The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, April 18, 1952, Image 7

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‘•.y, r — r^*> ’ — — ^ i'*i r^.J-;.'' .;,-r^ H»'\ r > ^ ■ FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 1952 THE NEWBERRY SUN PAGE SEVEN College Singers Begin Annual Tour The Newberry College Singers, under the direction of Professor Milton W. Moore, will make their annual spring tour beginning on April 21st. Professor Thomas E. Eptlng, Business Manager of the choir, announces the following schedule, which Includes nine stops in the states of South Caro lina, Georgia, and Florida: April 21, Florence High School and St. Lukes Lutheran Church, Florence, the Rev. Raymond R. Ellsworth, pastor; April 22, Hartsville High School, Hartsville, and Mt. Tabor Lutheran Church, West Columbia, the Rev. D. F. Swicegood, pastor; April 23, St. Mark’s Lutheran Church, Jacksonville, Fla., the Rev. Paul K. Nordsick, pastor. This concert is sponsored by the Lutheran Brotherhood of Jackson ville; April 24, Trinity Luther- and Church, St. Petersburg, Fla., the Rev. Henry V. Kahlenberg, pastor; April 26, St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, Savannah, Ga., the Rev. John L. Yost, Jr., pastor; April 26, Edmunds High School, Sumter, under the sponsorship of the St. James Lutheran Church, the Rev. J. Emmett Roof, pastor; April 27, Grace Lutheran Church, Gilbert, the- Rev. H. A. Dunlap, pastor, and Resurrection Lutheran Church, Augusta, Ga., the Rev. Henry E. Horn, pastor. From Augusta the Singers will return to the campus. Members of tho choir going on the spring tour are: Sopranos— Marianna Bunger, Savannah, Ga.; Imogene Counts, Little Mountain; Eunice Dendy, Whitmire; Doris Dominick, Newberry; Susanne Ebert, Jacksonville, Fla.; Patricia Faris, Newberry; Maytrude Ful mer, Leesville; Bonnelle Graham, Pomaria; Winona Mills, Newber ry; Joyce Pitts, Denmark; Sadie Rae Rawl, Columbia; Peggy Rogers, Columbia; Barbara All in the Game: >TAR ENGAGED ... Vic Wertz, •tar outfielder of the Detroit rigers and a big gun in las 4 year's all-star game, and Mis? Lucille Caleel of Detroit are en jaged to be married in the nea- uture. Looks as if she has hr »me a Tiger fan. vTAN MUS1AL has led his leagu ^ at bat five seasons and won th< ost valuable player award threr imes—deserving it at least in tw ther campaigns . . . W i 1 m e r lizell of the Cards was one of th< est looking rookies in Florida he Red Sox have the possibilities it a good pitching staff in Parnel? VfcDermoit, Kinder, Masterson Scarborough and Wight ... If Rer Sanders can crowd his UCLA out Tit into next New Year’s Rose Bow -;ame, the west might win a garm for a change . . . Bill Dickey waf + he making of Yankee catcher Yog Berra . . . What kind of year wil Sal Maglie, approaching 38 and said to be fading at the end of las’ season, have? . . . The origin? iVfarguis of Queensberry rules have a clause which bans boots or shoe? with springs . . . Lacrosse, origi nated by the American Indians, ha become the national sport of Ca nada . . . Walter Johnson fanner four men in one inning—the catch er dropped the third strike of th. bird man. THE BAFFLES By Mahoney NO-SHE JUST CALLED TO BORROW Ham.\ peg&y! n>)oH tm \ - — 1 TIME 30-0-0 3LEEP 13 J/AINTT IT r THE OKIE THE , [THiisie \ouNie peopleYtruth! NEED MOST! Poultrymen Warned In Using Vaccines • Columbia, April 12—The Clem- son College Livestock Sanitary De partment has been advised that unlabeled poultry vaccines pre pared in unlicensed plants are possibly being smuggled across state lines into a number of the eastern seaboard states, in cluding South Carolina, in viola tion of federal and state laws. Dr. B. W. Bierer, assistant state veterinarian, says that for the most part the illegal products are supposed to be Newcastle disease vaccine and laryngotracheitis vac cine. The department cautions poul trymen of the state to buy vac cines from reliable establishments only and to beware of cut-price unlabeled vaccines. “Licensed plants print their ‘U. S. Veterinary License’ number on the label and their products are tested and pre- Boosters Club Playing Host To Hi Seniors Schwartz, Jacksonville, Fla.; Vera Thompson, Granite ville; Marilyn Whitener, Newberry; and Mary Martin Dickson, Clover. Altos — Betty Jean Adams, Saluda; Mamie Bishop, Newber ry; Dorothy Brandt, Walhalla; Faith Bunger, Thunderbolt, Ga.; Patricia Anne Harnish, St. Louis, Mo.; Mary Ethel Hutto, Jackson ville, Fla.; Verna Kohn, Newber ry; Virginia Kloeppel, Charles ton ; Theodosia Macmurphy, August, Ga.; Mary Leslie Mac- Neal, Mt. Pleasant; Anne Rhyne, Columbia; Rebekah Sease, Gil bert; Betty Maude Setzler, Po maria; and Miriam Shealy, Lees