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—— FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1951 SALLY FORREST is definitely a sight for sore eyes on any beach. Sally is now proving she’s as good a song- and-dance gai as a dramatic actress, especially in M-G-M’s “Excuse My Dust,” with Red Skelton, and she does it again in “The Strip” with Mickey Rooney. Established 1947 Select your lot in Springdale Cemetery, where the memory of your beloved deceased will be beauti fully perpetuated. Springdale Cemetery Corporation Newberry, S. C. With just one grease, Sinclair Litholine, you can lubricate chassis, wheel bearings, water pumps, universal joints... of your car, truck or tractor., winter or summer. Farmers find it does a better job at each lubrication point than the "specialized” greases they formerly used. FARM ADVANTAGES at-a-glance: 1. A finer grease a» every point. 2. Less danger of applying the wrong grease. 3. Quicker greasing operations. 4. Smaller grease stocks — one instead of 3 or 4. 5. Fewer grease guns. 4. Less waste. ‘ W# d*livr direct to farms. Phone or write vs. Strother C. Paysinger SUPPLIERS OF SINCLAIR PRODUCTS NEWBERRY, S. C. lilHOLiNE WUlTI-PURPOSf GREASE THE NEWBERRY SUN Despite her vow that home and children come first, Cyd Charisse attains stardom as a dramatic actress in "Mark of the Renegade,” Universal-International’s Technicolor adventure-romance of early Cali fornia. Starring with handsome Ricardo Montalban, Cyd makes her return to the screen following the birth of her son, Tony Martin, Jr. FARMS AND FOLKS By J. M. ELEAZER Clemson Extension Information Specialist Miss Hutchinson And Mr. Schumpert Wed In Candlelight Rites Miss Margaret Ida Hutchinson and Robert Dennis Schumpert were married Wednesday evening, September fifth at eight o’clock in the Lutheran church of The Redeemer of Newberry in a love ly candlelight ceremony. The Rev. Paul E. Monroe, Jr. pastor of the couple and of the church, performed the double ring ser vice. The pulpit, arches and choir loft were decorated with fern and Southern Smilax and form ed a background with baskets of white gladioli and asters with numerous candles in candelabra for the wedding party. Miss Joan Dominick, organist, and Miss Nancy Wilson of Bel mont, N. C., soloist, furnished the wedding music. Miss Dominick played “Liebesfrued (Kreisler); “Jesu Joy of Man’s Desiring” (Bach) “Du-bist die Ruh” (Schu bert) and during the ceremony “To A Wild Rose” (McDowell). Miss Wilson sang “My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice” (Saint-Saen); “If God Left Only You” (Dens- more); “Give Me Your Hand” (Stewart) and “The Lord's Prayer” (Mallotte). The tradi tional wedding marches were used. The usher - groomsmen were Roy Clary and Charles Dukes, both of Newberry; Jim Smith, of Hartsville, uncle of the bride; Kenneth Rentiers of Charleston; William E. Hutchinson of Colum bia and Sgt. Tommy Setzler of Geneva, N. Y., cousin of the bridegroom. Dr. Yming M. Brown of New berry ‘was the bridegroom’s best man. The matron of honor, Mrs. Pul ton Hinson of Newberry, and Winnsboro, sister of the bride groom and the maid of honor. Miss Mary Sue Hutchinson, sis ter of the bride, wore dresses of aqua satin and net. The fitted bodice with off-shoulder neck lines was outlined with matching ruffle of net and bouffant skirts over satin. They carried raisin colored muffs with a spray of yellow roses and matching net. The bridesmaids were Miss Verna Kohn, Mrs. Robert Wes- singer, Mrs. Alfred Ringer, and Miss Caroline Huffman, all of Newberry; and Miss Louise Wal ker of Monroe, N. C. and the junior bridesmaid, Miss Suzanne Smith of Hartsville, cousin of the bride. Their dresses were of rais in colored satin and net and were made identical to those worn by the honor attendants. They car ried aqua muffs with matching net and sprays of yellow roses. The bride, given in marriage by her father, was lovely in her wedding dress of white Dutchess satin. The iftted bodie was offset with a deep front yoke of Chantilly lace and high neck line of nylon net. The long sleeves ended in points over the hands. The full skirt was border ed with a deep width of Chantilly lace which extended into a full lace train. The finger-tip veil of nylon Illusion was attached to a juilette cap of Chantilly lace/ She carried a cresent boquet of White phalanopsis orchids. The bride’s mother wore a gown of orange berry floral en> bossed net and a corsage of yel low orchids. The bridegroom’s mother wore a gown of green crepe and yellow orchids. Mrs. McKeene Hutchinson, pa ternal grandmother of the *bride wore a gown of lavender lace and a pink rosebud corsage. Mrs. Dwight C. Stuckey of Bishop- ville, maternal grandmother of the bride, wore a gown of green crepe and yellow rosebud cor sage. A reception was held immed iately after the ceremony at the Community Hall. The bride’s par ents, the bridegroom’s mother, with the bridal couple and their attendants formed the receiving line. The bride’s table was overlaid with a cloth of linen and lace and was centered with the triple tier ed cake. Flower arrangements in bowls were used on either end of the table and crystal candela bra held lighted candles. Mrs. Schumpert Is the daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Mc Keene Hutchinson of Newberry. SjLe is a graduate of Newberry high school and completed a two year course in commerce at Lime stone