The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, December 26, 1952, Image 2
PAGE TWO
THE NEWBERRY SUN
FRIDAY DECEMBER 26, 1952
X/fANY HOLIDAY ideas are
1VJ very simple in their thought
and may be made at home with
almost no expense whatsoever. Try
some of these which will give
holiday greetings:
Christmas cookies for the young
sters who come to call can be
wrapped individually in gay tissue
paper and placed in a drum at a
hall table. Make the drum out of
a cardboard carton and cover with
striped paper.
• These make attractive orna
ments for thp tree plus giving
cheer to those who come to call.
Wrap small pieces of your own
fruit cake in metallic paper and
tie with ribbon to boughs of the
Christmas tree.
If you’re giving aprons away,
which you’ve sewed yourself, wrap
the package in the same material
in which the apron was made and
use as ribbon whatever was used
for trimming.
Knitted presents can be wrapped
m tissue paper (white) and may be
tied with the various colored bits
of yam which were used for
knitting.
RECIPE OF THE WEEK
Green Christmas Salad
(Serves 6-8)
1 package lime-flavored gela
tin
1 cup boiling water
% cup orange juice
1 cup orange sections
1 unpeeled red apple, cut ?n
strips
2 cups cottage cheese
Lettuce or other greens
Make wool snowballs out of white
felt if you have some around and
use these for tying to bright red or
green ribbon in bows on presents.
Dissolve gelatin in boiling water.
' Add orange juice. Chill until thick
and syrupy. Gently fold in orange
sections and apple strips. Spoon in- j
to molds. When firm, unmold in a
circle on lettuce. Serve cottage
cheese in center, with soured
cream or salad dressing.
Socks for the fireplace may be
made out of bright red or green
quilted chintz or from felt. For
decorations, sew on bells, sequins
or paste on the name, also cut
from felt.
GRASS & CLOVER
IS BREAD A MEAT
Growing grass and clover to
gether is a bread and meat propo
sition. The grass is the bread to
the animals and the clover is the
meat. This is true, since grass is
high in carbohydrates, and clover
is high in proteins.
“There are two main reasons,’’
says T. B. Amis, Work Unit Con
servationist, Soil Conservation Ser
vice, “for growing a legume with
grass. One is to supply nitrogen
to the grass. The other one is to
give a better ‘ balanced feed rich
in both protein and carbohy
drates.”
A good balance of grass and
clover is desirable because it re
duces the danger of bloating of the
animals.
A summary of research results
recently released from the Missi
ssippi Experiment Station states
that at least 50 percent by weight
of grass is necessary to give rea
sonable protection from bloat in a
grass-clover pasture. This is the
practical answer to bloat control,
the research summary states. Re
search information at this station
also indicates that tall fescue, due
to its fibruous nature and its
growth characteristics, appears to
be the best grass for bloat control
in this area.
To have a balanced feed, accord
ing to Mr. Amis, you must have
a balance between grass and
clover. “If you slice your meat too
thick and your bread too thin, it
might make you sick,” he says. In
order to get this balance, he
thinks fescue should be sown at
a rate of about one pound per acre.
The fescue should be planted by
“If Ladino clover is seeded at
rate, it should give about fifty-
balance between grass and
if good management
practices are observed.”
When mowing is done for weed
control, the grass should be
ped about four inches high,
enables the grass to come baflk
better than closer clipping, and the
grass helps prevent bloat, accord
ing to Mississippi Experiment Sta
tion Research.
Fescue and sericea can be
grown together. Sericea is a non-
bloating legume. This makes a
good soil conserving combination
and also reduces the bloat haz
ard. Sericea can be planted on
land that is usually not suited for
cultivation but land that needs
cover.
and clover are in many
planted on lowlands not
for cultivation. Either corn-
decreases erosion where-
ever planted on sloping land.
IE, T. B. Amis, local technician of
the Soil Conservation Service, re-
that farmers cooperating
the Newberry County Soil
District have plant-
acres of permanent win-
thttf fall.
THAT IMMORTAL CHRISTMAS
ESSAY—YES, VIRGINIA
“Yes, indeed!
“Virginia, your little friends are
wrong. They have been affected
by the skepticism of a skeptical
age—they do not believe except
what they see--they think that
nothing can be which is not com
prehensible by their little minds.
“All minds, Virginia, whether
they be mens or children’s are
little.
“In this great universe of ours,
man is a mere insect, an ant, in
his intellect, as compared with the
boundless world about him, as
measured by the intelligence cap
able of grasping the whole of
truth and knowledge.
“Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa
Glaus.
“He exists as certainly as love
and generosity and devotion ex
ist, and you know that they
abound and give to your life its
highest beauty and joy. Alas!
how dreary would be the world
if there were no Santa Claus!
It would be as dreary as if there
were no Virginias. There would
be no childlike faith then, no
poetry, no romance to make toler
able this existence. We should
have no enjoyment, except in
sense and sight. The eternal light
which childhood fills the world
would be extinguished.
“Not believe in Santa Claus!
You might as well not believe in
fairies!
“You might get your papa to
hire men to watch in all the
chimneys on Christmas Eve to
catch Santa Claus, but if they did
not see Santa Clau& coming down,
what would that prove? Nobody
sees Santa Claus, but that is no
sign that there is no Santa
Claus—the most real things in the
world are those neither children
nor men can see.
“Did you ever see fairies danc
ing on the lawn? Of course not,
but that’s no proof that they are
not there — nobody can conceive
or imagine all the wonders that
are unseen and unseeable in the
world.
“You tear apart the baby’s rat
tle and see what makes the noise
in side, but there is a veil cover
ing the unseen world which not the
strongest man, or even the united
strength of all the strongest men,
that ever lived, could tear apart.
