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y rosperity Items lp: The Rev. Heyward W. Eptlng pastor of St. John’s Church, Charleston, will be at Grace Lutheran Church, Sunday morn ing, Aug. 10, at 11:15 o’clock. Rev. Mayer, local pastor, will conduct services at Rev. Eptings conduct services at Rev. Eptings’ originally from the Macedonia community. Miss Susie Langford is a patient in the Columbia Hospital where she underwent an opera tion Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Swayne of Elizabeth City, N. C. have come from the Columbia Hospital where both underwent operations, and are convalescing at the home of Mrs. L. J. Fellers. The Phoebe Rebecca and Carl Caughman Circles of the Women of the Church of Grace Church will meet Friday afternoon at 3:30—the Phoebe Rebecca with Mrs. Gregg Counts, and the Carl Caughman with Mrs. Otis -Shealy. Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Boland and their son have returned from a visit with relatives in Dallas and Gainesville, Texas. . Mr. and Mrs. George Elbe.’t Counts, Jr., moved Wednesday from the Hunt apartment to the Morris apartment, recently va cated when the Carl Risers mov ed to Joanna. Mrs. J. A. Sease and Miss Grace Sease spent Friday in Co lumbia. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Shearouse of Hot Springs, N. C. are visiting Mr. Shearouse’s mother and sis ter, Mrs. O. B. Shearouse and Miss Eleanor Shearouse. Mrs. Robert M. Myers and her three daughters, Sharon Anne, I>V; \r - ' 5 v ; - >: : . MOOtI »IIUX/ REGISTER FORMS •nd ACCESSORIES Moore RogUtor* and Register Forms assure protoction, avoid customer misunderstanding, prevent lost copies and simplify daily audit. m MOORE REGISTER FORMS ... designed by experts, will solve your business form needs. MOORE CARBON ROLLS .. . manufactured from tho finest grade of wax and other ingredients, assure legible writings. gipi A MOORI REGISTER and REGISTER FORM POR EVERY FORM OF RUSINBSS The Sun Phone 1 Cathy, and Roberta, of Richmond, Va., are visiting Mrs. Myers' parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Fellers. Capt. Myers brought his family here en route to Columbus, Ohio, where he will be for three weeks. Miss Roxdelle Taylor of the Columbia Hospital School of Nurs ing spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Taylor. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Dudis of Day- ton, Ohio are visiting Mrs. Dudis’ mother, Mrs. Rufus Long. Robert Counts of Spencer, N. C. is visiting his mother, Mrs. E. O. Counts and other relatives. Mr. and Mrs. D. O. Rudisill and their daughter, Patsy, of Cherryville, N. C. are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hamm. Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Counts, Sr. spent Sunday in Charlotte with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Hancock and their daughter Linda went to Winston-Salem, N. C., Sunday. Miss Hancock remained for a longer visit with Mr. Hancock’s relatives. Mrs. J. L. May of Eau Claire, Wis.; i? visiting Mrs. A. B. Hunt. Mrs. P. C. Singley was in Co lumbia the first of the week with her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Callahan. The Callahan’s have just returned from a two month’s European tour. Miss Phyllis and Patty Wise are visiting in the home of Mrs. Frank Wise in Atlanta, Ga. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Counts and ther two sons, Buddy and Steve, are spending the week at Myrtle Beach. Mrs. Ray Ohlhues and her two daughters, Jan and Kay, of Miami, Fla., are spending the week with Mrs. Ohlhues’ mother, Mrs. H. E. Counts, Sr. Capt. Ohlhues brought his family here en route to Southern Pines, N. C. and spent the weekend here. Miss Anne Bedenbaugh spent the weekend in Florence, the guest of one of her friends at Winthrop college. Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Rinfrette and their daughter, Kay, arrived Thursday from Washington, D. C. to visit Mr. and Mrs. P. E. Wise and Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Young. Mrs. Ruby Wheeler Garner of Ashboro, N. C. spent Tuesday with Miss Grace Sease. Gurdon Wright Counts, Jr., and Dicky Counts accompanied their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reagin of Greenwood for a few days trip through the North Carolina mountains, the first of the week. Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Newman, have returned from a week’s stay at Myrtle Beach. Mr. and Mrs. Claude E. Crea- son and their son, Claude E. Creason, Jr. were supper guests Saturday night of Mrs. J. A. Sease and Miss Grace Sease. Mr .and Mrs. W. C. Barnes at tended the Nichols reunion in Saluda County Sunday. Weekend guests of Mrs. J. L. Counts and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Foster were Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Foster, Mrs. Coman Falls and her daughter, Anne, Mrs. Humes Houston and her son, Sammy of Kings Mountain, N. C. The guests came for the graduation exercis es of Newberry College, when Mr. Richard Foster received his diploma. AVOID NEXT WINTER’S UNCERTAINTIES \ Y COAL NOW at the lowest price it will be all year! Processed and refined. Impurities are removed. Patsy is purified! You get pure, clean-burning coal. Ordfer today! ^ _ _ . FARMERS1CE& FUEL CO. Phone 155 - , ..JKjSL . ym/ 'm ♦ TH£ * \v BY.. HELEN RALE RECIPE OF THE WEEK Toasted Oat Cookies (Makes 3 dozen) % cup shortening cup granulated sugar V4 cup brown sugar, firmly 2 eggs, unbeaten % teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 cup sifted flour ft teaspoon soda 1 cup shredded coconut, toasted 1 cup rolled oats, toasted Combine shortening, sugars, eggs, salt and vanilla and beat thoroughly. Sift flour and soda together; add to first mixture with coconut and *oats; blend together thoroughly. Drop level tablespoonfuls on greased bak ing sheets. Bake in a moderate (350°F.) oven for 10 to 15 min utes. If fresh mushrooms are exposed too long to strong light, they will lose weight and wither. Brown mushrooms are more flavorful than white ones. Green onions at their best are tender and crisp with fresh green lops. Avoid those with damaged tops or nicks as these indicate age. There are many different kinds of okra. Some are two inches long while others are four. Some are green, others are whitish green. Some are smooth, others are grooved. All should have fresh pods that snap easily. Mr. and Mrs. James Arthur Bed enbaugh and their two children Jimmy and Anne, of Laurens spent the weekend with Mrs. R. T. Pugh and Dr. and Mrs. J. I. Bedenbaugh. Mr. and Mrs. Mower Singley and their daughter, Patricia, are visiting Mrs. Singley’s relatives in Swainaboro, Ga. m THE NEWBERRY SUN PAGE THREE REPAIRS FOR RAPIDS AHEAD By LYN CONNELLY B ERT PARKS, peppery emcee of ABC’s “Stop the Music,” will continue active on both radio and TV in the fall . . . While his pre sent video show ends its run soon, he has picked up' another sponsor for CBS will air a video audience par ticipation show in October called “Balance Your Budget” . . . Nice if you can do it these days . . . “What’s Your Trou ble?”, a TV series produced by the BERT PARKS Protestant Broad casting and Film Commission and featuring Dr. and Mrs. Norman Vincent Feale in a discussion of common problems, will be filmed shortly in Atlanta. Georgia. Jan Peerce will become radio's first operatic disc jockey this fall . . Things must be tough all ovei . . Costs of TV on ”1 Love Lucy” and “Racket Squad” have forced the sponsor to drop its daytime ra dio features, “Against the Storm,’ “Break the Bank” and “Romance >f Evelyn Winters” . . . Phfl Har ris, Tallulah Bankhead, Maurice Chevalier and possibly Bing Crosby will make their television debuts his fall. PLATTER CHATTER COLUMBIA:—Columbia’s gem o> the year is a fine album on the musical comedy “Roberta ...” Joan Roberta, Jack Cassidy, Kaye Bal lard, Portia Nelson, Stephen Doug las and Frank Rogier do justice by such Jerome Kern favorites as “Smoke Gets In Your Eyes,” Lovely to Look At,” “Yesterdays,” T Won’t Dance” and many others . . Chorus and orchestra are di rected by Lehman Engel* In singles, Columbia has a real winner in Rosemary Clooney’s atest, “On the First Warm Day’ . . Her treatment is the new bal lad is warm and tender and should go big . . . Back has “Botch-A-Me” . . Tony Bennett comes up with Have a Good Time” with “Please My Love” on the flip. r <r Over 9 Million Persons Eligible For Increased Social