The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, January 28, 1954, Image 4
PAGE FOUR
THURSDAY, JANUARY 28, 1964
"&uL
INTELHGRAM
Check correct word.
.1. Congressmen (need) (need not) be American-
born.
2. The capital of Australia is (Sidney) (Canberra).
3. (Utah) (Ohio) is the Buckeye State.
4. There were (37) (21) recorded boxing fatalities
in 1953.
'5. Herbert Hoover’s father was a (lawyer) (black
smith).
6. (Polk) (Pierce) was U. S. President during the
Mexican War.
7. A discobolus is a (discus thrower) (anteater).
8. The U. S. federal government maintains (6)
(13) penitentiaries.
9. The 15th wedding anniversary is called the
(Ivory) (Crystal) Anniversary.
10. (Hiroshima) (Nagasaki) was the first atom-
bombed city.
Check your answers, scoring yourself 10 points for each
correct choice. A score of 0-20 is poor; 30-60, average;
70-80, superior; 90-100, very superior,
Decoded Intelligram
‘euiiqsoJiH—01 6 9—8 MaMOiq* snosta—4 XPd
-9 -loiuisipeiH—fi 'll—V —8 •Biiaqueo—{ ’tou —t
12-Man Theme
Alabama's twelfth man theme
is net entirely new. Records have
been found to shew that In a game
between the Naval Academy and
Great Lakes Training Station, In
1918, a player came off the bench
tw tackle a touchdown-bound run
ner. Navy, ahead 6-0, fumbled on
Its own three end s Great Lakes
player started the 97 yard game-
tying run with the recovered foot
ball. A substitute Navy tackle,
William H. Saunders, jumped from
the bench and tackled him, but
the runner get up, went on to
score before the referee blew his
whistle. The extra point try pro
vided the winning margin . . . Ala
bama fullback Tommy Lewis, who
came off the bench to tackle
Rice's Dick Moegle In the midst
of a 95-yard touchdown run, re
ceived words of encouragement
from California center Roy Riegels'
who ran 65 yards the wrong way
in the 1929 Rose Bowl game.
Riegels* advice: "Laugh with
them. That's all yen've got to do."
Riegels went eu to captain his
team next season and become All-
American. Lewis is a senior.
TOP ATHLETE ... Tennis cham
pion Maureen Connolly, 19, was
voted female athlete of 1953 by
nation's sports editors. She also
won title In 1951 and 1952.
PERFECT
two for the show
Or for a party! Or for any special Spring oc
casion! The dress is a flattering sheath of an ex
citing new fabric, all-over string embroidered
nub rayon. The coat is nub rayon, too—styled
straight with side slits. They’re a perfect pair . ..
$45.00
t . t . ■ * . .
Carpenter’s
GOOD READING
At The Library
Non-Fiction
Concise Encyclopedia of Favor
ite Flowers, Marjorie Johnson,
comp.
The Opera Reader, Louis Bian-
colli, de.
UN: Today and Tomorrow, Elea
nor Roosevelt.
Benjamin Franklin, Bernard Co
hen. «
Lelia, Andre Maurois.
Misia and the Muses, Misia Sent.
Winning Badminton, Kenneth
Davidson.
Monster Midway, William Gres
ham.
Brother to Dragons, Robert Penn
Warren.
Measure of the Year, Roderick
Haig-Brown.
Journey to Bethlehem, Delos
Lovelace.
Esquire Etiquette.
Fiction
The Southerners, Edna Lee.
Love from Sandy, Elwynne Ber
ger.
The Hornbeam Tree, Cid Sum
mer.
Tales of Land and Sea, Joseph
Conrad.
The Face of Time, Jane Farrell.
The Whiteoak Brothers: Jalna-
1923, De La Roche.
Lincoln McKeever, Eleazar Lip-
sky.
Bridle the Wind, Julia Davis.
Tooner Schooner, Mary Lass-
well.
The Devil’s Current, Kem Ben
nett.
Return in August, Phil Stong.
Maughan’s Choice of Kipling’s
Best.
Black Death, Anthony Gilbert
Affair at Lover’s Leap, Robert
Dean.
Youth Fiction
Golden Slippers, Lee Wyndham.
Cross My Heart, Naomi Sellers.
Mara, Daughter of the Nile,
Eloise McGraw.
Outlaw Red, Jim Kjelgaard.
Triple Threat Patrol, Kenneth
Gilbert.
Stairway to a Secret, Joy
Wehen.
Juvenile
The Man Who Changed China,
Pearl Buck.
Brighty of the Grand Canyon,
Marguerite Henry.
The Unruly Robin, Dorathea
Dana.
Royal Canadian Mounted Police,
Richard Neuberger.
Adventures and Discoveries of
Marco Polo, Richard Walsh.
