The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, January 02, 1953, Image 3
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FRIDAY, JANUARY 2, 1953
THE NEWBERRY SUN
PAGE THREE
RECENT TRANSFERS
OF REAL ESTATE
Newberry No. 1 Outside
Troy E. Elrod to Walton R. El
rod, one lot and one building, $500.
Lamon W. Ruff to L. L. Cul-
clasure, one lot (Lot with store
house) 60*xl09.8' on Player street
Extension, and one building, $1,-
900.
Robert E. Bartley to John Har
vey Amick, one lot 50’x415’ on
Glenn street Extension, $5.00.
John Harvey Amick to William
H. Barnette, one lot 50’x415’ on
Glenn street Extension, $5.00.
WJlliam H. Barnette to Robert
E. Bartley, one lot 50’x415’ on
Glenn street Extension, $5.00.
Marion Daniel Paysinger to
Charley Wilson one lot, .52 of an
acre, $500.
Andrew Caldwell to Alma Domi
nick, one acre, $225.
John A. Nichols to John R.
Frazier, 83.63 acres, $9800.
Bush River No. 3
James Matterson Ownbey to
Tillman E. Crapps and Mary Own
bey Crapps, 52.2 acres, $400.
Whitmire No. 4 Outside
E. Maxcy Stone, Probate Judge,
to Elmer R. Baker, 25 acres, (Mrs.
May E. Wicker Estate), $1650.
Whitmire No. 4
E. Maxcy Stone, Probate Judge
to Newberry Federal Savings and
Loan Association, one lot (Thomas
Ackers estate property), $1500.
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•■X--
TUSSY
WIND AND WEATHER LOTION
•4
s
regular *1 size
Handy Family Carton-
Six—$1 size bottles
now only $3
<0ji£cud^a&
large *2 size
now only
$ 1
At this special price
...put away a year’s
supply! Lavish it from
head to heel! Pink, fra
grant, creamy...it helps
protect against weather irri
tation... makes hands, elbows,
heels, legs feel silken soft.
TUSSY
WIND & WEATHER CREAM
regular $2 size, now only $]25
Especially created for those who prefer a hand creatn
. with
all the wonderful skin beautifying properties of the lotion! >».■•
LIMITED TIME ONLY all prices plus tax
Carpenter's
Mr. 4* represents the
Jefferson
Standard
Jefferson Standard, now
guaranteeing 2Vi% on
P olicies currently issued,
as never paid less than
4% interest on policy pro
ceeds left on deposit to
provide income. 4% IS
THE HIGHEST RATE
OF INTEREST PAID
BY ANY MAJOR LIFE
INSURANCE COM
PANY.
COMPARE!
Jefferson Standard’s investment rec
ord is outstanding in the life insur
ance industry. Expert management
makes every investment dollar yield
its greatest safe return. Our excel
lent interest return has made it pos
sible to provide greatly increased
income dollars to the policyholder
or beneficiary. Contact your Jeffer
son Standard agent. Let him show
you how you can get more for your
money.
Your Mr. 4% is:
A. T. NEELY, Jr.
1226 Calhoun St.
Representing—
JEFFERSON STANDARD
LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Oyer One Billion Dollars
Life Insurance in force
Special Rep.
Phone 274
II
COMPARE!
see how you can
get more income
Most people buy life insurance to provide
income, and Mr. 4% shows how Jefferson
Standard gives you exactly that — more in-
come — more for your money!
$16,660 life insurance on a 4% interest basis
will give your wife $100 a month income for
20 years ... on a 2V2 % interest basis you
would have to purchase $18,960 life in
surance or $2,300 more.
For 44 years Jefferson Standard Life In
surance policies have never paid less than
4% interest income on policy proceeds left
with the company.
EASY
HEIEK RALE
After buying new tinware for
the kitchen, grease it very slightly
and warm slowly without burning
in your oven. It will not rust so
easily later on.
New ironware should be greased
with mutton tallow and heated
slowly before you start using It.
Ironware is best dried in an
open oven or on top, so that it can
dry slowly. Then it will not rust.
Egg beaters should never be
soaked. This loosens the cogs and
makes them give less wear than
is intended. Dry them as soon as
you finish washing.
Tea and coffee pots should be
left open when they’re not in use
so they cannot acquire a musty
odor.
Steel knives are best scorned
with a fine cleansing powder and a
large enough cork. Fine steel wool
may also be used. Scouring uten
sils should be damp rather than
wet.
This Week’s Pattern
RECIPE OF THE WEEK
Spanish Spice Cake
(Makes 1 loaf)
2 cups sifted flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon cinnamon
Vi cup shortening
1 cup brown sugar, firmly
packed
2 eggs v
ft cup cold strong coffee
Mix and sift together flour,
baking powder and cinnamon.
