself has a duty to be
the conscience of society. One
of the problems about which
our nation needs to be waked
up is one that Isaiah and Jere
miah faced, only we have It In
a more desperate form.
We call it alcoholism; they called
It by an uglier, more suitable word:
drunkenness. Even in those days
drinking was a problem; it cut
down the national health, wealth
and wisdom. Nowadays it is worse
because of two factors. One is the
higher percentage of alcohol in bev
erages such as whiskey, unknown
in those days. The other factor is
advertising.
• • •
Where Drunkards Start
A gainst all this the church
must keep saying and persuad
ing people. Choose the Best! But it
does comapartively little good to
say this to the confirmed alcoholic.
It makes more sense to say it to
young people. For the sad feature
of alcoholism is that it begins in
the high schools.
The Yale School of Alcohol Stud
ies has collected evidence indica
ting that two-thirds of all alcoholics
begin drinking habits in the early
high school years.
A recent Gallup poll shows
the greatest percentage of
drinkers to be in the age group
21 to 39. Today, it is estimated,
there are four million ^alcohol
addicts or excessive drinkers
who are in more or less con
stant trouble with their fami
lies and employers.
Drunkenness costs Industry In
America no less than one billion
dollars a year, and has a lot to do
with the break-up of homes and
with crime generally.
• • •
Allied Youth
S omething is being done to
stop this, which you should
know about. There is a movement
known as Allied Youth, a national
educational organization working
in high schools all over the country.
Its work is positive, not negative.
It is not trying to pass laws or to
bring back prohibition. What it does
try to do—and it Is succeeding re
markably well in many places—is
to give young people a way of life
(hat will enable them to meet social
pressure for drinking without loss
of “face.” Every Allied Youth post
in a school has three aims: 1. To
meet the social and recreational
needs of young people.
Every New Year’s Eve, for
instance, when millions of
Americans are getting sickly
drunk, more than 6,000 young
people gather in Detroit for the
biggest dry party in America,
sponsored by Allied Yonth.
2. To establish within the school
a fellowship of young people who
do not think it is necessary to
drink to be smart. Such a group
can change the attitude of an entire
school.
3. To build a solid foundation of
education for total abstinence. Es
sentially, Allied Youth is saying to
young people everywhere, “Choose
the Best!”
(Information about Allied Youth
can be had by writing Allied Youth,
1709 M. Street N.W., Washington,
D. C.)
(Copyright by the International Coun
cil of Religious Education on behalf of
10 Protestant denominations. Released
ly V’NU Features.
★ ★★ ★
By D8. XEHttUH HjUla
SCHIPTURE: Isaiah 3; 5; 22; 28 : 58:
1-9; Jeremiah 35. „
DEVOTIONAL READING; Romans
13:8-14.
Choose The Best!
NOVSSHOIP
v>XwXv«:-x*:-»x-x«x*!
Make Pinwheel Chicken Casserole from Leftovers
(See Recipe Below)
Plan Leftovers
P LANNED LEFTOVERS? “Never
heard of such a thing," says
one homemaker, while another
comes back with the comment,
“Certainly, plan to have leftovers.
If you want to save meal prepara
tion time and food money.”
If you think the family won’t eat
leftovers, you’ve probably never
jMfc,. presented them
GrGJP p rD-p e r 1 y be-
M (jj cause, really,
V leftovers can be
i ft glamorous! Just
- St see how pretty
chicken cas
serole looks In
the picture. Then
glance at some
of the other recipes we’re giving!
Have you ever thought why it’s
economical to buy a roast? For the
simple reason that you can have it
for another meal or two. This holds
true for many cuts of meat which
the family cannot consume at one
sitting.
• • •
•PHIS CHICKEN CASSEROLE Is a
A good example since it’s ex
tended with eggs and flavorsome
mushrooms. The pinwheel parsley
biscuits floating on top the creamy
and savory mixture make the dish
hard to resist. Makes you want to
go out and roast a chicken to have
some leftovers, doesn’t It?
Pinwheel Chicken Casserole
(Serves 4—6)
caps cooked chicken meat
2—4 hard - cooked eggs, coarsely
chopped
4 tablespoons fat
4 tablespoons floor
2 enps milk
Ya. teaspoon pepper
Ye teaspoon ginger
Y* teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon scraped onion
1 can mushrooms, U desired
Parsley Biscuits
Make a sauce by melting fat,
blending In flour and milk. Season
well with salt, pepper, ginger and
onion. Arrange layers of chicken,
eggs and mushrooms Into a greased
six-cup capacity casserole that is
from 2% to 3 inches deep. Pour
hot sauce over all. Bake, covered,
In a hot oven (400*) until sauce is
bubbly, 30 to 40 minutes. Top with
parsley biscuits. Note: If you have
leftover gravy, substitute it for the
sauce made of fat, flour and milk.
