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THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY. S. C. HENRY KAISER, ORGAN PUMPER XTENRY J. KAISER wonder man industry, used to be an orean pumper. It was his first job, he admitted the .other day. *1 got fired after I stopped pumping and let all the air out just to see what would happen,” he said. This de partment admits Mr. Kaiser to the Former Organ Pumpers’ Guild of America. Few organ pumpers have gone farther or become more famous. But he will not be ad mitted for originality. All organ pumpers stopped pumping at least once to see “wha’ happens.” « • • Henry will get In merely as a ran of the mill ex-organ pamp er who went on to bigger pamp- Ings. But we think that even back in those boyhood days, when he was laboring at the bellows, great ambitions were stirring within him and that he dreamed of becoming a super pumper. Henry must have seen the whole organ pumping busi ness on a big scale. One organ couldn’t have seemed enough. • * • In the village church, pumping away like everything, he probably began thinking in terms of hun dreds of organs, even going to the pastor and asking, “Why only one organ?” “One organ is all we need,” the pastor replies. “Aren’t you being narrow about it? Have you ever thought of the possibilities of a half dozen or gans?” asks Henry. "Why a half dozen?” "See! You haven’t even given the matter any thought,” presses the lad. “A half dozen would be six times as good as one.” “But it would drown out the choir.” ‘That is easily solved. Have twelve choirs!” • • • The rector of the little church wonders if the kid has gone daft. “Now, now, you just go back and pump the one organ we have,” he urges. “You couldn’t pump a half dozen, you know, Henry.” "I couldn’t, eh?” chaDenges the future industrialist. “In the bright lexicon of youth there is no such word as fail. And in the bright lexicon of Henry Kaiser there is no such word as ‘one.’ " • • • “But, my boy . . begins the pastor, anxious to get him beck at the {Sump. “I see a church with a dozen organs, a dozen choirs, a dozen pastors,” the boy goes on. “And a dozen organ pumpers, I suppose,” says the rector. “I see a hundred hymns played where one was played before . . . I see the whole choir program stamped out a year ahead . . . com plete ... all ready to go . . . Tenors and basses while you wait! . . . The Henry Kaiser Church Music Corporation of North Ameri ca!” ft • • POSSIBLE ITEMS FROM THE PERFECT STATE Zeb Pickett, a man who used to be in business for himself, will be the main attraction at the antique show next Tuesday. Zeb insists it used to be possible to make a liv ing without federal aid every hour on the hour. • • • Caraway Minch has got the contract for converting the Button Shop Into a roller skat ing rink. It’s been vacant for years, all buttons now being supplied from Washington. • » • There win be a debate in the town hall next week on the sub ject “Were Americans better off when they had money instead of security?” Come one, come all! • • • The government has filed suit against Joe’s Fish Market. Joe ownj and runs it himself but if you encourage a thing like that anybody is apt to go into business. • • • Eph Simsbury, the richest man in town, who died recent ly, left his entire state of two hambones and a jug of water to his birddog. Relatives will contest. • • • The board of finance voted to spend $789,345,234.78, about $48 in old-fashioned money. • • • The board of education holds a special meeting tonight at which a proposal to discontinue teaching arithmetic in the public schools will come up. Nobody even tries to add or subtract correctly any more in America anyhow, and it is felt that being able to get correct answers is merely a handicap. • • • Business everywhere continues at standstill. It is feared that if security lasts much longer nobody will be able to make both ends at MIRROR Of Your MIND Healthy Love I ■ ■ Creates Health By Lawrence Gould Can love be a cause of illness? Answer: In Itself, No. For love is a source of happiness or pleas ure and these create health, not Illness. But love for a person who is unattainable, or of whose re turn love you’re uncer'ain, may arouse anxiety and “nervous ten sion” that will be both mentally and physically harmful. The less sure you are of your own worthi ness to be loved, the more anx ious you’ll be, and while you will probably attribute your “love sickness” to the loved one’s being fickle or capricious (as may be true) it will be your self-doubt that makes you so vulnerable. Do men speak in softer tones to women? Answer: Not instinctively, at any rate, reports Dr. John D. Black, Minneapolis psychologist in the Journal of Speech and Hear ing Disorders. In experiments