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THE NEWBERRY SUN. NEWBERRY. S. C. Only DuffS Makes Prize Hot Rolls like these! /// >s Lighter, fluffier rolls, crisper crusted, fresher keeping, richer tasting... yes. Duff’s Hot Roll Mix gives Prize results. And home-baked rolls are so easy to make with Duff’s. Ev0rything’$ in. Just add wafer—that's all I A Product of AMERICAN HOME FOODS Relieve "r* Chest Colds PENETRATES Into upper bron* chill tubes with specisl soothing medicinal vapors. STIMULATES chest, throat and bach surfaces like a wdrmina. coa forting poultice. At bedtime rub throat, chest and back with Vicks VapoRub. Relief-bringing action starts Instantly ... 2 ways at once! And it keeps up this special unu' Penetrating - St: tion for hours In the night to bring relief. mlating ac- VapoRub ass; EELING OORLY? See how SCOTT'S helps build you up! N fto fssl run down,l ! and colds hang on — ! maybe yon don’t get { enough natural A4D Vitamin food. Then try good-tasting Scott’s Emulsion—the HIGH ENEBGY FOOD TONIC 1 See how you begin to get your strength back I How you can fight off col^y I Scott’s is a “gold mine’’ of natural A&D Vitamins and energy-building natural oil. Easy to take. Economical. Buy today at yonr drug store. MORE than just a tonic— it’s powerful nourishment! SCOTT'S EMULSION h/gh Ehergv tonic the Man Who Knows, Wears WORK CLOTHES rnfattBr OR RHEUMATISM, >TOMACH TROUBLE ’Almost a health miracle.” Millions bene- . toed by Crasy Water Crystals. Try it for rheumatism, arthritis, neu- ritis, stomach disorders caused or aggravated by faulty elimination. Money-back guarantee. Send $1.25 for 1-lb. box if your druggist doesn’t stock. Craxy Water Co- Mineral Wells, Texas. MIRROR Of Your MIND Real Feelings I ■ ■ Seldom Apparent By Lawrence Gould Can you be “certain” that anybody loves you? Answer: Never absolutely, for the simple reason that you cannot read another person’s mind, and therefore can’t be sure of his real feelings. If you let morbid suspi cion rule you, you can't prove that your best friend’s devotion is not just a pretense. That’s why trying to be “certain” leads only to need less misery and mental illness. As business depends on credit, your personal happiness depends on giving others the benefit of the doubt, and assuming that if their behavior conforms to their protes tations, they must love you. Are “crime specialists” harder to reform? Answer: No, says Dr. Edmund Mezger, German criminologist. There are two types of habitual criminals, those who specialize in one kind of offense (say, passing bad checks) and those who are ready to break any law, as fancy srikes them. Of these types, the “specialists” are easier to deal with because they express their hatred of society in one form which is the symbol of their spe cial grievance. By tracing the meaning of the symbol, you may be gble to help them see the world — and themselves — differ ently. May disabled children get too much attention? Answer: Yes, WTites Dr. Roger G. Barker of the University of Kansas in the Journal of Social Issues. Even the extra care and attention a disabled child must get tends to handicap his emotional development. He is likely to be come too dependent on the society of adults and leave it to them to decide what he’ll do next instead of planning his play for himself. This leaves him unconsciously frustrated, yet afraid to face new abled child is quite as much a mental problem as a physical one. LOOKING AT RELIGION By DON MOORE JftfrAiNZ RONALD KNOX, brilliant SCHOLAR AND TRANSLATOR OF TUB CATHOLIC BIBLE, ALSO WRITES Sports aunpbp tweed WEARING MINISTERS ARE HAV ING SUCCESS IN HOLDING YOUTH OF SCANDINAVIA WHERE OTHERS FAILED / KEEPING HEALTHY Infection, Neurosis Cause Tiredness By Dr. James W. Barton E ARLY ONE MORNING a neigh bor cartie to my summer cot tage and asked me to go fishing. I asked him why he had come for me instead of his regular fishing companion. He complained that liis former fishing companion wanted to sleep all day and didn’t want to get up in the morning. A few weeks later his fishing companion died of heart disease caused by several infected teeth. Tiredness and sleepiness is per haps the commonest sign of infec tion somewhere in the body. If a normal individual who has never complained of tiredness and sleepiness begins to feel tired and sleepy