The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, September 21, 1951, Image 3
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY. S. C.
SHOPPER'S
CORNER
By DOROTHY BARCLAY
CHICKEN OR THE EGG?
W HICH comes first, the chicken
or the egg? Remember that
old question? Bet you never get
the quick answer! But right now,
the answer is this: chicken comes
first—first in plenty, first in reason
ably-priced meat, first in the heart
of the thrifty meal-planner.
It’s the young
broilers and fryers
you’ll find tops right
now at your market.
Production is all of
30 per cent higher
in t h e s e tempters
than it was a year
ago. And the price?
No higher than last year at the
same time—which, these days is
good news.
With these larger supplies to
draw on, statistics figure that by
the end of the year, you will have
eaten 30 pounds of chicken, or 10
per cent more than last year. Even
hens will be more plentiful, be
cause a heavy rate of culling is
sending more hens to market.
VERSATILE BIRD
Sunday company? What more
delicious than fried chicken, unless
it's broiled chicken, or roast
chicken? With your special gravy,
mashed potatoes, vegetables or
salad from your own garden, and a
touch of your home-made cran
berry sauce. Left-overs? Why,
there’s no end to the things you
can do with those succulent bits
scraped off the bone! Sandwiches
for a picnic supper, salad for your
club luncheon, chicken a la king,
with a touch of green and red pep
per from your garden, and a few
mushrooms from your store. Or
that delight to the whole family,
chicken pot pie'with your left over
vegetables added.
DUTCH TREAT
Or did you ever try chicken
scrapple? This Pennsylvania Dutch
treat can be made with chicken
flavor just as well as with the more
expensive—as of today—pork. This
combination of chicken, broth and
com meal in proper proportion
makes a tasty and thrifty dish of
many helpings.
And what of that chicken of the
field, rabbit, which your market
has hung so temptingly out out in
front? If you like white meat on
your chicken, these young and ten
der rabbits are for you. And with
other meats climbing higher, rab
bit comes into its own. Do you
know that 85 per cent of the mil
lions of pounds of domestic rabbit
meat produced annually in the
country comes from these young,
fryer-size rabbits? Fried by the
piece, or in salad, or with creole
or other favorite sauces, rabbit
will make a hit with your family,
save your pocketbook, and answer
that constant question, “What’ll we
have for a change?”
As to eggs, while prices are still
high, there’s better news ahead.
The department of agriculture re
ports that 17% million more chick
ens are now laying or expected to
lay in the next few months than
a year ago. So the egg prospect is
good for the immediate future.
Ash Tray, Cigarette Lighter
Installed in Marine Planes
WITH THE FIRST MARINE
AIRCRAFT WING IN KOREA-To
smoke or not to smoke has long
been a question bothering Marine
aviators, since their single-seat
fighter-bombers had no facility for
disposing of ashes.
But now. Chance Vought, maker
of the world-famous Corsair line,
has solved the problem by install
ing not only an ash tray, but also
a cigarette lighter to help pilots
soothe jaded nerves on the way
home from a combat strike.
The new cockpit fixture replaces
the time-tested method of opening
the canopy and allowing the slip
stream to carry away ashes.
At 325, Andy Divine Fears
He Is Losing His Figure
HOLLYWOOD — Andy Devine
(weight, 325) is afraid that he is
losing his figure.
Rotund Andy has capitalized up
on his heftiness in getting screen
roles in westerns. He complains,
however, that he is melting down.
Riding or dieting never had too
much effect on him, he declares,
but a new picture, which requires
him to appear in several square
dance scenes is whittling him down.
RURAL LIVING
Writer Tells His City Friends
Why He Likes It in the Country
mm puzzle
LAST WEEK'S
ANSWER
(Editor’s Note: The following arti
cle, r, I Live in the Country” by Alan
Devoe, was published in the Septem
ber issue of Coronet magazine. It is
reprinted here with the permission of
that magazine.)
By ALAN DEVOE
JT IS QUITE CLEAR that most of
^ my city friends feel sorry for me.
