The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, November 14, 1952, Image 2
PAGE TWO
THE NEWBERRY SUN
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1952
Prosperity Items
Mrs. Joe Spotts was hostess to
the Dogwood Garden Club Monday
afternoon, November 1.
“Thoughts for November” was
the subject of the program lead
er, Mrs. W. L. Mills. Mrs. Jake
Wheeler gave gleanings.
Mrs. D. H. Hamm, Jr., conduct
ed a Halloween contest, pinning
a stem on a punkin. Mrs. Spotts
was prize winner.
The hostess served a sweet
course with tea.
The November meeting of the
Prosperity Garden Club was held
Monday afternoon, with Mrs. P.
C. Singley. Mrs. J. L. Mayer, Mrs.
Jake Singley, and Miss Ophelia
Connelly were guests.
Mrs. J. S. Wheeler, treasurer,
presided in the absence of the
president and vice president. The
club voted to have a Christmas
party at the December meeting.
Mrs. J. D. Luther, program lead
er, read an article, “The Beauties
of Autumn and Thanksgiving and
Its Customs.” Mrs. H. L. Fellers
gave an article “Indian Summer.”
“Ideas on Dry and Longlasting
Arrangements” was given by Mrs.
J. S. Wheeler.
Miss Effie Hawkins, gleaner,
read excerpts from “The North of
Beauty.”
Mrs. R. T. Pugh conducted a
“Vote-getter” contest, very time
ly on the eve of Election Day.
Mrs. B. T. Young was prize win
ner.
The hostess served a sweet
course and coffee.
Mrs. G. A. Quattlebaum was
hostess to the monthly meeting
of the William Lester Chapter of
the U.D.C., Friday afternoon, No
vember 7.
Mrs. G. Y. Hunter, vice-presi
dent, presided in the absence of
the president, Mrs. H. P. Wicker.
Mrs. John Stockman read an
article “Chaplains in World War
I and other Wars.” Mrs. Vida
C. Thomason read the prayer of
George Washington.
During the social hour the host
ess served a palatable salad plate
with coffee.
Miss Linda Hancock, student at
Erskine Colege, spent the week
end at her home here. Miss Han
cock was a delegate to the State
Home Economics meeting in Co
lumbia Thursday and Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Beden-
baugh moved last Thursday into
the Berry Livingston house, which
they recently bought. Mr. and
Mrs. Farr have moved into the
Norris apartment vacated by the
Bedenbaughs.
The Literary Sorosis will meet
Friday afternoon, at 3:30, with
Mrs. Elmer Shealy, in Newberry.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Walter Hamm,
Miss Helen Sanford and James
Luther spent the weekend in
Charleston and attended the Cita
del-University of S. C. football
game on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Cochran
and their children of Anderson
were Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. O. S. Cochran.
Mrs. C. E. Hendrix has return
ed from a several days’ visit with
her father, the Rev. Woodle and
her sister, Mrs. Smith and family
in McRae, Ga.
Miss Marguerite Wise of Colum
bia is visiting Mr. and Mrs. P. E.
Wise and Mr. and Mrs. B. T.
Young.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Ruff and
Mr. anl Mrs. J. I. Ruff attended
the wedding of their nephew, J.
W. Kibler in Spartanburg Satur
day evening. Mr. Kibler is the
son of the former Miss Lera Liv
ingston of Prosperity.
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Ballen-
Yes . . .
We are making ready for
Christmas . . . painting,
re-arranging stocks and
adding many new items.
So Come To
Carpenter’s
I
Beginning Saturday, November 15th, the fol
lowing farm equipment businesses will close
This closing hour will be observed until
1,1953.
If any customer of the below mentioned firms
wishes service or parts on Saturday after-
noons, they are asked to contact their dealer
at home.
J0HNS0N-MC CRACKIN CO.
NEWBERRY FARM EQUIPMENT CO.
RUFF IMPLEMENT CO.
SHEALY-LONG IMPLEMENT CO.
Home Dyeing Is Easy With Today’s Tints!
OOTATOES are a versatile food,
* but few people have heard of
them served stewed! Melt 4 table
spoons of butter into a skillet, add
6 potatoes, peeled and sliced, then
1% cups milk and salt and pepper
to taste. Cook, covered, slowly,
until potatoes are tender.
