The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, August 11, 1950, Image 3
THE NEtVBERRY SON. NEWBERRY. S. C.
'4
■
GOOD CITIZEN
Power to Declare War Invested
In Congress of United States
1
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This Is the sixth ef s series of ten
articles frem the boeklet “Good Citl-
sea” published bjr The American
Heritage Foundation concerning the
rights and duties of an American.
T HE FIFTH promise of a good
citizen: I will work for peace
but will dutifully accept my respon-
libilities in time of war and will
respect the Flag.
Probably the greatest of all pow
ers is the power to declare war.
In America this power is not given
to any one man. It is not given
to our gen
erals and ad
mirals. It is
not given to
the President
and his cabi
net. It is giv
en only to our
elected repre
sentatives —
the 'Congress
of the United
iE^SCRI
By INEZ GERHARD
JJONOLD REAGAN, star of “Lou
isa”, has been signed by Uni
versal-International for “Bedside
tor Bonzo” the story of a young
RONALD REAGAN
married couple who try out their
theories of child raising on a mon
key before having their own child.
no dramatic
DeMffle
Gloria Drew had
experience whei
started her on her career. In Flori
da gathering material for his next
picture, “The Greatest Show on
Earth”, he saw her, and as a result
she wak flown to Hollywood for
three weeks' training, a series of
auditions and a screen test.
• * »
Hollywood gossips.say that if
Shirley Temple really means to
marry Charles Black she should
have pursuaded him to stay in
the pineapple business, instead
of switching to television. They
point to all the marriages in
which a woman star has mar
ried a business man, who'
moved over into some branch
of her profession, whereupon
the marriage hit the rocks.
States. We have given the congress
also the power, in time of war, to
abridge some of our liberties for
the common good.
The most fervent hope of every
American heart is that the differ
ences between nations may be
settled without war.
Only a burning wrong can force
us into another war.
Only a burning devotion to the
principles of free government and
to national unity and strength on
the part of all the people can insure
our victory over the forces of
tyranny, if it is our destiny again
to engage them.
In 1776 we won freedom; in 1812
we held freedom; in 1861 we pre
served the union; in 1898 we
strengthened freedom; in 1917 our
freedom was threatened and saved;
in 1941 again our freedom was at
tacked and saved.
■pHE OPENING words of The
^ Crisis, written by Thomas Paine
at the lowest tide of America’s
hope, December, 1776, perhaps of
all that has been written expresses
the true feeling of the sixth prom
ise of a good citizen.
They say it was written upon a
drumhead by the campfires of
Washington’s defeated and retreat
ing army. By order of General
Washington it was hastily printed
in Philadelphia, rushed to the front
and read aloud to the troops on
Christmas night before the cross
ing of the Delaware and the attack
on Trenton, which was the turning
point of the Revolutionary War.
It reads:
“These are the times that try
men’s souls. The summer soldier
and the sunshine patriot will, in
this crisis, shrink from the service
of his country; but he that stands
it now, deserves the love and thanks
of man and woman. Tyranny, like
hell, is not easily conquered; yet
we hhve this consolation with us,
that the harder the conflict, the
more glorious the triumph. What
we obtain too cheap, we esteem
too lightly: ’tis dearness only that
gives every thing its value. Heaven
knows how to put a proper price
upon its goods; and it would be
strange indeed, if so celestial an
article as freedom should not be
highly rated.”
A S STATED at .the beginning? the
right to declare war is invested
Rosemary Clooney, the Columbia
Records singing star, has been
picked by CBS for a radio build-up;
at present she is heard weekdays
at 7:30 E. S. T. An expert singer,
lust 22, she is being hailed as an
other Dinah Shore.
in the congress of the United States
by Article 1, Section 8 of the Con
stitution.
The congress shall have the
power:
To declare war . . .
To raise and support armies . . .
To provide and maintain a
navy . . .
To make rules for the government
and regulation of the land and
naval forces;
To provide for calling forth the
militia to execute the laws of the
union, suppress insurrections and
repel invasions;
To provide for organizing, arm
ing, and disciplining, the militia,
and for governing iuch part of
them as may be employed in the
service of the United States . . .