The reason is that I live in the
country. While they pity, they also
wonder, and this reveals itself in
certain perpetual questions.
What on earth do I find to do in
the country? What is there to see?
How do I fill my time?
They feel sorry for me because I
have no radio or television, and be
cause 11 miles separate me from
the post office. They speak with
sympathy of how very “dull” my
life must be, and marvel that I am
content to “stagnate” here.
I receive these commiserations
with scorn. For I extract from this
life of “isolation,” as my friends
term it, a deep and endless de
light.
The house in which I live is very
ancient and somewhat askew; but
from this ancientness and crooked
ness I derive continuous solace.
Here in this tiny dining room the
china dogs on top of the old pine
corner-cupboard have watched
three generations at their feeding;
in the great spool-bed upstairs have
occurred both births and deaths.
There clings in these low-ceil-
inged rooms — with their faded
flowered wallpaper, their horsehair
sofas, and wideboarded uneven
floofs—an aura of the stalwart tran
quillity, the hard-toiling patience,
By INEZ GERHARD
B LONDF4 Marion Marshall has
her best role so far in “That’s
My Boy,” starring Dean Martin
and Jerry Lewis, at Paramount,
but she piled up an impressive list
of credits at 20th Century-Fox be
fore she left that studio. She was
a model when 20th signed her, sent
her to dramatic school for a year,
then put her into “The Snake Pit”;
after that came “Sitting Pretty,”
“Apartment for Peggy,” “I Was a
Male War Bride,” for which she
spent six months in Europe, and
others. It was the test she made
MARION MARSHALL
for “War Bride” that Hal Wallis
saw; as soon as she began to free
lance he signed her for her role in
“That’s My Boy.”
of that succession of homely Dutch
men who were our predecessors.
Near the middle of the last century,
one of these Hollenbecks (for such
was the name of the sturdy family
which tenanted this homestead) de
serted the plow for a life of seafar
ing. When he was an old man, and
had voyaged to every quarter of
the globe, he came back to this
house to eke out a living by mend
ing stone walls.
So much for the house. It is like
that tattered sampler in the hay
loft of our bam which reads, “Sweet
Rest in Heaven,” and like the
crooked path that untold thousands
of footsteps have worn through the
clover field to our well—a link
with the simple, earthly lives of
those good souls who are vanished.
In every direction, as I look from
my windows, are the green wooded
hills, untenanted by living man.
They, lie—these carved and molded
masses of rugged earth—brooding
in an ageless silence, baking their
hummocked backs in the hot sum
mer sun, shouldering the cold white
weight of countless snows, existing
eternal while the oaks and firs upon
their slopes wither and die, and are
born and live again through the
passage of seasons.
My friends who speak of “loneli
ness” and "isolation” take no heed
of the deep companionship of trees
and rocks. Yet it is easy to discover,
in lichen-covered boulders and in
the cool smooth trunks of maples or
the rough, fragrant trunks of firs,
an essence of being with which it is
very easy for a man to commune.
These high hemlocks are my fel
lows upon earth; together we face
the elements, together struggle for
sustenance, together are set upon
by plagues and pestilences, together
will return, when we die, to the
eternal embracing earth of this
planet. And it is possible for me to
walk upon the black leaf mold in
which these hemlocks have their
roots and to draw from that contact
a profound tranquillity of spirit.
This relaxed contentment is a far
better antidote for turmoil and
vexation than my citjf friends can
possibly receive in the diversions
afforded them by the movies, the
theater, the radio or television—of
which they deplore my lack.
'PHIS COUNTRY life of mine, far
from being barren of things to
do and see, is crowded from day
break until nightfall. My personal
routine of eating, working, sleep
ing, and performing chores is suf
ficiently simple. But the details of
the lives that surround mine and
demand my attention—the lives of
chipmunks and phoebes and wood
chucks and of the very buttercups
that grow profusely in our pasture
—are so vastly absorbing as to re
quire all my hours. It is inconceiv
able that I could possibly be
“bored,” even if I had nothing
more to occupy me than the con
templation of the meadow upon
which I lock out as I write this.
