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THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY. S. C. Tailored Suit-Dress Is a Year Round Hit 8627 12-42 SEWING CIRCLE MT West Adams Enclose 30c in tern. Add 5c for desired. Pattern No PATTERN DEPT. St.. Chicage 6. IH. coin for each pat- 1st Class MaU If t Name tPlease Print) Street Address or P O. Box No. City State i YOU’LL BE GLAD YOU DID! You’ll be glad you took this piece of advice. This Christmas give the cigarette-smokers on your list car tons of Camels . . . and the pipe- smokers and “roll-your-owners” Prince Albert Smoking Tobacco. You’ll be glad for two reasons: first, they’re gifts that are sure to please—they’re by far the most popular cigarette and smoking to bacco in America. Second, they’re gifts that are so easy to give. Camels come in bright and cheery Christmas cartons this time of year, all ready to give. There’s*a space right on the top where you just fill in your personal greet ing. The big one - pound tin of Prince Albert (“The National Joy Smoke”) comes in a festive Christ mas box and it, too, is all ready for Christmas giving, with a built- in Christmas card. Don’t put it off. Go right to your dealer today while he still has plenty of these time-saving, money-saving gifts . . . mild, flavorful Camels, by far America’s most popular cigarette . . . and Prince Albert, America’s largest - selling smoking tobacco. “The bite’s out and the pleasure’s ini’* ~Adv. RELIEF AT LAST For Ywir COUGH Creomulsion relieves promptly because it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial membranes. Guaranteed to please you or money refunded. Creomulsion has stood the test of millions of users. CREOMUUSION Colds, Acoto Bronchitis brighter teeth In just one week Amazing results proved by independent scientific test. For cleaner teeth, for a brighter smile. •. try Calox yourself 1 Crime in America By ESTES KEFAUVER United States Senator Fourteen of a Series Nevada: A Case Against Legalized Gambling Both morally and financially, legalized gambling in Nevada Is a flop. That was our conclusion after the Senate Crime Committee visited the only state which lawfully permits all gambling. We had wanted to see whether, in the committee’s opinion, it would deter organized crime if gaming were legalized nationally. We decided, instead, that “Nevada speaks eloquently in the nega tive.” It is true that revenue from state and local taxes on gambling is welcome in Nevada. However, what the state receives is only a pitiful fraction of the millions of dollars that the gamblers them selves dram from the public—not all of whom are out-of-state tourists, either. Furthermore, La, Vega,, Reno Hudolph HaIley asked how the and other gambling center, have possibly cou id have 11- beccme headquarter, tor some of c< , nscd a certain gambler who had the nation s worst mobsters. A a Q^ot record for me gai opera- sample was the late Bugsy Siegel, tions in other states, Moore replied: formerly a director of New York’s ,. How was he g oing ^ a*, Murder, Inc. He became the gam- j business?" bling boss in Las Vegas until he was murdered in his mistress' home in California in 1947. Another is Lester (Benny) Bin We also were captivated by the unique role of Clifford Aaron Jones, attorney - at - law, lieutenant gov- ■OR general wear the year around, nothing tops the good looking tailored suit-dress. This one has a choice of sleeves and comes in a wide size range. r r 20; 40. 42. Size 14. short sleeves. 4V« yards ol 45-inch Ion (currently alive who in 1936 emor of ^ state and „ partner was run out of DaUas, where he ^ pioneer club tte Golden bossed a miUion-doUar-a-year pel- Nu gget, and the Thunderbird Ho ley racket. Binion still has a hand te, aU g amWlng operations. Lieu- In running the Texas racket by re- tenant Governor Jones’ 2% per mote control from Las Vegas, ae- cent lnl e res t In the Pioneer Club, cording to Dallas police. which he purchased for W ,000. has In fact, he carried on a lurid yielded him approximately $14,000 feud with Harold Noble, the Dal- a year, and his 1 per cent interest las gambler who had been shot at in the Golden Nugget, for yihich he so often (nine at the time) that he | paid $23,310 pays about $12,000. The move which placed the tax commission in the business of U< censing gamblers, as