The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, September 08, 1950, Image 7
§
i'A
THIS ISNVfAIR
WEARING
By Clay Hunter
YOU'RE
Or. Foreman
By MELLORS
WHAT ARE YOU
AFTER UNDER THERE,
ANYWAY T
EASY, BOV, EASY/
SUN'S TOO MUCH
FOX you TODAY/
HBlUD/
HBPlPf
mu a i jr*rr
TRY VOOR
WHY? \
3
PEOPLE THROW BALLS
AT MV HEAD AND
YOU CALL THAT
GOOD? WHY,
I WONT BE
ABLE TO SIT
DOWN FDR A
BASEBALLS
HITTIN'VOUR
HEAD GOT
TO DO WITH
SITTING
gy pud tnb^r
OUT THE BACK OF
ME FOR KIDS TD
PLAY *P
JITTER
By Arthur Pointer
WYLDE AND WOOLY
By Bert Thomas
"IT'LL CERTAINLY be a
RELIEF WHEN HERBIE IS OUT
OF HIS RED-HEAD PERIOD j *
U NLESS THAT boarding house in
Antioch was different from other
boarding houses, you could hardly
have a private quarrel in it. There
would be some inquisitive people
who would notice when voices were
raised, and who could not resist
the temptation to
listen.
One of the quar
relers was none
other than the fa
mous Apostle Paul,
and the other was
his best friend
Barnabas. At leart.
Paul and Barnabas
had been good
friends up to that
day.
After that day's argument we
do not know that they ever saw
each other again. Paul never
mentioned the incident, but the
story got around, and Luke put
it Into his book of Acts.
• • •
young Man Seeks Position
T HE ARGUMENT was all about
a young man named John Mark.
Young people do not always real
ize how often they are discussed
by their elders, or how much those
discussions affect their lives. A
young man applies for a job (which
he would rather call a “position”)
and he either gets the job or he
does not But he never sees the
files. He never hears the conver
sations about himself. He never
knows just what remark got him'
the job—or cost him the job, as
the case may be. So John Mark
may never have known just what
Paul and Barnabas said about him.
The facts were plain. John
Mark was a native of Jerus
alem, son of a woman at least
well-off enough to have a large
house of her own. He was some
relative of Barnabas, nerhana
•» ww 9 \ wmmwm’wrmM _ mjmm j u w
was the young man in embar-
rasing circumstances described
la Mark 14:51-52.) When Paul
and Barnabas set off on their
first missionary journey togeth
er, this John Mark went with
them as a general assistant.
All went well at first. But when
the party landed on the hot steamy
shore of Pamphylia, and when the
missionary expedition was about to
take off over the high lonesome
ranges through bandit country. John
Mark left the party and took the
first boat back to home and moth
er.
• • •
Two Bosses
W E HAVE no idea why he went.
Maybe he had good reasons,
maybe not. Anyway, we do know
that he quit. And that was all Paul
wanted to know. A new missionary
party was being made up, and
Barnabas wanted to take his young
relative along again. But Paul
could not see it
Why take a man who had al
ready, fallen down on one job?
Why take an assistant that
could not be depended upon?
The argument between Mark's
two bosses boiled down to this:
Panl jodged their assistant on
past performance. It was all he
had to go by. Barnabas Judged
Mark by his love for him and
his belief in him. The quarrel
was sharp, and the two old
friends could not agree.. Final
ly the incredible happened:
Panl and Barnabas parted com
pany, and each went his sep
arate way from that time for
ward.
What happened to Barnabas we
do not know. But we do know that
Barnabas was right about John
Mark. Years later we read in more
than one letter from Paul that Mark
wag a real help to him. Wo find
that another great leader, Simon
Peter, called Mark his “son.** These
leaders of the Christian church,
though they might differ on some
things, agreed about Mark, that ho
was a man to rely on.
9 9 9
What This Goes to Show
W LL THIS GOES to show aeveral
things. For one, it is clear
that even an Apostle may be wrong.
No man can be an infallible judge
of another man. And another filing:
You can’t judge a man on his rec
ord alone. There may bo more in
the man than the record shows.
On the. other hand, people
do judge others by their rec
ords. The dubious young man
does not always have a rela
tive who win give him the bene
fit of the doubt.
If your record is bad, you must
realize that there are numbers of
people, even good people, who will
judge you by that alone.
(Copyright by the International Coun
cil of Religious Education on behalf of
<0 Protestent denominations. Released
•«- WNU Features.)
Wading Pool-Sand Box
To Please Youngsters
(WADING
POOL
WITH
Fainted
IWHALE
Shoots Wrong Womcm
MADISON, GA.—“Oh, Tve
the wrong woman 1”
This was the exclamat
Mrs. Charles Shell who wi
across the street from her
the other day and fired a
into a car occupied by Mrs.
Shepard.