Security Pay Oct. 1 mim 4.4 Million Certain to Have $2.50 to $8.60 a Month More In October Under New Law WASHINGTON, Aug. 2—More than nine million persons may begin receiving an increase of from $2.50 to $8.60 a month in social security benefits with their October payments. Under the amendments to the Social Security law it is certain that 2,400,000 retired persons now receiving Social Security insur ance payments will receive in creases of at least $5 a month, with the top permissible increase being $8.60 a month. In addition, nearly two million widows, children and parents can be sure of Increases ranging from $2.50 to $6 a month. The new maximum is $85 a month for the retired worker himself, compared with $80 now, and the minimum is $25, com pared with $20. The new maxi mum for payments to a single family will be $168.75, compared with $150 now, but the total pay ments may not exceed 80 per cent of the retired worker’s aver age monthly wage before he re tired. No action on the part of the beneficiary already on the Social Security rolls is needed to get the increase. The checks to be mailed about Oct. 3 automatically will include the higher amount. The new law provides that per sons serving in the armed forces since 1947 will receive Social Se curity wage- credits of $160 a month for the time they are on active duty. That applies to per sons forced to* leave jobs covered by the insurance program as well as those who have never been covered. A farm youth .drafted ? service would receive the credits, and should he die later in civilian status before. his cov erage has lapsed his survivors would be entitled to benefits based on a formula in the law. Technically, tne changes pro vide that retired persons whose benefits were based on covered earnings going back to 1937 will get an increase of 12% per cent. but not less than $5, a month. For practical purposes this in creases the maximum for such persons from $68.50 to $77.10. Few Will Get $85 Maximum The law fixes the maximum at $86, but Social Security officials said very few persons could qual ify for more than $77.10 under the formula. The. average in-, crease for the group would be about $6 a person. Benefit payments to wives, wid ows, children and parents will be increased proportionately with in- the maximum limits payable to a single family. For persons claiming benefits based only on earnings, after 1950, under amendments effective that year, a new formula provides in creases up to $5 a month each. The Federal Security Agency reported today that public as sistance cases under the Social Security Act dropped by 2000,000 persons during 1951 but the over all cost rose slightly, to $2,28V 204,000. _ Antennas Invite Lightning DIE IN PRACTICE LANDING . . . Three men died and four sur vived when a navy amphibian made a wheels-down on Lake Wash ington near Seattle. Here motorboat circles after depositing sur vivors on wing of plane which could sink no deeper. CHILDREN INSURED Columbia — Blanket insurance covering all South Carolina school children in connection with school bus travel, as well as all school buses, is now In effect. The last legislature passed a law providing for the insurance and the contracts were arranged by the sinking fund commission. LUTHERAN BLAMES HANNOVER, Germany, Aug. 2 Dr. O. Frederick Nolde of Philadelphia told the World Lutheran Federation today the United States and Russia were especially to blame for a situation which he described as “danger ously near to the beginning of & new world catastrophe.” T O PICK OUT quality celery, se lect stalks of medium length and thick stems free from damage. The exterior should be smooth with fresh looking leaves. Limp or stringy stalks with dry brown tops should be avoided. Good cauliflower has a creamy white color. It’s clean, feels heavy and is firm. Outer leaves should be fresh and green. Avoid those with dark spots or yellowed leaves as this indicates age. Fresh, fine cabbage has no dis colored veins, and is well trimmed. Lift it to test for heaviness. It should feel heavier than it looks. Cracked or water-soaked carrots will not give you the most for your money; neither will those which have green on top of the carrot. The color