during the day, an immed iate search for infection should be made by physician and dentists before damage to the heart and other organs occurs. What about the individual who is tired all the time, in fact has always been tired? In “Clinical Medicine” the question is asked as to the reason for tiredness in one who has always been tired, yet in whom careful examination reveals no cause of tiredness. The answer which follows states that the most important diagnostic method in the case of the tired patient is the asking of three ques tions: “Have you been more or less tired all your life? Does rest or a night’s sleep help your tiredness? Are there any new complaints in the last few months?” This latter question is to rule out any new con dition that may have developed, in addition to the chronic tired ness. Patients believe that their weak ness and tiredness is due either to a physical condition or to over work. “In the great majority of cases it is neither the one nor the other. Tiredness is, next to pain, the most common symptom of neurosis. Work, instead of making fatigue (tiredness) worse, often relieves it.** It is easily understood how an individual who thinks he has an ailment, when one exists, worries just as much as if a disease were present and what makes him more worried and upset is that he can expect no sympathy from family or friends. ★ HEALTH NOTES ★ For those who may wonder what to do for an epileptic during an at tack, the attacks run their course 50 that nothing need be done for the patient except to prevent him from hurting himself. • • • Scabies (the itch) is caused by a tiny organism, the itch mite, which burrows into the skin, and :ays its eggs. Several years ago research work ers at Toronto General Hospital were helping many cases of stom ach ulcer by feeding the patient by means of a duodena) tube. • • • Cancer should be suspected if a sore in the mouth has been growing for several weeks. Two other com mon sores found in the mouth are due to tuberculosis and to syphiUn. : :fV' r\> P's ! V I ' wMl '> m m m tip! ipj f|«,ir SCRIPTURE: Acta 13:3. DEVOTIONAL READING: Isaiah 42: 5-9. Where We Came In Lesson for Feburary 5, 1950 Dr. Foreman A CIRCULAR LETTER came in the other day from a stranger who is hot and bothered because he has discovered that Jews and Negroes can belong to Christian churches along with white Amer icans. The astonishing thing is not that that should be true, but that any man should get ex cited over it. What a s t o n ished the Apostle Paul was not that Jews were i n the Christian church but that anybody else could be! We must recall that Jesus was a Jew; that all the apostles were Jews; that the first Christian church at Jerusalem was composed exclusively of Jews. • • • New Type ■pHE CHURCH AT ANTIOCH, one ^ of the great commercial cities of the Roman world, was where we Gentiles came in. The writer is indebted to his former teacher. Dr. Charles Erdman, for noting four ways in which that church in Antioch was something new. They had no Old Testament, they knew nothing of the Old Testament sacrifices, they had no interest in the Temple or In the history of Israel. Like most Gentiles, they bad usually thought of the Jew as a quaint but unimportant minority group. Now that these Gentiles were in the same church with Jews, there would be plenty of room for trouble. Could a church made up of such different races become a true Brotherhood? So the old mother- church at Jerusalem sent up Brother Barnabas to look around. Barnabas was not the church’s most brilliant mind, but he had a heart full of faith. • • • New Leaders G OD DOES NOT ALWAYS give the greatest successes to the “big names.” Nowadays every one who knows his Bible knows Paul and Barnabas; but in Antioch both men were unknown at first, and untried. When God wants a Reforma tion he calls forth a Luther, an obscure -man who never fitted any of the existing priest ly molds. When God wanted to open up Africa he called David Livingstone; when he wanted men for the far interior of Asia he called Hudson Taylor. When he wanted light to shine down into the slums he called William Booth. These were all peculiar men by the standards of their times; but it takes peculiar men to break away from tradition’s hearth-fire and break out new roads for the Gospel * • • New Center tvOR SOME TIME Jerusalem