This article Is Chapter 5 of the
booklet "Good Citlxen’’ produced by
The American Heritage Foundation,
sponsors of the freedom train. A
complete book may be obtained by
sen dine 25 cents to The American
Heritage Foundation, 17 East 4Mb
Street. New York, N. Y.
ACROSS
1. A remnant
5. Vessel
9. Like a wing
10. Edible
rootstock*
11. River
(Venezuela)
12. Harangue
14. Jumbled
type
15. Neon
(sym.)
16. A son of
Ishmael
17. Naive girl
4. Dress, as
feathers
5. Ship’s
firemen
6. Long-eared
rodent
7. Sultan’s
decree
8. Edible
tuber
11. Sacred bull
(Egypt.)
13. Periods of
time
18. Choking bit
19. Aloft
20. Greek letter 23. The
21. Body of (archaic)
26. Jewish month
27. City in Italy
29. Guido’s
highest
note
30. Sharp iron
hook on a
pole
31. Trader
33. Music note
35. Ascends
36. Unit of
force
(C.G.S.
system)
38. Plate used
with
microscope
□□□□ □□□□
□□□□ □□□□
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raan aao od
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CODE CEJtl DE
□□□□□ ECUQU
v uaca BC3GO
□□□□ duud
NO.
40. Surfeited
41. Red-breast
ed bird
43. Perceived
48. Sum up
water
22. Lever
24. Bone
(Anat.)
25. Fuel
28. Diocesan
center
30. Gadolinium
(sym.)
32. Trick
34. Youth
37.TJopper
(Rom.)
39. Collection
of books
42, Not real
44. Behold!
45. At home
46. Aviator
47. Degrade
49. Paradise
50. Lateral
51. aty (Nev.)
52. Concludes
DOWN
1. Pillage
2. Eskimo tool
3. River (Fr.)
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SCRIPTURE: Ezra 7; 8:15-36; Neha-
miah 8-8.
DEVOTIONAL READING: Psalm 118:
87-1IX
He Loved Teaching
Lesson for August 13, 1950
rHAT WOULD you do if you had
W m
a million dollars? Several
THE
FICTION
CORNER
HARMONIOUS UNION
By Richard H. Wilkinson
I T WAS incredible that Tony and
Leah Cranston should have quar
reled over so small a thing. The
neighbors would have been horri
fied, for the neighbors thought no
two people were more ideally suited.
The neighbors were right, too.
Tony and Leah were harmoniously
united. They
were deeply in
love. There was
perfect under-
standing between
them.
Then one day Tony came home
from work and went into the bed
room to freshen up for dinner a:
found two five dollar bills and some
change lying on the bureau. He
scooped up the money.
“Hey,” he said good naturedly,
“we can’t afford this. I found this
money lying on the bureau. It might
have blown away. Don’t be so for
getful!”
Leah smiled. “Oh, my!” she said.
“Did I leave the change from the
grocer there?”
A week later Tony discovered a
dollar bill where it had been idly
dropped on the living room table and
forgotten.
“Listen, honey, you’ve got to
be more careful. Money is pretty
important to us right now.”
“I’m sorry,” said Leah, “but
It's only a dollar.”
“We can’t afford to lose a
dollar or even a part of a dol
lar,” Tony said, smiling.
The next time—the time Tony dis
covered three dollars on the kitchen
tables and one on the floor, where
it had blown—he didn’t smile.
“Good gosh, woman! Show a little
BROADWAY AND MAIN STREET
All This Ex-Boxer Wants Is Peace and Little Pinochle
By BILLY ROSE
One of the more off-colorful characters around Broadway these
days is Kid Herman, ex-great of the prize ring, who runs the news
stand on the southwest comer of 42nd street and Times Square.
The Kid, according to the record books, lost only once in 140 pro
fessional bouts and was one of the few men to beat Benny Leonard.
What’s more, he is reputed to have been as scrappy outside the ring
as in during his black-and-blue period.
