The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, November 28, 1952, Image 2
PAGE TWO
THE NEWBERRY SUN
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1962
Prosperity Items
Mrs. Elmer Shealy was hostess
to the Literary Sorosis last Fri
day afternoon at her home in New
berry. Mrs. Briggs and Mrs. Les
ter were guests. Three new mem
bers, Mrs. Hunter Fellers, Mrs.
Walter Hamm, and Mrs. P. E.
Wise were welcomed.
Mrs. C. E. Hendrix, program
chairman, introduced Mr. St. Clair
Knight of Spartanburg, who gave
a demonstrated lecture on house
lighting and fixtures.
The hostess served a salad
course buffet style.
The November meeting of the
Prosperity P.T.A. was held Mon
day night, November 17, with Mrs.
Hoyt A. Boland, the president, pre
siding.
Mrs. H. B. Hendrix conducted
the devotions.
The program on athletics was
given by Coach Johnny Sykes.
A picture on basketball was shown
with Coach Sykes lecturing on
the picture. After the picture a
panel discussion was held.
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Rosel of
Atlanta, Ga., were weekend guests
of Mrs. Rosel’s mother, Mrs. J. E.
Ross. Mrs. Ross accompanied
them home for a week’s visit.
Miss Katherine Counts of the
Greensboro, N. C. School faculty
is spending the Thanksgiving holi
days with her mother and sister,
Mrs. E. O. Counts and Miss Ethel
Counts.
Mrs. H. P. Wicker left Monday
for Tallahassee, Fla. to visit her
nephew, George Francis Black
and Mrs. Black. She went down
with Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow' Black
of Greenwood.
Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Hamm, Sr.,
visited Mr. Ernest Koon, in the
Columbia Hospital, Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. James B. Hunt and
their two daughters, Janet and
Joan, of Spartanburg are spending
Thanksgiving and the weekend
with Mr. Hunt’s mother, Mrs. A.
B. Hunt.
Mrs. G. W. Counts, Mrs. E. O.
Counts and Miss Ethel Counts
visited the Voight Eptings in Paco-
let Sunday.
'Misses Linda Hancock, Beth
and Clara Pugh of Erskine College
are spending the Thanksgiving
holidays with their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. W. E. Hancock, and Mr.
and Mrs. A. P. Pugh.
Arriving for Thanksgiving and
the week to be with Mrs. C. E.
Hendrix are Mrs. E. B. Smith and
two children, Beth and Edgar and
the Rev. Woodle of McRae, Ga.;
Danny Newton of the Brookland-
Cayce high school faculty.
Miss Clare Chappell of Charles
ton will spend Thanksgiving and
the weekend with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. A. R. Chappell.
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Luther receiv
ed a message last Friday of the
birth of their first granddaughter,
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Har
ry Klslevitz of New York City.
The little girl has been named
Amanda. The Kislevitzes have a
son two years old.
Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Summers
and their two daughters of Alex
andria, La., have been visiting Mr.
Summer’s sister, Mrs. Ryan Fel
lers and mother, Mrs. Thompsie
Summers. Mr. Summers has been
superintendent of the Masonic
Home in Alexandria, La., but has
accepted school work in Aiken
County. They will be with the
Fellers until their furniture ar
rives and they can move to Aiken.
Mr. John W. Taylor was operat-
ed on Monday morning in the
Newberry Memorial Hospital. His
friends wish for him a speedy re
covery.
Miss Martha Counts has com
pleted her work as laboratory
technician at the S. C. Medical
College and has accepted work in
the college. Miss Counts spent
the weekend w ith her mother, Mrs
H. E. Counts.
Miss Patty Wise, student at the
University of Ga. and Frank C.
Wise of Atlanta, Ga. and the Uni
verity of Ga. will spend the
Thanksgiving holidays with Miss
Wise’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. P.
E. Wise. Miss Phyllis Wise ol
the University of S. C. is also
spending the holidays with her
parents, the P. E. Wises.
Dr. and Mrs. George W. Har
mon left Tuesday for Washington,
D. C. to visit their son-in-law and
daughter, Major and Mrs. Frank
Bradley. They will return home
Sunday.
Miss Kathryn Pugh of Colum
bus, Ga., spent the weekend with
her mother, Mrs. R. T. Pugh. Mrs
Pugh and Miss Pugh visited Mr.
and Mrs. James Arthur Beden
baugh in Laurens, Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Schrum and
their two daughters, Harriette
and Johnny of Lincolnton, N. C
will spend Thanksgiving Day with
Mrs. E. O. Counts.
Capt. Ray Ohlhues, Mrs. Ohlhu-
es and their two daughters of the
Miami, Fla. Air Field, spent the
weekend with Mrs. Ohlhues’ moth
er, Mrs.’ H. E. Counts, Sr. Capt.
Ohlhues had been in Alaska for
two months and Mrs. Ohlhues and
children visited Capt. Ohlhues’
parents in Custer Park, 111. The
family was enroute to Miami.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tyler of
Jacksonville, Fla. are spending
the Thanksgiving weekend in the
home of Mrs. Tyler’s brother, P. E.
Wise and family.