In such a rural district as that in
which I live, neurosis is impossible.
That sickly “turning inward” which
makes wretches of city victims has
no opportunity to enter here. All
man’s thought and energy and time
are taken here, as they Were in the
beginning, in a constant coping
with the problems presented by the
earth and the elements. And living
thus in daily contemplation of the
vast swing and surge of the eternal
cosmic machinery, man’s minor
woes assume an utter insignificance.
ACROSS 2. Aslant 22. Angrily
1. Relating
to the
cheek bone
6. Apple seeds
10. Day’s
march
11. Wild ox
12. Lift
13. Diplomatic
agent
14. Vipers
15. Church
officers
16. Greek letter
17. Islands off
coast of
Greece
19. Raises
21. Apex
241 Rent under
lease
25. Musical
drama
27. Large
S-shaped
worm
28. Dwellings
29. Two-seated
bicycle
32. Foot
(abbr.)
S3. Staggered
35. Chills and
fever
37. Missile
weapon
38. A stern oar
39. Measure of
distance
40. Husk
41. Coats with
hot pitch
42. Like a wasp
DOWN
1. Estimates
3. Young girls
(Scot.)
4. Mimic
5. Music note
6. Raccoon
like
carnivore
7. Originated
8. Needy
9. Speaks
12. Roam
13. High
priest
15. Half ems
18. Poem
20. Eastward
23. A hard
crayon
25. Fetish
(Afr.)
26. Crushed
substances
28. Total
30. Plants of
the lily
family
31. Fresh
33. Sloping
roadway
34. Silkworm
36. Swallow
eagerly
ocarina fluaa
□maim ’imwu
□□□as raannn
□□a auHanra
oarngmaia
MHUH lUMMIl
BdiMU&j fdHHHD
SmOH HLGEil
□ki 'ammuuura
raarati uautti!
»-«
N-37
38. Wild sheep
(Ind.)
40. Compass
point
(abbr.)
1
5"
3
4
s
i
b
T
6
9
%
to
II
12
13
14
IS
lb
i
a
.
IW
i
IV
20
VA
21
22
23
24
%
251
,
2b
21
%
l
1
29
30
31
y/A
y/A
32
3*
34
35
3b
37
T sfy
%
33.
39
Y//,
40
1
41
e
42
THE
FICTION
CORNER
EPICUREAN ERROR
By Isabelle Snyder
L AURA FENTON viewed the rut
ted road dubiously. “Are you
sure this is the road, Amy?”
“Oh yes—‘third road on the left’—
just as you wrote it in the notebook
when MrS. Ed-
3 Minula wards told us
-Minute about it ... a
Fiction wonderful country
-I home that serves
food. Hurry, I’m starved.
divine
And it sounds so divine!”
Laura turned the carefully-cared-
for coupe into the narrow road,
guiding it cautiously up the steep
grade.
Amy giggled like a girl. “It’s a
good thing it isn’t much farther,
Laura. I’m starved!”
Laura smiled gently at the exag
gerated speech of her flighty friend
who refused to grow old, graceful
ly or otherwise. “I believe the food
will be worth the long drive off our
main route. Mrs. Edwards is most
discriminating.”
“There's the place,” an
nounced Amy coughing from the
thick Just. “Just look at all the
cars In the yard—the food must
be wonderful.”
Laura turned the coupe into the
crowded farm yard and carefully
selected an ample parking spot.
. Amy pouted, ‘The food may be
perfect but we’ll have to wait ages
to get in—just look at all those
others waiting!” She bounced from
the car like a child and stood im
patiently while Laura fastidiously
changed driving gloves for fresh
white ones before leaving the car
primly.
“Goodness, Amy Bowen, straight
en your hat,” Laura scolded as they
walked to the house. “It seems
strange that they don’t have a sign
on the road or out front,” she com-
GRASSROOTS
Republicans Must Woo Dixiecrals to Win in 1952
By Wright A. Patterson
A S A MEANS of stealing the
show from their oppenents in
the 1952 presidential campaign the
Republicans should insert* state
rights as a major plank in their
platform, so stated as to leave no
possibility of its being misunder
stood or misinterpreted.