Today, a muscle-bound 56, he likes to think of himself as “a stick of
sugar-coated Gandhi.” “Me and the world has seen too much fightin’,”
he told me the other night. “All I want now is peace and a little pinochle.”
While we were talking, as if on
cue, a man rushing for the subway
bumped into the ex-pug.
“Sorry, Mister,” apologized Her
man. “If I’d known you was com-
ta* Fda baked a
Bffly
The man’s glare
relaxed into a
grin.
coulda flatten-
•d him with a
punch,” said the
Kid, “but what
would it prove? Ya
sever convince
anybody by hittin’
aim. It’s better to
go along with peo
ple. F’rinstance, take the gink who
runs the newsstand across the way
. —Patsy White. Used to be a great
fighter. Had a string of 14 straight
knockouts till he met up with me.
( knocked him down 15 times in 10
rounds, but the first time Patsy
beard me tellin’ about it, he said it
was only 14 times. So the next
time | tell it, just to make him feel
good, 1 said it was 14 times, but
Patsy says, ’Who you kiddin’? It
was 13.’ Well, every time he hears
one tellin* it he slice* off another
so finally I says to
Mm, ‘Okay, let’s leave it this way.
Mosta the time you was fightin’ me
from a horizontal position.’ ”
JUST THEN, as if he knew we
were talking about him, Patsy
waved from across the street and
yeUed, ’How’s it goin’. Kid?”
“Come on over an’ get yer name
in the papers,” Herman yelled
back at him.
“In a minute,” said Patsy. “Un
der the arch!”
“What does he mean, under the
arch?” I asked.
"It's m private joke we got.*
said the Kid, "When we were
kids we lived near the Brooklyn
Bridge, and when we didn't want
to do our fightin' where the
cops could see us, we used to
say, 'Meetcba under the arch,'
and then go under the bridge and
settle things fair and square. By
the time I was 10, I musta
slugged it out with every punk
in the neighborhood — mil ex
cept Patsy. ■
“Then a few years ago, after we
both set up stands on Times Square,
some bad blood comes up between
me and Patsy for the first time.
The way it happens, one day I
order two bundles of papers in
stead of one, and when the truck
delivers them they forget to drop
off the regular one for Patsy. So
naturally he thinks one of my two
bundles is for him, but when he
comes over to get it I tell him it’s
mine. Well, one word leads to an
other, so finally I says, ’Under the
arch.’
“ That’s ter me,’ says Patsy, so
we pile in a cab and drive down
town.
“MY WIND AIN’T what it used
to be, but I musta knocked him
down half a dozen times before it
bits me bow crazy it is for a
couple of near grandfathers to be
heatin’ each other’s brains out. So
I drop my bands and say, 'I just
remembered somebtin’. I meant
to order two bundles but forgot to
do k, so you was right the whole
time. Let me buy ya a steak and
make it up to ya.’
“ ‘Lucky ya remembered,* Patsy
said, ’because I was just gettin’
warmed up. I’ll buy the beers.' ”
As I was about to go, Patsy
White came across the street and
the Kid introduced us.
"I was just tellin’ my friend,"
be said, "bow we go under the
arch and l knock you down six
times.''
"You remember wrong," said
Patsy. "It was only five,"
"l meant five," apologized
Herman.
“See what I mean?” he said
after Patsy had gone back to bis
stand. “Next time it’ll be four.
And after that, three. But what’s
the dlf? It makes him feel good
and it’s no skin off my nose.'*
thousand school teachers were
asked that question a few years
ago. Seventy-five per cent of them
gave the same answer: “I’d re
sign.” They weren’t real teachers,
they were only
hired help. The
other twenty - five
per cent were the
refel teachers. A
great university
teacher. Palmer' of
Harvard, wrote that
he had the perfect
job. Believe it or
not, he said, * Har- p r< p oreman
vard actually pays
me for doing what—if I could afford
it—I would gladly pay Harvard to
let me do.” _
» • •
No Finished Product
T HE REAL thing about teaching
is that you are dealing with
people, young people, growing peo
ple. In every other line of business,
whatever you turn out begins to
depreciate almost as soon as it
leaves the factory.
