The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, July 20, 1951, Image 6
MIRROR
Of Your
MIND
You Can Outgrow
2 ■ ■ *
Mistakes of Past
By Lawrence Gould
Can your past make yon unworthy of love?
Answer: Not in itself. The only
question is how far you have out
grown or “seen through” the emo
tions that led you to make the mis
takes which you are now so much
ashamed of. Insofar as you have
really done this, you are less like
ly to go wrong again than a person
who has always “toed the straight
atxd narrow.” Your worst handicap
is likely to be whatever sense of
guilt you feel at your past missteps,
for this guilt not only hampers the
self-esteem which mature love re
quires, but tends to discourage you
from trying to achieve the happi
ness that may still be yours. “Let
the dead past bury its dead.”
May repressed hate hamper
learning?
Answer: Yes, says Dr. Herbert
I. Harris, Cambridge, Mass, psy
chiatrist. Experiments at the Mas
sachusetts Institute of Technology
showed striking improvement in
learning and study habits in a
large number of students who had
had an opportunity in psychiatric
treatment to get their repressed
rage at parental discipline out of
their systems. “These students un
wittingly transferred rage from fa
thers to fatherlike teachers,” and
got their revenge by refusing to
study or learn. Any child’s natural
curiosity makes him eager to learn
provided he does not regard study
ing as something that is forced up
on him.
Can you bribe the “baby” In you?
Answer: Yes, and with quite
“small change,” provided the cur
rency is pleasure. Trying to cut
down-my smoking, I observed that
if I thought of lighting a cigarette
but refrained from doing so, it be
came considerably harder to con
centrate on my work, whereas
giving in to the “temptation” at
once released a flood of ideas.
While my conscious reason shows
me plenty of incentives for getting
my job done, these are all com
paratively in the future—at least as
far off as next week’s pay check.
But being completely infantile (like
everyone else’s) my unconscious
mind “can’t wait” and demands
pleasure “now.”
TRANSLATION! Of THE OLP TESTAMENT INTO ITS I9J£T
LANGUAGE WAS RECENTLY COMPLETED BY THREE NATIVE
SEVENTH PAY APVENTlST PASTORS OF THE SOLOMON ISLANPS,
AIPEP BY REV AR. BARRETT. PORTIONS OF THE HOLY BIBLE
HAVE BEEN TRANSLATED INTO 1,118 LANGUAGES AND DIALECTS.
I KEEPING HEALTHY |
Honesty With Self Prevents Tensions
By Dr. James W. Barton
A S A BOY I came home and told
my mother about an interview
I had with a prominent man of our
city.
“You know, Mother,” I said, “he
was very easy to see and talked
with me as if I were a man. I
thought he would be more impor
tant.”
My mother assured me that
all really big men were easy to
see and kindly because they are
themselves and do not put up a
false front to impress others.
This incident came back to me as
I read of an address given by Dr.
Bella S. Van Bark, psychiatrist and
faculty member of the American
Institute of Psychoanalysis, before
the Cooper Union Forum, New York
City.
In discussing the emotional ten
sions that come to many of us at
times, a sort of gnawing sensation,
like hunger, in the pit of the
stomach. Dr. Van Bark ascribes
them to not being honest with our
selves, trying to put on a “big
front.”
“When, In the course of trying
to take care of himself and get
along, an Individual needs to
evolve a fake picture of what
he really believes, wants, needs,
feels and thinks, he> inevitably
loses sight of and turns against
his own Urges for self-expres
sion, self-assertion and self
development, in a natural and
spontaneous way. In dealing
with himself and in any Impact
of people in daily living or on a
larger scale, he experiences
tension much more frequently
than the individual who is ca
pable of greater honesty and
reality about himself.”
.The individual who is not honest
with himself (or herself) fulfills the
expression, “Pride goeth before a
fall.” Dr. Van Bark points out that
when people fail to recognize him
for what he wants them to think
he is, he becomes filled with ten
sion.
★ HEALTH NOTES ★
Symptoms of stomach cancer
may be silent.
• • •
The vision of a cross-eyed child
is impaired when the child fails to
make full-use of one eye.
* • •
One of the first things an instruc
tor has to remember is that when
the brain is used in a task, fatigue
comes rapidly.
