The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, January 06, 1950, Image 3
*
Easily Built Trough
Will Aid Sheepmen
Designed to Cut Labor,
Lumber, Space and Feed
An easily built grain or hay
trough has proved to be a problem
for many sheep growers, but this
trough designed by H. M. Briggs,
department of animal husbandry,
4* IlftAC
This trough will save lumber,
space and feed for the sheep
, grower.
Oklahoma agricultural experiment
station, will provide the answer to
that problem in many cases.
The trough shown in these draw
ings is intended for mature sheep
and will save labor, lumber, space
and feed.
As the drawings show, the trough
can be built easily by any farm
handy-man, if the plan is followed
strictly. It should be noted that the
trough has its own floor.
If yearling rams are to be fed,
the material should be slightly
heavier than is shown in the plan.
The center of the pen, according
to Briggs, is the most desirable lo
cation for this trough. Or several
can be placed in a lot or pen. If the
trough is placed on a dirt floor or
lot, dig a shallow hole under each
leg so the trough cannot be pushed
about. In a bedded pen, the legs
will anchor in the bedding. The
trough can be cleaned easily by
tipping it up.
Wings for Wingless’
Wings for a wingless chicken
are provided here by airline
stewardess Marilyn Crawford.
She is shown holding her very
own “wings” to one of Peter
Bauman’s famed “wingless”
chickens, which Bauman is
holding in the photo. Four of the
chickens were shipped by air
to Olean, N.Y., for breeding
purposes.
Caution Urged In Use
Of Chemicals, Sprays
Dust sprays, gasses and other in
secticides will do much to promote
the healthy growth of fruits and
vegetables is the gist of instruction
being passed out now by county
agents over the nation.
However, these can often have
Just the opposite effect on people.
Even though the container may not
bear the skull and crossbones label,
caution is necessary sipce many
substances are harmful in some
ways to man, despite the fact that
they may not be definitely poison
ous.
- The whole story of safety in use
of insecticides, it was pointed out,
is simply precaution.
5v - A . ,
Technique Is Outlined
For Reclaiming Leather
One way to bring mildewed leath
er back into service in short order,
say home management specialists,
is to wipe it with a cloth wrung out
in diluted aleohoL
Use one cup of denatured alco
hol to one cup of water. Then, if
necessary, wash with thick suds of
mild, neutral soap, or saddle soap;
wipe with a damp doth, and dry
in an* airy place. When dry polish
with good wax dressing.
MIRROR
Of Your
MIND
Degrees of
'Emotionalism'
By Lawrence Gould
Answer: Very much so, if you
mean that they display their feel
ings freely, or cannot control them
when they want to. But I know no
reason for believing that one per
son is endowed by Nature with
more or less inborn capacity for
feeling than another. Depending
upon their life-experience, espe
cially children, A—develops more
Intense feeling of love or hate than
B—does and at the same time
either remains free to express his
feelings or is forced to “repress”
them out of consciousness. But
they may have been much alike to
start with.
Answer: Yes. For boredom is
frustration (of your wish to do
something that interests you) and
frustration always tends to create
rage and inner conflict. On the
other hand, the reason for your
being bored is often that you’re
childishly unwilling to “make the
best of a bad job.” For instance.
try to learn something from •
long-winded description of your
future f a t h e r-in-law’s business
problems if you have to listen to
them while you’re waiting for
daughter to put on her make-up.
Adaptability is the best antidote
to boredom.
Do “truth serums” violate a
prisoner’s rights?
Answer: They would seem to,
unless he accepts the treatment of
his own accord and with full
knowledge of what he is doing.
For “narcoanalysis” may lead him
to incriminate himself by admit
ting what the law allows him to
require the prosecution to prove.
A French court ruled that a pris
oner who had been shown by this
method to be feigning illness had
been “deprived of his free will,”
and threatened to prosecute the
doctors for “assault and battery.”
What goes on in our minds is no
one else’s business unless we
choose to reveal it.
LOOKING AT RELIGION
By DON MOORE
/TS 30ME5 57ILL LIE OH Mt.AmRAT
it came w -rest After we deluge?
'ALSO IN GEfTMANY IT MA6
0ZEN COMMONLY AGREE?
THAT A GIRL CAN WEAR
LimiCK AN? BE A CHRIST
IAN AT THE 5A ME TIME /
ANOTHER SEARCH IS PLANNED NETT YEA%
I KEEPING HEALTHY |
Cortisone, ACTH for Rheumatism
By Dr. James W Barton
W HEN WE READ about the won
derful results obtained in the
treatment of rheumatism and
arthritis by the use of Cortisone—
Compound E—and also ACTH, and
have a loved one suffering with dis
ability and pain, we may grow im
patient with the delay in producing
these drugs.