It doesn’t take long for butter to
get rancid, or bread stale. A cold-
storage egg Is a feeble imitation
of a fresh one. A car that has
changed hands once, even if it has
run less than 1,000 miles, is already
“used” car on Its way to the
Tony and Leah Cranston were
harmoniously united. The neigh
bors would have been horrified
if they thought there was trouble
between them.
more consideration, will you! If ]
hadn’t noticed that dollar on th<
floor it would have been lost.”
“Darling,” she said altogether toi
precisely, ‘T’ve never lost a pennj
of our money."
“How do you know?” asked
Tony, a bit smugly.
“Because,” said Leah, just ai
smugly, “I can account for everj
dime you’ve ever given me.”
“Ha!” said Tony. “Let’s see you!"
So Leah got a pencil and paper—
and sat down and figured out hei
expenditures, to the last penny.
“Well,” said Tony, “that doesn’t
mean you won’t lose some if yot
continue to be careless. After it’z
gone—well, you’ve heard the crack
about locking the barn door aftei
the horse has been stolen.”
“I’ve heard,” said Leah icily, “s
lot of cracks.”
gUDDENLY it occurred to Tonj
that this was their first majoi
crisis. Somehow he’d have to break
Leah of her habit without a quar
rel.
It was the next Saturday noon
when he came home from work that
Tony discovered three ones and s
two-dollar bill on the bureau where
it had been absently dropped by
Leah while she rescued the roast
from burning. Furtively Tony
scooped up the money and stuck it
in his pants pocket. Sooner or latex
Leah would discover it was missing.
She’d become concerned. She’d ask
him to help hunt. He’d make a pre
tense of hunting and then pretend
to find the' money where it had
blown into the bathroom.
That afternoon Tony went
playing golf. All the while he
was gone, while he was In the
looker room and mi the conrse
and later in the showers, he
kept thinking of Leah hunting
for the missing money.
He came home an hour earlier
than he had planned. The moment
he saw Leah’s face he knew she had
discovered the loss.
“Darling, I laid some money on
the bureau. Have you seen it?”
‘It must have blown off,” said
Tony. “Boy, I hope we can find it.”
His face wore a look of grave con
cern as he began hunting. “We
can’t afford to lose a cent.” he kept
saying.
Tony waited until Leah looked as
though she were on the point of
bursting into tears, remembering
she had been saving for a new bat
and knowing she couldn’t have it
unless they found the money. Then
he ambled into the bathroom, and,
chuckling to himself, reached into
his pocket.
A startled look came to his face.
He reached into his other pockets.
They were all empty.
junk-pile.
But the products of the teach
er's classroom are by no means
“finished” products when they
leave It, even If it Is a finishing
school. If the teacher’s work
has been done well, the product
will go on improving for years,
instead of running down.
• r •
Three Aims
PROFESSOR EZRA of Babylon
* and Jerusalem, was one of his
tory’s most famous teachers. We
note (Ezra 7:10) the same three
aims in Ezra’s life that you would
expect to find in all good teachers.
First of all, he “prepared his
heart” to do what he did. The
“heart” is the Bible expression for
character, for life as a whole. No
one can be a truly good teacher
who has a bad character.
Now Ezra prepared his heart to
do three things. The first was to
“seek the law of the Lord.” What
a teacher teaches may be as im
portant as who his pupils are; and
Ezra’s “subject” was the law which
God had given his people—part of
what we nqw call the Old Testa
ment. Nowadays this is called re
search, but a simple word for It is
just study. A lazy teacher is a poor
one. A good teacher will spend
more time studying than any of the
pupils do—and will learn more,
too. In fact, the best way to learn
anything, including the Bible, is to
try to teach it for a while.
Second, Ezra prepared his
heart to do the law. V The old
sneer, “He who can, does; he
who cannot, teaches,” Is true of
poor teachers, not of the good
ones. Particularly not true ef
Bible feachers. The aim of Bible
teaching, from Moses’ time till
now. Is always practical. “Truth
Is In order to goodness,” as the
Presbyterians say. One who has
not tried ont the Bible Ideals In
dally living will never do for
a Bible teacher.
