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PklDAY, JULY 28, 1850 THE NEWBERRY SUN ROSPERITY NEWS Mrs. Hunter Fellers entertain ed with a lovely bridge lunch last Monday morning, compli menting her house guests, Misses Jean Madill and Roberta St. Clair and Mrs. Robert Myers of Lewis town, Pa. The lower floor of the sppac- lous Feilers home was thrown ensuite. Mixed summer flowers were used in the rooms. Upon entering, the guests were invited into the dining room where fruit punch was served by Miss Elf fie Hawkins and Mrs. C. Mower Singley. A vareity of the fruit was frozen in the ice used in the punch bowl. A two course lunch was served at the card tables. Bridge was enoyed after the lunch. The high score prize was won by Miss Katherine Counts, second high by Mrs. Gurdon Counts, and low by Miss Ethel Counts. Mrs. J. L. Counts was lucky in winning the bingo award. Miss Roberta Sinclair and Mrs. B. T. Young were awarded travel prizes. The honor guests were presented lovely gifts. A marriage of cordial interest Was that of Miss Ellen Faye Pad- get and Allen Calhoun Hunter, Jr. which took place Wednesday, July 19, at the home of the Rev. J. B. Harman, D. D. The double ring ceremony was used. Mrs. Malcolm Meetze of Newberry was the only attendant. Mrs. Hunter is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Malcon Padget of 314 Oneal street, Newberry. She was educated in the Newberry City school. For her marriage Mrs. Hunter chose an orchid dress with white accessories. She wore a lily corsage. The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Allen C. Hunter, Sr. of the St. Lukes community and at tended Stony Hill School. He was in the U. S. Army in World War II for thirty three months and served in both the Pacific and European areas. He is an employee of the Joanna Mills. The couple will reside with his parents in the Stony Hill community. Mrs. Erin Nichols Morris of Newberry and T. E. Kunkle of Prosperity were united in mar riage in a simple ceremony per formed in the home of Dr. J. B. Harman on Saturday even ing July 22, at nine o’clock. Mrs. Kunkle is the daughter of Mrs. Luke M. Nichols and the late Mr. Nichols. She wore navy blue with white accessories. She is employed in the Newberry Textile Mills. Mr. Kunkle is the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kunkle. He is engaged in the lumber busi ness. They will make their home in Newberry. The Prosperity J. H. A. group spent last week at the J. H. A. camp at Ocean Drive. Seventeen girls accompanied by Mrs. W. H. Leaphart, home economics teacher. Misses Jeannine Ballen- tine and Dorothy Shealy and Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Half acre enjoy ed the encampment. Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Wingard who have been living in the M. P. Connelly house for the past two and one half years, moved back to Columbia last Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Sheely Setzler, who have been with Mrs. Setz- ler’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Singley, for several years moved Saturday to their home in Subur bia, Newberry. J. Frank Browne came home Saturday from the Baptist Hos pital, where he had been taking treatments for the past ten days. Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Jameson and their son, Jimmy, of Abing- ton, Va., were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Williams in the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Wicker. Dr James Crosson of LeesviMe was the guest of his sister, Mrs. John Stockman last Tuesday. On Thursday Mrs. Stockman had as guests Mrs. Leo H. Crosson and two daughters, Anne and Re becca, of Charlotte, N. C. T. ROY SUMMER NEWBERRY, S. C. Extend you a cordial invitation to attend the advance showing of the newest fall woolens for business and sportswear, formats and top coats, both for ladies and gentlemen. TAILORED TO MEASURE BY THE GLOBE TAILORING COMPANY Cincinnati Representative In Charge HUGH MAUNEY Take advantage of current low prices. Order now for later de livery, prices are likely to advance in the near future. Friday and Saturday, July 28th & 29th . ^ r m •iimur. ’ i, 1 iViVMMtV/ an’s castle . Wood helps make a house a home. Look around your home and note the articles made of wood. * From the floor up, you’ll find wood is used in a hundred ways. Sometimes it’s used in its natural state and often in a converted form. America’s need for wood and products made from wood continues to mount. Do your part to keep our forests growing by preventing forest fires. Keep America Green. Carolina National Bank \ Germans Turn To Hymns As Red Invasion Fear Mounts r HEIDELBERG, July 21—Peo ple stand In knots singing hymns. I heard them sing the old Ger man favorities in the main square of Heidelberg, in the sum mer camps along the Neckar Val ley and in the Bavarian uplands. It is their only defense in the hours of crisis. Gone is the old swagger and bluster of the aggressive German type. For the first time, they are disapned and