The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, November 24, 1950, Image 3
THE NEWBERRY SUN. NEWBERRY. S. C
Ultraviolet Light
Hikes Egg Laying
Hens exposed to ultraviolet light
showed a marked increase in egg
production during a series of ex
periments conducted by U. S. de
partment of agriculture scientists.
The exact properties of the ultra
violet radiation causing the in
crease have not yet been identi
fied, but production was raised by
as much as 19 percent through its
influence.
The experiments were started in
1945 by the agricultural research
administration as the result of a
discovery made while scientists
were working with so-called bac
tericidal ultraviolet light (the very
short rays of invisible light, fre
quently used to eliminate bac
teria). A source of bactericidal
light was being tested for its abil
ity to reduce the number of air
borne bacteria in a poultry house
when it was found that hens under
the ultraviolet radiation laid more
eggs than those held under similar
conditions but without the light.
The scientists then decided to gath
er more scientific facts about this
phenomenon.
For five consecutive years, hens
were tested in a specially con
structed underground poultry
house from which all natural light
could be excluded. Visible light
was provided for certain periods
each day by regular fluorescent
lamps. The flocks were held in the
house at all times during the ex
periment so that complete control
of the visible lighting could be
maintained. Recommended laying
diets were provided including nor
mal supplies of vitamin D.
Each year the hens held under
bactericidal light produced from
10 to 19 percent more eggs per bird
than hens maintained under the
same conditions and diet, but with
out bactericidal radiation. It was
demonstrated* conclusively that
neither the number of bacteria
in the poultry house nor the vita
min D content of the light rays
was involved in the beneficial ef
fect.
Further tests showed that the
addition of vitamin D to poultry
rations beyond normal amounts
did not increase the rate of egg
production. Exposure of hens to
longer rays of ultraviolet light,
which have previously been found
to supply vitamin D requirements
for laying hens, gave none of the
beneficial results of bactericidal
light.
Keep Posted on Values
By Reading the Ads
Grandma’s Sayings
AIN’T IT STRANGE how the more
happiness we pass along to other
folks, the more we seem to have
left fer ourselves?
• - N S5 oald Betty Crew. Aooalachla. Vm.*
TALKIN’ ABOUT the “new look*
brings to mind the new package for
Nu-Maid margarine. It’s modern in
every way . , . seals in Nu-Maid’a
sweet,, churned-fresh flavor. Yes-
siree! I prefer "Table-Grade” Nu-
Maid, the modern margarine, for
my pookin’ and bakin'.
our
JEST THINK how much wider the
“straight and narrow path” would
be, if more and more folks traveled
it-
S5 Raid Ur*. C. a Anderson. Lou Ur lilt. Ky.*
FROM SUNNY California comes
this bright idea—margarine molded
In modern table style hi pound
prints that fit any servin’ dish. And
Wouldn’t you know you’d find yel
low “Table-Grade” Nu-Maid
shaped this modern way, ’cause Nu-
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_ will be paid upon publication
to the first contributor of each
saying or idea. Address
109 East Pearl Street,
Cincinnati 2, Ohio.
accepted
“Grandma”
iiipkaa
miMm
mm
ALWAYS LOOK FOR SWEET,
wholesome Miss Nu-Maid on tbs
when you buy margarine.
Nu-Maid is your assurance of
the finest modern margarine in the
finest modern package.
How Old?
Age Figures Don't Tell
ATHENS, Ga.—Dr. A. S. Ed
wards, head of the University of
Georgia psychology department,
reports a gadget that measures
a finger’s tremors up, down and
sideways (his own invention), has
proved that a man is not obso
lete just because he is old.
He reasoned that a steady hand
and an erect frame have more
to do with fitness for skilled work
than age figures. He set out to
measure them with the tronom-
eter with hundreds of subjects.
He listed them as of coUege
age (16 to 35); senescents (60 to
85, in good health), and seniles
(54 to 90, in fll health).
He found that senescents had
little more finger tremor than
the younger group, and in many
cases were steadier. But among
seniles finger tremor increased
an average of 300 per cent.
