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r., N* Other M Ms faster b COLDS to relieve coughs—aching muscles Musteroie not only brings fast relief but its great pain-relieving medication breaks up congestion in upper bron chial tubes. Musteroie offers ALL the benefits of a mustard plaster without the bother of making one. Just rub it on chest, throat and back. MUSTEROIE Grandma’s Sayings NO TWO WATS 'bout It, there’s lots o’ folks that are troubled more by the cost o’ high livin' than by the high cost o’ livin’. $10 Dtld Mr*. J. O. Heinbert. Columbia. Ma* »j*r I MAT BE a Grandma in years, but when it comes to cookin’, I'm up to the minute. Yep, I look for the picture o' Miss Nu-Maid in choosin* margarine, ’cause I pre fer a modern margarine. Yessir, Nu-Maid is modern in texture . . . spreads on smooth! It’s modern in taste—full o’ sweet, churned-fresh flavor! DID YOU EVER stop to think how much better it is to trust folks even if you’re deceived, than it is to suspect ’em and be mistaken? $5 oald Franco* Molar. Lena Island. N. f.* THEY SAT A WOMAN alius has to have the last word. Well, I know one Miss who Is the last word— that’s Miss Nu-Maid. Yes, Nu-Maid is the completely modern yellow margarine. Nu-Maid is sweet tastin’, easy spreadin’. Up to the minute in every way! will be paid upon publication to the first contributor of each ac cepted saying or idea . . . $10 if accepted entry is accompanied by large picture of Miss Nu-Maid from the package. Address "Grandma” 109 East Pearl Street, Cincinnati 2, Ohio. ALWAYS LOOK FOR SWEET, wholesome Miss Nu-Maid on the package when you buy margarine. Miss Nu-Maid is your assurance of the finest modern margarine in the finest modern package. HEAD STUFFY DUE TO COLDS TAKE } or f aS { £* f* symptomatic OOO RELIEF brighter teeth in just one week Amazing results proved by independent scientific test. For cleaner teeth, for a brighter smile... try Calox yourself 1 gp- Ad.* HAPPY POP .. . Joesph Graber, 38, poses with his mother-in- law on steps of Brooklyn’s Bushwick hospital after receiving news that his wife, Fannie, 33, had given birth to quadruplets. The quads, three thriving girls and a boy, were the first born in New York in 1952. MIRROR Of Your MIND U ^ Don't Urge Man To Come Back By Lawrence Gould Should a girl urge a man to “come back”? Answer: Never. If she is reason ably sure the basis of his leaving her was a misunderstanding, she may try to clear this up, though evlen here she should be careful not to appear to be putting any kind of “pressure” on him. But if the man seems at all reluctant or is “not sure how he feels about her,” all that she can do is wait until he makes up his mind, or try to “forget” him. Her attempting to persuade him to come back against his will will either make him angry or give him the feeling that he is acting from a sense of duty rather than because he wants to, and no man can love q woman on that basis. Are skin ailments psychosomatic? Answer: \lost of them have at least an important psychic (mental) factor says Dr. D. E. H. Cleveland of Vancouver, B.C. The emotional dis turbance is not the sole cause of the ailment, but provides the fertile soil on which skin trouble may grow. The physician should study his patient’s emotional life and explain to him KEEPING HEALTHY A product of McUSSOIf A ROBBINS N OW THAT 20 full been added to the life span dur ing the past 50 years there is, as stated often before, a very large number of men and women past 50 years of age. The lengthening of the life span means that these eld erly folk need attention not only for the ailments common to the young and middle-aged, but for the ail ments that come on with old age. It can thus be seen that the geria trician must know diseases and symptoms common to all ages. One of the important factors in preserving the health and prevent ing ailments in the elderly is nu trition and food. Generally speaking, the dietary of the geriatric patient should ful fill the following requirements: Food intake must maintain normal weight with 1 gm. protein (meat, fish, eggs) daily for every two pounds of weight. There should be sufficient vegeta bles and dairy products to yield the necessary vitamins and minerals, qnd then enough carbohydrates By Dr. James W. Barton years have (bread, sugar, potatoes, cereals) to round out a meal. Fats should be reduced greatly in amount. One of the helpful forms of treat ment is gland extracts which are being used with excellent results. Just as women have change of