a matter of fact, was precipitated by Robert was known in the underworld as “The Cat.” But after Noble’s wife was blown up in a dynamite ex plosion, Binion quietly sent an emissary to Dallas to assure Noble E Jon strict attorney of the that he was not behind the trouble. Binion and the Nevada mob were unhappy over the bad publicity which was indirectly hurting busi ness in the Nevada casinos. • • • Studying what happens when a state or community is “Siegelized” or “Binionized,” my own opposi tion to legalized gambling has be come firm. The casino type of op eration is more often crooked than not—and legalizing it will not make it less so. The fascination of gam bling to many people is so strong county in which Las Vegas is la cated and a law partner—though no relation—to Lieutenant Gover nor Jones. He wrote the tax com mission that the gangsters were getting too quarrelsome since Sie gel’s assassination and that war fare might break out at any time. Siegei, an associate of Lucky Lu ciano, Frank Costello, Joe Adonis and other rulers of the Eastern mob, moved into Las Vegas around 1942, and established the plushy Flamingo Hotel. Working with Moe Sedway, ex-convict and long-time ^ la i t it jvould be complete folly^to | racketeer, he was the indisputable czar of the Nevada wire service. make the facilities more available. Employes of a magnesium plant near Las Vegas were paid extreme ly high wages and should have been prosperous. Yet, when the plant Actually, he was believed to have muscled in as a silent partner of every bookmaker to whom he sold the wire service and he would re- had to be moved several hundred fuse service to any bookie who miles, many of the employes simply did not have the money to move their families to the new locations; their earnings had gone into the convenient slot machines and gam bling dens. There is more than an abundance of evidence that when gambling is minimized, legitimate business flourishes. Sen. Lester C. Hunt, a member of the committee, told us of his experience as gov ernor of Wyoming. When gambling was outlawed in his state, business increased tremendously and sales tax revenue to the state immedi ately soared. Nevada’s gambling laws have been subject to periodic alterations. would not stand still for. the “muscle.” He was shot to death in the home he was leaving for Virginia Hill in Beverly Hills, Calif. There are two theories for his assassina tion: (1) He attempted to carry his “muscle” tactics too far, and/or (2) His last East coast and Chi cago mob backers were displeased with the way he had managed their Western interests. • • • The Flschetti brothers of the Chicago • Capone syndicate, the Frank Costello-Frank Erickson in terests in New York, and certain members of the Detroit mob had The latest took effect in 1949. It re- invested heavily in Bugsy’s Fltun- quired that persons engaging in | i n go f which reputedly cost between $4,000,000 and $5,000,000. They were said to be displeased with Bugsy’s management of the expensive prop erty. Virginia Hill is said to have known that the killing was to hap pen and she was out of the United States at the time. In New York later, she furiously disclaimed such knowledge. Anyway, after Siegel’s . murder, the Flamingo’s operation was tak en over bv Morris Rosen and Moe Sedway. They attempted to carry on Bugsy’s race wire monopoly, but weren’t tough enough. Soon the Stearns brothers, opera tors of the Santa Anita Club, next gambling operations must be li censed by the state, county, and city. Such license power is vested in the Nevada state tax commis sion. Ironically, the tax commission member appointed to “represent business” is William J. Moore, him self engaged in a gambling opera tion as part owner of the Last Frontier Hotel. The lanky, drawl ing Commissioner Moore addressed everyone as “fellow”—even the dignified Sen. Charles W. Tobey of New Hampshire. As part of the same “reform” in Nevada’s gambling laws, there is supposed to be an “impartial” distribution to all licensed book- | door, began tapping the Frontier makers of the race news wire serv ice, the life blood of gambling. The tax commission is authorized to fix rates for this service and, in gen eral, supervise its operation. The same Mr. Moore told us he recent ly made a deal for wire service for his own