University of South Carolina Libraries
fe®5 Ml v. % mm' mwm 4 i Mmm y- 5.9Mm’ %m w**mm .v.ss-x&Sv:#^ W#* : M- • : ' m Hwoca-:-.. •■ .. _ . : - -: .•:•• -1: *. Mdw? • ^ • •.. ...^. . -xA&ooo^jts - /V X;..v.; ^ -:c?:- : THEY LIVE HERE NOW Miss Estell Hightower, a mem ber of Newberry College faculty, who has been living in the Frank Sutton apartments on College St., has moved to an apartment in the home of Miss Ethel Jones on Cal houn St. v Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Mode are making their home in apartment 38-J on Vincent St- Mr. and Mrs. Paul Epting have moved to 915 McKibben St. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Catlin are re siding at 2310 Main St. Rfv. and Mrs.' Paul L. Walker are now making their home at 2007 Lee St. Hi iilli mm A pared land for annual winter graz ing crops are E. E. Piester and H. H. Ruff of the St. Philips section and C. R. Merrick of the Helena section. I jitf Mfllr DOOMED TO DIE . . . Mustafa Khamis, leader of recent factory riot near Alexandria, Egypt, was sentenced to be hanged after a military court trial. Twenty-nine other rioters went on trial. I W- NfS>: 'Os*. X. •:<v m Pictured above is the huge Carolina Giant Cement plant 000. Inset shows L. W. Bishop, Director of Research, at Harleyville where an expansion program costing $5,- Planning and Development Board, congratulating Frank 000,000 has just been completed. The plant’s . capac- * J. Cain, Jr., of Columbia, General Sales Manager of the ity. was increased from 800,000 barrels a year to 2,000,- company, on the completion of the vast expansion. ■ ■ . i - - — ■— Recent Births At Hospital Mr- and Mrs. S. B. Hare of Saluda, a boy, Aog. 19. Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Brown of Newberry, a boy, Aug. 6. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Force, Jr-, of Newberry, a girl, Aug. 20. Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Amick of Prosperity, a girl, Aug. 19. Mr- and Mrs. C. J. Bedenbaugh of Prosperity, a girl, Aug. 13. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Price of Newberry, a girl, Aug. 23. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Farmer of Newberry, a boy, Aug- 11. Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Baker of Newberry, a girl, Aug. 16. Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Mundy of Newberry, a girl, Aug. 26. Mr- and Mrs. P. C. Olsen of Saluda, a boy, Aug. 21. Mr. and Mrs. W- R. McCartha of Little Mountain, a girl, Aug. 20. Mr. and Mrs. K. R. Griffin of Pomaria, a boy, Aug. 19. Mr. and Mrs. G- W. Forrest of Saluda, a boy, Aug. 2. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Ulrich of Newberry, a boy, A.ug. 4. Mr. and Mrs. E- C. Miller of Little Mountain, a girl, Aug. 15. Mr. and Mrs. T. P. Walton, Jr., of Saluda, a boy, Aug. 2. Mr. and Mrs. M. P. Johnson of Kinards, a boy, Aug. 7. Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Osborne of Newberry, a boy, Aug. 8. Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Turner of McCormick, a girl, Aug. 10. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. * Long of Silverstreet, a girl, Aug. 28. Mr- and Mrs. J. T. Moore of Newberry, a boy, Aug. 27. Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Daniell of Newberry, a girl, Aug. 25. Mr. and Mrs. D. W- Werts of Newberry, a boy, Aug. 21. Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Swindler of Saluda, a girl, Aug. 19. Mr- ond Mrs. B. C. Smith of Newberry, a girl, Aug. 18. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Stone of Newberry, a girl, Aug. 1. Mr. and fllrs. Nathaniel Gist, Jr. of Newberry, a girl, Aug- 2. Mr. and Mrs. Eddied Rodelsper- ger of Newberry, a girl, Aug. 2. Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Wells of Kin ards, a boy, Aug. 2. Mr. and Mrs A. J. Carver of Newberry, a girl, Aug. 2. Mr. and Mrs. F. R. McJunkin of Newberry, a girl, Aug. 6. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Johnson of Newberry, a boy, Aug- 9. Mr. and Mrs. V. R. DeHart of Newberry, a boy; Aug. 11. Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Powell of Newberry, a girl, Aug. 15- Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Riley of Saluda, a boy, Aug. 17. Mr. and Mrs. B. S. Long of Newberry, a boy, Aug- 17. Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Mer chant of Newberry, a girl, Aug. 16. Farm Groups Planning New County Tours A preliminary survey for a stock pond has been made on the farm of Miss Carrie Lee Folk. Miss Folk has difficulty supplying water for her 20 beef cows. It is necessary during an extended drought to pump water from the well. A properly constructed pond will alleviate this oondiiton. Edward Hawkins of the Hart ford section has completed pre paration of a meadow strip to re ceive water from terraces on about 20 acres. This meadow will be two acres in size and will be seeded to fescue at an early date. 'Another tour of the lower sec tion of the county has been plan ned. This series of tours is sponsored by the local Chamber of Commerce. Technicians of the Soil Conservation Service and the County Agents are cooperating in this endeavor. The object of these tours is to call attention to outstanding achievements of farm ers and their efforts to conserve soil and water. Anyone interested is invited to make these tours. Business men are particularly urged to become acquainted with farmer progrers, the source of much of their business transac- ii tions Farmers . throughout the county are gathering hay from sericea, alfalfa and lespedeza. They are being urged to harvest hay of lower quality than usual so as to forego a possible shortage. Among the numerous farmers in the county who have already pre- w $*• ‘GREATEST FIGHTER’ . . . Sam Langford, called by veteran Boston fans “the greatest fighter who ever lived,’’ lives in Boston on a $1.65-a-day charity check. Ke is blind. At left is A1 Delmont, former New England feather champ. Schools Are Crowded . . CHESTERFIELD MELONS Chesterfield is growing into a mid-season watermelon center. I rode with County Agent Willis there the last day of July. Melons were going out in our early area then and just coming in good up there. They will continue to ship on out into September. We visited J. H. Hendrick. Wil lis said he was one of their oldest and best growers. He was picking melons when we arrived, in the largest field of melons I’v6 ever seen, 125.3 acres. He had another field with 65.9 acres in it. He spoke in exact numbers, as you will note from those tenths of acres. I like to talk- with a man like that. He shows that he is the master of what he is doing. I noticed that Mr. Hendrick has planted mostly the Congo variety. I asked him how he liked it. He said, “I tried mighty hard not to like it, but I had to come across.” He said it was the best melon they have. It is a very good shipper, bears a lot,, and the vines will live on if you have some rain and make you a second crop of melons. The other sorts won’t generally do that. The Congo , is that new melon I’ve told you about often in the past few years. The first plant ings of it were made there and down in Allendale, Hampton, and Barnwell with seed furnished the county agents by the USDA vegetable breeding laboratory at Charleston, where it was pro duced. Enough seed to insure car- lot shipments were furnished, and that was the final test, how it shipped. Mr. Hendrick told us his stand ard fertilization for watermelons was 600 pounds of a 4-10-6 per acre. This mixture has 350 pounds of cotton seed meal per ton in it. And then he top dress es them with 100 pounds of Cal- Nitro. Over on Smith Oliver’s farm Willis showed me another melon they are trying out for the Charleston station. It only car ries a number now, 48-12. It’s a dandy, resistant to both wilt and anthracnose. It will likely be named and put on the market in 1953. Mr. Oliver planted it fol lowing melons the year before. There were no signs of disease. With the old sort of melons the crop would have certainly been a failure there from disease. It is a Garrison type melon and Mr. Oliver said it sold just as well as the Congo. This melon will be a godsend to the grower, as it’s hard to find new land for melons all the time, since the old sort require a 7-year rotation. COLUMBIA FARMERS’ MARKET Under the management of Clem- son’s Bob Martin, and with the fine new facilities the state pro vided, the Columbia Farmers’ Market is growing into a giant. On one day at the height of the season 195,739 South Carolina cantaloupes and one car from California came in. Trucks all the way from Michigan to Missis sippi were there and