life, so also do men, and the gland ex tracts ease men and women from middle-age into old age without the terrible shock and other symptoms at this period of life. It is the grad ual wasting away of the sex glands that cause symptoms during change of life. Preventive care, not treat ment of existing diseases of symp toms, is the aim of the geriatrician who, in most cases, has been and is a general practitioner. As we grow older, we all appear to need reassurance about our health. The elderly patient may be given ideas on how to improve eat ing habits, how to get extra sleep, and the need for exercise. People won’t buy preventive care unless it’s wrapped up in an appeal ing package. HEALTH NOTES If attacks of quincy keey recur ring, the tonsils should be removed. • • • The home patient should be made to feel accepted, wanted, understood by his family. • • • Frequent falls by the old may be caused by high blood pressure, anemia, Parkinson’s disease, epilepsy, uncomfortable feet in ill- fitting shoes. It is false that cheese is hard to digest and is constipating. • • • In well-trained persons, emotional stress may lead to a highly effective stimulation of the adrenal glands. • • • Children classified after examina tion as likely to develop rheumatic heart disease should have re-exam ination after a period of mo more than a year. THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY. S. C. that medicine alone cannot curt him, so that he will not attribute his recovery to it if he gets well Any medication that is used should be chosen only to relieve the symptoms, since it is psychotherapy that the patient really needs. Itching and scratching may be basically “rage reactions.” May silence be cruel? Answer: Yes. In certain situations refusing to speak to someone may hurt more than harsh words or blows. Being ignored in this way is the same as being “rejected,” which is the most painful of emotional experiences. Again, refusing to speak to a person leaves him with out any hint of what you are think ing, or planning to do, and if he is inclined to be imaginative, this un certainty will be worse than the most painful knowledge. There are times, particularly if you are angry, when it is wise to “stop and count ten (or 1,000) before you speak, but don’t use the “silent treatment” as a form of punishment, especially with a child. Healthful Treatment for the Elderly Aerial Crop-Control Is Booming Industry 25,000,000 Acres Were Treated in U.S. in '51 A midwest wheat tract was so overrun with weeds that the farmer was about to plow it under. He de cided, hoever, to try treating it with 2,4-D and hired an aerial crop-con trol specialist to apply the chemical at a cost of $2 an acre. The result: a yield of 20 bushels of grain per acre. Other instances: Aerial spraying of weed-killing chemicals enabled a southern cotton planter to cut hoe ing costs from $14 to $6.50 an acre while a California citrus grower im proved his lemon crop by spraying his orchards from the air. Agricultural aviation is a boom ing new industry that is enabling the farmer to substantially increase The above photograph shows aerial dusting of an orchard. This method of insect control is becoming more popular with farmers thronghont the country. crop acreage, I. J. Becnel, * agri cultural research director for the Freeport Sulphur Company, report*:. Becnel pointed out that more than 25,000,000 acres of U.S. crop, range and forest ’ land were treated last year with chemicals sprayed or dusted by airplane. Some 6,000 pilots are engaged in the aerial battle against insect pests, weeds and plant diseases. And they are doing the job faster, more effi ciently and in many instances at lower cost than ground distribution of insecticides, fungicides and herbi cides. Store Unused Tractors Under Shelter in Winter If you want to ruin your tractor in a hurry, just let it sit outdoors, exposed to the weather, this winter. Farm machinery specialists say no amount of tough use will wear out your tractor as fast as leaving it out in the rain and snow. Tractors are fairly expensive and may be hard to get. So, if you’re not going to use your machine this win ter, it will pay you well to find stor age space for it in some building. Clean the machine thoroughly, es pecially the motor, and then store it in a dry protected place. Block up the tractor to take the weight off the tires. Then drain the radiator, block, gas tank, fuel lines and carburetor. Put fresh oil in the crankcase and add a rust inhibitor. Most