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THE XEWBBRBT SUE PAGE FIVE FRIDAY, AUGUST 8, 1941 Society and CLUB NOTES WHITAKER-WILLIAMS A lovely wedding marked by sim plicity and dignity took place a* 7 o’clock, Sunday evening, August 3, in Central Methodist church, when Miss Mary Lane Whitaker became the bride of James Randolph Wil liams. The ceremony was performed by their pastor, the Rev. Herbert O Chambers. Stately palms, tall baskets of white gladioli and hydrangeas, and white lighted tapers in candelabra effectively decorated the church for the occasion. Miss Virginia Graham, organist, and Miss Carolyn Lane, cousin of the bride, vocalist, furnished the wedding music. Before the ceremony Miss Graham played “Serenade” (Schu bert) and “To A Wild Rose” (Me Dowell). Miss Lane sang “All For You” followed by an organ number “Traumerai” (Schumann). “I Love You Truly’ was then sung by Miss Lane. “The Bridal Chorus” from “Lohengrin” (Wagner) was used for the processional and “Wedding March” from “Midsummer Night Dream” for the recessional. “O Per fect Love” was softly played during the ceremony. Usher-groomsmen were: Walter Dorrity of Cornelia, Georgia, Cecil Williams, cousin of the groom, Paul Whitaker and Otis Whitaker, broth ers of the bride. Bridesmaids were Miss Helen Parrott of Pomaria, Miss Kathryn Whitener, niece of the bridegroom, Miss Alice Neel Wilson, and Mrs. William Beard. Dame of honor was Mrs. William Jordan, sister of the bride, of Durham, N. C. and Miss Mary Blackwell of Greenville was maid of honor. They all wore white imported printed organdy dresses, having sweetheart necklines, short 'puffed 1 sleeves, fitted bodices, and very full skirts. They carried sheel pink gladioli fans and wore match ing gladioli bells in their hair. They also wore a single strand of pearls a gift of the bride. The bride, who was given in mar riage by her father, Herbert Dog- gette Whitaker, was lovely in her wedding gown of white mousseline J de soie, fashioned with tight bodices sweetheart neckline, short shirred puffed sleeves and very full skirt. Her fiinger-tip veil of bridal illusion was attached to a coronet of lilies-of- the-valley. She carried a colonial bou. quet of white gladioli bells, showered with tube roses. The bride’s ®n'iy ornament was a broach worn by her maternal grandmother. Guy V. Whitener, brother-in-law of the bridegroom was best man. Mrs. H. D. Whitaker, mother of the bride, wore a light blue silk crepe dress and a corsage of pink gladioli. Mrs. Guy V. Whitener, sister of the bridegroom, wore a dress of blue printed silk and a corsage of red rosebuds. Immediately after the ceremony the couple left for their wedding trip to Miami. For travelling the bride wore a navy and white sheer crepe dress with navy arid white accessories. Mrs. Williams is the youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Doggette Whitaker, and is very pop ular among her friends. She attend ed Newberry College. She has Been complimented with a long series of delightful pre-nuptial parties. Mr. Williams is the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. James Seth Wil liams. He also attended Newberry College and is now connected with the C. and W. Lumber company. The young couple will live for the present with the bride’s parents on Nance street. EARLY AMERICAN GLASS The general public has awakened to the (jeauty and possibility of early pressed glass. However, not too much of value is to be found on the subject. The art of pressing glass into molds was known to the ancient Egyptians, but it was not until the 1820’s that experiments with mach inery were made successfully, here in America. Authorities do award the credit for perfecting this method of glass making to Americans. From 1827 on, vast improvements were made. Manufactured in the early ’40’s, the first patterns were plain and heavy, classed under the general head of colonial. The demand for goblets, tumblers, wine, ale, beer, cordials came not only from taverns, ships, bar-rooms, but from private homes as well. As the country grew in popula tion and wealth, there was naturally a corresponding rise in refinment in the home, and the demand develop ed for pieces previously considered luxuries. The number and variety in output increased both in crystal and colored glass. There were loveliest shades of amethyst, cobalt blue, am ber, green or red'. Hob-nail, daisy and button, inverted thumbprint, moon and stars, rubber palm, bell flower, beckle, Presin, spiral are ad mirable patterns, beloved by collec tors and amateurs, alike. It is rather a curious but interest ing commentary that today the once unappreciated pressed glass is in de mand by fashion’s decree. So trot out your bowls, celery holders, butter dishes, cake stands, plates, compotes and what have you, and enjoy the possession of something, which once was an integral part of “America in the Making”. Mention should be made of the beautiful satin glass which comes in lovely shades of blue, rose and pale yellow. Vases and rose bowls are the most available. Many of them have fluted edges. Unfortunately