The “wrong woman”
L-
IPATTERN
For Sand or Water
r IS wading pool or sand box
with adjustable sun shade has
a marine plywood bottom. The
youngsters will be delighted with
the jolly whale at each end, for
which painting pattern and color
chart are given.
* • •
Everything complete on pattern 306
which is 25c. |
WORKSHOP PATTERN SERVICE
Drawer 10
Bedford HUIs. New York.
One appllct
MAKES FALSE tl
for the life of your
ere loose sad silpj
manent coo
_ strips. Lay i
bite and it
m
,7050
IlfORTHY of luncheon parties I
f * Classic scarf and mat set is
done in spider-web design with
piedt edging. Scarf can be any
length.
9 9
Durable and loyely crocheted In string.
In white or pastels. Pattern 7050 has
directions. Send 20 cents in coin, your
name, address and pattern number to . . .
Sewing Circle Needleer^fft Dept.
P. O. Ben 5740. Chicago M, HI. or
P. O. Bex 162, Old Chelsea Station,
New York 11. N. T.
Enclose SO cents for pattern.
NO. jmtS
seeeeeeeaeonoeeeeeeoneenonc
ooooeeeec
fLo <Lo <V* C'*- O-
l ASK ME
l ANOTHER
7 A General Quii
?
?
?
?
?
?
The Questions
1. Name the first widow of a
United States President to receive
a pension.
2. Name the three largest cities
between the Mississippi River
and the Pacific Ocean.
3. Approximately how high was
the Tower of Babel?
4. What water is softest?
5. Who is William Dudley Pel-
ley?
6. What is shoddy?
The Answers
1. Mrs. John Tyler.
2. Los Angeles, St. Louis and
San Francisco. -
3. 300 feet.
4. Rain water or melted snow.
5. Founder of the “Silver
Shirts” and publisher of “The
Galilean.” Arrested by F. B. I.
agents on April 4, 1942 on charges
of sedition.
6. Wool, re-manufactured from
waste or discarded woolens.
Slick Ad
One chilly day, a midwestern
concern advertised that it would
give away coal shovels to the first
150 persons who showed up at its
office. It did, too, and that eve
ning 150 persons were shoveling
coal in their basements with
brand-new shovels, each of which
had this message engraved on it:
“If you had installed one of our
oil heaters, you would now
sitting comfortably in the li
room/
WHEN SLEEP WON’T
COME AND TOO
FEEL SLUM
Use Chewing-Gum Laxative—
REMOVES WASTE..NOT 6000 FOOD
i y*n oust deep—feel Just awful
because you need a laxative — do as
MiLLxows do —- chew
r-e-MXNT is wonderfully different!
Doctors say many ether laxatives start
their “flushing” action tqa aeon... right
In the steeeaeh. Large doaes of such lax
atives upset digestion, flush away nour
ishing food you need for health and
energy ... you fed weak, worn out.
But gentle
oxmnended. works chiefly' in
bowel where It remevee eely i
good food! You avoid that weak,
feeling. Use rsnc-a-icxHT and feel
fine, full of life! 85». 50», or only
Brimms
or lower
Hardens
rubber c -
results from six mon
fends forever mess an_ _
applications that last a few
sands of people all over
with ~ ~
—r
Pei
, To Women
Nagging Backache
| or
down kidney fnno-
folks to com-
loen of pap end
to cold.
up nights or frequent
from minor bladder irritations
dampness or dietary tndlserstiooa.
If year discomforts are doa to thass
causes, don’t wait, try Doan’s Pills, a mild
diuretic. Ussd successfully by millions for
60 years. Whils thass symptoms may
r, it’s smssing how
tubes sad Altars
Gat Doan’s Pills today!
Writer Needs Local Color,
Goes to Jail to Get It
PASADENA, Calif.—A writer,
Mrs. Eloise Andrae, needed some
local color for some radio crime
stories she was writing. She need
ed to get in jail, so—
She took out a temporary
driver's license under the name of
Susan Ann Little and used it to
cash a check for $25. Nothing hap
pened.
Next she charged a $3.95 slip to
a friend who didn’t have an ac
count. Still no policeman.
Then she went back to the store
and pulled the same stunt J for
$15.47
Detectives hauled her away to
a cell with lots of local color and
booked her on suspicion of forgery.
Doan's Pills
ofeml
■ Grand breakfast main diahl
Here’s the “power” of com.
Tastes powerfully good!
Crisp, sweet, fresh! Your
bargain in goodness /
Kellogg’s Com flakes.
MOTHER KNOWS^jfwTI
— %
STAR OF STAGE, SCREEN AND TELEVISION
CAMELS ARE SO MILD that In a
hundreds off men and women who
for 30 days, noted throat specialists, making weekly examinations, reported
Not one single case of throat irritation
due to smoking CAMELS