defenseless in face of a menace from the East. They sing their old hymns, to the tunes which were the inspiration of so many of our own, with the natural musical instinct of the average man and woman here. By Summer campfire along the pretty Neckar Valley, I heard voices singing a familiar tune. “It is a German hymn,’’ my guide told me. And just opposite, from a Riverside inn, came the loud sing-song of tipsy voices in the popular drinking song, “One, two, empty your glass!” The contrast is the contrast of men and women of all time In the hour of danger—when there is no gun to take down from above the mantel, no government with the mandate to sound the assembly. Like these in the last moments of the Titanic, some stand at the bar and raise their glasses; others join in singing “Abide with me; The darkness deepens.’ Those who sing the hymns are conscious they may be singing them for the last time. They know, if the Russians come, the only hymns they may sing wil propagandists of the Kremlin. They are singing hymns out side my balcony window as I wrtie. Bare-headed gray-haired men, women in gay frocks, a girl with a white baby carriage, young men in light summer suits, perhaps 100 people who woul^ have stopped another day to listen to the band or a soapbox orator—though you don’t see those much in West Germany to day. The clang of the streetcars drowns out the words of the hymns. A black-haired young woman is leading the singing and the crowd -grows bigger every minute. Street musicians play hymns, too. The pfennings fall quicker in their caps than if they played jazz tunes. Those are out for now. The churches are crowded on Sundays, fuller than they have ever been sihce the war ended. These people have assessed their chances of physical salva tion if war comes to Western Europe. In Southern Germany, in the U. S. occupation zone, aU ways the most deeply religious half of the nation, men and wo men are putting' on spiritual armor. Those who can afford it are sending their children away to camps in the Black Forest for what they consider the critical months of August and Septem ber. The parallel with Korea may not be exxact near. But it is near enough to make a man be gin cpunting his estimated span of freedom. Hitherto, it Jias been a happy sun-kissed summer for West Germans—happy and sum- kissed like the summers of 1914 and of 1939. FARMS AND FOLKS Mr, and Mrs. W. C. Barnes' are in Charleston and the beach this week. Miss Rosa Mae Mitchell spent last week in Columbia with Mrs. Fred Wise. Mrs. Wise and her little daughter Judy came home with Miss Mitchell and are spend ing this week with Mrs. Wise’s mother, Mrs. L. J, Fellers. Dr. and Mrs. J, B. Harman are spending the week in New berry in the home of, their son- in-law, B. F. Hawkins, Their daughter, Mrs. Hawkins and their infant daughter are in the hos pital. Dr. and Mrs. Von A. Long and their three sons, Von Anderson, David and EEmer, visited L. S, Long in Brunson last week. Mr .and Mrs. W. O. Callahan of Columbia were weekend guests of Mr. andy Mrs. P. C. Singley. Col. and Mrs. George S. Wise enroute from Washington, P. C. to Col. Wise’s new assignment at Camp Stoneman, Pittsburg, Cal., visited relatives in Prosper- ty last Wednesday. Recent guests of Mrs. J. P. Perry were Mrs. Burton Able and Miss Connie Able of Colum* >ia; Miss Loretta Werts of New berry; and Mrs. Ollie Swygart of Clinton. Mrs. Mark Nichols and Miss Helen Nichols of Silverstreet visited Mrs. W. C. Barnes and Mrs. Emma Counts the first of ast week. Mrs. Counts accomp anied the Nichols home and is spending the week with them in Newberry. Mrs. G. Y. Hunter, was the dinner guest of Mr .and Mrs. Hunter F’ellers Sunday. Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Ballentine were Mj*. and Mrs. J. E. Shealy and daughter reda of Summett and Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Grout of Gilbert. From the mule to the tractor is a big jump. The tractor came quickly to many of our farms. Each year we see more of ’em and fewer mules. It didn’t take much intelligence or training to hold up a pair of plow handles, as the faithful mule plodded down the furrow. But when we go from there to the modern tractor and its machines in one jump, boy we are in a ( new and strange world for a while. To aid in this, 4-H is taking a firm hand. Eighteen counties now have 4- H tractor clubs. Clemson’s ex tension engirieers assist the coun ty agents with these. Tractor operation and maintenance are taught, with active tractors to work ^with. And some of them have held tractor driving con tests at the end of their course. These took the form of field days, with considerable audiences at places. Dealers cooperated in all of this. If all cows were like a register ed Hereford owned by W. H. Shiver of Lee county, it wouldn’t be long before a poor man could eat beef again. County Agent Bryant tells me that old “Bertha” has had and raised 14 calves since July 1941. That’s 14 calves in 9 years! She has had 5 single heifers, a single