And third, Ezra set out to “teach
in Israel.” Your research scholar
may or may not make a good
teacher. The good teacher in not
bored by teaching as some research
ers are. He loves it. He is happiest
at it.
Take Yourself, for Example
|^OW LET US see how this comes
out in your own home Sunday
school. If yours is like most Sun
day schools, the main trouble with
it is that they can’t find enough
good teachers, enough people who
really want to know about God’s
word themselves, who live and love
to help others know it.
The Rev. H. M. Lewis of Texas
has said in his essay. The Divi
dends of Teaching:
“When you begin to teach you
will realize that at last you have
found a purpose for your religion
. . . .Teaching gives a motive, the
highest ^motive, for all acts of re
ligion and for all pursuit of knowl
edge—‘For their sakes.' Every
Christian has the missionary obli
gation and is by virtue of his pro
fession of faith, a missionary,—
‘Go, teach all nations.' Make your
particular nation young America
and your special opportunity sys
tematic work in the Church school.
Once you believe that you must be
a teacher because you are a Chris
tian . . . you will have heard your
life’s calL”
(Copyright by fb« International Coun
cil of Religioua Education on behalf ef
40 Protestant denomlnationa. Released
by WNU Features.)
Serve Taste-Tempting Salads for Summer
(See Recipes Below)
Salad Days
THERE’S NOTHING q u i 16 , so
cooling as a jellied salad brightly
garnished with crisp greens.
There’s nothing quite so delicious
as well chilled
fruit or vegeta
bles attractively
arranged on
frosty looking let
tuce, watercress
or endive.
You can make
a meal out of a
salad that’s pro
tein-rich, or, if you prefer, you can
combine both the salad and des
sert course into a luscious fruit
salad.
• • •
•Jellied Tomato Salmon Me-d
(Serves 8-10)
2 envelopes plain gelatin
1)4 cups water and juice from ^
salmon
1 10)4-ounce can condensed
tomato soup
[ ) 3-ounce package cream
cheese , ■'
1 tablespoon grated onion
1 16-ounce can salmon,
drained well
H cup mayonnaise
Soften gelatin in M cup water.
Combine soup and remaining wa
ter; heat to boiling. Remove from
heat. Add softened gelatin and
cream cheese; beat with rotary
beater Until smooth. Cool. Add
onion, salmon and mayonnaise.
Pour salad into a greased 8-% inch
mold. Chill thoroughly.
Tomato Aspic Ribbon Loaf
(Serves 3-10)
Layers 1 and 3:
2 envelopes unflavored gela
tin
SH cups canned tomato juice
2 teaspoons onion juice
H teaspoon salt
Layer 2:
1)4 teaspoons anfiavored gela
tin
2 tablespoons cold water
- 4 eggs, hard cooked and
diced
H cap finely chopped celery
)4 cap finely chopped green
pepper
H cap light cream
1 teaspoon prepared mustard
)i cap mayonnaise
H teaspoon salt
Layer 1: Soften gelatin in )4 cup
cold tomato juice. Heat balance of
juice to a full
LYNN CHAMBERS* MENU
•Jellied Tomato Salmon Mold
Sliced Cucumbers
Potato Chips
Assorted Pickles
Toasted English Muffins
Fruit Jam
Lime Sherbet
Butter Cookies
Beverage %
•Recipe Given
s
H teaspoon salt
3-4 bananas
3 tablespoons lemon juLe
Melon balls
Strawberries, halved
Blueberries
Peach halves
Wedges or slices ef fresh
pineapple
Water ct
boil. Add onion
juice, salt, and
gelatin. Stir un
til gelatin is
thoroughly dis-
solved. Place
in a loaf pan
half of mixture
(8V4 x 4V4 x 2)4 inches). Chill until
firm.
Layer 2: Soften gelatin in cold
water. Place over boiling water
and stir until gelatin is dissolved.
Add to balance of ingredients and
mix well. Spread over first layer.
Chill again until firm.