was * the capital of the Christian world. All roads led out from there, so to speak. With the rise of the Antioch church, however, a new center took the place of the old. Jerusalem withered away. In later times Alexandria led, and then other cities. For a thousand years Rome and Constantinople were the ac knowledged centers of the Chris tian world. Now we have also London—New York—Geneva ... Many such centers have small beginnings. In America’s early days the churches of Scotland sent over missionary offerings for the help of the straggling little church of New York. In future years, who knows? Some church in Yunnan may be sending missionaries to the feeble folk left in the war - devastated ex - white world. • • • New Name WNTIOCH is no longer a city of ** any importance. Missionaries go to it, not from it. But old Antioch left us something still cherished, a new name for believers: Chris tian. That name itself proves something. It proves that the church In Antioch was something more than an aggregation of “churchmen.” It was a fam ily of Christ-men and Christ- women. These believers must have talked and lived some thing better than mere vague “religion.” They talked of Christ, they loved Christ and they lived Christ, till even their busy neighbors took no tice. If your church had no name, and if your neighbors were to name it, and all the neighbors knew about it were yen, by what name wou^ they call it? Spinach-Stuffed Fillets Make Novel Treat (See Recipes Below) Luncheon Ideas M ANY WOMEN would like to entertain a few friends for luncheon, but they worry about what to serve, and how it can look pretty. Should it be elaborate? Does it have to be practically a dinner? These are two of the primary q u e s- tions that come up with the un- accustomed hostess. For the luncheon at which you want to gather together a few friends casually, plan a simple menu that can be easily served. You’ll enjoy your guests so nluch bettei*! Even though you entertain six or more for luncheon, the menu should be simple, and not a dinner. Serve small portions of food, daintily and prettily. Make them feminine, aVid not too fattening. Your guests, di eting or maintaining weight, will appreciate this type of meal more than heavy foods which they’ll have to go home to prepare for the menfolk. A good plan for luncheon in cludes a clear soup, fruit cup or vegetable or fruit juice for a first course, but this may be omitted for very simple luncheons. Plan a main dish aud serve it with hot bfeads. Use a vegetable garnish or a salad that • can be served on the same plate with the main dish. • • • H ERE ARE TWO pie recipes which you will enjoy using with any of the above main dishes. • Frozen Lemon Pie (Serves 6) IK caps vanilla wafer crumbs, finely rolled 2 tablespoons melted but ter S eggs, separated K cup lemon juice K cap sugar 1 teaspoon finely grated lemon rind K pint whipping cream Line a refrigerator tray with one cup crumbs mixed well with but- t^£. Combine egg yolks, sugar, lem on juice and lemon rind. Cook on low heat until mixture thick ens, stirring con stantly. Chill and fold in whipped cream. Beat egg whites until they stand in peaks and fold into lemon mix ture. Pour into lined tray and sprinkle with remaining crumbs. Freeze until firm. Cut in triangles. Rhubarb Deep-Dish Pie (Serves 10) 8 cups rhubarb cut in 134- inch pieces 134-2 cups sugar 34 cup cornstarch 34 teaspoon nutmeg 34 cup butter 1 tablespoon orange rind 34 cap orange juice 34 recipe pastry Place rhubarb in colander and pour boiling water over it. Sift together sugar, cornstarch and nut meg. Cut in butter, add orange rind and juice, and blend. Add rhu barb and mix well. Spread over bottom of 9x13-inch pan. Place 10 rectangular pieces of pastry LYNN SAYS: Store Foods Properly To Avoid Waste To keep citrus fruit (Lemon, orange, grapefruit, etc.), place fruit cut-side-doujn on saucer or plate. If you have several slices of lemon or orange left over, pack them together neatly and place the pile cut-surface-down in the same way. Cover dishes of food in mechani cal refrigerator. (Rubberized or oiled silk slip-covers are easy to uso). LYNN CHAMBERS* MENU Chilled Tomato Juice •Spinach-Stuffed Fillets Cucumber Salad Crisp Rolls Beverage •Frozen Lemon Pie •Recipe Given (234x434 inches) over rhubarb mix ture. Slit centers with knife