Simple, or mucous colitis, is prac
tically chronic diarrhea.
* * *
High blood pressure is less com
mon among peoples who use rice
as we use bread.
* * *
Skin cuts and scratches during
polio season should be treated to
prevent polio organisms from enter
ing the body.
THE NEWBERRY SUN. NEWBERRY.
JyJIM RHODY
Not So Crazy
The old saw “crazy as a goose, 1
has always been ridiculed by hunt
ers of the Canada Goose. This, most
famous of the Domin'm’s wildfowl,
is brave, strong and vily . . . the
opposite to crazy. It has probably
more sense than any other bird, as
anyone who has set out to bag some
will testify.
There is probably no better au
thority on the Canada Goose than
Alfred Hole, who operates a mink
ranch near Rennie, Manitoba. As a
result of an incident back in 1940
he became the friend and protector
of a flock of wild geese and since
then he has devoted a great deal oi
time each summer studying their
habits and ways.
Workers in the Rennie railway
yards in June, 1940, found four
goslings not more than three or four
days old. Their mother had been
killed in some way, evidently, short
ly before the railwaymen made the
discovery. Not knowing what to do
with the youngsters, they took them
to Mr. Hole who undertook to raise
them.
Sportsmen who thought they knew
all about wild geese scoffed at the
idea that the goslings could be
raised without a natural mother and
made a bet of a bottle of Scotch
that the goslings would not live six
weeks. The bet was accepted and
Mr. Hole began a career that even
now is in its infancy. Alfred erected
a pen on a spot where there was
plenty of luscious grass and the
raising of the fledgling family
started.
The first diet was rolled oats and
green stuffs hand fed. But, it was
not the fun looking after them that
Alfred anticipated. It transpired,
goslings get mighty hungry around
3:30 in the morning and the “foster
mother” had to rise at that time to
do his self-imposed chore.
The babies thrived and survived
the difficult six weeks and the bet
was paid. Immediately there was
another wager that the goslings
would not be alive in six weeks and
this bet was duly paid.
In the late summer the young
geese, now strong and healthy,
made attempts to fly and their
keeper clipped their wings. Other
wise they were not confined and
had the run of the grounds and
neighboring water. The geese were
kept in this way for two years. The
third year they were given full
freedom and were soon winging it
around the country. In the fall of
the third year they “honked” a fare
well and took off for their winter
home in the south.
AAA
Drift Cards
Several thousand postcards, each
sealed in a plastic container, will
be dropped into the Gulf of Mexico
by United States naval aircraft dur
ing 1951 to trace complex gulf cur
rents as well as the distribution and
migrations of commercial fishery
stocks, including shrimp, the
United States department of the in
terior announces.
This project is sponsored by the
fish and wildlife service of the de
partment, with the co-operation of
the Gulf States marine fisheries
commission, the Texas game fish
and oyster commission, the depart
ment of oceanography of Texas
A&M college, and the navy depart
ment’s office of naval research.
The postcards are expected to
drift about in the gulf currents, and
to be cast up eventually on beaches,
where many of them will be found
and returned to the Gulf States ma
rine fisheries commission at New
Orleans, La. Then they will be rout
ed to scientists who will deduce
from the returns the paths which
the cards must have followed in
the sea.
AAA
Hunting Dog Types
The oldest type of hunting dog
known to man is the trail hound*
the dog that helped prehistoric man
keep the wolf from the door in more
ways than one. That first dog was
little more than a tamed wolf. He
found the scent trail left by the
quarry and followed it, baying all
the while. His master followed until
the hound had put the game up a
tree or driven it into a den. It was
then up to the man to get his meat,
although the dog was often in at the
kill.
As the centuries went by, man
saved the best of his hunting dogs
for breeding purposes, destroying
all those that failed to meet the
standards of the hunt. In this way,
man was unwittingly practicing se
lective, breeding, aimed at produc
ing a better dog with a superior
nose, greater stamina, courage and
tenacity on the trail.
Pursuit of different kinds of game
required widely varying abilities.
It was the search for different
hunting abilities that led to the de
velopment of the many breeds—all
known as hounds.