Parsley Biscuits: Prepare biscuit
dough, using 2 cups flour or 2 cups
biscuit mix. Roll dough V« inch
thick. Grease slightly and sprinkle
with % cup finely chopped parsley
over surface. Roll like jelly roll,
then slice % inch thick to bake.
Biscuits may be baked In oven at
same time as casserole.
• • •
S HREDS LEFT from the beef or
pork roast can go into this pie
to be extended with vegetables left
over from the roast:
•Roast Beef Pie
(Serves 4—6)
H cup minced onion
H cap minced celery
2 tablespoons fat
2 tablespoons flour
2 cups leftover beef or pork,
cut in pieces
1 cup cooked, diced potatoes
1 cup cooked, sliced carrots
2 tablespoons chopped parsley
1 tablespoon Worcestershire
LYNN SAYS:
Here are Little Ideas
With Lots of Flavor
For fish or salads serve a sauce
of soured cream, the thick, smooth
kind. Season it with salt and pepper,
some chopped chives or grated
onion and a bit of diced cucumber.
Garnish those steamed puddings
with grapes dipped in beaten egg
white and fine granulated sugar for
a frosted touch.
Mix some marjoram with salt and
pepper and use the mixture on
broiled steak for real flavor.
LYNN CHAMBERS' MENU
Clear Tomato Soup
•Roast Beef Pie Toasted Rolls
Celery Hearts Olives Pickle*
Fresh Pear and Grape Salad
Orange Tapioca Pudding
Chocolate Cookies
Beverage
•Recipe Given
sauce
1 3-ounce can browned mush
room* with broth
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup leftover gravy
Cook onion and celery in fat un
til golden colored. Stir in flour, then
add remaining ingredients. Simmer
for 10 minutes. Pour mixture into
individual baking dishes and top
with pastry. Brush crust with slight
ly beaten egg white, then bake in
a hot (425°) oven for 25 minutes.
Pastry for Roast Beef Pie: .Sift
together 1 cup flour with % tea
spoon salt and
work in % cup
shortening un
til mixture Is
crumbly. Add 2
—3 tablespoons
cold water and
toss mixture
with fork until
blended. Flute edges as for pie
crust after topping meat pies.
Beef-Noodle Casserole
(Serves 6)
2>/4 cups roast beef, cut In shreds
2 tablespoons shredded green
pepper
1 onion diced
2 tablespoons fat
1 cup celery, diced
1 can tomato sonp
2 cups cooked noodles
Salt and pepper to taste
H cup buttered bread crumbs
Brown onion and celery in fat;
add green pepper and meat, then
tomato soup. Place meat mixture
and noodles alternately in a two-
quart greased casserole after sea
soning to taste with salt and
pepper. Top with buttered crumbs
and bake in a hot oven (400°) for
30 minutes.
• • •
H ERE ARE TWO excellent
recipes for using the last at
the ham.
Ham Slices in Corn
(Serves 6)
1 cup chopped celery
1 chopped onion
1 shredded green pepper
-2 tablespoons butter
1 egg, well beaten
1 cup canned corn kernels
1 enp bread crumbs
Salt, pepper, sugar
2 tablespoons flour
1 cup milk
Fry celery, onion and green pep
per In butter until tender. Add egg.
corn and bread
crumbs. Season
with salt, pepper
and sugar. Place
ham slices in a
square baking
dish or casserole
and spread corn
mixture on top of them. Make a
sauce by using butter in which
vegetables were cooked by blending
in flour, then adding milk, stirring
constantly, and cook until thick
ened. Pour sauce over ham and com
and bake in a slow (325°) oven for
35 to 40 minutes.
Don't forget to serve cranberry
sauce with pork as well as with
chicken and turkey. A few seedless
raisins added to the sauce make it
an excellent side dish With the meat.
Salted walnut halves put to
gether with cream cheese to which
a bit of anchovy paste is added, are
a neat trick to serve with tomato
juice as a first course.
Paper thin slices of ham make
an excellent snack if you spread
them with cream cheese seasoned
with onion juice. Serve with thin,
buttered slices of rye bread.
Well-Fitting Daytimer
Buttons Down the Back
Daytime Dress
A COMFORTABLE, well fitting
daytime dress that buttons
down the back, has cap or three
quarter sleeves. Note the inter
esting curved detail on waist top
and hipline.
• • •
Pattern No. 8282 comes In sizes 12,
14. 16. 18 and 20. Size 14. cap sleeve. 4V«
yards of 39-inch.