should be a bright, fresh orange, and the skin smooth, firm and dean. SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO IT’S HERE! the new CHARLESTON, Aug. 1—Lightn ing struck a radio antenna at the home of J. W. Clark, on John’s Island last night. It jump ed through the window Into his living room and: Blew his radio through the ceil ing and “into a million pieces.” Ripped up the rugs all over the house. « Knocked out every window in the house. Shattered the walls. Inbedded debris in the ceil ing. Blasted the doors off his kitchen stove. Knocked Clark’s wife unconsci ous. Showered his baby, lying in its crib, with shattered window glass. Imbedded the window curtains in the walls. Ran under Clark’s bed and threw him onto the floor. Jumped through the wall of a rear bedroom and . disappeared. Four children asleep in the house were uninjured. Mrs. Clark was quickly re vived and other than “feeling like 'all my bones have been pulled ,apart,” is okay today. Quoth Clark: “I went through the war. I’ve seen a lot of things. But, brother, that was the damn dest thing I ever saw in my life! That ball of lire running all over the place and exploding every thing it hit! I tell you, it was a miracle mobodjr was killed.” News in a Nutshell , pONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTOR ^ Charles Cline, Toledo, who served two years in federal prison for refusal to carry a gun for his country, received a three-year sen tence in Ohio penitentiary for carry ing a concealed weapon. • * • Susan Back, of near Loraine, Ohio, admitted to police officers that she stabbed her boy friend Sherman Bigley in the hip because he had alienated *the affections of her pet monkey. • • • ANNOUNCJT , MT r 'NT (on billboard of a Greenville, S.C. church): “Sal vation is free and tax free. Tell Tom, Dick, but not Harry.” • * * Request received by marriage li cense bureau in Pittsburgh: “Please send me the name of the woman I married in 1922.—Harry P. Doyle. Quincy, 111.” • * • After telling several passengers on a train near Munich, Germany, that they had boarded the wrong train, a conductor discovered that it was he who was on the wrong train. 1 REMEMBER' BY TNI OLDTIMSR* From Amelia Doctor, Denver: I remember when horses became frightened and ran into tho ditch and upset the buggy wtean an auto mobile passed us. Minn.: I nine years old buying cream cones—also A* gum In a round (ki booc. From a L. Miller, Fate, remember when a elected—Grover Cleveland. Democrats would get Am smith anvils and load them up with gun powder ■ and shoot them. On a still night you ceuM hear them li miles away. From Idaho: I remember lighted the kerosene lamps when company came. We candles made of beef and mutton tallow and a little beeswax. We ran meltecl fat into tin molds with sticks laid across the top with can dle wicking dangling from them. From Mrs. Nellie Keene, Hillard, Fla.: I remember when we baked sweet potatoes in a Dutch oven on a clay hearth and carried water in pails up about a 100-foot hilL 4 vtto*** ^.••v-.v^vvy* • • • • 7 the BUY-WORD for Millions of American Families £1 More off the things you need For tho money you hove to spend You edn sdve time and money by shopping the Sears catalog way. See this brand new catalog that has everything you'll want this Poll and Winter—all at prices below what you’d normally expect to pay. And, remember, at Sears quality is guaranteed to satisfy or your money back. Try this convenient one-stop way to shop. Come In your Sears Catalog Sales Office where you can see samples of actual merchandise, have your measurements token If needed, and your order written up for you. N If you wish take advantage of pur telephone order service. Just coll 0000 and give your order. mMUf fact 1210 CALDWELL ST. PHONE 430 That fire is burning a hale in your packet There’s a price tag on every forest fire. Whoever you are, wherever you live—part of that cost comes from your pocket. Be careful with fire in wooded areas. When you see a forest fire report it at once. Remember, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Keep America Green. Fairfield Forest Products Company Newberry, S. C. 1 ^ \ ' 4 ’ USSSl ■■ ' - M ' ;A:V. jy .•••> :• .jS*; 4 JgQSg* - ■ -■