Mrs. Hunter L. Fellers is visit
ing her daughter, Mrs. Robert
Meyers and Capt. Meyers and chil
dren in Richmond, Va.
John Taylor of Florence and
Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Shelby and
their little daughter Chauncey of
Columbia were recent guests of
Mrs. John W. Taylor. They came
up to be with Mrs. Taylor and
Mr. Taylor who is in the Newberry
Memorial Hospital.
L. K. Singley of Hendersonville,
N. C. spent last Tuesday night
with his sister, Mrs. J. D. Luther
and Mr. Luther.
B C D 1 I 2 3 4
YOU CANHOW MAKE
/}/tu Sion uhtk
DURO DECAL
Transfer Letters
and Numbers
DOORS WINDOWS * TRUCKS etc
•WILL STICK ON ANYTHING
•LAST A'UFETIME
•EASILY APPLIED
• MADE IN 8 SIZES FROM V TO SV
VERY INEXPENSIVE
The Sun Office
iHt 1
rapr-'-c- *
t:
; J.
.
get full
value for
your heating
* Potty it painstakingly
processed to remove every
impure particle. When you
buy Patsy, you get pure coal
and nothing else. As a re
sult, Patsy, lasts longer, has
less waste —takes far less
tending. Just one load of
Patsy will convince you.
ATSK
TREATED FOR
DELIVERY I
Look for .this seqj on your^
delivery ticket.^,
Phone 155
Mrs. May Stuck
Named Case Worker
Appointment of Mrs. May Tar
rant Stuck as senior caseworker
for the Children’s Center in Green
ville has been announced by Lon
nie C. Carpenter, executive direc
tor.
Mrs. Stuck will begin her work
Dec. 16. Her chief duties will be:
1. To see that casework service
is provided all clients of the
agency. 2. To act as case super
visor and intake wmrker. 3. To
carry out a program of foster
home finding, evaluation and ap
proval.
A native of Newberry, Mrs. Stuck
lived here until 1950 when she en
tered graduate school in Boston,
Mass.
She received her education at
Winthrop College, University of
South Carolina, Nashville School
of Social Work, and Simmons Col
lege School of Social Work.
Mrs. Stuck has had several
years experience of working with
children. She has taught in the
Newberry public schools, worked
as senior visitor for the Newber
ry County Department of Public
Welfare, and casework supervisor
of Florence County Department of
Public Welfare.
According to Mr. Carpenter,
“The appointment of Mrs. Stuck
marks an important step in the de
velopment of the Children’s Cen
ter. We can soon begin to accept
and place pre-school age children
who need temporary care away
from their own homes.
THE AWFUL UNCERTAINTY
OF THE FUTURE
“It is a gloomy moment in his
tory. Not in the lifetime of any
man who reads this paper has
there been so much grave and
deep apprehension; never has the
future seemed so dark and incal
culable.
- In France, the political cauldron
seethes and bubbles with uncer
tainty.
England and the English Empire
is being sorely tried and exhaust
ed in a social and economic strug
gle with turmoil at home and up
rising of her teeming millions in
her far-flung Indian Empire.
The United States is best with
racial, industrial and commercial
chaos—drifting, we know not
where.
Russia hangs like a storm cloud
on the horizon of Europe—dark
and silent. It is a solemn mo
ment, and no man can feel indif
ference, which happily no man pre
tends to feel in the issue of events.
Of our own trouble, no man can
see the end.”
—From Harper’s Magazine dated
October 10, 1847.
NEAT TRICK
People who think politicians
lead an easy life should try strad
dling a fence and keeping both
ears to the ground.
REV. HENRY E. HORN
ON LUTHERAN HOUR
The United Lutheran Hour will
present this Sunday, November 30,
The Rev. Henry E. Horn, Pastor
of the Lutheran Church of the
Resurrection, Augusta, Georgia,
over station WKDK, at 10:00 A.
M. The United Lutheran Hour is
a Series in The Protestant Hour
sponsored by t he Methodist,
Episcopal, Presbyterian, and Luth
eran Churches. The speaker for
this Sunday is the Rev. Horn
whose subject will be “Onlooker
or W’itness?”.
The Rev. Henry E. Horn receiv
ed his A.B. Degree from Cornell
University, and is a graduate of
the Lutheran Theological Semi
nary in Philadelphia. He has been
Pastor of Immanuel Lutheran
Church, Burholme, Philadelphia;
President of Marion College, Mar
ion, Va.; and at the present time
is Pastor of the Church of the Res
urrection, Augusta, Georgia. He
is Chairman of the Church Music
Committee of the UCLA and is on
the Board of Deaconess Work of
the ULCA. The Reverend Horn is
a member of the Board of Trust
ees of Newberry College.
What we want to know is,
should a girl in a strapless even
ing gown be called a bust-truster?
Dh in h it Over!
T HANKS, folks, for the great
interest shown in our Slo
gan Contest, which ended Sat
urday, Nov. 15. At the close
we had received a total of
SLOGANS I
While we have not yet com
pleted the indexing, and can
not tell you how many people
submitted entries, it will prob
ably run a couple of thousand
or so. A great many sent in
only one slogan, but there
were others whose entries ran
into the hundreds.
