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THE NEWBERRY SUN. NEWBERRY. S. C. Keep DDT Away From Dairy Cows Experts Cite Danger Of Milk Contamination The U. S. department of agri culture’s entomologists have issued a warning that DDT should not be used for insect control on dairy cows. Even small amounts of DDT in food such as milk—a universal diet for infants and small children— might prove harmful in time, ac cording to toxicologists of the food and drug administration who have studied the subject for several It may be a temptation to use DDT in order to keep your dairy herd looking as sleek and contented as these animals, but authorities warn against it. years. They say presence of the chemical in milk would be con trary to the food, drug and cos metic act. The entomologists now recom mend methoxychlor, another effec tive insecticide, be substituted for DDT to control insect pests on dairy cows. Federal entomologists make no change in their recommendations for the use of DDT in controlling insect pests on other livestock, in cluding beef cattle. The department’s entomologists, chemists and veterinarians, coop erating in the investigation of the toxicology of DDT and other in secticides, say the application of DDT directly to milk cows for con trolling insects results in the pres ence of small quantities of the in secticide in the milk. They say al so that DDT in small quantities can be detected sometimes in milk following ordinary use of the in secticide for fly control in dairy barns. The bureau of entomology and plant quarantine has repeatedly cautioned that forage treated with' DDT and other chlorinated hydro carbon insecticides should not be fed to dairy animals or to live stock being finished for slaughter. A number of new insecticides are under investigation by federal en tomologists for controlling insects on cows and in dairy establish ments. Leaves Tell Story The leaves on com plants tell whether the crop is well fed or starved. That 'can make a lot of difference at the harvest. For only well fed com can produce high yields, well filled kernels and good quality ears. Growers should take a little time to examine those com leaves in the field. Healthy, well fed com is a deep, dark green. Any other color spells trouble. It means that the com plant is starving for one or more of the three plant nutri ents—nitrogen, phosphate or pot ash. Figure 1 in the illustration shows a typical case of nitrogen hunger. The signs show first at the tip then spread to the midrib of the lower leaves. The middle of the leaf turns yellow and dies. Figure 2 illustrates potash star vation. It shqivs on the tips and edges of the leaves. These turn yel low and later look scorched. Com hungry for potash has weak roots and stalks. It lodges easily. Potash starvation signs can appear at any stage of the corn’s growth. Bam Hay Driers Attract Attention of Many Farmers Bam hay driers have been at tracting a lot of attention recently and many farmers are reported thinking of installing equipment in order to assure themselves of high er-quality hay. Usually any information desired on techniques or equipment for this work can be obtained from the lo cal county farm agent, or from ex tension service specialists at the various state universities. MIRROR Of Your MIND Nervous Giggle Has Psychic Cause By Lawrence Gould Can a person overcome a “nervous giggle”? Answer: It may not be easy, both because the habit usually is more or less unconscious and be cause it grows out of deep-rooted attitudes and feelings. What the giggler is really saying when he behaves as if everything were funny is: ‘‘Please do not take me seriously”—which in turn means: ‘‘Do not blame me for being the sort of person I am.” Far from be ing merely meaningless or silly, the habit reflects a chronic sense of personal inadequacy if not of downright “guilt," and getting the better of such feelings is the way to cure it. iMO Should a psychiatric patient read this column? 