And in the case of ACTH, we
cannot understand why a firm as
large as Armour & Co., cannot
produce it in sufficient quantities
for even a small percentage of
sufferers.
Perhaps all the answers to why
we cannot get either of these drugs
at the present time is because the
tremendous demand greatly ex
ceeds the supply.
Rheumatism is the oldest disease
known to man and more patients
suffer with it than with any other
disease. Besides, to the jio^t de
mand for the drugs in --ases of
rheumatism, research workers are
reporting excellent results in the
use of them in other diseases than
rheumatism.
In fact, they state that Cortisone
and ACTH will be hailed as wonder
drugs of the same standing as in
sulin for diabetes. And like insulin,
at present anyway, these new drugs
must be taken continuously, as
symptoms return when these drugs
are stopped.
In “The Ontario Medical Re
view,” Dr. Wallace Graham, presi
dent, Canadian Arthritis society,
states that Cortisone, .produced by
Merck & Co., and ACTH, taking
months to produce even under the
best conditions, are now available.
“The production of Cortisone is
an extraordinarily difficult and com
plicated process requiring more
than 30 time-consuming chemical
reactions. To produce the com-
pound from its first step to the fin
ished pro duct requires many
months. The amount accumulated
from 1946 to January, 1949, will
have been virtually exhausted by
the experimental and clinical
studies which have already been
completed and by the additional
studies now in progress.”
★ HEALTH NOTES
Painful feet are both a physical
and mental hazard. Generally
speaking, most of us make as much
money with our feet as we do with
our beads.
• • •
Aside from the bile killing harm
ful organisms, the liver cells them
selves filter out poisons from the
blood which, if not removed, would
eause tiredness and weakness.
Now that chest X-ray examina
tions are becoming available al
most everywhere, it is known that
hundreds of cases of tuberculosis
are being found in which there was
no thought that tuberculosis might
be present. Some had the examina
tion because they had been told
that an early symptom of tuber
culosis was tiredness, and they did
feel tired most of the time.
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY. & C.
KATHLEEN NORRIS
Hasty Weddings
"TS THERE ANYTHING we can
^ do to stop the unthinking young
marriages that lead to so mariy un
thinking divorces?” asks Doris Day
(not her real name).
She is matron in a dormitory that
houses some 200 college girls, on
the campus of a midwestem uni
versity. "They plunge joyfully into
matrimony without any considera
tion for anything except their new
found passion for each other,” her
letter goes on,” and in a pitifully
short time the realities of rent and
food and clothing swarm over
them; they feel cheated and tied;
and only under exceptional circum
stances can they hold together, or
be expected to hold together.”.
And Miss Day, who is Scotland
bom—and has herself been mar
ried, and is war-widowed—observes
that she was engaged to her young
man at the age of 20, and married
to him eight years later, and that
their 10 years together were cloud
lessly happy.
“In my country,” she writes,
“long engagments are considered
quite natural. A girl and a man find
an affinity, they plan their future
and then, perhaps, he goes off to
Africa, China or India to get hit
start. Or he gets a position with
one of our many banks, oil compa
nies, or shipping firms that simply
do not permit employees to burden
themselves with domestic cares
until a certain financial stage is
reached.
Their Happy Plana
“It seems to me this delay,” con
tinues the letter, “makes for
character and self-control. The girl
trusts her man, and he trusts her.
And as the time of the wedding ap
proaches, their happy plans, their
preparations, the presents and
trousseau and finding of the new
home, are surely the more delight
ful because of the long wait
“Aren’t slow-developing things
nature’s way, after all? Spring and
summer, the coming of a baby, the
slow rise of a man to a position of
". . . they plan their future . . .*
responsibility, the slow gathering
of household goods in the slowly-
acquired home—doesn’t all this
come closer to a real ideal of liv
ing?
“Isn’t it better relished than this
rush of today’s adolescents into the
most sacred of relationships, the
skipping of all formalities and pre
liminaries, the childish assumption
that ignorance and passion and
novelty are all that is needed?
“Right near the campus,” writes
Doris, “there is a couple aged 19
and 20. They ran away and were
married in a neighboring state
eight months ago. The girl’s family
continued to send her $100 a month.
The boy’s family has never an
swered his exultant wire.