We have received many let
ters from folks telling us how
much they enjoyed trying, win
or lose, and we sincerely ap
preciate the time and efforts
of those who tried.
Announcement of the win
ners will be made in a state
wide broadcast at our Annual
Meeting in Spartanburg on
Thursday evening, December
18. The time of the broadcast
will be given here later.
PRESIDE!
CAPITAL LIFE AND HEALTH
INSURANCE COMPANY
COLUMBIA, S. C.
•-» \ v4* • mev
ONE GREA5
FOR ALL
*
I Lubr
■ GL at ■ It
V-> ■
«#*£»»
Sinclair
lubricate
or tractor..
With just one
litholine, you
chassis, whet
pumps, univt
of your car,
winter or
Farmers find it
job at eai
than the
FARM ADVANTAGES ot-a-glmcw
1. A finer grease at every point.
2. Less danger of applying the wrong greasa.
3. Quicker greasing operations.
4. Smaller grease stocks — one instead of 3 or 4.
5. Fewer grease guns.
6. Less waste.
We deliver direct to farms. Fhonm ur write us.
Strother C. Paysinger
Suppliers of Sinclair Prod.
Newberry, S. C.
.v.-r
Crystal Makes a Tinkly Christmas!
BY EDNA MILES
r PHE holidays always mean more parties, more dinners, more hos-
^ pitable gatherings for everyone. And this, in turn, means more
work for the housewife. It’s the season of the year in which she gets
out her best glassware, her fine linens and polishes up her good silver.
If you’re doing a great deal of entertaining this year, you might
prefer to leave your crystal packed away and depend upon modern,
moderately priced glassware. The latter will need only reasonable
care to keep it intact and sparkling . This means less work for you.
It also means that you can relax and enjoy your own parties.
To keep your inexpensive glassware shiny and bright during the
holidays, try these tips for its care:
Wash it in hot, not boiling, water. And never put glasses that have
just contained ice straight into hot water. Warm them gradually,
then give them a quick rinse under the cold water faucet. They’ll
sparkle anew.
Try adding a small amount of ammonia or detergent to the water
for a high shine. Then rinse the glasses in water of equal tempera
ture and air-dry with the rims down. If you do use soap, you should
towel the glasses dry.
It’s best to place a' rubber mat or towel in the bottom of the sink,
particularly if you’re washing stemware. Never crowd either the
sink or the drying rack. The rack should be rubber-covered. If you
haven’t a rack, place the glasses rim-down on a towel to dry.
You can clean sticky milk glasses by rinsing them in lukewarm
water before you wash them. Then use more lukewarm water softened
with soda to remove stubborn stains.
Often, glass dishes are stacked out in the kitchen during the rush
of the holidays. If this happens and if the dishes stick together, don’t
try to pry them apart. Instead put cold water in the inner glass and
bold the outer one in warm water. They’ll separate easily.
§||gppy
Informal table setting is very modern, is achieved with
glassware, inexpensive place mats and napkins. Flsv
is a budget-priced basket that can have many ..., r . r . T - nTI -
When you put glassware away, place the different sized pieces in
rows from front to back of the shelf. This way you need not bother "t
to reach over a low piece for a tall one. And never crowd glassware
when putting it away. Crowding can cause chipping or
GOLLY, MAW,
I'M TIRED
JOVK/J
>1
YOLfRE GETTING TO
THE AGE WHERE
YOU SHOULD
BEGIN TAKING
THINGS EASV.
paw;
LET YOUR HIRED MEN
DO MORE OF THE
WORK AND GIVE
YOURSELF SDME
LEISURE TIME.'
THAT
WOULD BE
SWELL
FOR. ME!
BUT YOU HA/E NOBODY
TO HELP WITH OH,
YOUR work; j—’Y DON’T
WORRY
ABOUT
THAT/
F v P
WITH YOUR EXTRA
TIME YOU’LL BE
TO HELP ME!
mm
we your
favorite
% " N ,V
youngster the
Christmas gift
that EARNS!
...
tafU
, Do you have a little one of your own-—or a favorite niece or gran
Of course you'll want to give her the toys that mean so much at
mas. But this year give her another gift too ... A Savings Account
will go on earning interest until she's fully grown.
She'll love her toys now. But in years to come slie'll love you
- ;•/ , .tgjggr
thoughtfulness which provided her with this
Make a Chnstmas-shopping stop at the bank and
ful possibilities of Savings Accounts as
• »
. *-V
-V- - ■
C.-. '.•«$&
ft
, v *.Y
-v •• -
. ’:v,v
. • ^ ■
■« ' *
‘
Along with Santa, we hope you are one of the happy ones to
CHRISTMAS SAVINGS CLUB CHECK from the SOUTH
NATIONAL BANK, which will be mailed this week and
December l5t.
We are proud of our CHRISTMAS SAVINGS CLUB this year,
it is the largest one in membership and amount of money involved
we began this service in 1932.
REMEMBER our new club for the year of 1953
December 1st.
We welcome all our regular members back, and invite you to
and join our CHRISTMAS CLUB for 1953.
I'
pgls