1 Answer: Several psychiatrists have told me that some of their patients are among my readers and have sometimes found the column helpful, but there may be danger in a person who is under psychiatric treatment reading along such lines. No two individual cases are exactly alike, and there’s always the tempta tion to adopt a ready-made solution rather than keep probing for your private and peculiar “answer,” es pecially if you are a person who would rather theorize than come to grips with harsh facts. Let your doctor decide. Do a couple’s parents deter mine which will be “boss”? Answer: They may, if both part ners grew up in homes of the same type, reports Hazel L. Ingersoll of the University of Tennessee. If both the wife and the husband grew up in homes in which father was the dom inant authority, they will be apt to take it for granted that the husband should be “boss,” while if both were reared in families where mother “wore the trousers,” their marriage will usually follow the same pattern. Different backgrounds will mean either discord, or a compromise solution on an “equal,” “demo cratic” basis. LOOKING AT RELIGION By DON MOORE m CWLPReH CAME ro VACATION SCHOOLS CON' Ducr£p&/us Protestants , lASrT SUMMtm- A F?£COf?p/ J&APT&MS CONPUCTEP BY NAZI GERMANS WERE HELD INVALIP BY THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH RECENTLY. THE BAPTISM OF THESE PERSONS MUST BE REPEATEPf .. JmM. -ttOtUl KOHb, GEM OF THE ORIENT- ANP SEAT OF EASTERN FAITHS - IS NON THE KEY CHRISTIAN CENTER OF ALL CHINA I * FRAGRANT TLOiNgR | KEEPING HEALTHY | General Practitioner of Today By Dr. James W. Barton J T ISN’T ANY WONDER that most medical students graduating these days are equipping themselves, or would like to equip themselves, as specialists. Their desire to get away from general practice with its long hours, and night calls, is only natural now that government regulations would put psysicians on the same basis as members of la bor and other unions. Everybody realizes that laboring men and women would be in a sorry mess today if it were not for unions, so that it is a natural se quence to find the various special ists forming their own unions, de manding, of course, that before a member is admitted he must have received the education and ac quired the experience necessary. What about the general physician, if, as it is reported of one gradua tion class in medicine, only 12 per cent expressed a preference for general practice? In the “Canadian Medical Asso ciation Journal,” Dr. W. V. Johns ton, Lucknow, states that he has come to look upon specialists as having three functions to perform. First, they are consultants and as such they help to keep me out of trouble or to get me out of trouble. Second, they are my teachers. Thirdly, they are our research workers. General practitioners have to di agnose and treat 85 per cent of the ills of mankind, and this includes the knowledge of when and where to obtain help for the other 15 per cent. Because of the importance of the knowledge of general medicine, today both in Canada and the Uni ted States, "specialists” in general medicine have formed their own organization. To show Ifow the position and prestige of the general practitioner is improving this same medical col lege at which, in 1946, 12 per cent of the graduating class preferred general practice, in 1949 graduated a group of which 58 per cent pre ferred general practice. Dr. Johnston states that he and his fellow practitioners believe that each university should have a chair of general practice and that general practitioners should be made thor ough-going and integrated mem bers of medical school faculties. Also that every general practitioner should be on the staff or permitted to use all facilities of a hospital DEVOTIONAL READING: I Peter *: 19-25. SCRIPTURE: Isaiah 42:1-4; 50: 52:13-53:12; Jeremiah 38:1-13. Love So Amazing Lesson for November 13, 1949 Dr. Foreman HEALTH NOTES Noise causes tiredness and dam ages hearing. • • • About 20 per cent of the people have the most accidents, while 80 per cent are comparatively accident safe. • • • Patients using drugs which take away their awareness are often ac cident prone. Cod liver oil has much of the beneficial effects of the sun in building up the hemoglobin or iron in the blood and is called “bottled sunshine.” • • • Some individuals have asthma hay fever because of their make-up or personality—they are over-cov- scientious, ambitious, hard-work ing. L ONG AGO riding in his slow chariot through the southern sands, a puzzled reader with Isaiah 53 in his hands asked the question other readers have asked ever since: Does the prophet speak of himself or of .some other? The answer given by Philip (see Acts 8) has been the answer of the church ever since: This prophe cy can be under stood only in the light from Cal vary’s Cross. Phil ip did not say, and we need not insist, that the prophet had Jesus, and Jesus only, in mind when he wrote. What we do say is that while these words might have described