Only faith, fancy, poetry, love, ro
mance, can push aside the curtain
and view and picture the supernal
beauty and glory beyond.
“Is it all real?—ah, Virginia, in
all this world there is nothing
else real and abiding. No Santa
Claus!
“Thank God!—he lives, and he
lives forever—a thousand years
from now, Virginia, nay, ten thou
sand years from now, he will con
tinue to make glad the heart of
childhood.”
NOTICE
CITY TAXES
All unpaid 1951 taxes will go in
execution on January 1,1953.
Penalties will be added to all un
paid 1952 taxes on January 1,1953.
Taxpayers are urged to pay
before January 1,1953
and avoid additional costs.
CITY OF NEWBERRY
y
1952
TAX NOTICE
f ,
After the close
of business on
January 2,1953
A ONE
PERCENT
PENALTY
will be added
to all
unpaid 1952
State and County
Taxes
s -
J. Ray Dawkins
Treasurer
Deed Transfers
Newberry No. 1
James Richard Williams to Ro
land C. Williams, Albert Williams
and Roand W. Wiliams, one lot
and one biuding, 1517 Drayton
street, $2700.
Bessie Thrift to Leone F. Thrift
one lot and one building, (her
undivided interest in P. B. Thrift,
estate), $5.00, love and affection
R. Derrill Smith and Son, Inc.,
to Mrs. Julia M. Smith, one lot
100’x330’ on Mower street, $500.
Julia M. Smith to Felix B. Green
Jr., one lot 100’x330’ on Mower
street, $10.00 and other considera
tions.
E. R. McConnell to LeVerne K.
Barker, one lot 75’xl63’ and one
building on Evans street, $8000.
Agnes McSwain Wallace, Earle
•P. Adams and Bernice P. Mc-
Crackin to Edson J. Gatlin, one
lot and one building, 2310 Main
street, $9000.
James Richard Clary and Estelle
Caldwell Clary to Robert Stutts,
one lot 87’xl75’ on Luther street,
(part of Reeder lot), $500.
L. G. McCullough to M. A. Mc
Cullough, 2740 Cheshire Bridge
Road, Atlanta, Ga., one lot and
one building, (His interest in pro
perty on Harrington street, 107’
x210’—Jane Knight Estate), ,$5.00
and other considerations.
Newberry No. 1 Outside
Robert B. Kennedy to M. O.
Mayer and Kathryn Mayer, 130
and 20 acres, $6000.
A. H. Shaw to Frank B. Hendrii
and Anna B. Hendrix, one lot and
one building, 2805 Clyde Avenue
Oakland Mill Village, $5000.
Hal Kohn, Sr. to Maggie White-
ner, one lot 100’x267.9’ (Part of
Frank Hunter property), and one
building, $3795.
R. E. Summer to Felix B. Green,
Jr. 2.54 acres, $10.00 and other
valuable considerations.
John A. Sligh, the younger, to
Robert Stutts, one lot, contains
one-half acre, $50.
■to ■
Minni'^npi j *
Roses To
Again at this season of the year we wish to voice our gratitude to our
friends whom it is our privilege to serve.
We esteem the continued patronage of our customers—-and the con-
fidence manifested in us by so many of y6u Newberrians. !
May we say in all sincerity that it ever shall be our desire to foster
the kindly relations which exist between us, and we believe no more
fitting demonstration of our attitude can be made than to rededicate; our
selves to the cause of quality, keep our standards high and strive to
t | I ' • ,' " ' J;.- ■ 1 » ■
merchandise our store so that you may always be better served.
For Expert Repair Bring
Your Radio and Television
GEO. N. MARTIN
Radio and Television
Service * i
SALES and SERVICE 7
BOYCE STREET
Opposite County Library
24 HOUR SERVICE
Telephone 311
- ■ ; £| a
- ■ ? - “W'V; • ‘'KJ6&4E
'
Carpenter’s
Jfelf
m
i-y
iH
Jr - ■ +•!.’ ■■
li
"c.. v
.fmmm
' *' ■
■' - ’ yi r y ■
H ow would you like the fun of
Christmastime to last all the year
through?
That’s the way it seems to be when you ,
call this Buick beauty your own—what
with the constant cheer it brings to you
week after week, month after month.
The cheer of traveling in style that’s
bright and gay as a. holiday wrapping.
The cheer of having rich and spacious
comfort — plus the cheery thought that
nowhere else can you get as much room
for the money.
The cheer of knowing abundant and
mighty able power is on call, with all
the solid thrift of a Fireball 8 Engine
Eater GENERAL MOTORS $194,000 BETTS* HIGHWAYS
that’s valve-in-head — and also high-
compression.
The cheer of riding wonderfully buoy
ant^ level and steady—with a ride that
feels Idee the million dollars it cost to
perfect.
The cheer of taking your travel free and
easy—with Dynaflow Drive* doing the
chores in letter-perfect smoothness —
with Power Steering** assisting to
make parking and slow-motion maneu
vers no task at all.
Even the price is a cheerful note here
—low enough, you’ll find, to crowd the
so-named “low-price three.”
That means action is called for this very
Ymvr Bmiek Docdw for conterf blank* and TUI
while it lasts.
Why not drop in today or
see how much cheer is t<
Buick showroom right now?
Equipment, access ories, trim
to change without notice. *Standar<t on
optional at extra cost on other Series,
extra cost on Roadmaster and Super only.
-
it*.
UK.
* ■ -. -i ' .*
i ; • ■*' . - ,Y
r-; »-•••••.
m
■
'iiSS
’ i