hotel at a rate which in the expressed opinion of the commit tee, “gives him a considerable fi nancial advantage over his com- Club’s race wire. It was then that the district attorney began fearing that shooting would break out, and the licensing arrangement, which has led to dubious peace among the gamblers in Nevada, was set up. Next week: California: Where Lobbyists Grow Big and Mobsters Thrive. Condensed from the book. “Crime In America,” by Estes Kefauver. Cpr. 1851. petitors.” _ _ The driving force behind the “re- Doubieday^inc. Dirt. General rzro c tVio crVitonin u fa of I forms” was the frightening fact that the out-of-state hoodlums and killers who invaded Nevada had be come so greedy and violent that an outbreak of gang warfare was To Save A Life Blood plasma, administered to wounded soldiers on the battlefield, feared. By “licensing” them, the | state hoped to stabilize the industry. water prior to injection into human Yet the tax commission promptly j veins, granted licenses to the same hood lums. This, as the dual-roled Mr. Moore Donating Blood Any person in good health be- explained, was a sort of “grand- I tween the ages of 21 and 59 may daddy clause” to protect the peo- | donate blood, vitally needed by the pie who were in the business when I Army as result of the Korean con- the law was passed. When Counsel | flict. A NATIONAL SYMPTOM Doctor Cites Scandals as Morals Index A product of McKesson a bobbins | NEW YORK — Collegiate sports scandals and other corruption are “a challenge to Americans in gen eral and especially to educational Institutions,” according to Dr. Oliv er C. Carmichael, president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Ad vancement of Teaching. In his 46th annual report on the state of American morals, Dr. Car michael said the recent expose of college sports, gambling, municipal and governmental corruption “should surely be * sufficient to arouse the American people.” The doctor pointed out that the finger of accusation had been point ed at thousands of innocents in loy alty probes, perhaps those Involved in sports scandals, but those found guilty, “deserve no consideration or sympathy.” JIMRI When to Fish? We have proclaimed often In this department that the rime to go fish ing is “any time you can get away to go.” Naturally, there are many who won't subscribe to that, point ing out that weather conditions too frequently determine whether or not a men may go fishing. That is true, of course; and we don’t mean a man should always go fishing in freezing weather, a roaring gale or when the rain is streaming down In torrents. How ever, there are times when what would be considered “bad weather” for fishing pays off handsomely. It did for us and a couple of com panions only a few weeks ago when, with streams l^igh and muddy, we set out to a nearby pond to do some panfishing. Our companions were equipped with minnows and worms. We toted a fly rod and some No. 14 trout flies. When we reached the pond, the day, which already had started out windy, turned into one wherein the wind was almost of gale propor tions. The wind waves on the pond were almost a foot high and white- caps were running. The wind was so strong that a fly rod, held vertical ly in the air, took a bend as If a heavy fish were on. On that particular day and under those specific conditions, we would have wagered that our flies would not have enticed a single strike all day; and our companions agreed with us. Despite the velocity of the wind, we were able to lay a respectable length of line occasionally and—to our amazement—whenever we did, we got a strike. The bream and crappfe were hitting furiously at flies which ono would have thought they couldn’t even have seen in that kind of water. The men using minnows and worms caught three fish between them! We point this incident up here to bolster a contention we have made before, that no one will ever get angling down to an exact science. About"Lead" & By now, the nimrods in many states will be out after rabbit, quail grouse and other upland game. There will be many hits, many misses, and those who miss will al ways be wondering “how come?” The answer is not a simple one. Millions of words have been written and spoken on this subject and there has been much discussion as to whether good wing-shooting can be