important of all, remove the spark plugs and pour one-fourth cut of light oil or kerosene in each cylinder. Then turn the crank a few times to work the oil around the rings and pistons, and replace plugs. Cover the exhaust pipe and crank case breather pipe with old rags to keep out dirt and moisture. Rodent Proof /£* MESH 2A w WIDE If wire mesh is applied to join ing sections of a poultry house, it will help keep the building free of rodents. The mesh is applied at the floor and ceiling line as shown in the above illus tration and should be well nailed. Farmers Are Advised To Store Fertilizer Farmers are still being advlseu to buy and store sufficient chemical fertilizer to meet their needs during the next 12 months. The supply is expected to be somewhat limited. Be sure it is stored in a dry place where there is little temperature variation, don’t pile it any higher than five or six bags, and never pile It on the ground or even a concrete floor—the ideal storage place Is an elevated wooden platform. Serve Yeast Breads For Delicious Variety At Fami^ Party Meals LIKE TO ADD something special io any menu, family or party style? [here’s nothing more tempting than a h o m e-made yeast-bread that’s feathery light but simply made, and crust ed with a deli cious topping. Even the plain rolls can make a simple main course more interest ing, and some of the sweet rolls and coffee cakes are so delightful and appealing, they can easily be uSed as desserts. The recipes given here today are a new version which combines yeast with baking powder, with their best features, thus giving you an extra ordinary lightness, quick action and wonderful flavor. • • • Here’s a basic recipe for coffee cake which is good either warm or cold. Leftover cake may be re heated, if desired. Sugar-Crunch Coffee Cake (Makes 1 cake) K package compressed or dry yeast Vx cup lukewarm water 1 teaspoon sngar K cup homogenized shortening cup sugar 1 egg, unbeaten 2 cups sifted, all-purpose flour 214 teaspoons baking powder H teaspoon salt % cup milk Crumble or sprinkle yeast in luke warm water in small bowl; add 1 teaspoon sugar and mix well. Let stand until yeast is thoroughly dis solved (5 to 15 minutes). Combine homogenized shortening, % cup sugar, and egg and beat until smooth. Sift flour with baking pow der and salt; add half of homogen ized shortening mixture, beating well. Add yeast mixture, Jhen milk, then remaining flour mixture, beat ing each addition until smooth. Spread % of batter in greased deep 9-inch round layer pan. Sprinkle Vi of Sugary Nut Filling over top of batter, cover with rest of batter, and sprinkle with remaining filling. Bake in moder ate oven (350°F.) 40 *o 50 minutes. If desired, the batter can be baked in a 5x9x2- inch square pan or 7%xl2x2-inch oblong pan in moderate oven (350°F.) 40 to 50 minutes. SUGARY NUT FILLING. Mix 1 cup firmly packed brown sugar, 3 tablespoons sifted flour, and 1 tea spoon cinnamon. Cut in 3 table spoons butter. Add 1 cup chopped nuts and mix. VARIATION. Omit the Sugary Nut Filling and put all the batter in a greased deep 9-inch round layer pan. Sprinkle with a topping made as follows: Mix % cup brown sugar, Vi cup sifted flour, add % teaspoon cinnamon. Cut in 3 tablespoons but ter. Add V\ cup chopped nuts and mix. Bake as directed. • • • ♦Candled Apple-Top Twirls (Makes 1 dozen) 4 tablespoons butter ft cap brown sugar, firmly packed 1 tablespoon light corn syrup ft cup pared, cored, thin apple slices 'A Serve an interesting variety of hot breads for family or party meals when yon want to make a really fine impression. Seed “tops” are flavorfnl, fruit twirls are interesting, while frosted rolls, corn bread and coffee cake are guaranteed to please. LYNN SAYS: Add Protein to Enrich Hot Supper Dishes Ready-to-serve meats and sau sages added to any of your meatless dishes add flavor appeal and pro tein enrichment to them, and are especially appetizing during cold weather. Sandwiches for a supper or snack? You’ll like frankfurters which are heated or broiled. Serve on toasted buns or bread and pour over them a creamy mustard or cheese sauce. wj n.Y Want to wake the family easily for breakfast? Just prepare this delightful sugar-crunch coffee cake that’s the last word in breakfast treats. It can be easily and quickly made at home and will be thoroughly appreciated even by those who like to skip the important first meal of the day. LYNN CHAMBERS* MENU Meat Balls in Tomato Sauce Scalloped Corn Green Lima Beans Jellied Fruit Salad •Candied