in tended to find whether the pitch at which you are spoken to affects the loudness of your answer, it was noted- that thirty male college students responded more loudly to a woman’s voice that to a man’s of equal volume. If this is the way that most men react, it might be because to the average male the presence of a woman is a chal lenge to his self-assertive instincts. Are single women lonelier than bachelors? Answer: I know of no way to pr ( ove it, but I am inclined to think so. And there are some realistic reasons for it. For instance, a sin gle woman is less welcome than an unattached man at most parties, and there are still many places where she cannot go without an escort. But this does not mean that every single person would be hap pier married. If you find it hard to “compromise” with other people’s tastes and ideas, the home that sometimes appears so empty with out anyone to share it will at least be happier than one filled with conflict. LOOKING AT RELIGION By DON MOORE m i9UEBB£, CANAPA ALONE THERE ARB MORE THAN 600 TOWNS ANO OTIES NAMEP IN HONOR OF CATHOLIC SAINTS. HkKefokmepchukchof FRANCE HAS PEODEO TO ORPAIN SOME NOMEN AS REGULAR MINISTERS. MStOf-l KEEPING HEALTHY What Is a Psychoneurotic? By Dr. James W. Barton I N THESE DAYS when all of us are more or less upset for vari ous reasons, we can understand why the nervous, emotional, anx ious individual is greatly upset. This mental and emotional dis turbance affects the various organs and processes of the body, 'so that this type of individual is constantly consulting his physician or many physicians in an effort to be free of these various symptoms. We call this individual a neurotic. A good definition of a neurotic is given by Dr. Joseph L. Felter- man, Cleveland, in the Merck re port: "The psychoneurotic is one who has failed to make an adjustment to life, who is troubled by inner conflicts of a greater degree than the average, and whose conflicts lead to a tendency to unhappiness, poor adjustment to others and to a great variety of physical com plaints for which there is no or ganic basis or cause." Sometimes the symptoms are limited to one region, but they are more likely to be in a number of regions — heart, stomach, intest ines, head, joints—and change oft en from one region or organ to another. Some of the symptoms pass away quickly, others seem to remain in the one region or organ. While some neurotics have a woe begone expression others assume the attitude of being indifferent to their sufferings. Unfortunately for the physician, many neurotics are above the av erage in intelligence, yet fail to understand how their inner mecha nisms convert disappointments and frustrations into disturbing physi cal derangements. Most physicians blame neurosis on parents who allowed the young ster to complain of illness when he was forbedden to do something he wanted or bidden to do something he did not want to do. Thus when the child grows up, he develops symptoms only “when over whelmed by major trials and re jections of life.” The treatment of the neurotic is a thorough physical examination in case some physical ailment is really present. If present, it is treated. Then follows an estimation by the physician as to the extent to which his emotional disturb ances are to blame for his symp toms. Pain in the back of the head, neck and shoulders sometimes is caused by a ruptured disc (cushion of hard tissue between spine bones in neck). • • • After World War 1 there was a great increase in treatment of ner vous symptoms of physiotherapy— hot and cold baths, electricity, mas sage and light physical exercise. Infected teeth can be a cause of rheumatic fever, so often followed by heart disease. • • • More men than women suffer with stomach and duodenal ulcer. • • • At this time there is not enough ACTH to supply the demand of hospitals to treat arthritis suffer ers. SCRIPTURE: Jeremiah 8:8-13; 23; 28-28. DEVOTIONAL READINO: Matthew 7:15-23. Prophets False & True Lesson for December 4, 1949 G OD is neither silent nor dead. He has his spokesmen today. We hear myriads of voices—preach ers, teachers, editors, columnists, poets and politicians, all professing to tell us the truth. When a man claims to speak in the name of truth, is there any way by which his claim can be tested? It is an old problem. Away back in Bible times every prophet had his rivals, the false j) r . Foreman prophets. The false were far more numerous, they often had immense prestige and government subsidies besides. How was the common man to tell the true prophets from the false? • • • Notion of Man or Word of God? O NE DIFFERENCE between the true and false prophets, of course, was that the false ones passed out their own ideas, while the true ones gave voice