some one the prophet knew, might have described the whole nation of Israel, might even have described himself, still the words make but a poor picture of any one else, com pared with the picture they make of Jesus. • • • The Scarlet Thread rSAIAH 53 has been in the center * of the church’s thinking about Christ from the beginning. It may be said to run like a scarlet thread through the New Testament. It was in the back of the minds of Paul and John and Peter alike. This great prophecy sheds a light on what otherwise had been a black opaque blot—the death of Christ. What would otherwise be simply a horrible tragedy, per haps the greatest tragedy of history, the perfect case of complete injustice, the final evidence that there is no God, in the light of Isaiah 53 be comes a center of glory. Instead of being ashamed of the cross on w'hich Jesus died, the church sings, ‘‘In the cross of Christ I glory,” . . . “Love so amazing, so divine, demands my soul, my life, my all.” We believe that Christ suffered not for his own but for others’ sake. Suffering, not forced but willingly undergone, suffering not as mere pain but that others might be saved, suffering on behalf of others and for love of them—this is the key to the riddle of existence, this is the key to the heart of God. • • • Not Christ Alone I F CHRIST’S MEN had refused to follow where he led, if all Chris tians had been willing to let him carry, alone, the burden of the world’s sin and grief, there never would have been any Christianity— for there would never have been any Christians. Peter and James and the rest of the apostles would have refused to die for Jesus’ sake. The noble army of martyrs would have been an ignoble army of cowards. No missionary ever would have left home and comforts and coun try; no mother would have laid down her life for her children; the unselfish service of those who have cared for the sick and the orphaned would never have been done; in deed, h:.d no one ever been willing to suffer for the benefit of others, one wonders whether the world could have even held together this long. Christ died that the world might live, yes; but others also had to die to make his death avail. He died for Africa, that Africans might live; but Afri cans died till men like Living stone and Schweitzer and many a less famous man and woman also went out and lived there in loneliness and died in pain. Christ died for the little children of the poor, but until the Salvation Army and others like them went down into the slums and suffered there with and for them, those poor little people died without so much as dreaming that God might love them. Christ died for all the lepers in the world; but until a Father Da mien, and others no less Christ- like, went among the outcast lepers and became outcasts themselves for the love of Christ, those lepers died in the dark. • • • “Let Him Take His Own Cross Daily” VES, Isaiah 53 pictures the self- * sacrifice of our Lord, above all. But any one who has any intention of being a true servant of God must be willing to find his own life-direc tion right here. The world does not need more pain; it does need those who will suffer pain to serve others in Christ’s name. (Copyright by the International Coun cil of Religious Education on behalf of 10 Protestant denominations. Released t>y WNU Features. _ 5 ii i i M a. I 111* 1 ^ Housewives Can Inspire Meals With Novel Salads Made of Fresh Foodstuff it 'T NEVER have trouble thinking ^ of salads to serve during hot weather when there’s so much available of' salad ingredients,” says a homemaker. “But salad inspiration dinring winter is a big problem!” It needn’t be so, especially if you chack over these inspiration—pack ed tips I’m giv ing in today’s column. All foods used are available dur ing cool weath er, and you’ll be surprised at what salads can be whipped to gether without mental fatigue.. Badly needed vitamins and min erals are found in fresh fruits and vegetables to a much greater ex tent than in cooked foods where water, steam and air have ren dered many of them useless. The best way to get their full benefit, therefore, is to serve raw foods. What better way to do this than in salads? ... F RUIT SALADS, when made large and beautiful enough, will double as salad and dessert or sal ad and appetizer. They may be garnished with a scoop of sherbet or dressed with a piquant dressing. * Fruit Salad Combinations 1. Alternate wedges of grape fruit, oranges, apples, pears and calavo. C'jrve with honey or lime- flavored French dressing. 