taught. It can be taught, of course—but only to a degree. That instinct in a hunter which makes him swing his gun muzzle the right distance ahead of a flying bird or a hurtling hare is a mystical something which cannot be completely gletmed from books. The only answer, as we believe any honest instructor would tell you, is sufficient practice in the field to become a good wing-shot by instinct But, with our waning fowl and game supply, the modern hunt er doesn’t have the chance to “get good” that his dad and granddad had. The next best thing, then, is skeet and trapshooting. These are only substitutes and we do not guaran tee that religious application to trap or station will make you a good gunner; but it will help to some ex tent. Learning to “lead,” which is the secret of successful wing-shoo\ing, must be done in the field for best results; and, in the end, wing-shoot- ng is an instant reaction to the three factors of speed, distance and alignment which must be correlated properly if the bird is to be downed or the bunny stepped. AAA Boys & Guns The question of when to give his son a gun and when to turn the youth loose in the field with it is a recurrent and serious one for all fathers who sincerely want their off spring to enjoy the pleasures of* hunting. And, it is one which each father must decide for himself; but there are a few guideposts which, If kept n mind, might simplify the prob- em. They are: If there is any doubt about the boy’s sense of responsibility and awareness of safety, don’t let him take the gun out unless you, or some other adult is along. Try to instill—by repeating as of ten as possible—the cardinal rules of gun-handling Safety into the boy. Don’t let the boy take his gun out with just other fellows of his own, or even older, age along. AAA Weight of Reel The weight of a fly reel. In the classic specifications, should be one and one-half times the weight of the fly rod. That’s what sportsmen used to think. But after the trial and error method proved the fallacy of hat thinking, fly rod users came to he commonsense conclusion that lie reel should weigh whatever it takes to make the assembled outfit feel “right” in the hand—balanced so as to perform a maximum of service with a minimum of fatigue. Let your Kitchen say, “Merry Christmas' (See Recipes Below) iW?) 1 A * I Kitchen Gifts WHEN YOU SIMPLY can’t face the ordeal of shopping among the crowds anymore, why not do your Christmas shopping right in your own kitchen? Thoughtful gifts to fit al most anyone on your list can be made right in the warm and cozy kitchen. m Children will adore • confec- tions that are tasty and color ful; neighbors and relatives will love your jellies; and any bachelor will appreciate a box of cookies to nibble over his favorite book on a long winter evening. Containers for all these can be cheerful \and full of Christmas spirit. Cover a cereal box of the cylindrical shape with gay wrap ping paper and line with foil or waxed paper. This is excellent for cookies if you dop’t want to put them in tins. Jelly glasses can be tucked in small baskets, or even muffin tins and the whole wrapped in colorful cellophane, then tied with gay rib bons. Confections can be wrapped individually and then placed in clear plastic containers which can be used for freezer or refrigerator use later. • • • Here are several jellies which can be made from canned juices if your own canning shelves do not provide enough for gifts. Pink Apple Jelly (Makes 5 6-ounce glasses) 2% cups sugar 2 cups canned apple juice Red coloring % bottle liquid fruit pectin Add sugar to juice in saucepan and mix well. For a pink color, add a few drops of red coloring. Place over high heat and bring to a boil, stirring constantly. At once stir in fruit pectin. Bring to a full, rolling boil and boil hard 1 minute, stirring constantly. Remove from heat, skim and pour quickly into glasses. Cover jelly at once with % inch hot paraf- fin. • • • Grape-Grapefruit Jelly (Makes 7 6-ounce glasses) VA cups grapefruit juice cups bottled grape juice 2 A cups sugar 1 box powdered fruit pectin Squeeze and strain juice from 2 medium-sized grapefruit. Measure cups juice into a large sauce pan. Add grape juice and mix well. Heat juice otfer high heat. Add powdered fruit pectin and stir until mix ture comes to a hard