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THJ3 NEWBERRY SUN. NEWBERRY. S. C. Handsome Two Piecer Comes in Junior Sizes Two Piecer K HANDSOME two piecer to pep up your summer wardrobe. Cut in junior sizes, it has colorful bands of contrast to accent the top. Skirt is slim, and so easy to make. • • • Pattern No. 8073 la a aew-rlte perfo rated pattern In sizes 11. !£. 13. 14, 10. iS- 8ize 12. 3 1/8 yards of SB-tnch; 7/8 yard contrast. e * • Don't miss the Spring and Summer STYLIST. It’s tilled with Ideas for a smart, wearable summer wardrobe; spe cial features; gift , pattern* ortnted In side the hook 25 cVnts SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. SSI West Adams St., Cblsage «, HL Enclose 30c in coin tor each pat tern. Add 9c for let Class Mall U desired. ^ Pattern No Size r Name Oftease ^rlnt) Street Address or P.O. Box No. City State HOTEL GORDON 3000 Ft. • in the Smoky Mountains WAYNESV1LLE. NX. European and American Plan SPECIAL PRE-SEASON RATES AN OLD STANDBY FOR S GENERATIONS GRANDMOTHER and MOTHER .Depended on Them and Gave Them To The Children Too Wkr Be Billions or Headachjrt If Your Tongue is Coated LIVER AILING? Treat It right sndeyoa'U bs bright. You Too Can Depend on Lane’s Here is the answer to Summer Sluggishness caused by constipation Don’t fool around with untried remedies. Thou sands depend upon this famous formula to make them “right” again. Re store regularity . . . feel better fast with 666. HOMS canning is NOW momthan IVW important Insist on Hie Quality Sod of Careful Conners MIRROR Of Your MIND ^ ^ Suicide Often Expresses Anger By Lawrence Gould Is suicide a form of murder? Answer: Certainly. In at least one language, German, it is called “self-murder” (Selbst-mord). A per son does not kill himself because he is sad and discouraged, but be cause his sadness and discourage ment have made him murderously angry and there is no one but him self on whom his fears or moral scruples will allow him to vent his rage. Suicide is most frequent in people who have been brought up under tyrannically strict discipline and in whom frustration in adult life re-awakens the rage which in childhood they felt at their parents, but later “displaced” onto them selves. May benzedrine create a “craving”? Answer: As is true of other drugs, even including the narcotics, this will depend on how fundamentally well-balanced you are. In the De troit State Medical Journal. Dr. F. A. Freyhan says that people whose moods do not interfere with their capacity for work feel no marked psychological effects from taking benzedrine. But people who suffer from moods of sluggishness and fatigue in which they “can’t seem to get going” find that benzedrine makes them cheerful, energetic and productive, and may develop an un healthy craving for it. Are “spastica” feeble-minded? Answer: Not always, by any means, says a joint bulletin of the U. S. Children’s Bureau and Office of Education, Washington, D. C. “Some of them are very bright,” and “those*who look and act worst sometimes are the brightest.” What is now known as “cerebral palsy” Is due to brain injury before, dur ing or soon after birth and affects the victim’s power to control some functions of his mind or body—most frequently certain types of muscu lar movements. It is not contagious or inheritable and in many cases can show marked improvement un der proper medical and parental care. EBERMARP FISH, 26-YEAR OLP FRANCISCAN MONK, IS MAKING A WALKING PILGRIMAGE £ROM COLOGNE,GERMANY, TO THE FAMOUS SHRINE AT LOURDES —650 MILES HE'S CARRYING A WOODEN CROSS, FT LONG, AND IS ACCOMPANIED BY A 29-YEAR OLD MECHANIC, HELMUTH HANSEL LAST YEAR THEY WALKED TO ROME. KEEPING HEALTHY New Drug Slows Blood Clotting By Dr. James W. Barton N ONE OF US is surprised any more wrhen we read of someone who has suffered a heart stroke (coronary thrombosis) at middle age, or even younger. Figures show that about one-half of all deaths are due to diseases of the heart and blood vessels. It is only na tural, therefore, that research work ers, physicians in active practice and others working in laboratories have been searching for methods of preventing these deaths. Why do apparently healthy men and women have attacks of cor onary thrombosis? In most cases. It is because the blood clots too rapidly and this