Cream shortening well with
sugar; blend in eggs, one at a
time. Add flour alternately with
coffee, beating well after each
addition. Turn into a well
greased loaf (8 x 8 x 1% W ) and
bake in a moderate (350° F.) ov
en until done, about 45 minutes.
Rather than tacking oilcloth or
plastic material to your kitchen
table tops, it's best to glue or
paste it on. It stays on better
without slipping and there are no
holes in it to cut down wear
Clean your tarnished copper and
brass utensils and accessories
with a cut piece of lemon over
which has been placed some salt.
Pewter can be cleaned most easily
with boiling water and soapsuds.
Black specks on silverware can
be cleaned with a paste of whit>
ing, which is free from grit, mixed
with olive oil Polish with a soft
cloth.
STRICTLY FRESH
TyroW that most everyone has
forgotten about the election,
we can reveal that General Mac-
Arthur did not vote He had not
registered. But Ike won anyway!
* • •
First v/eekly paper to support
Lincoln for presidency died elec
tion eve after 105 years publish
ing. At that age it just couldn’t
stand the shock of GOP winning
after all these years.
I Robber who read no newspapers
{confessed to 24-year-old murder,
•was told his “victim” is alive. Bet
he reads the papers now!
BOYS ARE
THAT WAY
By J. M. ELEAZER
No. S4SS Is sat Is slses IS to SO; M to
SO. 81so 18, 4 yds. SO-ta.
No. S777 Is oat Is slses t, 4, S, 8. Slse 4,
STS yds. SB-in. (Doll patters inel.)
Send Me for EACH pattern with name,
address, style asmber and slse to
AUDREY LANE BUREAU, Box S60.
Madison Sqaare Station New York 10.
N. Y. Tho now Fall-WIntor Fashion
Book shows 100 other stylos. Me extra.
Our great Christmas season
ended with New Year’s Day.
After a week of good living and
wonderful fellowship, with kind
red in from everywhere, we wound
things up with New Year’s Day.
That usually saw a turkey shoot
down in the pasture. That night
men with muskets prepared them
with their choicest loads. Each
had some secret about how much
powder he used, how hard he
packed it and the wadding used,
or just how he loaded the shot in
and padded them down. And he
wouldn’t let you see him load his
gun either. It was the same with
those who had the new breech
loaders that used shells. They
loaded their own shells, and used
them over and over.
The chances for a shot for a
turkey cost 10 cents each. It
took about a dozen to make up the
value of the turkey, all they were-
seeking. Each man’s name was
written on his target, a piece of
white paper about 6 inches square
with a cross mark clear across it.
The fellow who put a shot nearest
where those two lines crossed got
the turkey. And the fellow who
won a turkey or two was a hero
for a time in those parts.
One of our gang, who was
quite a hunter, once mustered up
a dime from somewhere and took
a shot. To the delight of the rest
of us kids, he won the choicest
bird of the day! As he walked
away with a turkey so big he
could hardly carry it, an envious
man he had beaten was heard to
mutter, “Kids haven’t got any
business down here, and specially
with that little old choked gun.’
Sidney G. Nelson and Catherine
F. Nelson to Robert S. Nelson,
one lot and one building, 1139
Reed Avenue, $750 and other valu
able considerations.
Leroy Yarbrough and Lillian E.
Yarbrough to Henry B. Cabanis,
one lot and one building, 201
Washington street, $4750.
Pomaria No. 5
T. H. Shealy to Norma S. Ept-
ing, one lot 44’x532\ $5.00 love
and affection.
Little Mountain No. 6
William Harold Bishop to Ern
est Edward Lindler, 26.9 acres,
$22 .
Prosperity No. 7
Von Long to Jacob A. Bowers,
one lot and one building, $11000.
Pomaria No. 5
John W. Bobb to Mrs. Anna
Wicker, one half acre, $15.00 (This
deed was made in June of 1930
and recorded on December 12,
1952).
John Coleman Store to Eliza
beth Ringer Stone, 72.84 acres,
(one half undivided interest), $5.00,
love and affection.
H. C. Wicker to Victory Bap
tist Church, one lot SOO’xlSO’ on
Highway 176, $5.00.
Prosperity No. 7
C. L. Wilson to Cora Lee Sease.
one lot and one building, contains
one-half acres, grantor to pay all
unpaid taxes to January 1, 1953).
$2500.
E. Maxcy Stone, Probate Judge
of Newberry County, to Esper Ben
son, 11.6 acres, $275.
E. Maxcy Stone, Probate Judge
of Newberry County, to Horace
Dennis, two acres, $675.