Baby Expected
“In a few weeks there will be a
baby. At first they were delighted
about this baby; now they are not
so sure. The boy has left school
and taken a job in a shoe store.
The girl plans to go home for the
baby’s arrival and tells me in tears
that she won’t come back. Sandy
Is so changed, she says, so irrita
ble lately. They can’t do anything,
can’t afford night club dinners or
movies. Their rent is $55 a month,
for three small unheated rooms in
the rear of a village house. Elinor
is sick of ‘money talk and the eggy
dishes and the splashy bathroom
and the oil cook stove, and feeling
so rotten all the time.”
Well, Doris, wonderful lives have
been built out of those eggy dishes
and cold little rooms, money short
age and young discouragement.
Spring comes and the baby comes
and, when they take the baby west
to see Grandma and Grandpa,
Sandy gets a job in hospitable Ore
gon or California, the little new
family will get on its feet among a
million others who have fought the
same good fight.
If Sandy and Elinor have charac
ter enough—or only the beginnings
of fine character—and if they know
that love has to be built slowlyt
like the house and the income and
the baby, then they're all right. I
hope they are.
But long engagements? Well,
perhaps blood in Scotland and Eng
land runs more slowly, is cooler.
Or perhaps pounds, shillings and
pence loom more important in the
eyes of lovers than do dollars and
cents over here.
But nobody dares talk long en
gagements here. The wedding date
is usually set before the engage
ment is announced at all, and as
for the quiet talks, the plans, the
reading of books, the placid post
ponement until say, 1954 or 1956—
our young people would laugh aU
that out of court.
Hearty Desserts, Served
Piping Hot From Stove,
Pep Up Family Meals
SEEMS as though I can’t serve
enough to keep appetites satis
fied these cold days,” says many
a homemaker when the tempera
tures dip and chilly menfolk and
youngsters crowd around the table
ready to eat everything in sight.
If you’ve planned a soup, this
helps take the edge off sharp ap
petites. Add to this a nourishing
meat dish, a starchy food and a
vegetable and . a salad; top It off
with a hot, hearty dessert, and
you’ll be certain to meet not only
nutritional requirements for a
heavy meal, but also those of the
appetite as well.
* * •
TF YOU MIX a starchy food with
^fruit, you have the perfect answer
for dessert in many instances. Hot
puddings can be baked right with
meat and vegetables. Other top-
of-the-stove desserts may be quick
ly prepared, so neither adds much
work toward getting together a
meal.
Cranberry Coconut Dumplings
(Serves 6)
1 cup sifted flour
1 teaspoon double-acting
baking powder
% teaspoon salt
$ tablespoons sugar
cup shredded coconut, cut
1 egg, well beaten
34 cup milk .
4 tablespoons melted butter
l-?6 cups (1-pound can) whole
cranberry sauce
% cup orange Juice
Sift flour once, measure, add
baking powder, salt, and sugar,
and sift again. Add coconut. Com
bine egg, milk, and butter; add to
flour mixture, stirring unti} soft
dough is formed.
Combine cranber/y sauce and
orange juice in saucepan; bring to
a boiL Drop dumpling batter from
tablespoon into hot cranberry
sauce. Cover tightly and cook over
low heat 15 minutes. Serve at once
with cream, if desired.
Coconut Dessert Pancakes
(Serves 4-6)
' 1 cup sifted flour
1 teaspoon double-acting bak
ing powder
tt teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon sugar
1 egg, well beaten
1 cup milk
3 tablespoons melted butter or
other shortening
H cup finely cut shredded co
conut, plain or toasted
1 cup fresh or canned whole
cranberry sauce
Sift flour once, measure, add
baking powder, salt, and sugar,
and sift again. Combine egg and
milk. Add grad-
ually to dry in-
gredients, beat
ing only until
smooth. Add
shortening and
coconut. Use
about three table
spoons of batter
for each pancake and bake on hot
griddle. Serve three or four (three-
inch) pancakes with cranberry
sauce for each serving.
Empress Pudding
(Serves 6)
1 quart milk, scalded
H cup rice
K teaspoon salt
cup sugar
2 eggs v
1 teaspoon vanilla
% teaspoon nutmeg
1-34 cups drained, cook apri-
Old-fashioned rice pudding
goes modern with apricots sub
stituted for raisins and some
Jam in between the layers for
extra appetite appeal. This is
an ideal dessert to make when
you’re having an oven dinner.