To be effective it cannot be
expressed in political weasel
words, one of those “heads I
win, tails you lose” kinds of
statements that can be twisted
to meet whatever occasion may
present. It must be as explicit
in its meaning as were those of
Thomas Jefferson, the father
and patron saint of the Demo
cratic party, and the original
states’ righter.
Every piece of Fair Deal legis
lation the President has been able
to force through congress has taken
something away from the consti
tutional rights of the states, and
something from the liberties of the
people.
All of the Fair Deal legislation the
President is so insistently demanding
that congress enact is of the same
anti-state rights character. Each bill,
should it become the law of the land,
would take away some rights that
are now enjoyed by the states under
the provisions of the constitution,
some things on which the states now
have the say-so.
At its convention, the Demo
cratic party must either approve
cur condemn the actions of the
Democratic administration. If it
endorses such policies, it is ap
proving a limitation of the constitu
tional rights of the states. That
would be objectionable to the mem
bers of the party in the southern
states.
With the Republicans propos
ing to protect the rights of the
states it would give the Dixie-
crats a place to which they
could turn, and might result
in the Republicans carrying
some of the Southern states as
did Herbert Hoover.
The Republicans have joined
with the southern Dixiecrats in
opposing the anti-states rights leg
islation the President has asked
for, and the adoption of such a
plank would be but an endorsement
of the party’s policies during the
last two sessions of congress. The
party, as such, must either endorse
such actions, or apologize for them.
The opportunity the situation pre
sents for a "squeeze play’ would
seem to have been made to order for
the Republicans. Will they improve
it, or will they "muff” it as not needed
to win that 1952 political battle?
Undoubtedly a strong states’
right plank in the Republican plat
form would insure some Demo
cratic votes for Republican candi
dates in many states.
*
Thanks to the brilliant mili
tary mind of the late Admiral
Sherman, at the time chief of
naval operations, and to his
ability In the field of diplomacy.
despite the pettiness of England
and France, fearful that Franco
might fall heir to some of the
funds that would otherwise go
for their rearmament, we have
added to the defense of Europe
a practically impregnable bat
tle line in the Pyrenees moun
tains and Spanish divisions to
man them, for which Eisen
hower will be thaWful. It will
prove of enormous value in the
job to which he has been as
signed.
There was certainly no reason
why we should listen to the preju
diced protests of England and
France. We are paying a large
portion of the bill for their defense
and providing a considerable por
tion of the armed manpower to
defeat Stalin and his Communistic
hordes.
England and France, being much
nearer and more vulnerable, have
much more to fear from the threat
ened Russian attack than have we,
but those protests, based on the
hates of many years standing, is
an evidence of the impossibility of
achieving the altruistic aims of the
United Nations so long as those
hates continue.
If England and France cannot
rise above their petty prejudices,
the United Nations might as well
call off its efforts for world pacifi
cation. We are indebted to Admiral
Sherman for ignoring those preju
dices and adding to the defenses of
Europe, for which we have assumed
responsibility. It was a fine job,
well done, and at an opportune time.
“Oh, outside, please,” an
swered Amy warmly. “It’s
much too nice a day to stay
inside.”
mented as they ascended the steps
to the veranda where other people
already waited.
T HEY were greeted by an unsmil
ing woman in black. “Would you
care to come inside or will you wait
here on the porch?”
“Oh, outside, please,” answered
Amy warmly. “It’s much too nice a
day to stay inside.” She continued
tb chatter of the weather and the
lovely view while they found chairs
in the shade. Then she turned to the
woman next her. “Isn’t this a love
ly place?” she asked enthusiasti
cally.
Her enthusion apparently was
not transmitted by her speech. In
fact, Amy had the peculiar sensa
tion that comes to one who has
committed a grave social error.