Cows Prance Home
As Retired Music
Teacher Blows Horn
FENNVILLE, Mich. — A former
bandmaster turned farmer brings
his cows home with a bugle call.
Ami Miller, 72, says he believes
his cows have a better ear for music
than most people.
*T don’t know why anyone thinks
It is unusual for me to bring my
herd home with a bugle call,” he
added.
“In fact, one old milk cow is
music-happy. When I blow the bugle
for the herd to come home, she
gambols along the path in a prance
that Is right in time to the beat.”
Miller taught band music in
schools in Seattle and Spokane, and
at Casco, Mich., during early life.
“We have a radio in the bam for
animals, and one of the herd had a
better appreciation for the classics
and band music than the others.
She stomps and moos her protests
when we switch on a jazz orches
tra,” he said.
He explained that with the short
age of help he was hard pushed to
farm his 80 acres. So he taught the
cows to answer to bugle calls so he
wouldn’t have to walk down to the
pasture after them.”
He first started several years
ago. At first the cows didn’t re
spond, but then he took the bugle
out in the field and blew it close
to their ears and led them to the
bam with music like the Pied Piper.
Finally they caught on and often
return home from as far as a mile
away when he blows the chow call.
“Sometimes I’m almost convinced
that it’s easier to teach music to
cows than it is to people,” he said.
New lype Operation Saves
Rheumatic Fever Victim
PHILADELPHIA, Pa. — A new
type heart operation has been per
formed on a 22-year-old girl rheu
matic fever victim.
The heart of Lorene Bean of
Hazleton, Pa., was damaged nine
years ago by rheumatic fever. For
two years after she was stricken
she was bedfast. Then she became
well enough to finish grade school
and later took a clerk’s job in a
store. Three years ago she was
forced to return to her bed.
Surgeons said she had mitral re
gurgitation. The mitral valve, they
explained, was damaged and re
mained open, alowing the blood to
regurgitate, or leak back, into the
left auricle and into the lungs.
In a two hour operation, one sur
geon cut from Miss Bean’s heart a
piece of pericardium, the membra
nous sac which covers the heart.
The tissue, about the size of the palm
of a man’s hand, was rolled up like
a cigaret and threaded into a wire
probe. Then the probe was forced
through the wall of the heart and
out the other side, leaving a flap of
tissue in the left ventricle beneath
the mitral valve.
The tissue, working like a check
valve, prevents the blood from leak
ing back into the left auricle, while
blood flowing in the proper direc
tion pushes the flap away.
Prisoner Saves $600 While
Serving Long Prison Term
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — During a
14-year stretch in prison A. A. Wynn
served as keeper of the prison’s
bees, and in turn, the bees served
as keepers of Wynn’s bank roll.
The bank roll was accumulated
during 12 years in prison from
shows he put on with a miniature
carnival he built. He charged his
prison audience whatever they could
pay for the shows.
After each performance, he
stuffed the “take” into a jar. When
the jar was full, he stashed it away
in a beehive.
The prisoner was released re
cently. He made a bee-line for the
bank with his savings which he esti
mated at about $600.
Climbing Party Seales
24,780-Foof Tibet Peak
ZURICH, Switzerland—Two Eng
lish university professors and three
Swiss mountaineers have made the
first ascent of one of the world’s
highest peaks, Abi Gaman in Tibet.
The party battled their way up
the ice-locked Himalayan peak to
gather Information, for the Swiss
alpine research foundation. Abi
Gaman is 24,780 feet high.
DEAN OF OPERETTA
Romberg Has Composed Over
Seventy Operettas and Musicals
Sigmund Romberg, whose life
story soon will be shown on the
world’s movie screens, is the kind
of man who makes “highbrows”
unhappy.
He insists he is a “middle brow”
composer and that he is happy be
ing just that. For a man who bears
the impressive label of Dean of
American operetta, it is a startling
admission.
“Most Americans have middle
brow tastes in music. What’s wrong
with that?” he says in support of his
statement that he’d rather write
melodies with a sentiment and a
tune that people can remember and
whistle than heroic arias that al
most no one can sing without weeks
of hectic practice.