2. Fill canned peach halves with cream cheese and chopped nut mixture and garnish with unpeeled raw apples. 3. Put three cups fresh cranber ries through food chopper with two apples and one large orange. Add two cups sugar. Serve, mounded, on a pineapple slice on a bed of lettuce. 4. Serve pear halves filled with a cream cheese and crumbled ginger- snap center on lettuce leaf. 5. Sliced bananas marinated in lemon juice, then mixed with orange sections and thin, unpeeled apple slices look pretty, taste well. Carefully cooked or drained canned vegetables may be used in vegetable sal ads with raw ingredients for contrast and texture inter est. Here are some sugges tions: Vegetable Salads 1, Arrange 4-8 asparagus tips (cooked or canned) on lettuce, en circling them with a green pepper ring. Serve with French dressing to which chopped chives or stuffed olives have been added. 2. Mix shredded red cabbage with fried and crumbled bacon. Toss together with tart mayon naise. 3. Serve cooked chilled broccoli with a French dressing into which is placed crumbled, hard-cooked egg and crumbled blue cheese. 4. Cooked lima beans mixed with diced pickled beets, chopped pars ley and onion are excellent on a bed of lettuce. A combination of citrus fruits makes an excellent salad for cool weather eating. Dress it down by having simply the fruit on a crisp bed of greens. Dress it np by topping with a scoop of colorful sherbet. LYNN SAYS: Try New Food Combinations For Flavor Possibilities Baked, smoked ham butts take on delicious flavor as well as glaze if you brush them with orange mar malade just before serving. Don’t bother icing cupcakes after they’ve cooled. Simply swirl them in com syrup and top with chopped nuts or coconut. Add onions and celery to potatoes when you’re making soup if you want to sharpen the flavor of the soup in a subtle fashion. When yon’re having hot sonp for lunch, team it with a hearty salad and make the meal out of it. Macaroni with celery, cheese, hard - cooked eggs, green pepper, bacon carls, ol ives and banana strips rolled in chopped nuts makes a generons plate that takes care of main dish and dessert. LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU Hot Tomato Juice Baked Halibut Oven-Fried Potatoes Creamed Broccoli Cinnamon Bread •Fruit Salad Peanut Butter Cookies Beverage •Recipe Given Golden Gate Salad Bowl (Serves 8) 1 clove garlic 1 cnp spinach leaves 1 small head chicory I small head lettuce 1 encumber, sliced 1 head cauliflower, uncooked, broken Into flowerets 1 head watercress, separated 19 radishes, sliced 1 bunch parsley, chopped 4 tomatoes, sliced 1 green pepper, cut In rings 2 carrots, shredded 1 cnp chopped celery U cup slivered onions French dressing Cut garlic clove and rub salad bowl with it. Wash all vegetables and dry thoroughly between towels. Tear spinach, chicory and lettuce leaves. Add remaining ingredients and toss together. Add enough dressing to coat vegetables but not to soak them. Serve from salad bowl. New England Coleslaw (Serves 4-6) 5 caps finely shredded cabbage H cnp soured cream 2 tablespoons vinegar 2 tablespoons sugar • • 4 Mix vinegar and sugar with soured cream and add slowly, stir ring constantly to shredded cab bage. Dust with paprika and serve from large bowl. Sonthern Chicken Salad '(Serves 8) 1 orange 15 large grapes 15 salted almonds 1 banana 1 apple, diced 3 enps diced, cooked white meat of chicken 1 cnp mayonnaise Remove seeds and membrane from orange sections and cut in half. Cut grapes in half, removing seeds. Split al monds; slice ba nana. Mix all in gredients lightly but thoroughly. Serve chilled on lettuce. 'Macaroni Salad (Serves 8) 2 cops cooked macaroni 1 cnp diced celery or encumber 1 cap diced American cheese. If desired Si cnp chopped pimiento i 2 diced, hard-cooked eggs Salt and pepper to taste Mayonnaise < Bacon curls Banana strips with chopped nnts Olives, carrot strips, radishes Mix together macaroni, celery, cheese and chopped pimiento. Add salt and pepper, then just enough mayonnaise to taste. Arrange on platter, and garnish with eggs, bacon curls, banana strips sprin kled with the chopped nuts, olives, carrot strips and radishes. To extend quick-frozen strawber ries for desserts, mix them with drained, crushed pineapple. The combination is exciting for quickly made jam, ice cream or pudding toppings and shortcake mixtures. Meat loaf will be more interest ing and colorful if you serve it with tart, bright