The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, August 15, 1952, Image 8

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_ " ! 'lull w ': f mW SS-s-f rmi Kr-. >v page Eight THE NEWBERRY SUN Friday, August 15, Mrs. Ora Sease Burial Friday At Rosemont Mrs. Ora Lominick Sease, 72, wife of Jacob E. Sease, died sud denly Thursday afternoon at her home in the Mt. Bethel-Garmany sectioc of Newberry county. She was a daughter of the late Robert v B. and Margaret Keighley Lominack of Newberry county. She was a member of the Associate Reform Presbyter ian church and was active as long as her health permitted in Unity Missionary Society find com munity affairs. Survivors include three sons, Robert T., L. Heyward and J. El- lerbe Sease of Newberry; three daughters, Mrs. Edna S. Sharpe of Columbia and Mrs. Margaret S. Hanna and Mrs. Evelyn S. Boozer of Newberry; one broth er, W. Frank Lominack, Sr., of Newberry, and five grandchildren. Funeral services were held at 4 o’clock Friday afternoon from the Whitaker Funeral Home, con ducted by the Rev. R. C. Grier, Interment followed in Rosemont cemetery. Serving as active pallbearers were William Buford, Pope Buf* ord, Frazier Lominack, J. G. Sease, Dr. Reyburn Lominack, Frank Lominack, Jr„ Govan Sease and David Luther Ruff. Serving as honorary pallbear ers were Dr. E. H. Moore, George S. Ruff, Wilson Brown, Max Ox- ner, Dr. R. M. Kennedy. John Clarkson, Wilbur Leitzey, . Joe Roberts, John Norris, Dr. John M. Livingston, Dr. R. E. Livingston, Luther Fellers, Johnny Ringer, S. W. Brown, Alan Oxner, B. B. Leitzsey, Henderson Hentz, Chal mers Brown, Lang Alewine, Horace Cromer, A. E. Bedenbaugh, and A. P. Faris. Assisting with the flowers were Mrs. Edith Buford, Mrs. Nan Buford, Mrs. Mattie Lominack, Mrs. Faye Laymon, Mrs. Libby Lominack, Mrs. Parnelle Ringer, Mrs. Vinie K. Price, Mrs. Le- land Boozer, Mrs. Marjorie Wil liamson, and Mrs. Roy Summer. Jr. a Rowe-Garret Rites Solemnized July 20 At St Paul Parsonage On Sunday afternoon, July 20, at six o'clock. Sue Jannet Garret became the bride of Oscar Harold Rowe. The marriage was performed in the presence cf a few relatives at the St. Paul’s parsonage by the Rev. J. L. Drafts, pastor of St. Paul’s Lutheran church near Po- maria. Together, the couple entered the ceremony room, which was decorated for the occasion with summer flowers. There were no attendants. The bride was lovely, dressed in a white eyelet dress with full circular skirt. The accessories were also of white and she wore a shoulder bouquet of red carna tions. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Garret of Colonial Drive, Columbia. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. F. F. Rowe of Edgefield and the late Mrs. Daphne Smith Rowe. At present, Mr. Rowe is locat ed at Fort Banning, Ga., where he is in service. Mrs. Rowe is em ployed by Mutual Insurance com pany in Columbia. HOSPITAL BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Beden baugh of Saluda, a daughter, Tues day, July 1. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Broome, Whitmire, a son, Tuesday, July 1. Mr. and Mrs. Earl B. Worthy, a daughter, Friday, July 4th. Mr. and' Mrs. W. R. Hardin, Little Mountain, a daughter, Fri day, July 4. Mr. and Mrs. Virgil E. Irons, a son, Monday, July 7. Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Kunkle, Prosperity, Monday, July 7. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Wilson, Jr., a boy, Wednesday, July 9. Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Carver, a son, Friday, July 11. Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Jenkins, daughter, Friday, July 11. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Meetze, Jr., a son, Thursday, July 10. Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Duffie, t daughter, Friday, July 11. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Livings ton, a son, Friday, July 11. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ellison, daughter, Saturday, July 12. Mr. and * Mrs. L. C. Brank Whitmire, a daughter, Sunday July 13. Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Berley, son, Monday, July 14. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Stuck, son, Sunday, July 13. Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Lake, Chap in, a son, Monday, July 14. Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Farr, Sa luda, a son, Wednesday, July 30. Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Kyzer, a •son, Saturday, July 19. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Davenport, a daughter, Saturday, July 19. Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Long, a daughter, Sunday, July 20. Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Goff, a son, Monday, July 21. Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Bost, a daughter, Tuesday, July 22. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Dix Good win, a son, Wednesday, July 23. Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Amick, Chapin, a daughter, Monday, July 28., Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Partain, a daughter, Monday, July 14. Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Smith, Saluda, a son, Wednesday, July 16. Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Amick, a son, Thursday, July 17. Mr. and Mrs. N. D. Reeves, a daughter, Saturday, July 19. a a Aspirin, Salt Not Needed In Home Canning Rock Hill, Aug. 11—Homemak ers of the state are concerned about the advisability of using aspirin and salt in the canning of fruits and vegetables and about the effects of freezing on canned goods. Miss Margaret Martin, extension food production and conservation specialist, Win throp College, says questions on these problems are often asked. In answer to the questions about the use of aspirin, she quotes the U.S. Department of Agriculture as saying that aspirin should not be used as a substitute for heat treatments in canning fruits and vegetables and that it cannot be relied upon to pre vent spoilage or to give satis factory results. “Adequate heat treatment in the boiling water bath for fruits and tomatoes or the steam pressure cooker for uonacid vegetables and meats Is the only safe procedure,’’ she states. In answer to the question as to* whether it is safe to can foods without salt, she says the USDA reports that salt is used in can ning for flavor only and is not necessary for safe keeping. Miss Martin says that if freez ing does not cause seals to break or can seams to open the food will remain sound. “Freezing may cause changes in texture or con sistency in canned goods and may cause curdling in starchy pro ducts," she continues. “Curdled products usually become normal after thawing and heating. It is best to thaw frozen canned foods slowly,” she adds. DEED TRANSFERS Silverstreet No. 2 E. Maxcy Stone, Probate Judge, Newberry county, to Willie John son, 6 acres, (E. F. Floyd land), W. Harmon, 66.7 acres, $2700. E. (Maxcy Stone, Probate Judge, Newberry County to J. O. and H. W .Harmon, 66.7 acres, $2700. THREE NEGROES DIE IN DAM BACKWATERS IN PARR SHOALS FILL Three Negroes died Saturday when the car in which they were riding fell into the muddy back waters of the Parr Shoals Dam. The victims were David B. Pear son, 33, driver, his wife, Cornelia Pearson and their two year old daughter, Geneva. The Pearson family was return ing from seeing a doctor at Peak when the car, a 1948 Oldsmobile, ran off a narrow fill into rain- swollen Cannon’s Creek about five miles north of Pomaria in Newberry County. The bodies were recovered shortly after the accident. NEWBERRY DRIVE-IN Phone—1533-J THURSDAY & FRIDAY Destination Tokyo Starring Cary Grant, John Garfield, Dane Clark and Faye Emerson WAHOO is played Every Friday Night! PROSPERITY ITEMS (continued from page one) Mrs. J. S. Wheeler Sr., is spend ing the week at Crescent Beach at the home of her sister, Mrs. Bryson of Winnsboro. Miss Martha Counts of the S. C. Medical College at Charleston, spent the weekend with her mother, Mrs. H. E. Counts Sr. Mr. and Mrs. M. P. Connelly and their daughter, Kay, left Sun day for Aiken. Mr. Connelly is teaching in the Aiken school sys tem and Miss Connelly will work at the Bomb plant. Dr. and Mrs. George W. Har mon, Mrs. J. Frank Browne and Mrs. L. W. Harmon spent Sunday in Charleston as guests of Mrs. J. C. Taylor. Mrs. P. W. Smith, who had been visiting Mrs. Tay lor for several days, returned home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Hester and their daughter, Patty Ann, of Buffalo ,N. Y. arrived Tuesday to visit Mrs. Hester’s sister, Mrs. P. E. Wise and family. Mrs. L. A. Permenter and her three children of Atlanta, Ga. are visiting her mother, Mrs. J. E. Ross. Also with (Mrs. Ross for the weekend were Mr. and Mrs, John Roeschel of Atlanta. With Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Bal- lentine for the weekend were Mr. and Mrs. Furman' Ballentine and children, -Mr. and Mrs. David Lee and children of Greenville, Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Ballentine of Cha pin. Mrs. Lee and her two chil dren remained for a week’s visit. Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Garner have with them Dr. and Mrs. Douglas White and son of Roa noke, Va., Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Smith of Flushing, N. Y., Mr. and Mrs. Aruthur D. DeVant and two daughters of Grosse Point, Mich., Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wheeler of Dillon, and Mr. and Mrs. Guy Saner of Charleston. Gary Cooper Stars In ‘High Noon’ At Wells Moiu-Tues. Stanley Kramer’s current hit, ‘High Noon,” a western that is completely different from any other ever produced, provides an hour and one half of unrelieved tension and suspense. The film starring Gary Cooper in one of the greatest roles of his career, is being released by United Art ists and opens on Mon. and Tues. at the Wells Theatre. Fred Zinne- mann directed. The unusual qualities of “High Noon" are best indicated by a study of its hero. As played by Gary Cooper, he is as hard-riding, hard-hitting and laconic as any other frontiertown marshal ever seen in pictures. But the dif ference—and that’s what counts— is that he is not an automaton, but a real human being set down in a typical—and v terrifically real situation. What distinguishes him from his cardboard counterparts most particularly is the fact that he is not totally and Incredibly fear less. From beginning to end of ‘High Noon" he is in danger, of being killed, and, from beginning to end he shows it. He is not a superman, to whom a single- handed fight against four out laws is a mere pause in the day’s occupation. He is not a coward, either. On the contrary, he is ^ DIES SATURDAY Mrs. Lilia Bolen Varnes, 64, died at 6:30 Saturday afternoon at the home of her daughter, Mrs. W. R. Counts, in Orangeburgr She was the mother of Mrs. Hayne Shealy of Newberry. Funeral services were held at 6:00 p.m. Monday from Dukes- Harley Funeral chapel, conduct ed by Dr. Roy O. McLain, Dr. Carl B. Caughman and the Rev. Paul A. Bolen. Interment fol lowed at Memorial Park ceme tery. brave man and like all brave men, he fears death. It is this attribute that makes the spectacular gunfight in “High Noon" one of the most absorbing ever filmed. Cooper is not a dead shot, he is not eager for the fray. And he knows that the odds are too great for him to over come. In fact he is so sure of it that he makes his last will and testament. If the hero is afraid, so is the audience. And by this simple device the suspense be comes terribly real and compell ing. The audience realizes—un like the case in a conventional western—that the hero can lose the fght! WANT ADS FOUND WEDNESDAY — key chain with three keys. May be had by identifying and pay ing for this ad. The Sun. FOR RENT—Apartment for rent. Mrs. D. J. Taylor, 1912 Harring ton street. 13-tnc. FOR RENT—Two apartments — first floor—furnished or unfur nished—Immediate possesion — Smith Apts. Main Street—prices very reasonable—Mrs. R. Der- rill Smith, Phone 338—Newber ry, S. C. 13-2tc CANNING SUPPLIES — Fruit Jars, large and small mouth — Rubbers — Tops — Lids for big mouth jars, standards, and 63 sizes. R. Derrill Smith & Son, Inc., Wholesale Grocers, New berry, S. C. 13-2tc MRS. COTHRAN DIED Mrs. Lou Ellen Cothran, 83, mother of Willie Cothran, died early Thursday morning at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Lola Walker, near Easley. She had been in declining health for several years. Funeral services were conduct ed at the Geer Memorial Baptist Church Friday by the Rev. G- M. Eads, the Rev. J. A. AndJ*- son and the Rev. A. A. Meng. Burial was in the fainily plot the Flat Rock Baptist cemetery. PICNIC SUPPLIES — Plates — Spoons — Forks — Napkins — Drinking Cups — Ice Cream Cones. R. Derrill Smith & Son, Inc., Wholesale Grocers, New berry, S. C. 13-2tc 3 - ROOM APARTMENT FOR RENT—Couple without children. Call 384. 41-tfc WANTED TO BUY—Iron, Metal, Batteries, Radiators and Rags. W. H. Sterling, 1708 Vincent street. Phone 731-W 28-tfc FREEZER LOCKER SUPPLIES— Locker Roll Paper — Plastic Bags — Oaken Buckets — Box es and Bags—Aluminum Wrap ping Paper—Tape—Twine—Etc. —Freezer Jars. R. Derrill Smith & Son, Inc., Wholesale Grocers Newberry, S. C. 13-2tc NOTICE—Hunting, fishing or tres passing in any manner is strictly forbidden on the lands oi the pndersigned W: D. (BILL) HATTON. 7-16tp. GEES Right now prices are at the season’s lowest—and you can get the exact kind of coal that works best in your stoker. We recommend ‘Rocky Lane’ Thriller At Wells Fri.