clot of blood obstructs the tissues of necessary organs, es pecially in heart, brain and lungs. If the blood did not clot, the individual would bleed to death. This disease is known as hemophilia. However the blood clotting In organs where it should not clot is jnst as se rious. At the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Pathol ogists, Dr. Shepard Shapiro, of the New York University school of medicine, forecast large-scale ex tension of a life-saving treatment using the anitcoagulant drugs in the treatment of coronary thrombosis through the discovery of a new test ing material called simplastin which is used in making tests of blood clotting time. Anticoagulant drugs prevent blood from clotting. These drugs are highly effective in the prevention and control of throm bosis (clotting within blood vessels) and the formation of an embolus (piece of clot entering the blood circulation - coronary thrombosis, pulmonary embolism and thrombo phlebitis). The anticoagulant drugs interfere with clotting by reducing the amount of prothrombin in the blood. Pro thrombin is necessary for clotting. To follow the effect of the anti coagulant drug and to administer it with safety to the patient, daily tests of the activity of prothrombin must be made. . . ... ★ HEALTH NOTES ★ Cortisone gives relief to all ar- thritics. • • • Fatigue may be caused by under active thyroid. • • • Boils may be caused and spread by nose infections. • • • Bloating is not always due to gas formation. Cutting down on salt is a big factor in rice diet in high blood pressure. • • • Infected tonsil stubs are danger ous. • • • If the thyroid gland Is not as ac tive as it should be, there is a slowness of the rate at which body processes work. Sportsmen's ABC's In a land founded upon the pas sionate desire for freedom, rules and regulations governing individ ual actions are always looked upon askance, regardless of how nec essary they may be for the gen eral welfare. This is particularly true among a great many hunters, and agnlers, according to Henry P. Davis, public relations manager. Remington Arms Company, Inc. * “But,” says Davis, “there la much more to sportsmanship than the mere practice of to-the-letter obedience to the game laws. A man may never violate a game law or break a club rule and still not be a real sportsman, for he may be re fraining from doing these things because he has to, not because he wants to. Real sportsmanship can not be defined or bounded by rules. It is imbedded in an inherent sense of fair play, which one may or may not possess. “There are certain maxims, how ever, that are worthy of constant remembrance, lest you carelessly or thoughtlessly stray from proper field behavior. T^ey are not rules, just reminders. As they run the gamut of the alphabet I call them ABC’s for Sportsmen. They could Just as well be called XYZ**, too. I think they’re worth looking over. Here they are: Always practice safe gunhandling. Be considerate of the landowner. You are his guest Conduct yourself as a SPORTS MAN should. Don’t be a game-hog. Educate youth in the principles of sportsmanship. Favor the fellow who is hunting with you. Give wildlife a break. Work for ita conservation. Have the location of your hiihri"g partner always in mind. Influence others to hunt safely. Join a sportsman’s organization. Keep that gun muzzle elevated. Leave some game for seed-stock. Make sure of your target before you shoot. Never leave a cripple to go to waste. Obey the game laws to the letter. Put yourself in the other fellow’s place. Treat him accordingly. Quit harping about game shortages and do something about it Retrieve every piece of game you knock down. Share your game bag with the farmer. Take a boy, other than your own, hunting ot fishing. Unite your fellow sportsmen in a common effort to provide bet ter hunting and fishing. Value, and protect your privilege to own and bear firearnis. Work for all sound game manage ment measures. X may mark the spot if you mix gunpowder and alcohol. Young America’s future field sport depends on You. Zeal in game restoration activities will pay big dividends. AAA Crow Hunting It is always a good policy to ask the farmer for permission to kill crows on his property. He will glad ly consent Ask him where the crows have been flying, and he