LYNN SAYS: ,
fjse Meat Tricks
To Add Variety
Change the flavor of the pot
roast with different combinations of
seasonings. For one, try a mixture
of marjoram, basil and rosemary.
For another, use lemon rind mixed
with curry powder; for a third, use
horse-radish.
Add grated cheese to creamed
dried beef and stir until the cheese
melts. This Is wonderful served
over drop biscuits, hot from the
oven.
Dumpling light as air are
these Cranberry Coconut de
lights that make a perfect,
frnit-fllled dessert for mid
winter mealtime glamour. The
batter is easy to make and Is
then simply dropped in cran
berry sance to cook.
LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU
Chilled Vegetable Juice
Braised Lamb Shanks with
Potatoes Onions Carrots
Orange and Grapefrui* Salad
Rolls
•Cherry Nut Custaru
Beverage
•Recipe Given
f- l ~> T Q
; n. n
—'r* * V,- 1 v
|i
•’*
; 2 ^ * -s? £ PS 3 $ X <
SCRIPTURE: Act* 1:1-41.
DEVOTIONAL READ IN vi: Joel 1:28-
32.
The Church Dynamic
Lesson for January 8, 1958
Look Fresh and Pretty ;
With This Bright Frock
• •
C tlrl* • # I
\* L * ■ m • a* •J
cots (sweetened) er
1 cup apricot Jam, or other
favorite jam
Scald milk in top of double boil
er; add washed, drained rice and
salt. Cover and cook over hot
water about an hour, until rice is
tender and milk
is about ab
sorbed. Stir oc
casionally Beat
eggs; add sugai
and blend. Stir
some hot rice
into egg - sugar
mixture and
blend; stir into '
. remaining rice
mixture. Add
vanilla and nutmeg. Put rice into
well-buttered casserole in alternate
layers with apricots or jam be
tween, reserving a little for top.
Bake in a moderate oven, 325*,
about 40 minutes or until lightly
browned. Serve with milk or cream.
• Cherry Nut Custard
Serves 6-8
H enp sugar
H cup flour
34 teaspoon salt
2 cups scalded milk
1 teaspoon vanilla or almond
extract '
2 eggs or egg yolks
1 cup red tart pitted cherries •
(canned or frozen)
34 cup broken nut meats
Mix dry ingredients. Add scalded
milk gradually. Cook 15 minutes in
double boiler, stirring c onstantly
until mixture thickens and after
wards occasionally. Add eggs,
slightly beaten, and cook two or
three minutes longer. Cool and fold
in the flavoring, cherries and nuts.
Serve with dainty cake cut-outs or
cookies.
Cherry-Apple Cobbler
Serves 8
Cobbler Crust: Any favozite bak
ing powder biscuit dough may be
used. This may be made a little
shorter for this purpose, if desired,
by adding two additional table
spoons of shortening per cup of
flour. Press a layer of the dough
into a greased baking dish, then
add filling ,and top with remaining
dough. Bake at 400°, about 23 min
utes, or until crust is brown and
filling is tender.
Cobbler Filling:
1 cup red tart pitted cherries
2 cups apples — any cooking
apples, sliced as for pie
1 cup sugar
3 tablespoon flour
Combine sugar and flour, then
mix well with the cherries and
apples.
Cherry Foam Sauce:
1 cup tart red cherry Juice
1 cup sugar
2 egg whites
K teaspoon almond flavoring
Few drops red vegetable
coloring
Combine juice and sugar. Cook to
a thick syrup or 230*. Pour gently
over stiffly beaten egg whites, add
flavoring, then the coloring to make
desired shade. Serve hot or cold
as a sauce or topping on any plain
cake, such as white, yellow, sponge
or angel food.
Use mint-flavored barbecue sauce
for lamb chops. Combine chopped
onion with mint leaves, vinegar
and salad oiL Let stand overnight,
then brush over lamb chops before
cooking.
When you have meat loaf left
over, cube it and heat with barbecue
sauce. Serve over toasted* buns.
Use a slice of luncheon meat tor
these tricks. Break an egg on top
of each and cover with grated Swiss
cheese. Cook slowly in skillet until
egg sets. It’s grand for Sunday
night suppers.
r E CHURCH is not meant to be
a club, a lecture-hall, a debat
ing society, a rest home, a music
hall, an entertainment bureau or a
burial association. It has some
thing to do along all these lines,
of course. But the Church is meant
to be a place and
channel of power.