-Sat Bringing fast action and plenty of exciting gun play. Rocky Lane and his famous stallion Black Jack, will ride on the Wells Theatre screen Friday and Sat. in Republic’s new western fea ture. “Thundering Caravans,” to produce a chain reaction of chills and thrills for the. packed audi ence. Rocky, in one of his most dash ing roles of the Lane series, again portrays a young U. S. Marshal. This time he discovers his old friend Nugget Clark, por trayed by Eddy Waller, in danger of losing his job as sheriff fol lowing a s' series of unexplained bandit raids on gold ore wagon trains. Rocky enters the seeth ing atmosphere as wealthy gold In tbe fine supporting cast of “High Noon" are Thomas Mitchell, Lloyd Bridges, Otto Krugger, Lon Chaney, beautiful blonde new comer, Grace Kelly, and the fiery new Mexican actress, Katy Jurado. mine owner, Stanley Andrews, is about to form a posse and take matters in his own hands, at the same time threatening Waller's young deputy, Richard Crane, for courting his daughter, Mona Knox. Meanwhile, a vitriolic spinster, portrayed by Isabel Randolph, Is busy campaigning against Clark in her independently owned paper, the Edgewater Bugle, in order to promote the job for her brother. Lane begins to get some action when^ Ed Brill, protrayed by Roy Barcroft, one of the ore wagon bandits and an escaped convict, tries to blackmail Crane after recognizing him as an ex-convict who shared his cell. Through a series of blackmail attempts and payroll robbery franv ups engineered by both Brill and t(ie spinster-editor, Lane moves with assurance and fearless reck lessness to trap the gang with the final showdown reaching a fever pitch when the renegades are nab bed with their loot in a deserted ghost town. B00KM0BI SCHEDULE w . The Bookmobile schdule Newberry County, for Thurs< August 21st., is: Mt. Bethel Garmany Commun ity (Mrs. Minnie Leitzsey) Mrs. Raymond Nichols’ home Mt. Pleasant Community (Mrs. Fannie Ringer) Mayblnton Community (Mrs. 9 Arthur Mayblnton). Strother Community (Mrs. Jeff Suber’s home) Crooks Store (Homer Crooks) New Hope Zion Commi (Miss Ollie Eargle) u Pomaria 6 & 10 cent store Peak St. Phillips Community (1 Belton’s Kinard home) Jp St. Phillips Community G. Y. Taylor’s home) St. Phillips Community John Stone’s home) DOLLAR DAY One group girls Loafers and buckle Oxfords One group genuine Cobra Pumps. G Red, Green, Brown. These shoes by Cross and Foot Flair Regular $12.95 value .... MENS SOX reg. 59c val. 3 for $l.i — • - MP ANDERSON’S Shoe Stoi MTSYI RITZ THEATRE WEDNESDAY Paul Henreid, Lizabeth Scott, Andre Morell Stolen Face Cartoon—Mealtime Magic -THURSDAY A FRIDAY SATURDAY Kathryn Grayson, Red Skelton, Howard Keel, Marge and Gower Champion, Ann Miller Lovely To Look At (In Technicolor) Fox News SATURDAY Saddle Legion Starring Tim Holt Dorothy Malone MONDAY A TUESDAY Maureen O'Hara, Peter Lawford, Finlay Currie Kangaroo (In Technicolor) M.G.M. News and Bugs Bunny Cartoon SUNDAY A MONDAY The Wild Blue Yonder Starring Wendell Corey, Vera Ralston, Forrest Tucker, Walter Brennan and Penny Edwards TUESDAY A WEDNESDAY Bullfighter And The Lady Starring Robert Stack, Joy Page, Gilbert Roland and Virginia Grey THURSDAY & FRIDAY The Outlaw Starring Jane Russell Always A Color Cartoon WELLS THEATRE FRIDAY and SATURDAY Allan Rocky Lane in “Thundering Caravans" with Eddy Waller Added—ATOM MAN VTk SUPER MAN and ANDY CLYDE Comedy LAZY MAN’S FUEL* because it burns clean and lasts longer. Patsy is purified! Impurities have been removed at the mine. FILL YOUR BIN TODAY! FARMERS ICE & FUEL CO. Phone 155 DoUar Specials Visit the Market Basket This Week and Save New RINSO 4 large pkgs - mm \: * 'V’lPp - I MONDAY A TUESDAY Also Late Show 10:30 Saturday Night The story of a man who was too proud to run! Gary Cooper in Noon State Fair Cal. 4 21 John B. Harmon Desr’t Peaches cans High with Thomas Mitchell and Katy Jurado Added—SPORTS WEDNESDAY A THURSDAY Another Man’s Poison Bette Davis, Gary Merrill and Emlyn Williams Added—"Hollywood at Play" Admission 12 A 40c Every Day % Has Assumed Management of Nance St. Puroil Station formerly operated by John Billingsley / The new management will continue to serve the public with Pure Oil Pro ducts, a full line of groceries, cold drinks, and ice cream. Mr. Harmon, who has been connected with the Newberry Steam Laundry and Dry Cleaning Company for the past IIV2 years, invites his friends to call on him at his new stand. Duke’s MA8K£T, BASKET -