satin glass is becom ing increasingly rare. There is the opaque or meek-white glass, also madb in turquoise blue. Lovely old open work plates, fruit bowls and rose bowls come in this particular ware. Then there is the distinctive marble glass, so named be cause of its resemblance to marble. This glass is strikingly colored. It comes in lovely rose shading to ame thyst—and is rare. The designs in old glass are num erous; there is charm and variety to patterns; there is character and at mosphere in many suggestive of by gone days and manners. Old glass speaks for itself! Personal Items Ellerbe Pelham of Columbia spent several days last week with his mother, Mrs. W. E. Pelham on Har rington street. Miss Tommie Johnson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. P. Johnson is spend ing her vaaction at Blue Ridge, N. C. Miss Bettie Brown is attend mg a house party at Estill where she taught school the past year. Rev. and Mrs. C. A. Calcote and two sons, Allen and Mack, left Mon day morning for Ackermtfh, Miss., where they will spend about ten days visiting Rev. Calcote’s mother, Mrs. K. Calcote and other relatives. Pat Mitchell and B. P. Ringer spent several days at Myrtle Beach last week. Mrs. Sarah Suber and granddaugh ter Patsy White, of Whitmire were visitors in the city Saturday. Miss Mary Wicker, Mrs. Lora Schumpert, Mrs. Harry Stone, Max- cy, Edna and Evelyn Stone are spend ing this week in Washington with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stone. Mrs. T. E. Davis and daughter Mary Ann, Misses Frances Wallace and Sara Linda Goggans left Wed nesday for Myrtle Beach where they will spend several days. Mrs. Eugenia Wise returned to her home Sunday after spending three weeks with her daughter, Mrs. R. E. Livingston, Dr. Livingston and their little son, Robert Edward, III. Mrs. Edgar Hart and two daugh ters Anna and Mae Porter, also Bebe Purcell are spending this week at Myrtle Beach. Miss Marjorie and Caroline Young and Miss Kelly Young of Whitmire, were business visitors in Newberry Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Alex C. Cartledge re turned to their home in Norfolk, Va., last Thursday after spending three weeks with Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Long. Mrs. E. A. Carpenter, returned to Newberry Saturday after spending two weeks in New York buying fall merchandise for the local store. Little Miss Ann Carpenter has re turned home after spending two weeks with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cunningham in Win ston-Salem, N. C. Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Williams left Monday morning for Lovette, Ga. where they will visit their daughter, Mrs. Walter Lovette and family. Mr. and Mrs. Buff Crueger and son Leigh of Pelman, New York, return ed to their home Monday after visit ing several weeks with Mrs. D. A. Livingston and Miss Mary Livingston on Summer street. Miss Rook Purcell is spending this week at Myrtle Beach. Among the out-of-town guests at the wedding were: Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Whitaker, Williston, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bedenbaugh, Spartan burg, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Whitaker, and Miss Annie Lee Young, Columbia, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Thornton, Greenville, Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Cothran, Belton, Mr. and Mrs. Perry Caughman of Colum bia and Miss Margaret Bums of Rock Hill. SO SYMBOLIC OF HIM . . . “It was a plain, massive stone that seemed to characterize his strength and comfort we so often depended upon. We are glad we se lected this monument from the NEWBERRY MOMUMENT COMPANY.” “A HOME CONCERN" 5J>u)brrnj iWonumrnt €0. J. B. COWARD, Prop. Mrs. D. A. Livingston and daugh ter Mary Livingston, also Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Taylor, and Miss Maybelle Taylor of Florence, Mrs. Harris Stone and daughter “Snookie” of Wilmington, N. C., left early Monday morning for Bat Cave where they will spend this week. Misses Azilee and Anne Livingston, Mrs. Horace Swittenberg and Mrs. John Kunkle and son, left Newberry Friday morning for St. Petersburg, Fla., where they will spend this week. Dr. and Mrs. W. E. Sawyer of Try- on,, N. C. were weekend visitors in the home of Mrs. Sawyer’s sister, Mrs. H. K. Boyd and Dr. Boyd. Mrs. B. L. Mills of Savannah, Ga. is spending the week with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Alewine. Miss Alice Aiken of Winnsboro is the guest* of Miss Frances Wallace on Calhoun street. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Culclasure and daughter Mary of Buffalo, New York, spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Culclasure on Cor nelia street. Miss Margaret Paysinger left Wednesday for Florence where she will sing in the Hopkins-Ridgell wed ding which will take place at the bride’s home Thursday of this week. Miss Agnes Mayes has returned to her home in Newberry after attend ing summer school at Winthrop. Mrs. F. Z. Wilson returned to her home on Main street the past week end'after being a patient in the Mountain Sanatorium at Fletcher, N. C. for about a month. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Coward spent Sunday in Greenville. Mrs. Mary King attended the Sears-Roebuck manager’s meeting held in Atlanta last week. Buck King and Chester Hawkins are spending this week at Myrtle Beach. Mildred Blackmon of Hartsville is visiting Miss Betty Jo Counts on Hunt street. ^ TWIN BOYS Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Longshore an nounce the arrival of twin sons, born at their home in the county Monday, August 4th. Kirby Lominack and Miss Blanch Knapp of Atlanta, Ga. were weekend visitors in the home of his parents Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Lominack. William Green, of Rocky Mount, N. C. spent last weekend with his mother, Mrs. J. R. Green. %Iiss Margaret Harmon was a visi tor in Augusta, Ga. Monday. Miss Fay Shannon of Greenwood was a weekend visitor in the home of her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hayes and Miss Virginia Hayes. Mrs. R. W. Culbertson and daugh ter Ann, of Anderson spent last week with her son, Mike Culbertson, and Mrs. Culbertson. Candidates Flay Isolationists REUNION OF NEWBERRY COLLEGE HELD The Newberry college reunion held annually on the first Friday in Au gust for students, alumni and friends of the college was held Friday at Little Mountain, this being the fifty- third such occasion. A large crowd was in attendance and the day pass ed off without any interruptions. The morning program was given over to a number of talks, the main address was made by Gary Paschal, Columbia attorney and president of the alumni association, who spoke on national defense and the great need of a Christian college at this time. Others making talks were ' J. Kess Derrick, Newberry county represen tative in the legislature; Dr. S. J. Derrick, Dr. E. Z. Pence, Dr. James C. Kinard, president of the college, James H. Hope, state superintendent of education, and S. J. Williamson, chief of the state highway depart- ment. Featuring the afternoon was the showing of pictures of Newberry college by Prof. Erland Nelson and a ball game. The Little Mountain PTA served a chicken barbecue at noon. UCC EXAMS HELD SATURDAY Six hundred South Carolinians will compete in written examinations be ginning at nine o’clock Saturday morning, August 9, for positions in the employ of the South Carolina Un employment Compensation Commis sion, according to an announcement made today by E. H. Bradley, Merit System Supervisor. Assembling in the seven centers to which they have been assigned, these examinees whose applications for examinations have been accepted will compete for places on'registers from which present and subsequent appointments will be made to fill vacancies within the agency. The seven examination centers with the head proctor administering the examinations at each are as follows: Winthrop College Administration building, Rock Hill, Dr. John G. Kel ly, proctor; Senior high school, Au gusta road and Vardry Street, Green ville, J. B. Hunt, proctor; Senior High School, Greenwood, R. P. Smoak, proctor; City High School, Marion and Washington streets, Co lumbia, John F. Alliston, proctor; Orangeburg High School, F. D. Cox, proctor; Junior High School, Flor ence, John F. Harllee, proctor; and Memminger High School, Charleston, George C. Rogers, proctor. Candidates accepted for examina tion have been advised by mail frMn the office of the Merit System Sup ervisor as to the center, the building, and room to which they are to report. They have been requested to report to their respective examination cen ters not later than 8:45 a. m. (day light saving time) Saturday so that they may be checked in and receive their examination materials in time to start the examination by 9:00. Aiken, S. C., Governor Burnet May- bank and former Governor Olin D. Johnston, two of the three candidates seeking the Democratic nomination for the U. S. Senate, drew applause here today with denunciations of Charles A. Lindbergh and Senator Burton K. Wheeler of Montana. The third man in the race, Con gressman Joseph R. Bryson of Greenville was absent — he was in Washington to vote on the big de fense tax bill—but he was represent ed by his 15-year-old son, William Jefferson (Billy) Bryson, who read a speech for him. About 350 people oroiwded into the county courthouse to hear the candidates in the second of a series of 14 meetings arranged by the state Democratic executive committee. This meeting was for the second ju dicial circuit and the campaign party will move from here into the 14th circuit for a meeting Wednesday at Walterboro. Both Maybank and Johnston reit erated their indorsement of Presi dent Roosevelt’s foreign policy and the former declared himself unalter ably opposed “to the croakings of Wheeler, Lindbergh or any others . . . who would have our defenses held up.” Johnston said he favored full preparedness and that he would never “line up with such people as Lindbergh and Wheeler.” . ‘Plight of Farmer’ Speaking first, Maybank asserted that there