to the ideas of God. Some of the false prophets even dug down into what we now call the subconscious, and told their dreams as if they meant something. The false prophets of our own times jire still the people who draw on their own minds, even on their day-dreams, to furnish messages for the people. The gypsy dream- books are still with us. Astrologer-: flourish, and not always on the side streets. All sorts of queer cults profess to tell us what is coming next and what we ought to do. Before we take a modern “prophet” seriously we should ask: Is what he is saying his own idea or God’s idea? In this 20th century after Christ, It should be easier to know God’s ideas are than it was 27 cen turies ago in Jeremiah’s time. For now that Christ has come, we can safely check all the self-styled prophets with the measage and the mind of Christ. • • • Is the voice of the people the voice of God? T HE FALSE PROPHETS were always popular, the true ones seldom. Mere unpopularity does not prove a man a true prophet; but you may be sure that if a man says only what people like to hear, always tickling the ears and feed ing the pride of his listeners, he is no true spokesman for God. Not that the true prophet Is always insulting his hearers. The Lord’s prophets often speak comforting and welcome words, to be sure. But a steady out pouring of soothing-syrup is not what we would expect from a genuine prophet. Man is often most proud when he is most wrong; and then God has to sweep the man down. Don’t take too seriously the men who merely reinforce your prejudices and shore up your pride; they are more likely fake prophets than true. The voice of the people is not always the will of God. * • • Time is the Test That great prophet Moses (Deut. 18) had already given a practical test of a true prophet: Does what he says turn out to be true? Can he really see into tomorrow? Alas, we may have to wait until tomorrow to find out for sure; but tomorrow always comes, and when it comes, the prophets of today will be shown up for what they are, true or false. Time is the test. Not, Is it likely? ft ft ft Truth and Right are Twins P ERHAPS the worst feature of the false prophets who were Jeremiah’s competitors was their real immorality. “Their course is evil and their might is not right,” he said (23:10, American transla tion). “They commit adultery and walk in lies, they strengthen the hands of evildoers so that no one turns from his evil ways'” (v. 14), God’s spokesman can never also speak for the enemies of God. Whenever you hear any one talking as if we could now get “beyond good and evil,” or as if the Ten Commandments were something we had out grown, then you may know you are listening to a false prophet. There are no new command ments but the one which sums up all of them: Love one another. Prophets of hate, prophets of dis sension, of lust, these may be speak ing for themselves or for the devil —but not for God. (Copyright by the International council of Religious Education on behalf of 40 Protestant denominations. Released hr WNU Features.) HOUStHOlV Serve Time-Savers on Busy Days (S** Recipe Below) Shopping Day Meals B USY DAYS, these, when you’re trying to get holiday shopping done, attending club meetings and making final arrangements for the festivities. Sharp appetites, how ever, will have no mercy on you, and you’ll be a wise homemaker to plan dinners that can be pre pared early in the morning, then baked when you whisk into the houseT while you set the table. Smart planning will be your best guide for days that you’ll be spend ing away from home. You can do so relaxed, knowing that in the re frigerator sits the main dish for supper, needing only baking or heating. • • • A LL OF THESE casseroles may be prepared while you’re await ing the last straggler for break fast. They may be refrigerated and need only baking for completion. *Bright Salmon Loaf (Serves 5-6) 1 1-pound can pink salmon 1 egg, slightly beaten ^ % cup condensed cream of celery soup 2 tablespoons chopped green pepper 1 tablespoon lemon Juice S crushed shredded wheat biscuits K cup chili sauce Drain salmon; remove bones and skin. Combine salmon juice, egg, soup, green pepper and lemon juice; mix thoroughly. Add salmon and crushed wheat biscuits; mix lightly. Place in a greased loaf pan (8%x4x2 inches) or In a fish mold. Bake for one hour in a mod erate (375*) oven. Allow loaf to stand for five minutes before re moving from pan. Inseit knife around all sides. Beef Dinner Casserole (Serves 6-8) 1 pound ground beef V* cup chopped green pepper 1 pimiento, chopped 1 No. 2 can whole kernel corn 1 can condensed tomato soup % cup cracker crumbs 1 tablespoon butter Brown meat and green pepper in butter. Stir occasionally to keep meat particles