Sliced orange garnish makes good
eating with lamb. Sprinkle them
with brown sugar, dot with butter
and dust lightly with curry powder
and broiL
When next you make cream puffs
or eclairs, add some finely sieved
banana to the vanilla cream filling.
This gives you a novel flavor treat.
Sweeten your next batch of ap
plesauce with maple sugar or
syrup and serve with cornmeal
griddle cakes. You’ll like strips of
bacon to go along with these.
Chocolate and orange are un
usual but welcome team mates.
For your next chocolate cake, choc-
RECIPE OF THE WEEK
Cranberry Ribbon Loaf
(Serves 8)
1 1-pound can whole cran
berry sauce
2 tablespoons lemon juice
% pint heavy cream, whipped
V4 cup confectioners’ sugar
% cup chopped nuts
% cup crushed, drained pine
apple
Combine cranberry sauce and
lemon juice. Pour into refrigera
tor tray. Blend together remain
ing ingredients and place this
over cranberry sauce. Freeze
until firm. Serve in slices as
salad or dessert.
BY EDNA MILES
olate-frosted, grate some orange
rind on top and listen to the call
for second helpings.
In place of parsley as a gar
nish, use the parsley in the food
prepared and see how much zest it
adds to simple dishes. Chop it fine
for hamburgers, salad dressings or
biscuits.
Shrimp ^ la king can be pre
pared the same way as you do the
famous chicken dish of the same
name. Serve on a bed of well-
seasoned peas, or, if desired, on a
bed of rice mixed with peas.
Lime frosting on a white cake
does wonders in color and taste
appeal. Use a package of cream
cheese (3 ounces), 2% cups confec
tioners’ sugar and 1 tablespoon
lime juice. If you like, add 2 tea
spoons grated lime rind and mix
until smooth.
Three-quarters of a century ago
it was not unusual to see a
housewife perspiring over the
steaming tub-kettle combina
tion needed to tint dresses and
living room drapes.
WITH THE SICK
Mrs. Louise Arthur, 1412 Silas
3t.
Mrs. May Bouknight, 2805 Hunt
Mrs. Rosemary Bouknight and
Baby Boy, Apt. 3-A Vincent St.
Mrs. Bertha Cason, Route 2,
Prosperity.
Mrs. Sallie K. Craft, 2800 Milne
Ave.
Mrs. Sarah Cooke and Baby Boy,
Route 2, Prosperity.
Mrs. Mary Etta Coppack, 3100
College St.
Master Wayne Coppack, 3100
College St.
John Crosby, 310 Spring St.,
Whitmire.
Robert G. Davie, 2802 Milne Ave.
Mrs. Nettie Dennis, Route 2,
Prosperity.
T HE so-called “good old days” were hard on housewives
Hoping for more attractive dresses, drapes and other
things that make a home attractive, those little ladies were
forced to go through the over-arduous processes connected
with always-messy home dyeing.
Home dyeing in the old days mednt muscle-straining
drudgery over steaming tubs and kettles. Actually it has
only been 75 years since chemical dyes were developed from
coal tar.
Before that, home dyeing was often disappointing. You
could not tell in advance whether you would end up with
the desired color or not. For that matter, your color choice
was contined mostly to blues, reds and yellows. You could
not hope for success unless you knew a great deal about
cloth, textures, mordants and dyes.
However, today’s home dyeing is a cinch, thanks to the
development of easy-to-use, all-fabric dyes in 50 colors and
an eflicieht color remover.
Widespread ownership of washing machines helps, too,
because the washer is ideal for tinting bulky things like
curtains, drapes, sheets, bedspreads and shag rugs.
All you need do is dissolve your dye in a quart jar or
pitcher of hot water, then pour the mixture in your machine
as soon as it fills with hot tap water. Let the pigment sink
deep into the fabric, pull the cloth out.and hang it up to dry.
Home dyeing in 1952 is much better, much easier, and
certainly a lot more successful than back in “the good old
days.” . Today, ihanks to modern science, there are many
good, eilicient dyes on the market. You can find them in
almost any drug, dime or department store.
lliwg
Today a
era uses the
process in her
ing in a few
took a long tl
old
youn
iiufiir
Mrs. Lucy Elmore, 1325 Pelham
St.
Mrs. Caroline Frich and Baby
Boy, Route 1, Little Mountain.
Master William Ansel Fuller,
Joanna.