Apple-Top Twirls Beverage ♦Recipe Given 2 caps sifted all-purpose floor 3 teaspoons baking powder 94 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons sngar ft cup homogenized shortening 1 egg, well beaten ft cup milk ft cap brown sugar, firmly packed ft teaspoon cinnamon ft teaspoon nutmeg ft enp apples, pared, cored, and finely chopped Cream 2 tablespoons butter with ft cup brown sugar and com syrup. Spread on bottoms and sides of 3- inch muffin pans and arrange apple slices on bottoms. Sift flour, baking powder, salt, and sugar into mixing bowL Cut in homogenized shortening mixture as fine as meal. Combine beaten egg and milk; add to hom ogenized shortening mixture, mix ing to a soft duugh. Knead lightly on floured board about 20 seconds. Roll dough into rectangle about 6x18 inches and about ft inch thick. Brush with remaining butter, melted. To make apple filling, mix ft cup brown sugar, spices, and chopped apples; sprinkle over dough. Roll like jelly roll, cut in Ift-inch slices, and place cut-side down in muffin pans. Bake in hot oven (425°F.) 25 to 35 minutes. • • • Poppy Seed Sapper Rolls (Makes 2 dozen) 2 packages compressed or dry yeast ft cap lukewarm water 1 teaspoon sngar ft enp homogenized shortening 2 teaspoons salt 2 tablespoons sugar 1 cup scalded milk ft cap water ft enp bran cereal ft enp yellow corn meal 3 cups sifted all-purpose floor 3 tablespoons butter, melted 4 tablespoons poppy or sesame seeds Crumble or sprinkle yeast in lukewarm water in small bowl; add 1 teaspoon sugar and mix well. Let stand until yeast is thoroughly dis solved (5 to 15 minutes). Put hom ogenized shortening, salt and 2 ta blespoons sugar in large bowl and add scalded milk and water. Stir until shortening is melted and cool until lukewarm. Add dissolved yeast and mix well. Add bran and corn meal, then add flour gradually, beating thoroughly for 3 minutes. Cover and let rise in warm place for 1 hour, or until light and spongy. Stir down and let rise again until very light (about ft hour). Drop dough from spoon into greased 3- inch muffin pans. Let rise in warm place until very light (about 20 min utes). Brush with melted butter and sprinkle generously with poppy seeds. Bake in very hot oven (450°F.) 15 to 18 minutes. If desired, poppy seeds may be omitted. Pork sausage balls or cubed pieces of bologna are excellent with your macaroni and cheese or maca roni and tomato a&uce casseroles. Highly seasoned sausage meats can be ground and used as the stuff ing in green peppers, tomatoes or onions. This provides a very savory flavor. Any of the ready-to-serve loaf type of meats may be heated in the oven with tomato or mushroom soup and a leftover vegetable right in the same pan with the soup-sauce and aseat IHm lli' BY DR. KENNETH J. FOREMAN lnt*rn*Uon*I Uniform Sunday School Lwaona SCRIPTURE: Luke 7:36-50. DEVOTIONAL READING: Psalm 32. Understanding Lesson fbr February 8, 1952 P EOPLE are like books. Some can read them, some can’t. You can put a thing down in black and white and still some people will not under stand, simply be cause they can’t read. If a person is illiterate it makes no difference how plainly a book is printed or how big the type is or how clear the author’s sentences. So a per son can be read by some of his neigh- Dr. Foreman hors, like a book in plain English; to others who are just as close to him (close, that is, measured by a foot-rule) he might as well be written in Egyptian hier oglyphics for anything they can make out of him. • • • Strange Dinner Party 'TRUE of all men, this was and is J* tfue of Jesus. Luke tells of a din ner party where he was a guest, and puts the spotlight on three per sons there: Jesus, the host Simon, and an un-named woman. The woman was not supposed to be there; she just wandered in off the street Not that she was a stranger, exactly; she was well enough known in Uie village so that the host knew what sort of woman she was, even if (being a respecta ble man) he did not know her name. Like all guests In those days, Jeans had taken off his sandals and xras reclining on the conch beside the dinner table. This woman stood behind him and wept Her tears feel en his bare feet and she wiped them dry with her long hair. Jesus at first paid no attention, but the host was scandalized. How could Jesus take it so calmly? How could he let such a woman touch him? The conversation that went on, as Luke reports it between Jesus and Simon, shows that the poor woman of the street understood Jesus’ heart, while the leading citizen, whose house it was, did not ‘under stand Jesus at all. One could read Jesus, the other found him a closed book. Why? • • • A Door Barred rpHE MAN could not read Jesus' mind and heart because, for one thing, his own mind was made up as to the kind of person Jesus ought to be. He supposed Jesus was the same sort of person as him self—proud. sensitive, careful of Lb social standing, unwilling to asso ciate with the “lower classes,” wanting to be respectable much more than he wanted to be helpful. 