Layer 3: Pour remaining aspic
over egg mixture to form third
layer. (Soften aspic, if necessary,
over hot water.) Chill again until
firm. Unmold and garnish with
salad greens. Slice to serve.
Fruit Basket Salad
(Serves 8)
2 avocados
1 cup cottage cheese
1 cup chopped pecans
1 cup chopped ripe olives
1 teaspoon minced parsley
LYNN SAYS:
Broiled Sandwiches Make
Good Summer Meals
Scrambled eggs, mixed with
some grated onion, chopped green
pepper and prepared horseradish,
to which are added some bologna
strips make a delicious and filling
hot sandwich.
Sliced hard-cooked eggs placed
on toast slices, then topped with a
slice of cheese and broiled until
the cheese melts, adds variety to
summer lunches.
Pare avocados; halve. Fill halves
with cottage cheese combined with
nut meats, olives, parsley, and
salt. Press two halves together;
sprinkle with
lem on
Arrange
on water cress.
Pass Fruit
Dressing: Com
bine )4 cup su
gar or light corn
syrup and four
teaspoons enriched flour; gradual
ly add )4 cup vinegar. Cook over
low heat until smooth and thick,
stirring constantly. Add one teav
spoon salt, two teaspoons paprika,
one tablespoon onion, minced fine
and two teaspoons celery seed;
mix thoroughly. Pour % cup salad
oil into mixture very slowly, beat
ing constantly with rotary beater,
Party Chicken Salad
(Serves 8-18)
3 cups cubed, cooked chicken
1)4 cups Mioed celery
3 tablespoons lemon Jules
1 cap seedless grapes
1 cup toasted almonds
1 teaspoon dry mustard
1)4 teaspoon salt
)i teaspoon pepper
1 tablespoon capers
)4 cap light cream
.1 cup mayonnaise
Combine chicken, celery and
lemon juice. Chill one hour. Add
grapes and almonds. Combine re
maining ingredients. Add to chick
en. Toss. Garnish with slices of
hard-cooked egg.
Cool Sea-Food Platter
(Serves 8)
1 7-ounce can tuna
1 cup crab meat
2 cops shrimp
2 tablespoons French dressing
1 cap diced celery
)4 eap diced encumber
2 tablespoons chopped radishes
1 tablespoon capers
2 tablespoons lemon juice
)4 cap mayonnaise
Salt, pepper, paprika
Flake tuna and crab meat Re
move black line from shrimp. Mar
inate tuna, crab meat, and shrimp
in French dressing 15 minutes.
Combine with remaining ingred
ients. Arrange all in lettuce-lined
salad bowL Garnish with additional
shrimp, water cress, and lemon
wedges. Hostess serves from salad
bowL Pass more mayonnaise.
Grated American cheese mixed
with chopped green pepper, diced
onion, chopped hard-cooked eggs,
stuffed olives and seasoned with
catsup makes a good mixture to
spread on buns. Broil until cheese
bubbles.
Sauteed, corned beef hash makes
a hearty luncheon, sandwich when
served on toasted, buttered bread
or buns. Spread the hash with tar-
diuretie. Uwd
orm 60 years.
Oh What Fun!
732
Ilf IN HER heart
” life-size dolly!
year old, this dolly
size two clothes.
• o o
Thirty-two Inch doll is
children! Pattern 7:
don only. Send SO
name address and p
JNhfcw .se-eeeeeseees
Name
Light, Sturdy loot
For Cruising
Use With Oars
THE MAN who likes
his holidays ci
rowing in shallow trout
will be delighted with this
boat It is light enough to
on top of the car.
see
Pattern gives material list,
for cutting and assembling, with t
for finishing. Price of pattern 230 I
WORKSHOP PATTERN SI
Drawer IS
Better* jIUls, New York.
it&i
■
SMOKE
than any
nfhor
uuitn dgareuei
11
I have to!
my
Camels f<
They’re mild!”
GENERATION
has lifted
ACTION
Aat PRO
buy today ..sxer.
Now She Shops
“Cash and Carry
99
Without Painful Backache
i
try Doan’s Pills, a i
by