Master Walter Fay Fuller, Jo
anna. . x
Mrs. Geneva D. Fulmer, Route
1, Prosperity.
Miss Mae • Porter Hart, 1227
Crenshaw St.
Sam Johnson, 1812 Main St.
Mrs. Roslye Kitchens, Route 1,
Carlisle.
Mrs. Dorsey Lawson, 914 Cen
tral Ave., Whitmire.
Mrs. Virginia Leslie, 1410 Friend
St.
Mrs. Vera Livingston, Route 1,
Pomaria.
Carrol Lowe, Box 164, Whitmire.
Mrs. Ethel Miller, Route 2, Po-
PFC RUFF RETURNS TO
STATES FROM FAR EAST
Pfc. Luther H. Ruff, son of Mr.
and Mrs. S. L. Ruff of Route 4,
Newberry is returning to the
United States under the Army’s
rotation program after serving 15
months in the Far East, with the
1st Cavalry Division in Japan.
He served in the 1st Cavalry
Division, which spent 17 months
maria?
Mrs. Hazel Pitts, Route 3, New
berry.
Mrs. Vera Proctor, 9-C Vincent
St. Apt. ■ '
Mrs. Callie Quattlebaum, Route
3, Prosperity.
C. W. Rushton, Box 192 Clinton.
Mrs. Eunice S. Simmons and
Baby Girl, 2127% Nance St.
Mrs. Maude Stockman,, 701
Wright St.
MR. CHAPMAN UNI
SURGERY IN LOCAL
Sloan Chapman, who
surgery in the
Hospital last
ed to have stood the
and expects to
on College street
in the front lines of
being assigned to
Japan late in 1951.
Ruff entered the
cember of 1960 and i
rifleman in Company
Cavalry Regiment,
▲ veteran of five
Korea, he bolds the
for wounds received
Combat Infantryman
Korean Service
Nations Ribbon
Occupation Medal for
Japan.
iiiMIfliliiwfei
RECRUITING SERGEANT
IN NEWBERRY, WHITMIRE '
Sgt. Ray E. Morris of the Army
and Air Force Recruiting service
will be in Newperry at the post
office on Tuesday and Thursday
of each week, and in Whitmire at
the post office on Wednesday of
each week for the purpose of ac
cepting enlistments in the army
or air force.
Sgt. Morris is a native of Whitr
mire, the son of Mr. and Mrs. J.
N. Morris. He is presently living
in Columbia and is attached to the
Columbia office of the recruiting
service.
tine spent Sunday in Batesburg
with Mr .and Mrs. J. B. Ballen-
tine. '
Guests Sunday of Mrs. Gordon
W. Counts were Voight M. Epting
of Pocolet; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Reagin and their son Earle and
Mrs. A. K. Epting of Greenwood.
Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Hooker of
Charleston were weekend guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Hunter L. Fellers.
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Beautiful New
It’sThe
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BP? 1 ■
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vet.
r [IS IS the last week of the
Slogan Contest. If you
have not yet mailed in your
entry, better do it at once. The
deadline is Saturday, Nov. 15,
at midnight, and all mailings
must be postmarked before
November 16.
The winner of the first prize
will be presented with a check
for $1,000 (which may be di
vided among two or more con
testants submitting identical
slogans) and 10 others will re
ceive $100 each for Honorable
Mention.
At the rate the slogans are
now coming in, indications are
that a total of upwards of 10,-
000 will be received. The job
of checking these and deter
mining the winners, a huge
task indeed, will be completed
in time to announce the names
at our Annual Meeting Thurs
day. Dec. 18, which will be
broadcast over a statewide ra
dio hook-up.
Who knowst Yours may be
one of the names called. But
it can’t be unless you get your
entry in.
i’ *?/
BRAND NEW STYLING! Lower
and longer . . . glamorous new
chrome fender mouldings ... new,
wider, lovelier front grille ... beau
tiful new swept-back rear fenders
,.. new, lower, wider rear deck!
BRAND NEW VIEW! Greater
glass area all around ... huge new
curved one-piece windshield and
narrow comer posts... big windows,
slender center posts ... new sweep-
around one-piece rear window!
SEE 160 H. P. FIRE DOME
V.
CAPITAL LIFE AND HEALTH
INSURANCE COMPANY
COLUMBIA, s. a
eSSi v : :