moved them all, along with variety loads of all sorts of seasonal produce. On another big day a total of 519 trucks paid the small fee at the gate. These were in addition to the many regular ones that had already paid and had their sticker on. Bob Martin’s records show that during July a total of 946,336 watermelons were sold at the market. And for the season he estimated they will handle 1% million. That’s over a fourth of the total commercial crop of mel ons in the state. While walking over the market with Bob, he introduced me to Ed Phillips, who said he has been selling on the market since 1930. And, of course, he liked the new facilities. He has seen it go from rain aijd mud to shelter and con crete. COOPERATION GETS THINGS Out of 15 million telephones in stalled in the United States from 1945 to 1950, I read that only 200,- 000 of them were on farms. It used to be much the same with electricity. But look now! Farm folks got together to try to do something about it, borrowed the money to build many lines, and the companies got busy and built others. And now this great boon to farm life reaches the vast majority of our farms. Likewise I see cooperatives working on telephones for the farms, even the far places. And I see the companies stretching lines at many places. So maybe the next few years will see the benefits of the telephone reach a greater proportion of our farms than > were reached during the period spoken of above. With short labor, time becomes of more value. A telephone on the average farm can sure save time and travel. Like one farmer said of irrigation, “It’s not can you afford to have it, it is if you can afford not to have it.” SOAP BOX CHAMP ... Joe Lunn, 11, clutches trophy after winning 15th all-American soap box derby in Akron’s derby downs. Some 70,000 spectators were rooting for the Columbus, Ga., youngster after he cracked up his racer after winning first heat. All in the Game: G reyhound, champion trotting horse, won $38,952 — was at peak when stakes were at mini mum. He average $5,650 per sea son. In $6 starts he was first $2 times, second 3 times, and fourth one time ... Churchill Downs, the Kentucky Derby track in Louis ville, opened in 1875 . . . The first and most historic of motor boat races was for the Harmsworth Trophy, originated in 1903—Gar Wood became a consistent winner ... Sir Malcolm Campbell ranks as the greatest motor boat racer of all time . . . Since 1939 the sport of six-day bicycle racing has been in a coma. In its heyday, a pro fessional rider, if he was good, could make $25,000 per year . . • Most bowlers remain amateurs, but a few go in for tournament play and others put on exhibitions —the latter may earn up to $15,000 per year . . . Pro golfers, in tion to prise money, add to come by endorsing golf giving lessons, and serving as tutors at fashionable golf clubs. •4 BOYS ARE THAT WAY By J. M. ELEAZER Deed Transfers Newberry No. 1 Haskell R. Hair and Kate Mae H. Goff to Elbert Hair, one lot 75’xl76’ and one building (Ernest Hair Estate) $5.00, love and af fection. Dorothy H.. Coleman, Erskine Levi Hair and Mattie B. Hair to Elbert Hair, one lot 75’xl76’ and one building (Ernest Hair Estate) $5.00 love and affection- LaRossie Stephens et al to Ed ward C. Floyd, one lot, 65’x250\ and one building on Morgan St., $5.00, love and affection. LaRossie Stephens et al to Clif ton O. Floyd, one and one half acres 80’x250’ and one building on Morgan St., $5.00 love and af fection. Robert L. Schumpert and John Walker Schumpert to Marie Schumpert and Ruth S. Ward, .one lot, one-tenth acre and one build ing (Mrs. Carrie A. Schumpert estate), $500 love and affection. Robert E. Summer to Ezikiel L. Jefferson, one lot, 60’xl98\ and one building on Emory St., $350. Newberry No. 1 Outside Doris Bledsoe to H. A. Crump ton and H. A. Tarver, five acres and one building on Newberry Country Club road, $5800. Collie E. Dominick to Mrs. Annie L/ Wessinger and A- A. Wessinger, 83 acres (her interest in Carrie E. Dominick estate) $400. Louis C. Floyd to Dennis O’Neal DeWalt, one lot, 62’xl40’ on Emory street, $300. Silverstreet No. 2 Maggie S. Havird to Mrs. S. E. Nichols, one lot near Silverstreet, $50. Feagle Takes Job With Serum Firm Jim Feagle, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Feagle, who