for steam vent. Bake one hour in mod. erate oven (350°). * • • H ERE ARE SOME novel sugges tions for luncheon main dishes that are ideal when entertaining. Their preparation is simple, so the hostess may keep cool and charm* ing. •Spinach-Staffed Fillets (Serves 6) 1 pound spinach or kale 1 onion, chopped 1 tablespoon butter Salt, pepper 1 egg, beaten 34 cap bread crumbs 134 pounds fish fillets Wash spinadh thoroughly. Cook spinach and onion together with only water that clings to leaves. When tender, drain and chop. Add butter and seasonings to taste. Cool. Meanwhile cut fillets in two- inch strips. Add egg and bread crumbs to cooled spinach. Spread the mixture on each fillet, roll and fasten with toothpicks. Place, cut side up, in greased baking dish and bake at 400° fo£ 20 minutes. Chicken Fondne (Serves 4) 34 cup finely chopped cel ery. 1 tablespoon butter 1 enp milk, scalded 1 enp soft bread crumbs 1 enp diced cooked chick en meat or 6 ounce can 1 tablespoon finely grated . onion 34 teaspoon pepper ,« 3 eggs, separated ^ 34 teaspoon salt Cook celery in butter several minutes. Combine with milk, bread crumbs, chicken, onion and pepper. Add salt to egg whites and beat until shiny and whites form peaks that fold over when beater is withdrawn. Beat yolks. Pour milk mixture into yolks stirring constantly. Pour yolk mixture gradually over egg whites folding at the same time. Pour into un greased 134-quart casserole. Place casserole in a pan of hot water. Bake in a moderate oven (375°) until a knife inserted in center comes out clean, about one hour. Toasted Crabmeat Sandwiches (Serves 6) 1 cup flaked crabmeat (634 ounce can) 3 hard-cooked eggs 1 teaspoon minced onion 1 teaspoon Worcester shire sauce 4 tablespoons mayonnaise 34 teaspoon salt 34 cup grated cheese 34 teaspoon pepper Paprika 6 slices of bread Mix the first seven ingredients into a paste. Toast one side of bread slices. Spread crabmeat mixture over untoasted side of bread. Sprinkle with grated cheese; sprinkle paprika on top. Broil four inches from unit until cheese has. melted and lightly browned. Serve at once. Left-over canned fruits or veg etables may now be kept in the original tin cans with safety. (A thin film of oil over pimiento pods left in the can will keep them from molding. Olives should be kept in their liquor.) Sterilize bread box occasionally by washing thoroughly in hot, soapy water, rinsing with boiling water, drying well and airing in sunshine. Sticky cinnamon rolls, coffee cake, etc., may be kept in the bread box with the bread or in a covered roaster. Pillowcase Decoration 5011 Ideal for Gifts pRETTY little pansies in a cro- cheted basket make a lovely decoration for pillowcases So simple to make you’ll want sev eral pair for gifts as well as your own linen cupboard. Pattern No. 5011 consists of crochet ing Instructions, hot-iron transfers for four designs measuring approximately eight Inches long, color chart, stitch il lustrations, material requirements and complete making and finishing directions. Grandma’s Sayings SEWING CIRCLE NEEDLEWORK 030 Snath WeUs St. Chlesge 7, m. Enclose 2C cents for pattern. No. ••••••«•«••• Name Address For Your Future Buy U. S. Savings Bonds DROP HEAD COLD CLOGGED ISfOSK mzn wnmisnllultyas— S drops of Penetro Nose Drops In each nostril, ease conges tion. open clogged nose, xou "—— * er this 2-drop way. MMt nnont NUot UKUro GROWIN* UP is sure a serious job, but we kin tell tie younguns ho# it grows easier from the very day we have our first laugh—at our own selves. $5 pad Min M. Zimmerman, Nee Orleens. La.* v*T 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-Maid. And what’s more new Nu-Maid Is improved—smoother spreadin’, bet ter tastin’ than ever! THE ONLY TIME It’s safe to give the low-down on fblks, is when it’s the foundation fer a build-up. $5 paid MOv toe Hallman. Charlotte. N.C.