Susan, Robbie Trent.
Wilbur and Orville Wright
Augusta Stevenson.
The Wild Wood, Dorothy Clewes.
City Dog, Gerald Raftery.
Kit Carson, Augusta Stevenson.
Shooting Star Farm, Anne Mol-
loy.
Pocahontas, Flora Seymour.
Caps for Sale, E. Slobokina.
The ind and Peter, Alvin Tres-
selt.
Lance and His First Horse,
Jack Holt.
this week’s:
patterns
BY AUDREY LANE
V
N». 2616 U sat la sixes 14Vfc, 16V4,
ISVfc, 20H, 22W, 24%. Size 16%: Bolero
aad skirt, 2% yds. 54-in. Bloass (alss
lacladed), 1% yds. 85 sr 39-In.
Ns. 2304 Is sat la sixes 6 mos., 1, 2, S,
4, 6 yrs. Slxs 2: Dress, 1% yds. 35-In.
Caps, lit Yds. 54-In.
Bead SOs for EACH pattern with name,
address, style namber and slxs to AUD
REY LANE BUREAU, Box 869, Madi
son 8«aaro Station, Now York 10, N. Y.
The new EALL-WINTER FASHION
BOOK shews saarss sf ether styles, 26s
extra.
THE NEWBERRY SUN
ATOM TESTER . . . Maj. Gen.
Percy W. Clarkson, commander
of joint task force 7. will con
duct top-secret hydrogen and
atomic weapons testa at Eniwetok
atoU In Pacific.
| Recuriter Says
‘Get The Facts’
These days it seems as though
a guy is always, looking for some
thing, somewhere, or someplace.
It is timing and coordination
that pays off for the future. If you
wait too long before you make up
your mind on a profession, it is
just that much longer before you
can retire and take it easy. If you
jump the gun and make a snap
judgment, you will wind up unhap
py and frustrated. If you just drift
around from job to job, you’ll never
find anything or get any place.
Few jobs pan out to be. what
you think they will be . . . unless
you know all the facts.
You’ll never know all that YOUR
U.S. ARMY and U.S. AIR FORCE
can offer you . . . until you’ve
talked it over with M/Sgt. Thomas
N. Moore, your Recruiting Service
Representative who will be at the
Court House, Newberry, each Mon
day and Wednesday from 9:30 a.m.
to 2:30 p.m.
He will be in Whitmire each
Tuesday from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30
p.m. at the Post Office.
Be alert and prepared. Join the
U. S. Army or U.S. Air Force
now. It reflects your will to re
sist aggression and stand four
square behind the ideals and
principles which have made this
country the home of democracy
and the Champion of the rights
of free men.
Mrs. Chandler, 73,
Former Resident,
Dies In Columbia
Mrs. D. B. Chandler, 73, former
resident of Newberry, died Thurs
day afternoon at Forest Hill Rest
Home in Columbia after an illness
of nine months.
She was born in Abbeville, a
daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.
James B. Anderson. Her husband
was the late D. B. Chandler, who
for many years was overseer of
the clothroom at Newberry Tex
tile Mills.
Surviving are two daughter*,
Mrs. Truman Harrison Roper and
RD. AGENT
SCHEDULE
The County Home Demonstra
tion Agents, Miss Margie Davis
and Mrs. Barbara G. Brown an
nounce the following schedule for
the week of February 1st through
the 6th.
Monday, February 1st: Office;
Home Visits.
Tuesday, February 2nd: Pomaria
t Jr. and Sr. 4 j H; Busk River HDC
at 3:00 p.m. at the school with
Mrs. Ermonde Green, hostess.
Wednesday, February 3rd: Home
Visits; Hartford HDC at 3:30 p.
m. at the Community Center with
Mrs. Earl McCullough, Mrs. Wood-
row Lathrop, Mrs. W. P. Lath-
rop and Miss Lois Merchant as
hostesses.
Thursday, February 4th: Home
Visits; Mt. Pleasant HDC at 3:00
p.m. at the school; Jolly Street
HDC at 3:30 p.m., Mrs. Julia Werts
and Mrs. Isabelle Kinard as host
ess.^
Friday, February 5th: Stoney
Hill 4-H; Newberry Jr. High 7th
4-H; Publicity Workshop at Agri
culture Building in Newberry at
3:00 p.m.
Saturday, February 6th: Office.
All Home Demonstration club
Publicity Chairman are urged to
attend the workshop. The local
newspapers and radio station are
wholeheartedly cooperating t o
make this workshop worthwhile in
forwarding council and Home
Demonstration work in Newberry
County.
All club members are urged to
attend their club meetings. The
second Family Life Demonstra
tion, “Friends in The Home” will
be given.