The slim, stately Greyhound, the
Irish Wolfhound, and the long-
legged. elegant Borzoi are all
hounds. So are the little Beagles,
the Shorter Bassets and the shortest
Dachshunds. The sad-visaged, long
eared, slow moving Bloodhound and
the speedy Walker are merely cous
ins, many times removed, in the
big family of hounds.
International Urnlonn
Sunday School Leeaona
BY DR. KENNETH J. FOREMAN
SCRIPTURE: Matthew 25:31-46; Act*
6:1-7; Romans 12:9-21; 13:8-10.
DEVOTIONAL READING: J a m • •
1:19-27.
Can Luscious, Seasonal Fruits Now
(See Recipes Below)
Fruit Canning Helps
L USCIOUS FRUITS AND BER
RIES canned right now mean
better meals for your family later
on during the year.
Isn’t it nice to open a can of ap
plesauce for luncheon, without hav
ing to cook it just before the meal?
Nice, too to take
peach halves,
pears or apri
cots for salad
right out of a
jar, isn’t it?
How about a
berry pie?
They’re already in the jar, sweet
ened, ready to be put In a crust.
Fruit for dessert? Open a can of
pineapple^ resting on the canning
shelf.
Fruit is easy to can because it
requires only the simplest of prep
aration. Some need skins removed
by blanching in hot water. Then
they’re packed in jars and pro
cessed in a hot water bath or oven
to cook them completely. If you
want to prevent shrinkage on some
types, pre-cook slightly.
Applesauce (Hot Pack)
3 pounds green apples
2 cups water
1M cups sugar
Wash apples, quarter, core and
remove bruised or decayed parts.
Jf fruit has to stand for any time,
prevent discoloration by placing in
slightly salted water. Drain. Add
water and cook until soft. Press
through sieve or colander to re
move seeds and skins. Add sugar
and bring to a boil. Pack while hot
into clean jars. Adjust cap accord
ing to manufacturer’s directions.
Process 15 minutes in boiling water
bath.
Baked Apples
Wash and core apples and place
in baking dish containing enough
boiling water to cover bottom of
dish. Bake until tender. Pack im
mediately In hot, sterile jars. Fill
to the top with juice from baking
pan and additional medium syrup.
Seal immediately. Medium Syrup:
Use 2 cups water, 1 cup sugar, and
bring to a boil before packing.
* • •
Apricots (Open Kettle)
This method gives nice, rich fla
vor to the fruit. Use firm, ripe apri
cots and drop into boiling water for
y» minute, then dip in cold water
shortly and slip off skins. Remove
stones. Place fruit in Medium Syrup
and simmer for 10 to 15 minutes,
then bring to a full boil Pack im
mediately into hot sterile jars, fill
ing the jar to the top and sealing
quickly.
• * •
Berries (Hot Flack)
Use these directions for black
berries, blueberries, dewberries,
huckleberries, loganberries, mulber-
ries and raspberries, and help pre
vent floating which often occurs in
canning them.
I V ^ & Wash and stem
*<=* v 9 berries. Drop
into boiling thin
.or medium syrup
(Thin syrup: 3
cups water, l
cup sugar), and
let stand 15 to 20 seconds. Drain.
Pack immediately in hot, sterile
jars and fill to within % inch of the
top with boiling syrup in which the
berries stood. Seal jar and process
5 minutes in a hot water bath.
LYNN SAYS:
Here are Aids
For Fruit Canning
Work with tongs or gloves when
removing jars from hot water to pre
vent burned fingers.
When a recipe calls for hot, sterile
jars, this means they should be pre
pared by washing in hot, soapy
water, rinsing in clear hot water and
then placing in a large kettle, tub
or pan on a rack or folded cloth.
Pour boiling water over them and
boil for 10 minutes. Take jars out
of hot water as you fill them.
LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU
Sliced Rump Roast
in Barbecue Sauce.
Au Gratin Potatoes
\ Baked Tomatoes
Jellied Cabbage-Pineapple Salad
Sliced Peaches with Cream
Gingerbread Squares
Beverage
Sour Cherries (Open Kettle)
Wash and pit cherries. For pitting
use a pen point inverted in a hold
er. Place cherries in preserving
kettle immediately and add enough
sugar to sweeten, about 1 cup sugar
to each quart of berries. Add no
water. Heat slowly to the boiling
point. Pack immediately into hot,
sterile jars, and seal each one be
fore filling the next.