will give you this valuable information. Protect his property while hunting, and thank him for the use of his woods when you bid him goodbye. This is most important. It builds up good relationships between the farmer and the sportsmen; and finally, when the rabbit and squir rel season is open and you want a place to hunt stop in again and ask permission to hunt—even If his land is posted; we are sure you will find a pleasant welcome. AAA Give Wildlife Break! • The heaviest loss of wildlife on highways occurs in the spring. At this time of year, cover is at^ its lowest effectiveness. Last season’s vegetation flattened by wind, snow and rain, no longer provides a satis factory hiding place in much of the normal game area, and new vegeta tion has not yet provided satisfac tory cover. As a result many species of wildlife are forced to the dangerous protection of the shel tered roadside ditches. Spring food supplies are low; weed seeds, in sects, and waste grain are at a minimum in the fields. Consequent ly the grain shifted onto the road in farm to market movements from tempting and often deadly invita tion to game birds and other forms of wildlife. - At this time the mating season is in full swing and results in wide traveling by some species and a to tal loss of fear and caution in many others. AAA Trout Behavior Trout behave differently from bass at spawning time. Bass lay their eggs and guard the nest until the young ones hatch out and then look after the young for a considera ble time. A bass will sometimes actually smash into a rowboat, and keep on smacking it until he is dizzy if it comes close to his nest. In contrast, trout spill their eggs on the gravel, fertilize them, and then start eating them—or as many of them as they can reach. SCRIPTURE; Luke 4; 19; 19:1-10; Mark 10:49; John 3:16: 12:44-90. DEVOTIONAL READING: John 10:7- 15. Not to Be Served Lesson for Jane 16, 1951 T HERE are at least three ideas of what religion is, and two of them are wrong if Jesus was right. To put this more correctly: All three ideas have some truth in them, but if either the first or the second is taken as the main and only truth, then religion goes wrong; while Christ’s truth car ries in itself all the truth the others have. Dr. Foreman Berries are Ripe New for Jellies (Set Recipes Below) Jam ’N Jelly Time THIS IS THE TIME when fruit trees are plump with their produce, and bushes are colorful with berries. If you plan to have some delightful jam and jelly spreads on the table for fall and winter, it’s time to get busy! Breads, sand wiches and rolls which are daily fare take on new Interest when they’re served with different spreads. Many of them can be used to enhance meat, fruits and desserts, tool Have a variety pn hand, and meals * ,JB always sparkle with interest. " Take a choice of one or two of six berries and combine with rhubarb to make a delightful and colorful jelly as your starting project. It might even be wise to use one which you’ve not tried before if you want a flavor surprise: Berry-Rhubarb, Jelly (Makes 7 6-oimce'glasses) Use one of following combina tions: Blackberry-Rhubarb Boysenberry-Rhubarb Dewberry-Rhubarb Loganberry-Rhubarb * Raspberry-Rhubarb \ Youngberry-Rbubarb • • • 3 cups Juice 4 cups sugar 1 box powdered fruit pectin To prepare juice, crush thorough ly or grind about one quart of fully ripe berries. Cut in 1-inch pieces (do hot peel) about one pound rhu barb and put through food chopper. Place fruits in Jelly cloth or bag and squeeze out juice. " Measure sugar into a dry dish and set aside until needed. Measure juice into 8 or 4 quart saucepan and place over hottest fire. Ad<f pow dered fruit pectin, mix well and continue stirring until mixture comes to a hard boil. Pour in sugar at once, stirring constantly.’ Con tinue stirring, bring to a full, roll ing boil and boil hard for 30 sec onds. Remove from fire, skim and pour quickly into sterilized glasses. Paraffin hot jelly at once. Currant-Gooseberry Jam (Makes 12 6-ounce glasses) 5 cups prepared fruit 7 cups sugar 1 box powdered fruit pectin Stem about one quart of currants and crush thoroughly. Grind one quart fully ripe gooseberries. Com bine fruits and measure 5 cups into a very large saucepan. Measure sugar and set aside. Place sauce pan holding fruit over high heat Add fruit pectin and stir until mix ture comes to a hard boil. Stir in sugar at once. Bring to a full rolling boil and boil hard for one minute. Remove from heat, skim and ladle quick ly into glasses. Paraffin at once. Cherry Jam 1 quart cherries 4 cups sugar H cup lemon Juice Wash, drain and pit cherries; then measure. Place In layers In a large kettle with the sugar. Let stand 4 hours. Cook, bringing to a full roll ing boil and boil for 20 minutes. Add LYNN SAYS: Serve Pancakes For Easy Meals Ham pancakes make a delightful supper when served with raisin sauce. Fold 1 cup chopped, leftover ham into your pancake batter just before baking. Serve warm. Plan to roll-up pancakes when you’re serving them with a cottage cheese mixture made by heating 2 cups of cottage cheese in the top part of the double boiler with % cup each of green pepper and celery, chopped. LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU French-Fried Scallops Tartar Sauce Shoestring Potatoes Broiled Tomatoes Chefs Salad Crusty Rolls •Currant Jelly Orange Sherbet Beverage •Recipe Given lemon juice and bring to a boll again; boil 5 minutes longer. Let stand until cool. Turn into hot sterile glasses or jars and cover with paraffin and hd. •Currant Jelly 1 quart currants M cup water Sugar Wash and pick over currants, but do not remove stems. Mash a few of the currants in a preserving ket tle, using a potato masher and con tinue until all berries are mashed. Add water, cover and heat slowly. When fruit juice is thoroughly heat ed, put into jelly bag and let juice drain. Measure 4 cups of juice, add 3 cups of sugar and boil 3 minutes or until jelly sheets off spoon. Pour into sterile glasses and cover with paraffin when cold. Apple-Raspberry Jam (Makes 4 pints) 6 cups chopped, sour apples, pared and cored 3 cups raspberries 9 cups sugar 2 cups water Boil sugar and water until it spins a thread. Add apples. Boil 2 minutes. Add raspberries and boil 10 minutes. Cool, fill glasses, seal with paraf fin and labeL Sunshine Strawberries Wash and hull perfect strawber ries. Arrange in layers in preserv ing kettle with an equal amount of sugar. Let stand for Vs hour, then bring to the boiling point and cook 20 minutes. Arrange in shallow en ameled pans or platters, cover with glass and set in the sun for several days or until the syrup is thick. Stir several times every day. Pour into glasses and paraffin at once. SUNSHINE CHERRIES: Use the above method with sour red cher ries. Cook until they are just tender but still firm. These cherries are especially delicious when served with ice cream. Three Fruit Preserves 1 pineapple, cut in thin wedges 2 oranges with rind of one 3 quarts strawberries 4 pounds sugar Peel pineapple, then slice and cut in thin wedges. Grind the oranges, peeling (me and discarding the rind, and using the rind of the other. Wash, hull -and pick over the straw berries. Place all fruits and sugar hi preserving kettle and stir until sugar is dissolved. Cook for one hour. Pour into sterilized jars and seal with paraffin. Yellow Pear Tomato-Orange Jam 4 quarts yellow pear tomatoes - 5 oranges 5 pounds sugar Grind tomato and whole oranges. Mix with sugar and boil, stirring often to prevent scorching until thick and clear. Fill sterile glasses, let cool, then seal with paraffin. Religion Is Not Retreat F IRST of these wrong' ideas about religion is that It is/ a retreat from the world, a private confer-' ence between God and the soul— and nothing mere. People holding this idea have lit erally fled from the world, they have lived as hermits, they have taken vows of silence and not spoken to a living soul Tor years on end, they have lived in little shut- in communities devoted to contem plation and prayer. Now the relation between God and* the soul is extremely' important. Prayer and contemplation are the very atmosphere of religion, and the Christian ought always to be truly separate from the world. But re treating to a cell won’t answer. No body is any better for taking a vow of silence. Jesus was net that kind of person. His apartness from the world was net marked by a brick wall, bat by his being a different kind of person, in the world. • • « Religion Is Not a Guarantee A NOTHER wrong idea about reli gion is that it is a means of gain. Being religious is supposed to