One" of the last
things Jesus, the
Founder of the
Church, said to his
friends was: “Ye
shall receive pow
er when the Holy
Spirit is come up
on you.” Not—you
shall receive com- Foreman
fort, or wealth, or insight, or any
other good thing, though all of
them have their place. What
Jesus highlights is power.
Df. W. M. Horton, in his little
book on the Christian faith, asks:
When is a church not a church?
His answer is: When it has lost
the Holy Spirit That is a good
New Testament answer.
The early Christians could not
have imagined a church with
out the Holy Spirit because
in fact there had never been
one without him. It was the
coming of the Spirit on that
summer day in Jerusalem that
actually made the church, in
the first place. True, it was not
made oat of nothing.
But suppose the Spirit had never
come? What would have happened?
Sooner or later the little band would
have grown tired of waiting, would
have given up faith in Jesqs’ prom
ise, would have drifted off one by
one, and the Christian church would
have died after it was bora.
Tongues of Fire
ipHERE SEEMS to be something
* mystic, mystezious and unreal
about the Holy Spirit, to most peo
ple’s minds. We read in Acts about
the flaming tongues of fire, about
the rushing| mighty wind,
Christians talking in
guages; and then we go to our own
church and find there no fire, no
wind; only ordinary English is
spoken by everyday people, the
same people we have been seeing
all week.
We get to thinking the Holy Spirit
Is just something in the Bible, some
experience they could have away
back yonder, but not here and now.
After all, looking over the church
from that day to this, and around
the world at the present day, how
many cases, authentic genuine cases
of fire-on-the-head or storm-in-toe-
church-house, do you find? Not
many! Does that show the Holy
Spirit is not here any more?
We mast remember that St
Paul met with mach the same -
questions. Did a man have to
speak in strange tongues to be
sure he had the Holy Spirit?
Fortunately, Paul stated In so
many words what the fntKs of
the Spirit are: Love, Joy, peace
... Look np the rest of It In Gal.
5:22-23.
You may take St Paul’s in
spired word for .it: If you ever see a
church, a Christian group, that is
notable for love, joy, peace . . .
gentleness, goodness, faith . . . you
may be sure the Holy Spirit is there.
We do not gather grapes from thorns
nor figs from thistles, Jesus says.
You don’t have the fruits of the
Spirit without having the Spirit. And
that is Power. Said a great Austral
ian preacher: Show me a church
where the members treat one an
other with more real love than the
people outside the church treat one
another, and you will find men
crowding the doors of that church to
get in.
• • •
How Can We Get
the Holy Spirit?
t*TE CANNOT GET the Spirit by
wishing ourselves back in toe
first century. We can have the Holy
Spirit now, on the same terms as
always. There are no new condi
tions, no complicated rules, no ap
plication blanks to fill out. Jesus
said: God will give toe Holy Spirit
to them that Ask him; Paul said:
Covet earnestly toe best gifts.
In any church, if there la
even a Email group who want
the power of God In their l(ves.
who want his power for the
church, that little group can
change that church and change
the community. Power pasoea
through a wire when one end
of it is attached to a dynamo
and the other end to a ma
chine that is doing some work.
•
Prayor—that is the touch with
God. Service—that is toe link'with
man. So power will flow through
the Church when at one end it is
In touch with God,, and at too other
end it is doing something real for
human needs.
I I
3 H|
Fresh sad Pretty
lO’ICELY styled to keep
ing fresh and pretty
four housework. Trim with
ric rao—tie a narrow belt
in front. It’s a wearable
with the longer sleeve.
Pattern No. 8310 Is In
J8. 40, 42. 44 and 40, Size
t yarda of 38 or 39-mch.
• • •
The Fall and Winter
fulde you smoothly and «xp<
alng a wearable winter wa
eial features, free pattern
the book. IS cents.
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN
530 Bents Welle St..
Enclose 15 cents In
pattern desired.
Pattern No.
Name
Address
. T.
In each m
Va-tro-nol’
right inhere
etuffy trouble is/
It opens up cold-1
clogged nose .. •
relieves stuffi
ness ... and lets
you breathe
again. Try it
BIG JAR |
not
He
scorn ii
Thoosnads of happy
folks know this I Good*
tastins Scott’s Emolstm'jyij
helps yon ward off colds—helps yea.
ret wall faster—and helps yon heap
roing strong whan roar diet neede
more natural AAD Vitamins I Scott's Is
a HIGH ENERGY POOD
rich in aatsraJ AAD VI
and casrgy
oiL Try It! Sea tow
feel Easy to take and
Economical. Bus today <
drug store I
MORE
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