Since Romberg exiled himself to
America 43 years ago to escape his
parents’ determination to make a
bridge builder out of him, he is
quite content to have the same
tastes as most of the rest of the
people in the United States.
“Besides,” he asks, “what high
brow achieves enough importance
during his own life to merit a Hol-
By INEZ GERHARD
Irene Dunne handled the difficult
impersonation of Queen Victoria in
“The Mudlark” so satisfactorily
that the picture was chosen for a
command performance in London.
But wait till you see what happens
to her in RKO’s “Never a Dull
Moment”. She falls into a haystack,
sets a stove on fire and tries to
cook a cougar, all incidents gleaned
IRENE DUNNE
from the life of Kay Swift, on
whose book the picture is based.
However, she needed no elaborate
make-up. For “Hie Mudlark” she
said, “They covered my face with
strips of plastic lastex so I doubt
whether my own daughter would
recognize me”. And made her a
heavy-set woman with several dou
ble chins!
Samuel Goldwyn will come up
with a re-make of “The Winning of
Barbara Worth”, remembered as
the picture which launched Gary
Cooper’s career, in 1926. This time
Dana Andrews gets the starring
role. And it will be produced in
semi-documentary style, since it
deals with the trials of desert re
clamation in the west. But the love
story won’t be ignored.
Gov. Dan E. Garvey of Arizona
has agreed to appear in a walk-on
role in Pine and Thomas’ “The Last
Outpost”, being filmed near Tucson.
It has not yet been decided whether
the governor will portray a Yankee
or a Confederate soldier. In either
case, he will be given the grade of«
corporal. Ronald Reagan, Rhonda
Fleming and Noah Beery, Jr., head
the cast.
Slfmaad Romberg' deaa of Ameri
can operetta, who has composed
more than 70 state and aereen op
erettas and masleals. His most pop
ular include ‘•Mayttme,'’ ‘‘Student
Prince’* and the “Desert Song.’
lywood movie treatment of his
career while he is still around to
see it?”
Romberg will be able to see It
as soon as Hollywood finishes the
moxie it is now making.
o o *
SIGMUND ROMBERG really
might have built some beautiful
bridges if his parents had their
way and he had become a construc
tion engineer. But instead, he has
turned out more than 70 stage and
screen operettas and musicals,
among them standards like “May
time,” “Student Prince” and the
“Desert Song,” one or the other of
which is still touring somewhere
at almost any time. He has writ
ten a magnificent total of 2,000
songs like “Lover, Come Back to
Me.”
And he isn’t finished yet!
“There is lots more music to be
written—lots of it in me—and I am
writing it,’’ he explains.
Right now, he is composing an
other musical which he expects to
have on Broadway this winter.
Some composers compose their
songs on a piano, some in their
head. Romberg composes most of
his music on 9 Hammond organ, so
that he can &et the effect of the
entire orchestra as he tests a mel
ody on the Hammond. He used to
do it on a pipe organ, sitting in sol
itary majesty before the gigantic
instrument^ When the Hammond
organ was 'invented, he got one of
the first made. Since then he has
been using it to turn out the kind
of music that fits in frith Ameri
ca’s heart beat.
IT WAS IN VIENNA that he got
his first formal music education.
Finishing his schooling in Vienna,
he had to serve his term in the
army. When that was finished, the
crisis came. His father, though
very musical himself, was deter
mined his son was going to be an
engineer and build bridges. The
peace maker in the dispute that
arose was his mother who sug
gested that he spend a year in
America before making a decision.
America had a lot of fine bridges,
she figured, and maybe her son
would learn to love bridges over
rivers more than musical bridges.
It didn’t work. Romberg came to
the United States, went to work
packing pencils in a pencil factory
for a brief period and then got a
job as a pianist in a restaurant
he had stopped at to satisfy his
craving for Hungarian goulash.
That was the beginning.
The next steps in his career came
in rapid succession. He organized
his own orchestra, played at a
fashionable New York restaurant
and began composing in earnest.
He never got around to thinking
of the bridges again. Let the high
brows build the bridges, he decided.
Instead, he wrote enough music to
make him probably the most pro
lific of the big-time composers in
the theater.