college the past June. She will continue her education at the Atlanta division of the Universi ty of Georgia. Mr. Schumpert is the son of Mrs. Claude C. Schumpert and the late Mr. Schumpert of Newberry. He is a graduate of Newberry high school and graduated in law at the University of South Caroli na the past June. While at the University he was a member of Phi Delta Phi, legal fraternity; Omicron Delta Kappa, honor lead ership fraternity, the Cotillon club and Beaux Arts. He is now an attorney advisor in the Regional Council’s office of the OPS in Atlanta, Georgia. The couple left during the af ternoon for a wedding trip. The bride changed to a dress of red clay wool with a cape of red clay and royal blue checks. She wore brown accessones and a corsage of orchids: The couple will make their home at 1620 Ocalla Avenue, in Atlanta, Georgia. MARSHALL DECLINES LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Sept. 12- Gen. George C. Marshall today declined an invitation to address the Southern Governors’ con ference next month at Hot Springs. DEVELOPING A MARKET A sort of hard puzzle hangs over the building of a market for a new thing. Farmers are reluctant to pro duce it in the absence of an es tablished market. And market people are equally reluctant to try to build a marketing facility before the stuff has been produc ed. And even then they need to know something about its quality and how it fits in between other competing areas of production, as often pointed out by our exten sion marketing chief, Tom Cole. I stopped to see County Agent Jackson of Williamsburg the other day. He told me they have a daily hog market now, hogs are an established money crop, and everyone seems happy. I recall the beginning of all of that. In the late twenties the Low Country was still reeling from the near-knockout punch of the boll weevil. And they were looking for another money crop. They had plenty of corn, but couldn’t sell it for anything much. The county agents put on hog feeding demonstrations, using fish meal for the first time as a protein supplement in our sec tion. These demonstrations showed that corn could be marketed profitably through hogs. There were no adequate local markets. So the agents marked the hogs and consigned them to Richmond. I recall seeing Jackson there at Kingstree crawling over wagons and trucks on a freezing day marking hogs with scissors and loading them in cars for Rich mond. There each man’s hogs would be separated out, sold, and check would come back in about a week. That system went on for some years. Local associations , were formed and F.O.B. sales smarted. They operated for years, and in some counties they still do. But at Kingstree their association is now dormant, since a dependable daily cash market for hogs and cattle has been established there. And there, folks, you have a brief history of the building of a market for a new cash crop. It is not easy. But it can be done. Many counties have proved it with hogs. And some have proved it with other things. There is a lot of rough going at first. The county agents are constant ly ^grappling with such problems. CONFIDENCE TO THE HEARTS I visited the Pee Dee in late June. It was mostly a sorry spectacle of puny wilted crops wading in pure dust. The county agents showed me their tobacco demonstrations irrigated with the Clemson outfit. They looked very good. While I was down there, gen eral rains came. And with that moisture for the land came confi dence to the hearts of those who dwell there. My, the meaning of a good shower when you really need it in June! Crops are young then. And they recover overnight. Corn that was burned and twisted felt its fertilizer, turned green, and smelled like watermelons next morning. Tobacco, whose limp leaves had hung like silk hand kerchiefs the day before, now bristled upward in the morning sun. And the farmer, who was blue and grouchy over the pros pect, took on a smile and could enjoy a joke again. I was raised on a small farm, where a shower could determine If folks or critters were to eat enough the coming winter. And, since leaving home, I’ve been associated with farming all the time. I know the yearning that goes up for the needed showers. And all too often, they do not come in time to save great crop loss. For generations we could do nothing about that. If the kindly benediction of good showers came in regular fashion, we were thankful. And abundance bless ed the land. But when the sear ing droughts baked promising prospects of land and muscle into parched fodder, there was hard going on the land. Many an education has thus dried up in the field. And many an old unpainted house tells the mute story. For, after drought had taken its toll, there was only enough left for bare ex istence, and to , keep the sheriff away. At long last now we are get ting to the point that we can do something about this ancient af fliction of drought. The rice planters solved it in their day. And some of our truckers along the coast country solved It too years ago. The first irrigation I ever saw was on Paul Sanders’ farm at Ritter, Charlie Garity’s farm at Meggett, and on Clem- son’s truck station at Charles ton 10 years ago. In the last two or three years I have seen it corned to a few farms in practically every county. And farmers like it! It is spreading rapidly. The Clemson Extension Service has been aided in its promotion by the Camp