Don’t miss the Fall and Winter Issue
of FASHION—64 pages of smart, easy to
make styles for winter: home decorating
tips, fabric news—free pattern printed
inside the book 25 cents.
Head
Sftfffii
6£V£V£0f0SECO/mSf
For almost instant relief, put *,
few Vicks Va-tro-nol Noee Drops
in each nostril
Va-tro-nol works
right where
stuffy trouble isl
It opens up cold-
clogged nose . . .
relieves stuffi
ness .. . and lets
you breathe
again. Try It
DOUBLE FILTERED
FOR EXTRA
QUALITY
-PURITY
-ffTTTTTn
MOROLINE
Pfc TROLE U M Jf l l Y
Grandma’s Sayings
SEWING CIRCUS PATTERN DEPT.
sso s,,tk w«u» st. cu«»c# 1. m.
Enclose 25 cents In coins (or each
pattern desired.
Pattern No. —" ■■ i.—■ Sin
Name — ———
Address I...—
<V. {V. fw. (V- <V. (V. <V. fV. fY. {V. {V. (tegte
\ ASK ME
; ANOTHER I I
l A General Quiz 11 |
gbo o— O- 0— O- O" A*^e fWe
The Questions
1. Tom Brown was the hero of
what famous stories?
2. What country is known as
The Netherlands?
3. In Roman mythology who is
the God of the Sea?
4. What are the duties of a
comptroller?
5. Where are the Falls uf Minne
haha?
The Answers
1. “Tom Brown’s Schooldays”
and “Tom Brown at Oxford,” by
Thomas Hughes.
2. Holland.
3. Neptune.
4. He oversees and verifies the
accounts of subordinate officials.
5. In the Minnehaha River, near
Minneapolis, Minn.
-I SHUNNED THE DAT’S WORK"
Comer from ■ dear intestinal
IrKJr i tract—for 50 year, Lana's has
bean a chosen household remedy t Test it.
IF WE’D ONLY STOP to realise
how profitable the seeds o’ happi
ness are, strikes me we’d all try
scatterin’ ’em more often.
15 mid Hn. ifattl. wetas. IHemerffla da.*
•*r
ALWAYS did think “Table-Grade”
Nu-Maid wu* Jest about perfect-
now they've gone and made it even
better. Yessir—the new Nu-Mald'a
tastier and smoother spreadln’. And
It’s got a fine new package that
seals In that “Table-Grade” flavor.
-w
AINT IT FUNNY how them phi
losopher fellers alius seem to know
what to do, til it happens to ’em?
is mid VWlaa Uatar. Mid. OMS>
«JW°
NO TWO WAYS about It. bakin'
good pies and cakes calls fsr *
shortenin’ that’s tasty by Itself. And
that calls fer “Table-Grade” Nu-
Maid . . . better tastin’ than ever
now, ’cause Nu-Maid’s improved!
*SC '* r
eS will be paid upon publica
tion to the first contributor of each
accepted saying or Idea. Add re—
“Grandma,” 109 East Peart Otrset.
Cincinnati 2, Ohio.
“You may quota me as saying that
the secret of my contentment b
that Table-Grade’ Nu-1
e gets its fine flavor from
pasteurized, skimmed milk!”
CE-M.Cs.
Guard Yourself Against
# FEELING WORN 0UTI
It's much easier to catch a cold or to
pick up dangerous disease germs
when you feel worn out or utterly
exhausted than when you are In ex
cellent health. So, guard your health
Jealously! If you feel run down or
worn out, try Vita wine. This easy-
to-swallow, delightful tasting liquid
contains sn abundance of those vita
mins and minerals which aid nature
In building and maintaining normal
pep, strength and energy, provided
yfiu have no organic complication or
focal infection. Vltawtne has helped
thousands In the past 10 year*. Doc
tors have recommended it Drug
gists, from coast to coast have sold
It. Try Vita wine yourself! Juet
ask your druggist or writs to The
Vitewlne Oo„ Louisville. Ky.
AT All UADIHO DRUG COUNTESS
A DIETARY SUPPLEMENT
(SHOULD * RUN OVEKl
40 STOP SMOKMO?
Change to SANO—
the Safer Cigarette with
51.6%* LESS
NICOTINE
Sano’s scientific process cuts nico
tine content to half that of ordinary
cigarettes. Yet skillful blending
makes every puff a pleasure.
VLEMING-HAIA TOBACCO CO. INC, If. T.
• A Mnu* ta—m eonMsWiv <a<> o/rwaior trewb
ASK root DOCTOR ASOUT SAW CIGAKETTtS