1
pciAin
DR Dll771C tAST WEEKS
J
jjWU
nil r IIllLl answe * 9
4. Narrates
5. Music note
6. Acknowl
edged
7. Extend
across
8. Light boat
11. Fool
12. Presently
14. Conclude
ACROSS
1. Outer
garment
5. Refuse of
grapes
9. Capable
10. Notion
11. Attacks, as
of illness
13. Hair on
horse’s neck 20. Retired
15. Compensate 22. Argon
16. Behold!
17. Sacred
image
(Russ. Ch.)
18. Gulf (Sib.)
19. Calmed
21. Patron saint
of Norway
24. Indehiscent
fruit
25. Wild
27. Lukewarm
31. A strong ale
33. Bird of peace
34. Large plate
for meat
38. Ahead
39. Particle *
40. Molybdenum
(sym.)
41. Bitter vetch
42. Places
43. A sally of
troops
45. Couple
47 Syllabic
stress
48. Epochs
49. Bodies of
water
DOWN
1. Competent
2. Comply
3. Entire amount
28. River (It.)
29. Piano
keys
30. Thick
32. Precious
stones
34. Apple seed
35. Magnifying-
glass
36. Oil of rose
petals
B
37. Under-
(abbr.) ground
23. Free parts of
Instrumental plants
composition 41. Spirit
26. Fate lamp
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□a aua □□□
□□a aaacaan
□□□a □□□
□□□□□ □□□(!□
□DU □□□□
□□□□□□□ □□□
□□□ aau hg
□□□□a □□ubu
□□□□ CIEDG
□□□□ □□□□
NO. 78
44. Spawn of
fish
46. Revised
statutes
,abbr. >
THE
FICTION
CORNER
NEW NEIGHBORS
By Richard H. Wilkinson
3
Minutt
Fiction
T HE Whitney’s living room faced
on a court. Across the court
were the windows of another apart
ment. Occasionally Paul Whitney,
relaxed on his couch, could see
people moving around there. After
a day or two he decided that the
occupants were a
young, childless
couple who spent
a good deal of
time at home.
•T’d like to
get to know them,” Paul confided
to his wife.
Mrs. Whitney sighed. “I would,
too. We’ve been hcx;e a month now
and haven't met a soul. Do you sup
pose I ought to go over and call?”
Paul shook his head doubtfully.
"I wouldn’t—not without some good
excuse.' You know how apartment
dwellers are. They might think we
were imposing.” He glanced across
the court. “They have a much bet
ter apartment than ours.”
“Better?”
“Why, it’s obviously their living
room we can look into and, if you’ll
notice, there are windows on both
sides.”
Mrs. Whitney followed her
husband's gaze. Without effort
she could look Into their neigh
bors’ living room and see the
window on the waD opposite.
“That’s so,” she admitted.
Mrs. Whitney went into the kitch
en and Paul rose and strolled idly
toward the window of his own liv
ing room. On the chance of being
observed, he pretended to examine
a potted plant on the sill.
Surreptitiously he glanced across
the court, and was shocked to see
the head and shoulders of a man
framed in the window on the far
side of their neighbors’ living room.
He called his wife, and, standing
well back so as not to be observed,
they peered across the court. But
BROADWAY AND MAIN STREET
Wise Boys learn Impossible Sometimes Can Happen
By BILLY ROSE
Last night at Lindy’s a bunch of us were discussing what, for
want of a better term, I’ll call the inevitability of the impossible.
“The most improbable yarn I ever heard,” said Deems Taylor, “is
the one about a missionary named Renault who was captured in 1948 by
a tribe of cannibals in French Equatorial Africa.
“According to a report in the
files out at the U.N., just as they
were about to roast him over a
fire, shish-kebob
style, the mis
sionary fell to his
knees and asked
the Lord to have
mercy on his ser
vant, Renault. And
when the canni
bal chief heard
the name, he un
tied him and told
him to go about
his business.
“No, it wasn't the prayer that
did the trick—it seems that six
months before, they had cooked and
eaten another gent named Renault
and he had turned out to be tough
and tasteless.”
