The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, December 31, 1953, Image 6
PAGE SIX
THE NEWBERRY SUN
THURSDAY, DEC. 31, 1953
THE BAFFLES
WHY-HERMAN BLOOKY.y Hl-YA SERF.'
WHAT ARE i—OH-I GOTTA
doing now l A^^iKgood JOB
By Mahoney
I'M NOW THE WINDOW WASHER
ON OUR NEW SKYSCRAPER
AND ALSO A STEEPLEJACK.
GOSH-1 COULD
NEVER DO A
THING UKE
Carolina
Remnant Shop
Criskay
Linen
Prints
Nylon
Chambray
Denim
Dotted Swiss
Taffetas
Crinkle Cloth
Crib Sheets
Drapery
Curtain Material
Organdy
Rayons
ALL AT POPULAR PRICES
FIRST QUALITY
WEEKEND SPECIAL
All wool 54” tubular Jersey, assorted
colors. Ideal for dresses and stoles.
I
j
1 ‘ i:
TAX NOTICE
After the close
of business on
January 2, 1954
A ONE
PER CENT
PENALTY
will be added
to all
unpaid 1953
State and County
Taxes
J. Ray Dawkins
Treasurer
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SIAMESE TWINS LIVE . . . Cleveland, Ohio’s Siamese twins. Identified only as Nancy (left) and
Ellen, are only such twins In medical history to survive one year after separation. Nancy and Ellen
weigh 18 pounds apiece.
Prosperity Items
Holiday guest^ of Mrs. J. A.
Sease were Major and Mrs. G. A.
Sease and their three children of
Columbia; Elton C. Sease and
Johnny Sease of Columbia; Lt. El
ton C. Sease of Marianna, Fla.;
Mrs. T. M. Sease and children and
Mr. and Mrs. John Dairs of Clin
ton; Mr. and Mrs. Herman Rich
ardson and their son Rick of Co
lumbia; Ralph E. Sease and Mrs.
James Shannon and two children
of Savannah, Ga.
Mr.‘ and Mrs. W. H. Leaphart,
Sr. and their daughter, Miss Doro
thy Leaphart spent the holiday
weekend with the Ted Jameses at
Taylors.
Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Hendrix,
Miss Anne Hendrix and Billy Hen
drix spent Christmas Day with rel
atives in Columbia and Lexington.
Col. and Mrs. Frank Bradley of
Washington, D. C. spent Christ
mas holidays with Mrs. Bradley’s
parents, Dr. and Mrs. George W.
Harmon.
Mrs. Gurdon Counts and her
two sons, Gurdon Wright and
Richard spent the weekend in
Greenwood with Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Reagin.
Mrs. J. S. Wheeler and Jake
Wheeler spent Christmas Day in
Anderson and the weekend in
Charlotte. Miss Margaret Wheeler
of Charlotte came home with her
grandmother for a week’s visit.
Mr. and Mrs. William Ross and
their three children of Pensacola,
Fla. have been visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Ross’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
W. C. Barnes and Mrs. J. E. Ross.
Misses Susie and Mary Lang
ford spent Christmas Day and
night with Mr. and Mrs. John
Langford and family in Camden.
With Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Mills
for the holidays are James Mills
of the U. of S. C.; Mr. and Mrs.
S. C. Brissie and their two sons,.
George and Robert, of Woodruff;
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bedenbaugh and
their daughter Linda of Lexington.
Mr. and Mrs. John Schrum and
their daughters Harriette and
Johnny of Lincolnton, N. C. spent
Sunday with Mrs. Schrum’s moth
er, Mrs. E. O. Counts.
Frank C. Wise, Jr., of Atlanta,
Ga. is visiting in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Pat E. Wise.
Mr .and Mrs. W. E. Hancock
have returned home from a visit
with Mr. Hancock’s brother, D. C.
Hancock and family in Trilby,
Fla.
Mrs. Bernice D. Bjonerud of
Wilmington, N. C. spent last week
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T.
A. Dominick.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Price of
Cheraw are spending the holidays
with Mrs. Price’s mother, Mrs. R
W. Pugh. With Mrs. Pugh for
Christmas weekend were Mr. and
1953 DOCTOR
Dr. Joseph
Greeuwell, 80, of New Haven, Ky.
was named “family doctor of
1953“ by American Medical As
sociation. He’s practiced 53 years
and delivered 4,300 babies.
Mrs. Carl Russell Caughman and
their son. Rusty, of Orangeburg.
Mrs. L. J. Fellers, Quay Fellers,
and Miss Rosa Mae Mitchell spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Wise in Winnsboro.