red cranberry sauce, fresh or canned . Sliced oranges with halved and seeded Tokay grSpes are an ex cellent idea for a colorful, flavor ful salad to serve with a heavy dinner. Afternoon Dress Also Ideal for 'Occasions' 2 drops ox x'dicxiv In each nostril, ease conges tion. open clogged nose. You isier this : Jged nose. breathe easier this 2-drop way. ■sfgSs: PENEIRO NOSE DROPS WHEN SLEEP WONT COME AND YOU FEEL GLUM Try This Delicious Chewing-Gum Laxative • When you roll and toss all night—feel headachy and Just awful because you need a laxative — do this... Chew rax-A-xnrr—delicious chewing- gum laxative. The action of rrxx-s-isiNT's special medicine “dxtouiis’' the Btom&ch. That Is. it doesn't act while In the stom ach. but only when farther along In the lower digestive tract...where you want It to act. You feel One again quickly I And scientists sa; chewing makes vnu-a-MiNT's fins medicine more effec tive—“readies" It so It flows gently Into the system.Get rxEH-a-KnvT at any 1 fl a drug counter—25s, 50« or only .... IVV S FEEN-A-MINT jjj FAMOUS CHtWIHC* GUM LAXATTVf Aftt The Man Who Knows, Wears BIG.SMHH WORK CLOTHES UXfWUtl MU lULMH II HI • UittlJgM Sam uoi. am ca • «i. JOM»n • ouroiAGa miuouo Relieve Chest Colds i. STIMULATES chest, threel sad back swteees Me swarming, coa- fortiag povltieSL PENETRATES Into upper bron* chill tubes with special soothing medkinel vapors. At bedtime rub throat, chert and back with Vicks VapoRub. Relief-bringing action starts instantly ... 2 ways at ones/ And it keeps up this special Penetrating - Stimulating ac tion for hours,* #|^|f C in the night to bring relief, w VapoRu* Grandma’s Sayings Lace Featured A GRACEFUL afternoon dress for women that’s ideal for dressier occasions. Dainty all over lace is used for the shaped yoke. Edge with narrow suflling or lace. • • • Pattern No. 8453 Is a sew-rite perfor ated pattern in sizes 32, 34, 36, 38, 40. 42 14 and 46. Size 34. 3Vi yards of 39-inch; t yard contrast. SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 530 South Wells St. Chleafo 7* HL Enclose 25 cents In coins for each pattern desired. Pattern No. Name Address DR0P~ CLOGGED NOSE & .4 ~-= 2 drops of Penetro Nose Drops STRIKES ME if we Jeo’ try in creasin’ our rate o’ Interest in other* we’ll earn much bigger dividend* of happiness. 15 P.K1 Mrs. & W. Ihrttn. Dortw. WmA osr TAKE IT FROM ME, a top quality; margarine really shows up In your cookin’ and bakin’. That’s why it pays to use "Table-Grade” Nu-MaULl And what’s more new Nu-Maid is improved—smoother spreadinV better tastin’ than ever! •J*r AIN’T IT STRANGE how oppor tunity alius looks bigger goin’ than! cornin’? 15 void Mur Hauck. Ashlaod. Ohio*. WHAT D* YA KNOW! “Table- Grade” Nu-Maid la improved! Sweet tastin’, smooth spreadln’ Nu-Maid la 1 better ’n ever. Not only that, but it'* 1 got a brand new package, ‘specially, fixed to keep that mild, sweet flavor sealed in. Yessirree—Nu-Maid’a im proved ! *ts will be paid upon publication to the first contributor of each am' cepted saying or idea. Address “Grandma” 109 East Pearl Street, Cincinnati 2; Ohio. Cow-toon "They soy it’s my boot picture. I sat for It luot after I’d found out that ‘Table-Grade’ Nu- Maid Margarine gets its fine flavor fronL-fresh, pasteurized, skimmed milk!" OM.M.C* Guard Yourself Against 5) WINTER C0LDSI When you feel run down .. or tired out . . you may catch a cold much quicker than when you feel fine. Guard yourself against troublesome, nasty and sometimes dangerous colds by maintaining your normal pep, strength and energy throughout the entire winter! A simple, excellent way to do this Is to take Vitawlne regularly. Vitawlne Is an eesy-to- swallot;. delightful tasting Squid. It contains an abundance of those vita mins and minerals which aid nature In building and maintaining normal pep, strength and energy, provided you have no organic complication or focal Infection. Vitawlne has helped thousands! Try It yourself! If your druggist can’t supply it, writs Vitawlne Co., Louisville. Ky. MB m AT AU LEADING DRUG COUNTIES Vitawine A DIETARY SUPPLEMENT f IS IT HARD FOR YOU TO ^ CUT DOWN SMOKING? Then change to SANO, the safer cigarette with » 51.6%* less NICOTINE Aim* sa W fYOw 0 ORwyME»»MiW > '-fwOw fVIVOTCOT0 9 Sano’s scientific process cuts nico tine content to half that of ordinazy cigarettes. Yet skillful blending makes every puff a pleasure VLEMINO-HALL TOBACCO CO.. fNC. W. ». *Avrrati band on continltno utu If Pb;»4jv IroaSl AS* rOM DOCTOR ABOUT SAM CMARCTIB