• • •
Currants (Open Kettle)
Wash, stem and pick over care
fully. Use % cup sugar for 1 quart
currants. Place fruit and sugar in
kettle. Add no water. Heat slowly
to boiling, shaking kettle to pre
vent burning occasionally. Boil 5
minutes. Fill hot sterile jars and
seal immediately.
• • •
Gooseberries (Cold Pack)
Wash stem and cut off blossom
ends with scissors. Prick each ber
ry with a fork. Prepare 3 cups me
dium syrup. Drop 1 quart of ber
ries into the boiling syrup and let
stand 20 seconds. Remove to col
ander and drain. Repeat, using an
other quart of berries. Continue un
til there are several quarts in col
ander for canning. Pack closely in
hot sterile jars and cover to with
in % inch of top with syrup in which
they were dipped. Seal jars and
process 20 minutes in hot water bath
or 70 minutes in a 250°F. oven.
• • •
Peaches (Open Kettle)
Use firm, ripe fruit. Dip in boil
ing water for 1 minute, then in cold
water and slip off skins. Clingstone
peaches are usually canned whole
and freestone
\ varieties are cut
in halves or
sliced. Cook
peaches in thin
or medium
syrup for 20
minutes or until
clear and ten
der. Pack carefully and tightly.
• • •
Pears (Hot Pack)
Peel and leave whole if stems,
are in good condition, or cut in halves
and core. Drop into slightly salted
water while preparing until all are
done to prevent discoloration. Drain.
Precook Kieffer and Sand varieties
in boiling water until tender. Drain
and use the water in making me
dium syrup. Cook Bartlett varieties
in a medium syrup for 5 minutes.
Pack in hot, sterile jars and fill
with syrup to within % inch of top.
Process 20 minutes in boiling water
bath or 70 minutes in 250°F. oven.
• • *
Pineapple (Cold Pack)
Use fully ripe, sound fruit. Cut off
butt end with sharp knife and twist
out the top. Slice crosswise and pare
each slice. Cut out cores and re
move eyes. Pack in jars in slices,
wedges or grated, as desired. Cov
er with thin or medium syrup to
within % inch of top. Seal and
process in boiling water bath for
30 minutes; or in oven 90 minutes
at 250°F.
For oven canning, set jars 2 in
ches apart in a shallow pan. Heat
oven to temperature necessary be
fore putting in the jars, and begin
counting the time immediately. If
using an electric oven, do not use
the top heating element.
When fruits are packed tightly
in jars, you will not have too much
space at the top after they’re pro
cessed. A wooden paddle is good to
use for this job, and so is a small
olive bottle, the top of which fits
nicely on the fruit or tomatoes as
you pack.
Community Living
Lesson for July 22, 1951
Dr. Foreman
T HERE is one way to get along
in any neighborhood without
any. trouble at all: just have nothing
to do with any one. But that is not
only not a Christian way of living,
it is not practicable.
You need the
community and the
community needs
you. If you want to
tell the world good
bye, go rent your
self a room on the
17th floor of some
apartment house in
New York. You
won’t be bothered
with callers! But if
you live in the typical American
town or country community, you
not only cannot help knowing every
body more or less, but you want to
know them, you need to know them.
• • •
The Community
Includes Everybody
S OME communities cease to be
communities and become ex
clusive clubs; no strangers can
break in. A lady in a very old
county in a long-settled state, said
of her next-door neighbor: "That
family came here sixty years ago;
they don’t really ' belong here.”
Now a true community ought
to include every one In it, and it
isn’t a real community until tt
does. Jesus’ parable of the
sheep and the goats suggests
this.
The trouble with the “goats” was
that they just never saw the down-
and-out members of the community
at all. Your own neighborhood has
in it, perhaps, some lonely people,
unfortunate people, some human
left-overs. What is the community
doing for them?
• • •
The Church and Its Own
O NE practical thing that Chris
tians can do for their commu
nities is to see to it that no Chris
tian suffers want. However much
we may disagree with the Mormons,
there is one feature of the Mormon
church which the rest of us might
take to heart: in all the depression
of 20 years ago, there never was a
Mormon on relief.