Newberry County Board of Edu
cation to Boyd’s Lumber Company,
four acres, $1075.
P. Claud Singley, Receiver The
Bank of Prosperity, to Mrs. Nannie
Morris Sanford, 13.35 acres,
$421.64.
Prosperity No. 7
Nannie Morris Sanford to Mable
G. Lipscomb, 130.50 acres, $5.00
and other valuable considerations.
OUTSTANDING . . . Oklahoma
halfback Billy Vessels, leading
scorer In the Big Seven, was
named the winner of the Heis-
man trophy as the outstanding
college football player of 1952.
The trophy Is an award of the
New York Downtown Athletic
Club.
All in the Game:
B ILLY MEYER, former man
ager of the Pittsburgh Pirates,
had a jieart attack recently in his
room in a Phoenix, Ariz., hotel,
and was rushed to a hospital .
The major leagues ended their
joint meeting recently with legis
lation aimed at preventing the
New York Yankees from grabbing
National League players for late
season pennant drives . . . Don
Hurst, 47, once a Chicago Cubs
first baseman, died recently in
Los Angeles after an illness of
several months ... Vic Seixas of
Philadelphia whipped Australia’s
tennis ace Frank Sedgipan recent
ly in Melbourne to win the Vic
torian tennis championship . . .
The college of William and Mary
announced recently that It is se
vering all athletic relations with
the University of Virginia
Virginia has been W&M’s greatest
rival . . . Argentina defeated Spain
1-0 recently in soccer in Madrid
before 85,000 spectators . . . The
U. of Maryland student newspaper
took the university president to
task for criticizing the coach.
FOR ALL '
Lubrication lobs!
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 1 ’ greases
they formerly used.
FARM ADVANTAGES ot-o-glance:
1. A finer grease at every point.
2. Less danger of applying the wrong grease.
3. Quicker greasing operations.
4. Smaller grease ‘locks — one instead of 3 Of 4.
5. Fewer guns
6. Less wasle.
*
Wd deliver direct, io
rS
Strother C. Paysinger
Suppliers of Sinclair Prod.
Newberry, S. C.
Line That IsnT There Gives
North America a Third Coast
A CROSS the breadth of North
America runs an invisible line.
Its ends dip into Atlantic and Pa
cific. It ties two nations together,
mixes up their geography, and
gives the continent a “third
coast.” * 4
The line is Uncle Sam’s 3,986-
mile international boundary with
Canada.
Usually thought of as a land
frontier, actually the Canadian
border is wetter than it is dry,
the National Geographic Society
says. Winding from Grand Manan
Channel off the coast of Maine to
the straits south of Vancouver Is
land, the line crosses 2,198 miles of
water to only 1,788 miles of dry
land.
Since the American Revolution
this boundary, drawn originally
through unsettled wilderness, has
never brought an appeal to force.
It stands today as the longest un
fortified frontier in the world.
At the eastern end of the line,
however, a little-remembered dis
pute nearly precipitated a war
with Great Britain in 1839. The
issue was the “St. Croix River”
specified in the original border
treaty. Partisans claimed different
rivers were the St. Croix.
Acadian axemen crossed over in
to Maine to chop its towering pines,
and New Brunswick tried to col
lect taxes from the territory- Maine
marched 12 companies of militia
north through deep show to stand
glowering guard over its rights.
This bloodless “Aroostook War”
was settled finally by compromise
in 1842’s Webster - Ashburton
Treaty. Later, it was revealed that
the United States held two maps
backing up Britain’s claims to
Maine territory, and the British
Foreign Office had a secret map
proving Maine’s claim to 5,500
square miles of New Brunswick.
As it was drawn, the compromise
line makes a cape named West
Quoddy Head the easternmost point
of land in the United States.
Maine’s northernmost town, still
called Township 20, can be reached
by road only by way of Canada,
and includes houses split through
the front parlor by the boundry.
Because Benjamin Franklin,
John Jay, and John Adams didn’t
know where the Mississippi Hiver
began, there is a 130-square-mile
chunk of U. S. territory north of
Minnesota’s mainland that is com
pletely surrounded by water and
Canada. This “Northwest Angle,”
hitched to Manitoba, is cut off from
the rest of Minnesota by waters of
the Lake of the Woods.
Spoilsmen
don't do
this
- -..y ■
.-.a,
" Win
why do
this?
One untended campfire can bum a forest. One
carelessly dropped cigarette or match can send
flames across thousands of acres, ruining fishing
and hunting for hundreds of sportsmen. If you
like to hunt, use common sense. Be careful with
fire in the woods. Keep Your State Green!
.
m
Fairfield Forest Products
Company