ville. Tenors—Bankston Derrick, Sa luda; Bill Howell, Sumter, Lewis Hunt, Sumter; Dwight Roberts, Miley; Herlong Yarborough, Fort Mill; Michael Ollic, Charleston; John Moye, Manning. Basses — Jerome Bishop, Ehr- hardt; A1 Brodie, Perry; James Connelly, Sumter; Pat Dennis, Sumter; Carroll Dorrity, Charles ton; Robert Fraser, Florence; Al vin Haigler, Swansea; Gordon Haigler, Cameron; Donald Long, Newberry; John Ohslek, Savan nah, Ga.; Walter Pond, Columbia; Frank Shearouse, Hot Springs, N. C.; Karl Suhr, Augusta, Ga.; James Wehle^ St. Petersburg, Fla.; and Clarence Derrick, At lanta, Ga. Newberry College will again be host to a number of high school seniors on the weekend of April 18, 19, and 20. This is the third high school weekend spon sored by the Boosters Club of the college. The entertainment program will include the play, “Mystery in the Library’’ ou Friday evening to be followed by an informal reception in the parlors of Smeltzer Hall. Saturday morning the visitors will go to some of the classes and confer with departmental heads. Saturday afternoon the Newberry College Singers will entertain the guests with a program of music. The theatres in the city of Newberry will admit the guests to the movies during the after noon. Saturday night the Col lege Gym will be the scene for an old-fashioned Square Dance with music furnished by a Hillbilly Band. Mr. Homer Schumpert will call the sets and figures. Sun day morning, the visitors will go to the church of their choice for Sunday School and Worship. pared under the supervision of of ficials of the U. S. Department of Agriculture,” Dr. Bierer states. “The mere presence of a label, however, is no guarantee that the product is prepared by a licensed plant, since a vaccine could legally be produced and labeled by an unlicensed plant for use within a certain state. All label ed vaccines, nevertheless, whether from licensed or unlicensed plants, are subject to the scrutiny of the U. S. food and drug In spectors. “Unlabeled vaccines could be a potential menace to the poultry industry, since there may be no supervision of their production and no testing as to potency, the producer may not even be quali fied to produce vaccines, and such products may even be con taminated with other disease germs or viruses so as to be a possible means of spreading dis ease rather than a source of dis ease prevention,” he cautions. MAYOR McGUP By John Jarvis SAX I KNOW VAHERE YOU CAN FIND TWO COMMUNISTS IN THIS TOWN. Census Shows Progress In S. C. Industry that's interesting Birr WHY "RE you / YOU'RE TELLING A4& ? ^ AIM F. 0.1, JUST MAKE HER.. THINK WU PONT WANT HER TO DO something and SHELL VO IT! [sza HEAVENS, f WHAT'S THE PEOOV, / USE? BETWEEN YOU TURNED MM \ THlNKINe AN HOUR ASO- J ABOUT FASS" WHY DON'T SOU PUT OUT THE y" DATE WITH AND 1 r M1SSIKJ© A &OCO MOVIE. I SIMPLY. CAN'T - Vv‘ r Time was—and not so long ago—when the South was notor ious for shipping its raw mater ials North, for manufacture into finished goods, many of which were shipped back South for sale. But final census analyses for 1960, now being released by C. W. Martin, Charleston district man ager of the U. S. Department of Commerce, shows that this is no longer quite so true. And, perhaps as a corollary, South Carolina’s total “income to individuals” took a prodigious spurt in the decen nial, 1940-1960. Here are the statistics: South Carolina’s total income to indi viduals in 1940 was $646,000,000. In 1960 it was $1,762,000,000, a rise of 223.3 per cent. The 1950 income represented 9 per cent of that In the entire Southeastern re gion, and .8 per cent of the na tional income. Even more significant — consid ering that in the same decennial the state’s population increased 11.4 per cent—was the rise in per capita income. In 1940 it was only $287. In 1960 it had increased nearly three-fold to $831. > To measure the impact of crea tive industries on the economic health of a region, the Census Bureau used a term: “Value add ed by manufacture.” In simpler words, this means that if you buy some raw lumber for $1, and con vert it (through manufacture) in to a chair or table, or ladder which will sell for $3, you have added $2 to the value. That is pre cisely what northeni miles used to do with Southern raw mater ials. The 1960 census analyses show that industrial plants of South Carolina during that year “added by manufacture” a value of $854,- 925,000 to the raw materials used, plus the cost of supplies, fuel, electric energy and contract work. Mr. Martin’s report says: “South Carolina led the South eastern states with high percent age increase” of value added by manufacture. Also the report said South Carolina led the Southeast “in the percentage increase of esti mated cash farm income, which amounted to 33.7 per cent.” Also, “the value of land and buildings average, per farm in South Caro lina rose 89.4 per cent between 1945 and 1950 which ranked above any Southeastern state.”’ The farm picture in the state was particularly significant be cause between 1945 and 1950 the number of farms dropped from 147,745 to 139,364 and harvested acres dropped from 4,149,000 to 3,860,000—but with fewer farms and smaller acreage, the value of Lt. Drayton Nance Graduated Saturday At Randolph Field San Antonio, Texas—In the handsome Spanish-mission chapel at Randolph Field Saturday morn ing graduation exercises were held for the largest class of avia tion medical examiners trained at the Air Force School of Aviation Medicine since World War II. Among the 97 medical officers re ceiving their diplomas was Lt. Drayton L. Nance, Jr., whose father is D. L. Nance, 2026 John stone street, Newberry, where he prectised medicine before he entered the Service. For the first time since Sept ember 1950, when the course was cut to six weeks plus a three- month preceptorship in the field because of the rapid expansion of the Air Force, this class received the full eleven weeks of instruc tion that were given before the Korean War. It has been an un usual class In two other re spects—it contained no represen tatives of foreign air forces and no officers above the rank of captain. Pre-Ministerial Group Elects Easley Charles Easley, a rising Senior, from Georgetown, was recently elected president of Theta Sigma Eta, the pre-ministerial group on the campus of Newberry College. Other officers elected were: Jim Aull of Grenwood, vice-president, Clarence Derrick of Atlanta, Ga. secretary, and James Connelly o' Sumter, treasurer. The new mem bers were admitted to the fratern ity, Don Loadholt of Fairfax, and Charles Seastrunk of West Co lumbia. For every woman who yearns for that school-girl complexion, there’s a man who longs for that school-boy digestion. farm products sold rose from 1 $191,666,000 to $213,529,000 and the value of livestock and live stock products rose from $24,977,- 000 to $40,258,000. The manufacturing picture is given in terms of 1,300 plants employing 126,409 persons in 1939, compared with 2,137 plants em ploying 188,601 in 1947. Totals salaries and wages in 1939 «hounted to $103,171,000, compSed with $376,964,000 in 1947 and $459,658,000 in 1950. The “value added by manufacture” In 1939 was only $169,294,000. In 1947 It was $794,312,000; in 1960 it was a solid $854,925,000. Here’s the Dope T HE fight is on to save more lives Now is the time Yo back science to the hilt in its battle against cancer. Last year, 67,000 men, women and children were rescued from cancer. Many more can be saved—if you strike back at cancer. Give! Give your dimes and quar ters and dollars. We need more treatment facilities, physicians, medical equip* meat, and laboratories. Re search and educational programs depend on you! Your contribution helps guard your neighbor, your self, your loved ones. This year, strike back at cancer . . . Give more than before ... Give generously! Give to the Newberry County Cancer Drive Market Basket Super Food Stores IT3I idiiiNNfi \ v.--. ■ ■ r-.-a? • /£.y j .V GIVE to Concju IF SOMEONE IN YOUR FAMILY NAD CANCER, you Would do anything . . . everything that would help. And today there is so much that you can do to help. We need more research, more life-saving edu cation, more training for scientists and physi cians, more equipment, more services for those already stricken with the disease. We all must help. Any contribution is welcome, but the fight against this major threat deserves major support: dollars—tens—twenties—hundreds of dollars. Will you help? t-, Give to the Newberry County Cancer Drive MAlL YOtlR dlFT TO "CANCER." IN CARE OF YOUR LOCAl TOSt OFFICE - Here is my contribution of $ . the Cancer Crusade. in support of . I i . ■» Name. I ... Address. City - - State Largest Reduction in 14 Years on BROADLOOM CARPET Don't miss this great carpet sale! The savings will amaze you. There are scores of qualities, patterns and colors for you to choose from. We can fit any room re gardless of size or shape. Special cut-outs made and ends bound without extra charge. Free estimates on request. $133.50 on a 9 x 15 ft. Room Size Rug SAMPLES OF ALL PATTERNS AND COLORS ARE ON DISPLAY Fsam Lat§x MATTRESS sad BOX SPRIKGS RedacBd *20°° A top quality foam—latex mat tress with an extra deep box spring to match at a sensational savings . . . just one of the hun dreds of furniture items being offered during this gigantic sale. CCADC op m*tmr dted JEMIv) 1210 Caldwell Street Phones 430 4 911