Mrs. • E. B. Smith and her two
children Betty and Edgar and Rev.
A. D. Woodle of McRae, Ga., are
visiting Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Hen
drix and Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Chap
pell.
Mrs. J. E. Ross had with her
for Christmas aVid the weekend
Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Fermenter and
their three children; Mr. and Mrs.
John Roesel, and Mr. and Mrs.
Walker Ross, all of Atlanta, Ga.,
and Miss Laura Hillhouse of New
berry.
Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Barnes
and their tw r o children of Colum
bia were holiday guests of Mr.
Barnes’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
W. C. Barnes.
Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Eargle
spent last week with their son-in-
law and daughter Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Jacob and children in Paris,
Tenn. Mr. and Mrs. Elton Epting
and their small son, and Mrs.
Harold Epting and her daughter,
Hope went to Paris, Tenn., for the
Christmas weekend and all of
them came home Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Young spent
several days the first of the week
with Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Richards
in Heath Springs.
Mrs. Leslie Mills had with her
for Christmas weekend her grand
mother and mother, Mrs. Tedder
and Mrs. Bath of Georgetown. .
Miss Kathryn Pugh of Colum
bus, Ga. and Mr. and Mrs. James
Arthur Bedenbaugh and their two
children, Jimmy and Ann of
Laurens spent the holiday week
end with Mrs. R. T. Pugh. On
Saturday, Miss Pugh, Mrs. Pugh,
Ann went to Charlotte to see Mrs.
Curtis Pugh, who is recuperating
irom a recem operation.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Darlington
of Mayesville, Kentucky, were
guests of Misses Susie and Mary
uangford last Sunday.
Little Miss Linda Pugh is
spending a few days with her
cousin, Anne Bedenbaugh, in
Laurens.
Mrs. Rufus I. Long has had with
her .for the holiday season Mrs.
Emma Dudis of Dayton, Ohio; Mr.
and Mrs. Boyd Long of Meggett;
Capt. Verta Ruth Long of Fort
Jackson.
A-2C Bale A. Eargle of Irmo
visited his uncle and aunt, Mr.
and Mrs. E. G. Eargle recently,
befoire he leaves for overseas
duty.
Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Smith of
Jacksonville, Fla. and Dr. and
Mrs. D. A. White and their son
Wesley of Roanoke, Va. spent the
Christmas holidays with tfieir par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Saner.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Webster and
their little daughter Lois, of
Florence spent Saturday and Sun
day with Mrs. Webster’s mother,
Mrs. Byrd Gibson and Mr. Gib
son.
Mr. and Mrs. D. O. Rudisill and
their daughter Patsy of Cherry-
ville, N. C. were Christmas Day
.guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. Walter
Hamm. The Hamms accompanied
the Rudisills home for a few days’
visit.
Col. and Mrs. George S. Wise
and their son Spence of Columbia
visited relatives in Prosperity dur
ing the holiday weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Shearouse of
Highlands, N. C. and Lt. Frank
Reid Shearouse of the U. S. Air
Force of Albuquerque, New Mexico
have been visiting in the home of
Mrs. O. B. Shearouse. With Mrs.
Shearouse Christmas Day were
her daughter, Mrs. J. T. Martin
and her two sons. Jack and James
• v
iy
, PET PEEVE
3* 70. Scott
npHE STORY I read the other
* day set me to doing a lot of
thinking.
It was one of these forecast
deals, you know, where the writer
gives us a preview of what the
world will be like a hundred or
so years from now.
As this fellow saw It, there will
come a time when we no longer
have feet. That’s right, no feet.
The appendages upon which we
now rely so heavily to take us to
the dinner table and out to the
garage where we step into the car
—they just disappear because, by
that time, we will have ceased to
use them for anything at all
Now, this idea fascinates me
Ol course, as this writer foresees
things, we will push back our
chair from the coffee cups and
toast, press a little button, and
the chair glides smoothly into the
blue yonder, settling down in front
of the office desk. Fascinating,
isn’t it?
But, this Is not the best part of
it for me. Living on the second
floor of a three-story apartment
building, as I do, one gets to the
eventual opinion that feet are the
first thing that should be done
away with, come any kind of a
revolution.
The wife and I have ‘•pet’’
names for the feet upstairs The
worst are the “get-up” feet, which
start at the crack of dawn, are
hesitant, faltering, and seem to
wander all through the house, kick-
>ng over chairs or baby toys that
ring and rattle. Next are the »‘wa-
ter” feet, which never come at
a certain time, other than between
11 p.m and 4 a.m.