The woman murmered something
polite and turned away but Amy
was not to be denied. “I’m Amy
Bowen and this is my friend, Laura
Fenton. We are school teachers
from over in Ohio,” she said.
The woman locked at them in a
pugzzled * way, acknowledged the
introductions briefly and changed
her place.
“Well, really!” Amy said in dis
gust before turning to Laura to say
in a whisper, “Where do you sup
pose they feed folks, Laura? I don’t
smell any food nor hear any
dishes.”
Laura answered quietly, “Don’t
fret so, Amy. There are so many
flowers around that you couldn’t
smell food.”
Amy squirmed around in her
chair, peering curiously into the
house. “Goodness,” she said, “the
place is banked with flowers.”
“Oh,” she gasped, turning an odd
greenish white. “Laura, I’m going
to be sick,” she cried.
Laura moved quickly, grasp
ing the smaller woman by the
arm to help her to the car. As
they passed the open door,
Laura r glanced inside, then
stifled a cry with a white-gloved
hand. Reality had arrived with
abrupt suddenness.
Not till the two women were safe
ly in the car and ready to turn onto
the paved highway did either speak.
Amy wailed, “Oh, Laura, that hor
rible place! We’ll never live this
down.”
Laura stopped the ear and looked
at the directions in the notebook.
“ Third road on right,’ ” she read.
She turned to her stricken compan
ion. “Amy Bowen,” she said stern
ly, “maybe this will teach you tc
read the directions as they are writ
ten and to follow them carefully
The idea of taking us to a funeri
instead of a restaurant!”
Legumes, Fertilizer
Re-Build Worn Field
Most Soil Will Produce
If Cared for Properly
The teamwork of legumes, grass
es and plenty of fertilizer made the
difference between these two fields
in Huntington County, Indiana,
points out the middle west soil im
provement committee.
The barren field in the upper
photo had 6 feet of soil removed at
the deepest point for road fill. It
had no soil care, no fertilizer. Aft
er three years the field is still badly
eroded, criss-crossed with gullies
2 to 3 feet deep.
The lower field located on- Nor
man Thompson’s farm near Hunt
ington, had 8 feet of soil removed
Sliliiliiif
The above fields are exam
ples of what can be done to
build eoil even on the most bar
ren, eroded’ fields. Given proper
plant food and plenty of it, plus
legume-grass mixture, most soil
can be made to produce.
from a hilltop, for road fill. As
soon as the soil was carted off,
Thompson added heavy applications
of fertilizer carrying nitrogen, phos
phate and potash. Altogether, he
used the equivalent of 600 pounds
of plant food per acre—approxi
mately 250 pounds of 3-12-12 and
350 pounds of 0-20-0. No lime was
needed, as the subsoil is almost
neutral.
Thompson seeded bluegrass and
some ladino and red clover. The
roots anchored wx»ll and soon built
up a protective growth that yields
good forage. Volunteer white clo
ver has come in to add to the pas
ture.
Now Thompson uses the field for
night pasture.
Stocks of Feed Grains
Relatively High in June
The bureau of agricultural eco
nomics reports relatively large
stocks of all feed grains in storage
in July. Disappearance in the April-
June quarter was larger than in
most years for com, but about us
ual for oats. It was the heaviest on
record for barley.
Approximately 1,270 million bush
els of v corn were in storage as of
July 1, 11 per cent less than on
July 1, 1950. Oats stocks of 298
million bushels are the largest car
ry-over of record by a small mar
gin. The off-farm portion of pearly
34 million bushels is largest of rec
ord also.
Barley stock of 93 million bushels
are a slightly larger carry-over
than average, with the off-farm por
tion of 53 million bushels.
Toolbox on Wheels
>*hm.i.hii i*>i 1 111
•'
A practical idea for most
farmers is the toolbox on
wheels. Made of light-weight
iron sheets, the drawers can
slide on angle-iron channels and
store a complete set of hand
tools. The handles can be made
to fold down when not being
moved wheelbarrow fashion.
Coaster-wagon wheels will serve
the purpose. With a little plan
ning the average farmer can
build it easily. The above draw
ing is a good start on the plans.