'in his mind he carried a ready made pattern of what a “Prophet” ought to be, and :o when one who was greater than all the prophets sat at his own dinner table, he could not see him for what he was. His eyes were blinded, he could not read Jesus, the door to understanding him was closed. He had never learned to read the kind of language which Jesus’ life wrote large. Then there was another reason why this man could not “see” Jesus. It was his own pride, Simon looked down on Jesus so much that he could not even treat mm with ordinary politeness. • • • A Door Open B UT the woman understood. She did not know all there was to know about Jesus. And still she un derstood the depth of his heart. The door of his heart opened to her—she could read the clear writing of his spirit. She under stood him because she was hum ble. She did not try to fit him into her pattern; In his presence she knew, as the host Simon did not, that his was the true pat tern of life and hers the false. She understood him too be cause of her love. And so in spite of the immense difference between them, there flowed the light of understanding, even before a word had been spoken. She could read the bright word FORGIVENESS which to Simon was only a blank. • * * And So Today T O this very day, some people can read Jesus while others cannot. And in between are uncounted peo ple who can read him only more or less dimly as thrbugh glasses that are not clean, or through the smoke of a city twilight. But it is still true that pride and prejudice not only keep us from reading the lives of those around us, they keep us from reading the mind of Jesus. 4 And it is still true that humility and love are the great teflehers; they show us how to read the lives of those around us every, day, and best of all they teach us how to read the word “Forgiveness” in the mind and heart of Jesus . . . which is the heart of God. , Styled House Dress For Larger Figures YiP re. vlslygJI TYERE is a nicely styled house ** dress for the slightly larger figure that’s so neat and attrac tive. Easy to sew, too, and trimmed with colorful ric rac. Pattern No. 3221 Is a sew-rlte rated pattern in sizes 29, 38. 40, 42, 48. 50. 52. Size 38. 5 yards ot r SEWING CIRCLE PA1 867 Wsst Adams SL, Chleaga S, Enclose 30c In coin for each tern. Add 5c for 1st Class Mail desired. * , ^ y w .: Pattern No. ••.•»•..,«••.« Size... mmm . m >-::v Name (Please Print) Street Address or P. O. Renew Workbench Top To renew a workbench t er it with quarter-inch te hardboard. Fasten it with ; glue or screws after holes required for bench stops openings for tools. The sm< hard surface will give long s kesi I my fe f aaaaaa ea^^asnaa say many old toiks about good tasting SCOTT’S EMULSION Thousands of happy ' folks know this! Good- tasting Scott’s Emulsion helps yoa ward off eolds—helps yon get well faster—and helps you keep going strong when yonr diet needs more natural AAD Vitamins 1 Scott's is • HIGH ENERGY FOOD TONIC- rich in natural A&D Vitamins and energy-building natural oiL Try it I See how well yoa feel. Easy to take and digest. Economical. Boy today at your drug store 1 MORI than |ost • tonic — it’s powerful nourishment! SCOTT'S EMULSION High Energy tonk Housework ^ Easy Without Nagpug Backache When kidney function slows down, many folks complain of nagging backache, loos of sp and energy, headaches and dusio a’t suffer longer with these discomfort* If reduced kidney function is getting yoa down—due to such common causes as stress and strain, over-exertion or exposure to cold. Minor bladder Irritations due to cold, dampness or wrong diet may cause getting op nights or frequent passages. Don’t neglect your kidneys if these condi tions bother you. Try Doan’s PiUs—a mild diuretic. Used successfully by OTUiona for over 60 years. While often otherwise caused, it's amazing how many times Doan's civ* happy reii f from these discomforts—help the 16 miles of kidney tubes and filters flush out waste. Get Doan’s Pills today! Doan’s Pills •* . .