* LAND 8AKES! I jest can’t keep up with “Table-Grade” Nu-Maid! Now It’s better ’n ever. Yep. TheyVe im proved my favorite spread ... made it even better tastin’...more smooth spreadin’. And new Nu-Maid’s got a brand new package to keep that sweet, churned-fresh flavor sealed In! ^ will be paid upon publica tion to the first contributor of each accepted saying or idea. Address “Grandma” 109 East Pearl Street, Cincinnati 2, Ohio. Cow-foon “Now that I’m going to get rled, mother, I think I should know where ’Table-Grade* Nu- Maid By WALTER A. SHE AD W HILE ALL the attention and shouting about the 1950 census right now seems to be over the questions to be asked about in come, the real political signifi cance of this census is in what it will do to congress after the reap portionment as a result of the cen sus. This second session of the 81st congress is sitting for the last time as npw constituted, for as the say ing goes, there’ll be some changes made. For instance the migration from rural areas into the cities will make a definite impression on the complexion of congress .and more representatives will come from the urban centers. New York state, for instance will lose three congressmen; Pennsylvania win lose two. In dications now are that Illinois, Georgia, Arkansas, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, Tennessee and Oklahoma will each lose at least one congress man. California will -be the big winner with an increase of eight more congressmen. Florida, Indiana, Michigan, Texas,, Oregon and Washington will each gain at least one. And there may be other shifts as the population moves from East to West • • • Seed Shortage Seen The department of agriculture Is deeply concerned over the fact that up to 100 million acres of land may go seedless as a result of a com bination shortage of about 446 mil lion pounds of grass and legume seeds and the new decrease in acreage allotments of basic crops. In other words, some 30 million acres will be released from the pro duction of wheat cotton, tobacco, potatoes, rice and other allotment crops in order to prevent surplus in those crops and the estimate for needs of grass seeds stands at about 756 million pounds whereas the production this year amounted to only 310 million pounds. Whether these acres will stand idle subject to weeds or erosion, depends upon whether or not the farmers will plant more acres this year to La- dino clover, brome, sweet clover, alfalfa or other legumes. * • • • Huge Pif Crop The department of agriculture forecasts a record crop of pigs go ing to market in 1950 with the first wave to reach the market in the late winter or early spring at a re duction of about 10 per cent In price. The present 90 per cent at parity price support will be main tained through March and an ex pected reduction in the price •up- port is expected beyond that date, • • • REA Roto Holp I Approximately 800 applications are on file with the rural electric administration ( from companies seeking to give rural telephone service under the law enacted by the last session of congress. And apparently there is an en tirety different feeling between the private telephone comite- nies and REA aa compared to this government agency and the private power companies. Perhaps the telephone compa nies are taking a page out of the book of experience, for aa a matter of fact they are offering REA every facility and help as a result of their long experi ence, instead of attempting to bloc the program as did the electric utilities. Most applications for extension of phone service to the farms is com ing from established private firms. The private companies say they in stalled 350,600 rural telephones in 1949 without REA. One advantage the private companies have is that REA seemingly does not want es tablished electric Coops to handle telephones. So new telephone coops must be organized. • • • Would Widon Soeurity One of the “must” bills insofar as the administration is concerned and a likely campaign issue is the bill to extend social security to the tune of about 11 million additional persons and to increase its bene fits. This measure (HR 6000) al ready has passed the house and carries increased payroll deduc tions to be borne by employers and employee alike. It would up the average payment from about $26 per month to about $44. Another on the administra tion time table la the aid te education bill which passed the senate last session carrying aa appropriation of about S00 mil lion and which became all snarled np In a religions con troversy in a house committee. It will be remembered that the senate in the 80th congress passed a similiar bill introduced by Senator Taft, and which was never reported out of a house committee. It seems almost certain that some kind ol education bill will pass this sea sion.-