separated. Add pimiento to meat and green pep per. Place half the corn into a greased 1W quart casserole. Add a layer of the meat mix ture. Pour over half of the tomato soup. Repeat layers. Bake in a moderate (350°) oven for 45 min utes. Cabbage Bundles (Serves 6) • cabbage leaves H cup ground, cooked ham IVe cups cooked rice 1 cup shredded American cheese 1 egg yolk, beaten 1 tablespoon chopped onion hi cup chopped green pepper Salt and pepper to taste 1 cup tomato sauce or 1 cup thin cream sauce Cook the cabbage leaves for a few minutes in boiling, salted wat- LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU •Bright Salmon Loaf Buttered Cauliflower Baked Potatoes Molded Peach-Grape Salad Jelly Muffins Beverage Orange-Banana-Coconut Ambrosia •Recipe Given LYNN SAYS: Salad Making Becomes An Art at its Best To have the right beginning, use only salad greens that are crisp and clean. As soon as they arrive In the kitchen, wash thoroughly and drain on a rack or put with a soft towel. Store in vegetable crisper or plastic bag. Keep salad arrangements simple and avoid a cluttered look as well as one which is too artful. Let the greens, fruit and vegetables ar- range themselves naturally. er until almost tender. Drain well. Combine all remaining ingredients except sauce. Place a tablespoon of this mixture on each cabbage leaf and wrap leaf around. Place the bundles in a shallow baking dish and pour sauce over all. Bake in a moderate (350*) oven for 30 minutes. Ham-Cauliflower Scallop (Serves 6) 1 cauliflower 3 tablespoons buttei S tablespoons flour 1H cups milk Salt and pepper to taste 44 pound American cheese, sliced 1 cup chopped, cooked ham 1 cup soft bread crumbs Separate the cauliflower mto flowerets and cook until almost done. Melt butter, add flour and blend in milk. Stir constantly and cook until thick. Add seasonings and cheese and stir until latter melts. Place cauliflowerets into casserole, sprinkle with ham and cover with sauce. Place border of crumbs around edge of casserole. Bake in a moderate (350°) oven until crumbs are browned, about 30 min utes. Supper Special (Serves 6) 2 tablespoons butter 74 cup flour 94 teaspoon salt H teaspoon pepper 94 cup evaporated milk 94 cup liquid, drained from peas 1 cups canned salmon, flaked $94 cups cooked or canned pea* 1 cup crashed potato chips Melt butter, blend in flour, salt and pepper. Add milk and pea liquid and cook until thickened stirring con stantly. Add sal mon to half of the sauce and place in but tered custard cups or in a large casserole. Cover with potato chips and bake in a moderate (350°) oven for 45 minutes. Unmold and serve with remaining white sauce to which the peas were added. Scalloped Corn and Oysters (Serves 5-6) „ 1 No. 2 can corn kernels 1 pint oysters 3 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons flour 1 teaspoon salt Dash of pepper 194 cups milk 1 cup buttered crumbs Heat corn. Drain oysters and add enough water to their liquid to make 94 cup. Melt butter, blend in flour, salt and pepper. Add milk and oyster liquid and cook, stir ring, until thickened. Arrange com, oysters, white sauce and crumbs in a casserole in alternate layers. Bake in a hot (400°) oven for 12-20 minutes. Mayonnaise may be thinned for fruit salads with juices of any canned or citrus fruits. Cream or whipped cream may also be used. Cream cheese, blue cheese and salad dressing, all blended together give an excellent, nippy topping for some fruit and vegetable salads. Balls of cream cheese rolled in coconut make a frosty garnish for fruit salads. Dark sweet cherries stuffed with cream cheese make a delightful at well as attractive garnish for fruit and salad plates. Sew Several Aprons As Christmas Gifts RESET LOOSE SCREWS Pretty and Practical / PHIS GAY little bib apron is so ^ pretty and practical you’ll want to sew several as gifts and for your own apron wardrobe. It lakes just one yard of fabric in the smaller sizes, is trimmed with colorful ric rac. Pattern No. 8089 comes In sizeq 34, 36, 38. 40, 42, 44. 46 and 48. Size 36. 1 yard of 35 or 39-inch. Don’t miss the Fall and Winter FASHION—64 pages of style, color, easy to make frocks; fabric news, fashion tips —free pattern printed inside the book. 25 cents. SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 630 Sonth Wells St. Chleaga 7. DL Enclose 25 cents In coins for each pattern desired. Pattern No. ————Size - Nam* ■■ Address - Open Pit Mines Open-pit iron mines such as those of Minnesota’s long abun dant Mesabi Range have been a great asset to the nation because output could be expanded by put ting more shovels to work. The flow of ore from three Minnesota ranges reached a high of 75 mil lion tons in 1942 in response to World War II demands. -W^Suft* 7 - ril Mill! Kits Ml pint IP RHEUMATISM NEURITIS-LUMBAGO MCNEILS MAGIC REMEDY BRINGS BLESSED RELIEF 1 L.r(* Bettl.lt mm mm!