recent ly accepted a position with the Eastern State Serum Company in Columbia, began his new duties on Tuesday, August 26th. Jim was formerly associated with his father in the Feed and Seed business in Newberry be fore the- former sold the firm a short while ago. My earliest recollection goes back to a colored boy that came to live with us- His name was Jim Row dy. He ran away rom his home in Charleston and came to Colum bia. His father died and his mo ther married again. The step father was very lazy and lived largely from the work of the kids. Jim was made to sweep out chimneys. As . he grew he got stuck in one and it scared him very bad. So he ran away. Some colored folks took him in in Columbia, and through them he found a home with two old ladies back in the woods from our place, who needed a man to get wood, etc., for them. Jim broke his arm while living there with my daddy, the country doc tor, fixed it for him. He h£(d no thing to pay with, but promised to come and work it out when he got well. This he did and paid it • off. He liked it at our house, and came to live with us, as my daddy needed a boy to help around the place when we were small. Jim was with us several years, a trustworthy, strong, deserving youngster. Our milk cow had a half-grown bull calf. He broke that calf and planted him a crop- At lay-by time he wanted to work on the railroad and make him a little money before harvest time. He got a job on the C. N. & L. Ry. and after working a few weeks was killed on the trestle near Columbia. That came as a great shock to all, specially to me, as we all liked him, and he was so good to me. Soon a widow with a whole crowd of hungry and ragged children gave us another little ne gro boy. His name was Green Lea- part. He stayed with us until he was grown. He too went away finally to work on the railroad. For years he always came back home to our house for Christmas, and we were as glad to see him as if he had been a relative. He was a fireman when he last came and we don’t know what ever became of him. Then we had another one, Faw- ly Robinson. He was about my age, and I liked him very much. Many are the happy hours of childhood we spent together. When he got almost grown he too went away to work. That a sad day for me. . BOOKMOBILE SCHEDULE The Bookmobile schedule for Newberry County is as follows: Thursday, Sept. 11, 1952 Silverstreet Community (Shep pard’s Store) Silverstreet School Chappells Community (Wert’s Store) Chappeplls School Smyrna Community (Mrs. Frank Senn’s) Friday, Sept 12, 1952 Prosperity School Mollohon School Mollohon Community (Commun ity building) —^ ■■..si ONE GREASE FOR all Lubrication lobs 1 Sint** 1 * < r W«‘ r . 1* ^uNf »"** i ibh ■■r““r-“r“ , rm“r -si ■ m • iri v ’! mm ' More children are in South Carolina schools today than at any other time in history. And the peak of enrollment is still in the future as the state’s births continue to rise. Millions of dollars are being spent to erect new schools for these children. Thousands of families are saving part of' their income so funds will be available to continue the education of the students. Federal Savings and Loan association of Newberry offers you the op portunity to help your child by saving any amount at any time with the assurance of safety, profit and convenience. Newberry Federal Savings & Loan Ass n. John F. Clarkson, Pres. J. K. Willingham, Sec.-Treas. ANSWERS TO Intelligence Test 1 — Moscow. 2 «*■> decade. 3 —- Salem. 4—Philippine. 5—Robert E. Lee. 6—Prince. Edward Island. 7—(AJ Les Miserables; (B) Dick ens’ Christmas Carol; (C) Uncle Tom’s Cabin; (D) Tom Sawyer. •j.h.smith R.F.D. mm**? AUTO WHEEL RIMS h<-PIPE SUPPORTS 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 Qt-o-glonM: 1. A finer grease at every point. 2. Less danger of applying the wrong grease. 3. Quicker greasing operations. 4. Smaller grease stocks — one instead off 3 or 4. 5. Fewer grease guns. 6. Less waste. MAILBOX SUPPORT • • • A strong support for rural w»an boxes big enough to hold large parcels can be made of two old auto mobile rims riveted to four pipe legs. Legs are beet as draws and set firmly ia the Wo dolfvor direct to forms. Phono or write vs. Strother C. Paysinger Suppliers of Sinclair Prod. Newberry, S. C. SINCLAIR UTHOLINE ^UlTI-PURPOSi GREASE ■