Watch And
Jewelry Repairs
BROADUS LIPSCOMB
WATCHMAKER
2309 Johnstone' Street
We Can Know
Jesus as Well as
His Friends Did
t>EADING the pages of the Gos-
^ pels, we can perhaps become
nore familiar with Jesus than
were His friends.
For we can learn from what
the writers learned—but learned
late and not until their Master
was about to die, or after His
resurrection.
Almost to the very last the
chosen Twelve were quarreling
about place and preferment.
Even at the Last Supper in the
Upper Room Jesus had still to
teach them the lesson of humility
and service by washing their feet.
It seems rerrtarkable that those
chosen by Jesus, men of initia
tive, intelligence and daring,
should so seriously have failed to
grasp His teaching and under
stand His mission and purpose.
Their hearts and wills were in
the right place, but their minds
were blinded by the intensity of
their ambition and their vision of
glory in an earthly kingdom.
They did not understand Him
when He said, “My kingdom is
not of this world.”
But in the aftermath they un
derstood, as the Comforter
brought to their remembrance all
that Jesus was, said and did.
Under that spiritual guidance and
remembrance they became what
Jesus had intended.
It was John, whose mother had
asked preferment for him and
who had thereby aroused the in
dignation of his brethren, who
was to express evidence of the
effectiveness and power of the
Gospel:
“We know that we have passed
from death unto life, because we
love the brethren.”
We have the advantage of
knowing the Master as John first
knew Him, but also as John came
to know Him with the fullness of
love and insight.
Vic Vet jays
Y ONE COURSE CHANGE,
it’s possible FOR veter-
THE KOREA 61 BILL ALLOTS
ONLY
BUT
ANS TO SHIFT FROM ONE
BACHELOR'S PE6REE TO
ANOTHER WITHOUT ITS
COUNTING AGAINST THEM.
1 ■
For foil information contact year nearest
VETERANS ADMINISTRATION oMea
AT LOMINICK’S
DRUG STORE
PRESCRIPTIONS PILLED
BY LICENSED
DRUGGIST
PRESCRIPTIONS ARE
CALLED FOR
AND DELIVERED
PHONE 981
l. The only crime defined In the U.8. Constitution Is <») »■**
der; (b) treason; (o) avariciousness.
Z. Deference is another word for (a) Indifference; (b) over*
bearing; (c) general respect.
3. How many people were killed in the^world’s worst railway
disaster—(a) 354; (b) 190; (c) 521?
ANSWERS
•twi ‘Arm «n *us •*
taadaaj 'Z
nos«aj£ *X
Sheet Metal Contractor—Heating—*Air Conditioning
CAROLINA METAL WORKS
College Street Extension
A. G. McCaughrin, Pres. & Treas. Phone 115
of Laurens.-
With Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Bal-
lentine some time during the holi
days were Mr. and Mrs. David
Lee and two children; Mr. and
Mrs. Furman Ballentine afid chil
dren of Greenville; Mr. and Mrs.
R. W. Ballentine, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Cumculander, Miss Eva
Cumulander, and Mr. and Mrs. Ed
ward Sites' of Chapin.
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Williams and
Mrs. H. P. Wicker spent Christmas
Day with Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Long in Saluda.
Mr. and Mrs. Willie Ruff, Mrs.
Sally Ruff and Miss Effie Ruff of
Princeton spent Saturday < -'With
Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Hamm, Sr. The
Hamms and the Ruffs went to
Florence Sunday to visit relatives.
Mr. and Mrs! B. C. Pressley of
Sumter were recent guests of Mrs.
A. B. Hunt and Mrs. Frances
Spotts.
M
Notice
The Following Stores
Will Be Closed All Day
Friday, January
Observance
NEW YEAR’S DAY
CARTER’S FLOWERS AND GIFTS
NOVELTY SHOP
W. E. TURNER, JEWELER
HAMILTON’S JEWELRY
VERNA AND HAL K0HN
FENNELLS JEWELRY STORE
T. M. ROGERS AND SON
THE STORY OF PATSY
I rCOAL REALLY 18
DEPENDABLE
AND SAFE
YES / ANO IF >
Y0UTCE BURNING
PATSY COAL/
VOU'RE COMFORT
ABLE ALL THE
TIME
PATSY COAL/OF
COURSE* ITS PUfUFtBO,
YOU KNOW- OVER 97%
PURE COAL-THAT
MEANS A LOT MORB
ECONOMICAL HEAT
OUST WHEN WE WANT
IT- AND there's
HARDLY ANY ASH
80V PATSYFROM;
Farmers Ice
& Fuel Co.
Phone 155