Probably in most small com
munities the separate congre
gations are not large enough to
do this kind of thing effectively;
but surely in a community
where there are as many as
three or four different denom
inations, they might mil plan
together so that whenever any
Christian got into a strait, the
rest of the Christians would
stand by to help him.
There will always be a need fo»
general organizations such as the
Red Cross or the Grange and the
Community Chest; but if Christians
always stood by Christians, the rest
of the community would at least
have less to worry abouL
* » •
It Takes All Kinds
T HE ideal community is one in
which everybody is a Christian
and indeed all belong to the same
church. But such communities are
few and far between. Most of us
live pretty close—and sometimes
uncomfortably close—to people who
are not Christians, except perhaps
in name, and who may be hard to
get along with.
How can we live with such
people in a Christian way?
Paul, in Romans 12, makes
some practical suggestions. He
knew very well that no city or
town in the Roman Empire was
Christian or anywhere near it;
yet he shows how to have the
Christian spirit never-the-less.
Christians should be the most val
uable members of any community.
But are they? Is this true in your
community? If so, what is it that
the Christians contribute? And if
not, is it maybe the Christians’
fault?
• * »
The Law Above Laws
A group of people who act toward
each other in no better way
than the laws of the land require,
may be a neighborhood but it is nc
community.
The laws (and useful they
are, to be sure) can regulate
our behavior, bn( they cannot
toach our hearts. They can for
bid ns to harm our neighbor,
but they cannot force ns to feel
kindly towards him. For com
plete community, something
more than law is necessary; and
again Paul puts us on the track
of it.
Love is above all law; it does nol
break laws but it goes far beyond
them. It is not the law-abiding
citizens who are the best ones; the
true ornaments and treasures, the
First Citizens of a community, ar*
the love-abiding.
(Copyright 1951 by tho Division of
Christian Education, National Council
of the Chnrcheo of Christ in tho Unitod
States of Amerioa. Rolaaaod by WNU
Featuroo.)
“Before I started to eat
regularly, I had a great
trouble with constipation,
thanks to all-bran
I’m regular!” Mrs.
Hessie Hamilton,
2212 Millet Street,
Flint, Mich. Just
one of many un
solicited letters from
all-bran users. If
you suffer from con-
stipation due to
lack of dietary bulk, try this:
an ounce (about ^ cup) of <
Kellogg’s all-bran daily,
drink plenty of water! If not com
pletely satisfied after 10 days,’
return empty box to Kellogg’s,
Battle Creek, Mich. Get double \
TOUR MONET BACK!
\
AN OLD STANDBY
FOR S GENERATIONS
GRANDMOTHER and MOTHER
Depended on Them and Gave
Them To The Children Too
Why Re Rlllloas or Headachy?
it Your Toneue is Coated
8692
10-20 ■
A Fresh Look
ive your wardrobe a fresh
lease on life with this youth
ful style that has such nice detail
—tiny collar and cuffs, handy
pockets, novelty button trim.
o o o
Pattern No. 8692 la a seOv-rite perfo
rated pattern in sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18 and
20. Size 12. 4 yards of 35- or 39-inch. ^
Send 25 cents today for youi copy of
the 1 Spring and Summer STYLIST, our
complete pattern magazine. Gift patterns
are orinted Inside the hook
LIVER AILING?
Treat It right and yea’ll he bright.
You Too Can Depend on Lane’s m
tyMtiousfiod!
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
S67 West Adams St., Chicago 6. Hi.
Enclose 30c in coin for each pat
tern. Add 5c for l*t Class Mall if
desired.
Pattern No Size
~ Name (Please Print) 0
Street Address or P.O. Boot No.
City
Stata
Too True
Give me a sentence with the
word diadem in it.
People who drive onto railroad
crossings without looking diadem
sight quicker than those who stop,
look and listen.
Don’t Believe in Signs
You know that sign downtown
that says: This will take you to
42nd Street. The one near the ele
vated?
Yes.
Well, I sat on the sign for two
hours and it never moved an inch.
Make Certain
Don’t you know that you should
always give half of the road to a
woman driver?
I always do, when I find out
which half of the road she wants.
Economical Way
What is the best thing to do when
the brakes of one’s car give way?
Hit 'something cheap.
Morton
salt
Makes i|v ; r.
2 Qoartsi l.^
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