“I KNOW AN equally implausible
story,” I piped up. “The one about
the clerk in Tacoma, Washington,
who was handed five thousand dol
lars to buy insurance for a bridge
that was under construction. The
fellow had never stolen a nickel in
his life, but this was one tempta
tion he couldn’t stand off—what in
the name of the five Ringling Broth-
Billy Rose
ers could happer to a bridge?
"Suiting misdeed to thought,
the clerk went to Reno and blew
in the whole five grand on a
couple of gals, and then, the
night before he was due to start
hack, the Mayor of Tacoma
phoned and wanted to know
about the insurance. It seemed
that the bridge—the famous
Galloping Gertie of the news
reels—bad come apart at the
seams and fallen into the gorge."
• • •
“THE BELIEVE-IT-OR-NOT that
tops them all is the one about
Charles Coghlan,” said Eugene Burr
who writes the theatre pieces for
Playbill.
“Charles who?” I asked.
“Coghlan,” said Burr, “the actor
who used to play opposite Lily
Langtry back in tht; last century.
When he was 50, he bought himself
a farm on Prince Edward Island in
the Gulf of St. Lawrence and quit
the stage for what he thought was
good. A few years later, however,
Forbes-Robertson made him a very
attractive offer to play Mercutio
in a touring production of ‘Romeo
and Juliet,’ and while Coghlan
hated to leave the island, he couldn’t
afford to turn the offer down. In one
season he’d earn enough to be able
to live comfortably the rest of his
life.
“When his neighbors came down
to the boat to see him off, the actor
assured them that, come heaven or
high water, he’d return when his
tour was ended. And he did—but it
took both heaven and high water,
and in that order, to arrange it.
"Heaven got into the act
shortly after the tour started—
in Galveston he suffered a heart
attack and died, and was buried
in a cemetery not' far from the
sea. The high water came a yea*
later, September 8, 1900, when
a tidal wave hit Galveston,
droumed six thousand people
and washed away a gcpod part
of the waterfront, ' including
most of the coffins in the ceme
tery.
“Some months after the disaster,
a fisherman on Prince Edward Is
land went down to the beach one
morning to inspect his nets, and
found a coffin which had washed up
on the sands.
“On it was a brass plate with the
name ‘Charles Coghlan’—the actor,
with an assist from the Gulf Stream,
had made good his promise to re
turn.”
“You’re positive you saw
someone?” Mrs. Whitney asked.
the figure in the window on the fax
side and vanished.
“You’re positive you saw some
one?” Mrs. Whitney asked.
“Positive!” Paul affirmed.
“Ought we to notify the police?”
“I wouldn’t. Whoever it Is is
gone, and perhaps the police
wouldn’t believe us. We’d appeal
ridiculous.”
T WO evenings later Paul again
saw the peeping Tom. He was
standing in the same position, and
sight of the man at the window of
their neighbor’s apartment gave
him the same unexpected shock.
. “I’m going to do something about
it. Sooner or later the chap will
conjure enough courage to break
his way in,” Paul said.
“Let’s go over there and wain
the people, tell them what we saw
and then let them do as they like
about it.” She hesitated. “Perhaps
we can strike up an acquaintance.”
T HEY CROSSED to the neighbor
ing apartment and knocked. A
pleasant-faced woman opened the
door. -
“Are you Mrs. Phelps?” Mrs.
Whitney asked. The woman nodded
and Mrs. Whitney said; “We’re Mr.
and Mrs. Whitney from across the
court. We—”
“Come right in! Frank and I
were thiqking of calling on you.”
The Whitneys entered and were
greeted cordially by Mr. Phelps.
“I’m afraid,” said Paul, “that we
came on rather an unpleasant mis
sion.” And he explained what they
had seen.
Mr. Phelps looked puzzled.
“There’s something wrong here.
Would you mind stepping Into
the living room?” They fol
lowed him In and he pointed
toward the far wall. “Yon see
we have no windows on that
wall.
He broke off as Mrs. Whitney
gasped. “Why, it wasn’t a window
at all! It was that mirror! You see,
it hangs where a window might be,
and faces our apartment. Paul
Whitney, it was your own reflection
you saw! Standing near the flower
pot, you saw yourself in the mirror,
and it appeared that some one else
was peering in at the Phelpses!”