boil. Stir in sugar. Bring to a full, rolling boil and boil hard I minute, stirring constantly. Remove from heat, skim and pour quickly into glasses. Paraffin at once. ; • • • Pinecot Jam (Makes 10 6-ounce glasses) 1 pound dried apricots 2 No. 2A cans broken pine apple slices Sugar Wash apricots and cut in pieces; soak overnight in syrup drained LYNN SAYS: Use these Short-Cuts During Busy Holidays Cut square biscuits from baking powder dough using the ice cube divider from a refrigerator tray. It’s quicker than using a round cut ter. When you don’t have time to make white or cheese sauce for vegetables like broccoli, cauliflow er or brussels sprouts, simply melt some processed cheese in the top of the double boiler and pour over the vegetable. LYNN CHAMBERS* MENU Fried Oysters Tartar Sauce Buttered Broccoli Mashed Potatoes Lettuce Wedges Blue Cheese Dressing Crusty Rolls Beverage Canned Peaches Cookies from pineapple. Dice pineapple and combine with apricots; measure and add % cup sugar for each cup of fruit and juice. Cook over low heat until thick and transparent Seal in hot, sterile glasses. • • • Christmas Star Cookies (Makes IK dozen 3-inch cookies) K cup mixed, candied fruit K cup seedless raisins 2 tablespoons sugar 1 tablespoon water 1 tablespoon orange juice K cup shortening K cup brown sugar 1% cup sifted flour 1 teaspoon baking powder % teaspoon salt K cup water K teaspoon vanilla 1 cup corn flakes Chop fruit and raisins into fine pieces; mix with sugar, water and orange juice. Cook until a soft paste Is formed. Blend together shortening and sugar. Sift flour, baking powder and salt together and add alter* nately with water and vanilla to first mixture, then stir in finely crushed corn flakes. Chill thoroughly. Roll dough thin on lightly floured board. Cut with star cutter. Put small amount of filling in center of each star. Cover with another star cookie with center.cut out with a smaller star cutter. Bake on a greased baking sheet in a moder ately hot (425°F.) oven for 8-10 minutes. • • • Deluxe Candled Orange Peel 6 navel oranges Water 2 cups brown sugar 1 cup water 2 tablespoons corn syrup Sugar decorations Cut the peel from oranges, then cut the peel with small cutters into star, tree or bell shapes. If you have no small cutters make a pasteboard pattern and cut around it. Place these designs as well as any left over strips into saucepan and cover with cold water. Bring to a boil and boil 5 minutes. Drain and repeat this 3 times to prevent bitterness. Drain water and then add brown sugar, 1 cup water and com syrup. Boil gently, stirring constantly, un til syrup is thick and almost ab sorbed by the peel. Drain and roll peel in sugar or decorations. Pink Popcorn Balls 1 cup sdgar K cup water 1 teaspoon vinegar 2 tablespoons light corn syrup K teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon butter 1 teaspoon rep food coloring 6 cups popped corn Combine sugar, water, vinegar, com syrup and salt. Cook to a very hard ball stage (265 C F.). Add butter and coloring. Pour over popped com. Shape balls. When muffins bake before the rest of the meal is ready, loosen them from the pans and tip them in the pans slightly and keep in a a warm oven until the meal is ready. A small jar of softened butter or substitute kept on a kitchen table is a big time-saver for such things as buttering bread or toast and mix ing with cooked vegetables. As soon as you remove food from cooking utensils, put water in them. They will soak while you eat, *pd will be easy to wash quickly. Dr. Fortmoh Living in Victory Lesson for December 16, 1951 T HE story of the conquest of Canaan is of course a story «f historical events. By itself, how ever, it is not so “edifying” as it once was. Joshua ^' repeatedly commit ted, or attempted to commit, what is now k n o w n as “genocAde,” or the total deliberate slaughter of an en tire nation. So it is better, all around, to take the story of the con quest of Canaan not in its bare historical form but to follow the example of earlier gen erations of Christians and take It as a kind of parable,*a payable of the victorious life. • • -0 - Victory Has Mpny Wounds n Y the victorious life is meant the " life that rises above its tempta tions, living for God against all op position, the strong life, not over* thrown by selfishness and