be a sure way of getting what you want, it means getting God on your side, it means having all your pray ers answered, it means prosperity and success.' Surely no one could study the story of Jesus and come away with that notion in his head! Jesus got neither health, wealth, popularity nor success out of being what be was and doing what he did. The most respectable citizens re garded him as a wicked man; his property was only the clothes he wore; he Is known to us as a “man of sorrows and acquainted with grief’; as for success. It is written that “he came to his own, and his own received him not.” Well, some one will ask, do yon mean to say there is noth ing In being a Christian? Don’t you get, anything at all out of it? That is a fair question. Yes, there is everything to be gained; but not in that money-mak ing, happiness-guaranteeing fashion. The person who “goes in for reli gion” hoping to advance his own interests, is still only a selfish man; and selfishness and Christianity are just crosswise. Not To Be Served For a lovely meat accompani ment, place slices of pineapple on the griddle and then pour Vs cup of pancake batter around each pine apple slice, being careful not to fill center or top of pineapple. Rake to a golden brown, turning only once. Instead of serving broiled bacon strips with pancakes, crumble bacon to measure Vs cup and fold into the batter. Serve with butter and spiced honey made by heating together 1 cup of honey with 1 tea spoon cinnamon and Vs teaspoon nutmfeg. ■HE third idea is in Jesus’ words: “The son of man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life a ransom for many.” And aa one of his great followers said: “As he is, so are we in this world.’ (I John 4:17.) This is the ideal of service, in ita deepest, widest sense; and it takes in both those other ideals of reli gion. One of the best ways of serv ing others is to pray for them, as Jesus did. One of the best things we can do feur others is to live as close to God as'we can. But as Jesus him self said: “For their sakes I dedi cate myself.” It is true, also, that some thing is to be gained from reli gion; but nothing that a selfish, greedy, money-loving person can understand. As one of the great creeds expresses it, the ’benefits of redemption” are assurance of God’s love, peace of conqcienoe, increase of grace, and perseverance therein to the end. These are priceless, but no one can understand such things or even wish for them so long as he is a self-loving person. Jesus served men’s bodies and minds, he taught and healed; but deeper than this, he came to save men—save them from their worst selves, bringing them out from slavery of sin, into the freedom of God. So the Christian who wants to know the full meaning of his reli gion will, like his Master, so far aa he can find opportunity, asrve oth ers’ needs in every way he can. And the best service one person can do for another, after all, is to introduce him to Christ. (Copjrrlffct 1801 by «*• DItIsIob of Christion Edocotloa, Nottoaol Coanell •f the Charehes of Christ la the United States sf America. Released hr WNI) Featmrss.) MOST TIMES you’ll find folks who make good are the that mind their work and work: minds. *10 ptld Ida. V. k Wolfe. < •Jet* 1 LOOK for margarine, X always look for the picture of Mias Nu-Maid on the package. And folks, there’s « package that’s realty Bumpin’ — modern in every Seals in Nu-Maid’s flavor. And that churned-fresh 1 makes a big difference in my cookin’ and bakin’. NO MATTES what your lot in life may be, you’ll alius find it’s good policy to build somethin* on it. IS psld Mn. R fMrtsea Feetae. Ma* FROM SUNNY CAMVORNIA comes this bright Idea—margarine molded In modern table stylo 36 pound prints that fit any servin' dish. And wouldn’t you know you’d find yellow “Table-Grade’’ Nu-Maid shaped this modern way, ’cause Nu- Maid is a truly modern margarine! *tK j will be paid upon publication to the first contributor of each no* cepted saying or idea .. . $10 if ac cepted entry is accompanied by largo picture of Miss Nu-Maid from the package. Address “Grandma” 106 East Pearl Street, Cincinnati 2, Ohio. ALWAYS LOOK FOB wholesome Miss Nu-Maid on the package when you buy margarine. Miss Nu-Maid is your aswirance of the finest modern margarine in the finest modern package.