°12S- Small Six. 60c I » Ulllll: IK HIT I n tu ciu mi JUKI«i BclllL MM Cl- Im. iKmUIUI .]>]20-Small Six. 60c ■II M llltCHI« I II lilt M liCCipl cl pike ICMMIIUI ♦, Tlltm Starts INSTANTLY to reHerft SOM Caused by Colds Just rub on Uuzterols... It’s msde 3^“JS3&’SSSB due to cold*. M ucterol. actuxUy heipB br.-.k up local confoatoon in the up per bronchi*! tract, DCS* aad t In 8 i MUSTEROLE How You May Tomorrow —without being Night --■sis If jraTi* forced op thia: sure Uktnc FOLEY pa Thex Bucftah Kidney. They j>urx»^Mdi thorn urz«. Alee allay hmkackm, Uc panful pametr. from kldMy leartioa. ’ you clasp all nixht tomorrow nicht DO! Your money back. At ye ' 1 WHEN SLEEP WONT COME AND YOU FEEL GLUM Try This Delicioui Chewing-Gum Laxative • Whoa yee roll ead tow all .lekt—fMt headachy and Juat awful bacauae you head ftiaxattre - do thla.. . Chew rxBf-a-iuHT—deUdoua gum laxative. The action of Ran special medicine "oxrotrxa" the That la. It doesn’t act while In the ach, but only when farther along in the lower digestive tract... where you want IS to act. You feel Him again qulcxly I And sclentlsta aay ch.wtng makes ton-.-hint's On* medicine nun afir.fi> tire - “readies” It so tt Hows gently li .to the system.Get rm-.-uorT at any IA4 drug counter-23a. 30« or only.... Iw> K FEEN-A-MINTH . WUROUS OtEWIHG-CUM uuumvi B?dUs. NKW vo *K *•. N. * 60 Bottles of Hadacol Pay Big Dividends wm Mr. Meaux Robert Meaux, Box 182, Airport Road, Lafayette, La., has taken more than 60 bottles of HADACOL in the e ist four years and he considers bis ADACOL money brought rich divi dends because today he is happy, healthy and able to do any kind of work while two years before taking HADACOL he was unable to do work of any kind. “I was first taken with stomach sickness eight years ago,” said Mr. Meaux. ‘T was so rail down that my friends did not even know me. For two years I was un able to do work of any kind. My food did not agree with me. I suffered d i g e s- tive disturbances. I had difficulty sleeping and my chest seemed to be stopped up most of the time. U I thought I would never be able to work again and had just about given up hope when I was advised to take HADACOL. After the second bottle of HADACOL I began to feel better, sleep better and started gaining much needed weight. “Today at 66 I am a healthy and happy man because I gave HADA COL a trial. I took about 30 bottles of HADACOL the first year, and in the past three years I have taken another 30 bottles of HADACOL to help me stay well.” Mr. Meaux and his son were both suffering from a lack of B Vitamins and Minerals which HADACOL con tains. HADACOL comes to you in liquid form, easily assimilated in the blood stream so that it ean go to work right away. A lack of only a small amount of B Vitamins and certain Minerals will cause digestive disturbances... Your food will not agree with job , You will hAve an upa«t ——— ., You will suffer from heartburn, gns- pains and your food will sour eft your stomach and yon wilt net be able to eat the things yon like far fear of being in misery afterwards. Many people also suffer from con stipation. And while these symptoms may be the results ef other causes, they are surely and certainly the symptoms and signs of lack of B Vitamins and Minerals which HAD ACOL contains. And if you suffer from such a deficiency disorder, there is no known cure except the administration of the vitamins and minerals, which your system lacks. It is easy to understand, therefore, why countless thousands have been benefited by thia amazing tonie, HADACOL. So it matters not how old you are or who you are ... it matters not where you live or if you have tried all the medicines under the sun, give this wonderful preparation, HADACOL, a trial. Don’t go on suf fering. Don’t continue to lead n miserable life. Many persons who have suffered and waited for 10 to 20 years or even longer, are able now to live happy, comfortable lives because HADACOL supplied the vitamins and minerals which their systems needed. Be fair to yourself. Temporary relief is not enough for you. Give HADACOL a trial! Sold at all leading drug sterea. Trial size only $1.25, but save money; buy the large family econ omy size. Only $3.50. If your drug gist does not handle HADACOI* order direct from The LeBlanc Cor poration, Lafayette, leu, and when the postman brings your package just pay the amount plus the e*A. and postage. If you remit with the order we will pay the postage. Then, if you don’t feel peMecUy satisfied after using HADACOL as directed, just return the empty car ton and your money win be cheers fully refunded. Nothing could hB fairer.—Adv. ■