sin but overcoming evil with good. First all, as a famoas war correspondent said, “Victory has many wounds.” Joshua and his armies won; but they had casualties. No victory is ever won without a fight; or to put it another way, no victory with out a fight is worth much. Yet we forget this in our personal struggles against sin. We are tempted to think, I could be a better person if I did not have so many temptations. I could be a better person, in more sympathetic surroundings. I could be a better Christian if I had had better upbringing, if ... ii... Maybe you are right, more likely you are wrong. Is an oak a better tree If It is raised in a hot-house? Is a race-horse faster if he never has a hard race? We pray for strength and God sends us difficul ties. That is God’s way of answer ing our prayer. • • • . > Life-Long Campaign tN {mother way Joshua’s wars are ^ a type of the war of our best against our worst. He never did quite conquer Palestine. In Judges I the repeated phrase strikes the eye, “—did not drive out ...” In the very center of Palestine, for example, what we now know as the city of Jerusalem remained a hostile strong-point for centuries after Joshua. The whole story of the Israel ites after Joshua shows how im perfect the conquest was at first, and archaeology has un derscored the record of the Bible. Yet it is true to say that there was a real conquest of Canaan. The country was won, * though there was a vast deal of mopplng-up to be done. This la again a parable. The victorious life is not the same as the sin less life. The majority o{ Christians believe there was one sinless life, but only one. We have a right to call a man good (as the Bible does) without meaning that he is perfect Some people are needlessly discouraged at this point. If we expect the victori ous life to be so completely victori ous that not a single tinge of evil remains in it anywhere, we shall not only be expecting ourselves to be better than the saints, but we shall be living in disillusionment. • • • D-Day and V-Day rpHERE is another, brighter side to this. It Is true, no present con quest of evil is complete; but final and complete victory is assured. For the “Captain of our salvation” Is Christ, and we Christians believe he has actually conquered evil, once and for alL As Dr. Cullman puts it, D-Day and V-Day are not the same. The battle of the beach heads came long before the sur render. Christ has put the pow ers of darkness to flight. The Cross and file Resurrection are the Christian's D-Day. There will be much fighting, many casualties, perhaps many back sets, before V-Day, bat It will come. The only assurance Joshua luu that his cause would finally win wa his confidence in God. So the rei guarantee, and file only guarantee, which a Christian has of ultimate and total victory is that he fights in the name and in the strength of Jesus. As Mart*’* Luther’s hymn has It, "Did we in our own strength confide, Our striving would be losing. 0 “Chris tus Victor,” Christ the Conqueror, is an ancient name for our Lord. But his victories are not old finished stories; they still go on—In us. (Copyrlcht 1951 by th* DirUlaa rt CfcnstUii Edacatlon, National CoaaeU •f tha Churches sf Christ la tbs Units4 Slats# sf America. BslsassA by Fsatsrss.) SANTA CLAUS IS C0MIN8! Yes, the old boy’s beginning to pack the sleigh and soon- he’ll be on his way. Ordinarily that’s aB happy a thought as you -could have —But if you’ve got a long Christ mas list and a short shopping time, well, old Santa’s impending appearance can cause you much apprehension. However, it needn't do that. You see, the cigarette smokers on your list will be de lighted to receive king-size Cava lier'Cigarettes this year—and the pipe-smokers and “roll-your-own- ers” will be grateful that you re membered to give Prince Albert, America’s most popular smoking tobacco! As for gift packaging, extremely mild Cavaliers come all Christmasy in their bright, gay carton ... while Prince Albert, in the pound size tin, is boxed beauti fully in full holiday colors with the card built in. So, let Santa Claus come. You’re ready for him, with Cavaliers and Prince Albert, now available at your dealers! These ere time-saving, money-saving gifts — the kind you’d enjoy re ceiving yourself. 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