Experts See Good Future
For Nation's Dairy Farms
Dairying looks profitable fpr the
years ahead, dairy experts believe.
They list six reasons: (1) Increased
population; (2) higher incomes for
the average working man; (3) peo
ple are living longer; (4) high
meat prices which are reflected
in higher prices for dairy cows and
veal; (5) increased use of dairy
products; and (6) the greater stress
being placed on the use of milk and
milk products.
Out Of The Mail
Dear Mr. Rhody:
I was greatly interested in
your article on the ability of
fish to see and distinguish be
tween colors.
Here at the Cortland Line
Company in Cortland, N. Y. we
hold similar views and after
considerable research, both In
the laboratory and in the field,
we created a CAM-O-FLAGE
line which we feel is less visiMe
to the fish titan the traditional
black casting line. This line
changes color every foot or so
and you’ll find In it all the col
ors commonly found in ocean,
lake, stream or pond. By snip
ping just a bit off the end, the
fisherman can match the color
of most any water he encount
ers. When he ties this end to
Ids'bait or plug, it appears to
be swimming free, unattached
to any line. Does It work? Well,
this season fishermen bought
35,606,066 yds. of Cortland
CAM-O-FLAGE and every mall
brings enthusiastic letters from
successful users. That’s a
pretty good indication that it
works and that fish can dis
tinguish between colors.
Glad to be able to support
your theory on this. We aP
ways look forward with a great
deal of interest to seeing the
latest isgue of SPORTSMAN’S
HORIZON.
Yours very truly,
CORTLAND LINE CO., INC.
R. F. JENNINGS
Public Relations Director
AAA
Canning Timetable
Best Ways
Often the angler will attempt to
determine what kinds of fish live in
his favorite stream or lake. He
makes his decisions upon angling
methods.
It may sound strange, but the
rod and line are among the poorest
methods of finding out how many
or kinds ,of fish exist in a stream or
lake. The fishery biologist' keeps
records on anglers’ catches, known
as creel censuses; however, in
addition to this he uses certain
tools and methods which prove to
be better in ascertaining what fish
exist. The common methods are:
draining a pond or stream, use of
chemicals, seining, trapping and
electrical shockers. By these meth
ods, actual counts and weights
of fish found in the water can be
made. Often we surprise anglers by
showing “new” species in their
favorite holes, or greater numbers
than he suspects. On other occa
sions , we can show that non-game
species of fish are more abundant
than the game fishes he seeks.
Some say that public relations
provides the answer to better fish
ing. I don’t agree with this. Study
of the fish in a stream or lake is
the job to be done. Research is im
portant in industry. It is necessary
in the living world—our fish and
game resources. The big job in
fish management of streams is find
ing the answer to how to manipu
late fish populations to make game
fishes produce heavily and grow
faster. Research and investigation
will eventually find the answer.
AAA
The wombat, called the Australian
badger, has a pouch like a kangaroo,
the internal anatomy of a beaver and
the habits of a rodent. Natives say it
can easily cross a river by walking
on the bottom.
AAA
•Taint So/
It has generally been accepted as
a fact that fawn deer carry no odor
—an act of nature to protect them
from predators. Statements to this
effect have found their way into
print on numerous occasions. This,
however, isn’t so, according to ex
periences of field men of the Utah
State Fish and Game Department.
In the spring of 1950 WaUace Jen
sen, assistant Federal aid leader
for the Utah state fish and game
department was assigned the task
of tagging numerous fawn. After
several days in the mountains re
sulting in almost total failure, he
returned very discouraged and
solicited the aid of his trusty dog—
a cross between a collie and an
English setter. Returning to the
hills Jensen was lucky inasmuch
as he found a newly born fawn lying
low in its hiding place. The dog
watched with great interest while
Wally placed a tag in the fawn’s
ear and then released it A few
moments later another fawn, a
little older, was flushed. The dog
promptly took after it and very
carefully taking hold of it pulled
it to the ground and held his
front paws on top of it
AAA
First 'Scope Rod
Know how the first telescope rod
came into being?