Paul’s jaw dropped. He swal
lowed, grinned and looked sheepirh.
But the Phelpses thought it was a
grand joke, and urged their new
neighbors to spend .the evening.
All Iron-House
Almost 150 years ago an experi
mental all-iron house was built in
England ... at last advice, it was
still in use.
Here’s s way to stretch your
Christmas money and please your
friends at the same time! The
cigarette smokers ul your list will
International Show
Opens November 25
Cattle Class Prizes
Largest Ever Offered
The 51st International Live Stock
Exposition will be held this year in
the International Amphitheatre at
the Chicago stock yards from No
vember 25 through December 2.
Increased prize money for the
show should help to encourage the
exhibition of top livestock from
both the United States and Canada,
exposition officials reported. v .
Prizes for all cattle classes will
be $61,370, the largest total ever
An international grand cham
pion steer is shown above with
owners, Cleo Yoder of Iowa, .
Henry W. Marshall, exposition
chairman, and Dr. A. D. Weber
who Is slated to judge steers
-again this year.
offered. Many prize increases made
in other breeds to mark the occa
sion of the golden jubilee show of
1949 are retained this year.
Dr. A. D. Weber, of Kansas State
college, will judge the steers again
this year. He is the only American
to judge these classes since the ex
position departed from the custom
of having foreign judges two years
ago.
Other features in connection with
the international that have, been
familiar in the years since 1900 in
clude the grain and hay show, rec
ognized as the world’s largest com
petitive showing of farm crops.
Farm Expenses Increased
Five Fold in Past Decade
•
Farm expenses have increased al
most five-fold over the past decade
and not many farmers would care
to return to the “good old days” of
low expenses—if they had to accept
the level of income that accom
panied them.
This increase in cost of farm op
eration has been accompanied by
some phenomenal changes in the
composition of expenses. Machinery
expense made up only 14 per cent
of the total in 1935-39 while, in 1947-
49 it accounted for 21 per cent
Also, farmers are spending propor
tionately more for seed, fertilizer
and crop expense than they spent
15 years ago.
These changes have been accom
panied by a substantial increase in
man labor efficiency on farms.
Improved Seed Rat
^ L yt, --Tjg™*
welcome a carton of cool, mild
Camels. And to the pipe
and men who “roll their t
give a one pound tin of Prince Al
bert Smoking Tobacco. When you
give Camels or Prince Albert
world’s choicest tobaccos, expert
ly blended — a good^reason why
more people smoke ~
- Camels than
any otner cigarette 1 And mellow
Prince Albert is America’s larg
est-selling pipe tobacco. Wb
more, both Camels and F
Albert are already gift-wra _
in gay, red and green packages.
All you do is fill-in your perse
greeting on the built-in card,
fuss. No bother. Save time,
energy, save money. Give
and Prince Albert — the .
Christmas gifts for smokers!
An idea that might be useful
when growing next. spring’s plants
is the seed box with removable
sides as shown in the above illus
tration.
The sides are nailed together and
attached to the bottom by means
of hooks and screw-eyes. When the
plants are large enough to be trans
planted from the flat, the sides are
unhooked and lifted up from the
bottom, the soil with the plants in
it remaining undisturbed on the
bottom board. The plants are then
easily separated and pulled up.
When ready to use again, the sides
are hooked to the bottom, and the
flat filled with new soiL Very little
root disturbance will result when
the small plants are cut from the
mass of soil with earth clinging
to their roots.
Low Temp. Rendering
Of Lard Is Recommended
. Your home-rendered lard will be
of better quality if you use a low
temperature for rendering, nutri
tion specialists report
A low temperature is needed to
give the greatest yield of lard from
the fat and to prevent scorching
and sticking, which changes the
flavor. Render the lard as promptly
as possible after the carcase has
been thoroughly chilled—preferably
within 24 hours.
How To Rol
Bronchi
Creomulsion relieves promptly 1
it goes right to the seat of the 1
to help loosen and expel j
phlegm and aid nature to
heal raw, tender, inflamed
membranes. Guaranteed to please;
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