Irrigation Fund. And an agricultural engi neer has been assigned to the irrigation task, with truck and portable irrigation equipment for putting on demonstrations. Yes, life-gfiving showers are beginning to route the dreaded drought at places over South Carolina. Thanks be! CIVIL SERVICE EXAMS The Civil Aeronautics Admini stration announces an examina tion for Airway Operation Special ists with salaries at $3100 and $3450 a year. These examinations are to as sist in the National Emergency. The positions are at Communi cations Stations, Traffic Control Towers in the states of Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Miss., North Carolina and Tenessee. No written test is required. Ap plicants must have experience in air traffic control or as an air plane pilot. < See announcement No. 5-78-1 (1951) at any first or second class post office, or get in touch with the Civil Aeronautics Ad ministration, 50 Seventh St., NE, Atlanta 5, Ga. Applications will be received until further notice. WATCH AND JEWELRY REPAIRS BROADUS LIPSCOMB WATCHMAKER 2309 Johnstone Street POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS r w 11 ■■■■■■ ' .I. 11 >■ i FOR MAYOR OF NEWBERRY I hereby announce' myself a candidate for re-election to the office of Mayor of Newberry, and pledge myself to abide the results of the elections. JAS. E. WISEMAN ALDERMAN WARD 1 I hereby announce myself for election as Alderman for Ward 1 and agree to abide the results of the primary. GEORGE W. MARTIN ALDERMAN WARD NO. 2 I hereby announce myself a candidate for reelection to the office of Alderman Ward No. 2 and pledge myself to abide the results of the election. C. A. DUFFORD ALDERMAN WARD 3 I hereby announce myself for re-election as Alderman for Ward 3 and agree to abide the results of the primary. FORREST W. DICKERT ALDERMAN WARD 4 I hereby announce myself a candidate for Alderman from Ward 4 and agree to abide the results of the Democratic Pri mary. A. P. (PETE) PARROTT ALDERMAN WARD 4 I hereby announce myself a candidate for re-election as Aider- man for Ward 4 and pledge my self to abide by the results of the city primary. ERNEST H. LAYTON ALDERMAN WARD 5 I hereby announce, myself a candidate for Alderman from Ward No. 5 and agree to abide the results of the election. I will appreciate any favors shown me and will act in the best in terest of all the people. JESSE J. OUZTS ALDERMAN WARD 5 I hereby announce myself a can didate for re-election as Alderman for Ward 5 and agree to abide the results of the primary. CECIL E. KINARD. ALDERMAN WARD 6 I hereby anounce myself for re- election as Alderman for Ward 6 and agree to abide the results of the primary. J. LEE BOOZER WANT ADS MAN WANTED — Good nearby Rawleigh business now open. If willing to conduct Home Ser vice business with good profits, write immediately. Rawleigh’s Dept. SCM61-45, Richmond, Va. 19-ltp FOR RENT — Furnished Bed Rooms for men. Phone 220J— 1237 Calhoun Street, Newberry, S. C. 19-4tc PULLETS FOR SALE—100 4-H club pullets, six months old, many now'’laying, sold to highest bidder in lots of 10, in parking lot behind Newberry County Agri cultural Building at 11 o’clock Saturday, September 15th. 19-ltc WANTED TO BUY—Iron, Metal Batteries, Radiators and Rags. W. H. Sterling, 1708 Vincent street. Phone 731-W 28-th FOR SALE — Recently painted seven room house, two baths, on lot fronting 150 feet on Sum mer Street. C. E. Saint-Amand 4-TF. WANTED Reliable sawmill man who owns complete mill and logging equipment to contract sawing stand of pine timber located in Newberry County. Address reply to: P. O. BOX 429 Newberry, S. C. George’s Radio Shop At corner of Floyd and Graves “Expert Workmanship, Prompt Service Guaranteed” Residence Phone 1271-J GEORGE R. SUMMER, Owner For Expert Repair Bring Your Radio and Television —To— GEO. N. MARTIN Radio and Television Service . SALES and SERVICE • BOYCE STREET Opposite County Library 24 HOUR SERVICE « Telephone 311 t FLYING ‘WORKHORSE’ DESIGNED FOR FARM USE Y i ti This ‘workhorse of the air’ i» a new experimental airplane designed especially for performing such farm operations as crop dusting, sprayinj ' ‘ ' id bi “ ~ and fertilizing. The experimental plane, designed and built for the Ci' Aeronautics Administration by Texas A & M College in cooperation the National Flying Farmers' Association and the aircraft industry, is making a series of appearances in the cotton-producing states. :xv>: portrait mo. of a Young Executive Eagerness . . . competence . . vitality . . . this portrait of a |‘young industrial executive radi< ates the glow and character of the living subject with the fl> delity to be found only in a mm |I|: ySficholl Portrait Terms, and size of your monthly payments^are varied to make home ownership a pleasant, practical reality for you To Finance or Refinance a Home _ NEWBERRY J Federal Savings AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF NEWBERRY John F. Clarkson J. K. Willingham President Sec.-Treos. Newberry, S. C. 9 He’s Fully Covered... ARE YOU Just think about it a moment. Loss, whether by robbery, fire, storm or accident still adds up to loss . . . and if you’re under insured the loss comes out of your pocket. Come in today and let’s talk over just what complete coverage for you would be. It means real peace of mind now ... real sav ings in the future! For Details \ Call 197 PURCELLS "Your Privafe Bankers" E. B. Purcell Keitt Purcell