bull, twin heifers once, and bull and heifer twins 3 tim se.'All calves lived and all twin calves were born on Mon day,” says Bryant, and “some of her daughters have also given birth to twin calves.” There is some feeling among the experts that twinning might be an inherited trait. If so, Mr. Shiver has something in old “Bertha.” it, or if volunteer rye grass was there from previous seedivgs, it came along very fine on the good treatment put there for fescue. It makes earlier growth, and being an annual, makes a big seed crop the following spring. The fescue gets off a little slow er there and makes a light seed crop the first year anyway. But so overgrown by the rye grass, it makes very few seed heads there the first year, and the field just looks like 100 percent rye grass at harvest time. Hugh Woodle tells me “you’ve got to get down on your knees to straighten this- thing out.” He says if you will look close there now, since the rye grass has gone out for the summer, you will likely find your intended fescue there that you thought you didn’t have. Many farmers have combined fescue seed in recent weeks. May be you have a neighbor whose seed you know to have minimum of rye grass in it. The rye grass is not objectionable except you don’t care to pay fescue prices for it. In fact it’s very good stuff in its right place. — Watch For Opening ' Announcement of PROFESSIONAL DRUG STORE — -5 • Flowers and Gifts for All Occasions CARTER’S Day Phone 719 — Night 6212 Many cases have been re-J ported to Clemson again thirf year of where folks bought fescue seed and in * June they thought it had turned out to be all rye grass. ' Our pasture men tell me they have examined many such past ures. And here is what hap pened in most cases they have seen. The man got fescue all right, and it is still there. But if it had a little rye grass In FREEZER LOCKER PAPER— containers—Freezer Jars— al so regular Fruit Jars—Tops- Rubbers—Ice Cream Cones—Oys ter Containers—Drinking Cups— Paper Plates, Spoons, Forks. R. Derrill Smith and Son Inc. Wholesale Grocers Newberry, S. C. 11-2-tc. TAMPA NUGGETT CIGARS— King Edwards—Elmoro—Gen eral brands—Smoking and chew ing Tobacco. Fresh shipment of Candy coming in each week. R. Derrill Smith and Son Inc. Wholesale Grocers Newberry, S. C. 11-2-tc. BIDS WANTED FOR SCHOOL BUS DRIVER IN JOHNSTONE SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 12 The Board of Trustees of Johnstone school District No. 12 hereby announces that bids for driving said bus will be received from this date until 3:00 o’clock in the afternoon on Saturday, bids will be opened in the office August 5th, at which time all of the County Supt. of Edu cation, Each bid shall be plac ed in a separate envelope ad dressed thus: “Bid to drive bus in district No. 12.’’ The Board reserves the right to reject any and all bids. BOARD OF TRUSTEES JOHNSTONE SCHOOL DIS TRICT NO. 12 DROUGHT STRUCK County Agent Bull of Abbe ville says yields of reseeding crimson clover seed were off due to the spring drought. “Aver age yields will be less than 75 pounds to the acre,” he says, ‘and our highest was 275 pounds.’ And this condition was pretty general over the state. The same thing happened to the lespedeza, only more so. Drought so parched and burned the lespedeza out of many of our grain fields that it just simply is not there at all now. Yes, many a field was simply crying aloud for water that did not come the past spring. Crops were ruined, delayed, or hurt there, and the harvest was dwarfed. Irrigation is on its way to a good many of our fields that are near streams and ponds. BOYS ARE THAT "WAY Talking about that beef cow of Willie Shiver’s a While ago that has had all of those calves reminds me of a tale of boyhood he told me some years ago. On Sunday afternoon a bunch of them sneaked off down in the pasture to ride the cows, as usual. They had some great times down there, and had never found a yearling they couldn’t ride. But that afternoon one threw them as fast as they could get on it. One of the boys watching pro ceedings closely had a bright idea, or at least he thought it was. He noticed how the year ling threw its head down and its heels up to throw the rider. So he built his case on that. They got a sack and filled it half full of rocks. The idea was to lay that across the rump of the yearling to hold him down behind. They turned the year- ing loose. At the first leap, he kicked up behind, pitching that sack of rocks forward. It caught the boy across the back of the neck, adding to his mo mentum, as it ground, him into the dirt. The other boys thought it had killed him. But, 'after being a bit woozy for a while, he got the kink out of his neck and was soon all right. They all marked that up as a good idea that didn’t work. Memories, memories! It’s a wonder country boys ever sur vive. S.-i UPS AND DOWNS . Folks are having more ups and downs—last yearf^ elevators carried 30 times as many passengers as railroads. 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