Well, the story is that a cagey
Connecticut mechanic who wanted
to fish on Sunday without bringing
down the wrath of his righteous
neighbors, invented a rod with sec
tions that would telescope. He fig
ured that a rod of this type would
be easy to hide by slipping it down
one leg of his pants. Then, he
could stroll off to stream or lake
without anyone being the wiser.
If you don’t have a canning time
table issued since 1946, you will
want to take advantage of t h e
time-saving new rules resulting
from research in the U.S. Depart
ment of Agriculture. Get the latest
canning information from your
home demonstration agent, located
at the extension'office in the coun
ty seat.
• • •
Best Varieties
Freezing the right varieties now
can make a big difference in the
quality of frozen foods you take
out of your locker next winter. Be
sure you freeze only the recom
mended varieties of fruits and
vegetables this summer.
jour
IliME]
GUARANTEED
POP.
bHISP-TCNOCA
[PCUCIOOS/
jouyJ
Itimei
% %
AT ALL
So delicious, so easy! Mix everything
In 1 bowl this Kellogg-quick way!
1 cup Kellogg’s 2 tablospoons i '
All-Bran soft shortwing
cup milk
J. cup siftsd flour TopP‘ n 9:
2 Vt teaspoons 12 cored thin
baking powder apple rings
teaspoon salt ,% teaspoon \
1/4 cup sugar cinnamon
1 egg V* cup sugar ^
1. Combine All-Bran, milk In bowL
2. Sift together flour, baking powder,
salt into same bowL Add sugar, egg,
shortening. Stir only until combined,
3. Fill greased muffin pans % full. Dip
apple rings in mixture of cinnamon,
sugar. Place firmly on muffin batter.
Bake in preheated mod. hot oven
(400°F.) about25min. Yield: 12 medium
muffins, 2% Inches in diameter.
America’s^
natural laxative cereal
for diets of imuffidMt
bulk. Try • bowtfnl
today!
It's Wonderful the Way
Chewing-Gum Laxative
Acts Chiefly to
REMOVE WASTE
-MOT ,
GOOD FOOD
• Hoe’s the secret millions of folks haffit
discovered about nmr-A-Mnrr, the mod
ern chewing-gum laxative. Yee, here la
why nof-A-Mms’s action Is so wonder
fully different!
Doctors say that many other laxative*
start their “fii
flushing” action toolBB^TT
stomach ■
right in the stomach where food Is
digested. Large doses of such
upset digestion, flush away nourishing
food you need for health and energy.
You feel weak, worn out. «
But gentle rnar-a-ttnrr, taken as rec
ommended. works chiefly In the lower
bowel where It removes only waste, not
good food! You avoid that typical weak,
tired, worn-out feeling. Use renr-a-acmc
and feel your “peppy,” energetic self 1 Get'
rnof-A-MntTi No Increase In price—still!
25#, 50# or only 10#.
25#. 50# or only 10#, ^ {\
E FEEN-A-MINTTO
HUMOUS QjgWUlO-qiM UUCATTVI yffil
Quick Thinking Scouts
Also Divide the Spoils
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Two
Boy Scout friends used a snake
bite kit suction pump on Rich
ard Carroll, IS, all the way to
the hospital after he was bitten
by a pygmy rattlesnake.
Hospital authorities said it
helped the boy make a ’“re
markably fast” recovery.
The boys skilled the snake be
fore going to the hospitaL After
ward they went back and di
vided the spoils. Richard
Thomas, 12 said with a grin:
• “Billy (Billy Weaver, 13) got
the skin, I gpt three rattles,
and Rickey—he got the bite.”
Yodora
checks
perspiration
odorMH
THE w*Y
Made with a face cream bate. Yodora
is actually toothing to normal skins.
No harsh chemicals or irritating
salts. Won’t harm skin or clothing.
Stays soft and creamy, never gets
grainy.
Try gentle Yodora—/erf the wonderful |
difference!