was “no .place for person alities” in the campaign. “Issues and issues .alone should be the only consideration,” he said. Calling attention to “the plight of the farmer,” Maybank again ex pressed himself against any “celling on the price of cotton under its pres ent parity,” which he said “certainly should not be less than 20 cents a pound.” He reviewed the work of his ad ministration as Governor, and said all of his many activities were de signed “to make South Carolina a better place to live in.” When he touched on the interna tional situation, Maybank said, “It will not be but a very, very short time before the Congress of the United States declares a national emergency ... I know whereof I speak.” This action, he said, “means a period of trial and sacrifice.” “If we are to-’survive, we have to protect ourselves against any at tempt to tear down our form of gov ernment,” he said in support of the President’s foreign policies. He said also that “we must plan for the days of peace” in order to prevent any rep- itition of the 1929-39 depression. “We must look at the future,” he said. “Those who refuse to look . . . will be sorry when the future comes.” He contended that "when peace comes it will be up to us .. . to see that the world is returned to Christianity.” Maybank maintained that “prof its should be kept out of the war” by the imposition of taxes on the manufacturers of war supplies and equipment. He said he Would work towards that end if elected. Johnston told of his war record and said that because “I have known the horrors of war . .. I intend as fhr as necessary to keep the United States from sending its boys to the battlefields again unless it becomes absolutely necessary.” He endorsed all-out aid to the democracies and shouted: “Down with that Hitler and his crowd!” The former Governor was defeat ed in his 1938 senatorial bid declared it was his intention "to represent all the people of South Carolina,” not “the up-State against the low- State, labor against capital, capital against labor, businessmen against the farmers, farmers against bus'in- Back at the OLD STAND ... AND READY TO SERVE YOU We are back at our old location at 1504 Main street and invite you to call on us there. Our building has been remodeled and we are in excellent position to give you good service on auto repairs. He said he would not “engage in personalities” but that he would run “on my record of the past.” He promised to “carry out my promises” and “to fight hard for what I consid er” the best interests of “a majority of the people.” Like Maybank, he said he did not favor “a ceiling on the price of cot ton” at this time. He did not think it would be “right and just.” Johnston advocated “a better bal ance” for agriculture and said “the government should step in and nelp the farmers” get more for their pro duce. He said “an inadequate mark eting system” now existed. His farm program, he continued, was for more aid to farmers In the standardization of markets; more as sistance to farmers “where they need it most;” rural electrification expan sion; forestry development, encour agement for “proper manufacturing interests” to locate in South Caro lina; and development of new crops. There should also be a parity price “for all farm products of the State, not just the principal one*” Johnston told of many things ac complished during his administra tion as Governor from 1935 to 1939 and asserted thot “much ol the President’s humanitarian program was along lines I had advocated.” He declared that the South would never be the nation’s economic prob lem No. 1 “if Congress will follow what I have recommended” for ag riculture and. industry. He said his program would also be “uplifting to the nation as a whole” but that he was “for the people of South Caro lina” first. Johnston favored conscription of wealth in time of war. In the speech read by Young Bry son, his father endorsed the national defense program and the President’s foreign policies. He told of his work in Congress for the betterment of ag riculture and the extension of rural electrification; against “every at tempt aimed at destruction of the Wage-Hour act, the National Labor Relations act, and other great legis lative landmarks of the Roosevelt administration,” for lower freight rates in the South; for hydroelectric power development; and for "Presi dent Rrfbsevelt’s program of social and economic betterment.” GelUng Up Highb MakesManyFeelOld ~ yon fed elder than yea art or suffer Getting Up Nights, Backache, Nerroue- Leg Paine, pRirlnass. BwoBcn Ankles, naue Palm or fre- Boraing, scanty o_ ... f so, remember that your l to £our health and that poisonous excess add* and vastea. YW. hay# everything to gain and nothing to Tree In trying OysSex. An lron<«lad guarantee wrapped around eaoh pookege eesuiye a re- DACkftM chances EEm" chance* on any Kidna not fuarantceiL Don’t fflu! I nSL-Tt&l Jne that la Get Cretex :) from your today. Only as«. The guaranteo protects you. Get a ROYAL Portable For That Boy or. Girl going off to School This Fall Hayes Motor Co. The Sun Dave Hayes Phone 667