Mrs. Francis B. Collins, both of
| Columbia; one son, Benjamin Earl
! Chandler, Columbia; five grand
children; six sisters, Mrs. C. A.
Scott, Greenville; Mrs. B. B. Babb,
Spartanburg; Mrs. J. M. Lindsey,
Easley; Mrs. J. E. Harper, Pied
mont; Mrs. Claude Davenport,
Lake City; and Mrs. J. A. Senn,
Newberry; and one brother, L.
L. Anderson, Greenville.
Funeral services were conduct
ed Saturday at 3 p.m. at O’Neal
Street Methodist Church by the
Rev. J. W. Tomlinson and Rev. A.
H. Bouknight. Burial followed in
Rosemont cemetery.
Active pallbearers were John
Senn, Charles Senn, James Dav
enport, Joe Harper, Frank Collins
and Albert Jones.
Serving as honorary pallbearers
were Dr. F. Eugene Zemp, Dr. E.
J. Dickert, John Neville, Eugene
B. Shealy, Burley Bouknight, J.
E. Cox, Frank Jones, J. W. Wood,
Jack Senn, Ernest Layton, Olin
Layton, R. R. Davis, Ed Beck, Jim
Taylor, J. Y. Jones, Dewey Kin
ard, M. W. Vaughn, Buck Corley,
Leslie Brooks, Cecil Kinard,
Claude Werts, Tom Fellers, and
Pope Tompkins.
Assisting with the flowers were
Mrs. Ed Beck, Mrs. Frank Jones,
Mrs. S. O. Nesley, Mrs. Ernest
Layton, Mrs. Claud W. Bouknight
and Mrs. Jack Senn.
radio
Mm RODOLFO ACOSTA . r„d«c.-1, benedict bogeaus W
>ir.ct.4 by JACQUES TOURNEUR • Screenplay bv KAREN DeWOLF ▼
See It At
WELLS THEATRE
Mon. & Tues. Feb. 1 & 2
FHA Assists
8,000 Families
In Year Past
Approximately 8,000 South Caro
lina farm families used the credit
and technical assistance available
through the local offices of the
Farmers Home Administration in
1953 according to R. Frank Kolb,
State Director of the agency in re
viewing the year’s work.
Loans received by these farm
ers were used to adjust and im
prove their livestock and crop
programs and to earn better in
comes; to develop land; to buy or
enlarge farms; to build or repair
houses and farm buildings; and,
in conuties where agricultural pro
duction was curtailed by drouth,
emergency loans were made avail
able to farmers to enable them
to keep their land in production.
Three local farmer committee
men in each county made the de
cisions on the applicants eligibil
ity for loans and assistance was
given only to farm families whose
needs could not be met by local
banks or other credit sources in
their communities.
More farmers were aided by op
erating credit than any of the
other sources available. These
loans are all based on individual
farm and home plans showing
what improvements each borrower
is to make in order to get prodnq-
tive use of the family's available
resources. To help borrowers be
come more efficient and to protect
family was also assisted with such
the Government’s investment the
farm management problems as
developing a farming business of
the right size for the land and la
bor resources and of the type suit
ed to the agriculture in the com
munity. Of the $5,500 advanced
in 1953 to 5692 borrowers for op
erating purposes, 92 percent of
the matured amount was repaid
by December 31.
Farmers Home Administration
has, since the service was made
available, assisted 3,367 farm fam
ilies in South Carolina to purchase
develop or enlarge their farms,
Forty-six percent of these loans
have been paid in full—far in ad
vance of maturities. Of these who
have not completed paying for
their farms 60 percent are well
ahead of schedule with payments.
In the last four years 611 rural
residents of the state have bor
rowed more than three and one-
half million dollars under Title
V of the Farm Housing Act of
1945 to construct or repair homes
and other buildings. More than
half of these loans were made to
veterans. While amortized over a
period of 10 to 33 years, 29 of
these loans have already been
paid in full. At the end of 1953
above 98 percent of these ac
counts were in current condition.
Money, however is the jack of
all trades.
D ON T be a slave to your kitch
en. With wise planning you can
cut down the time spent in food
preparation and, at the same time,
conserve your energy.
Arrange equipment and food sup
plies for easy reaching. If your
kitchen is divided into various areas
of preparation with utensils near
each area, you can save time in
getting meals together.
When planning a meal, have only
one dish which requires several
steps m preparation. One night
this can be a casserole and a sim-
RECIPE OF THE WEES
Sausage Casserole
(Serves 4-6)
1 pound sausage links
3 tablespoons water
1 No. 2 can tomatoes
IVi cups cooked rice
1 ‘easpoon salt
1 tablespoon chopped onion
2 teaspoons ground sage
% teaspoon pepper
Place sausage links in skillet
with water, cover and simmer
for 5 minutes. Remove cover
and cook links until browned.
Use sausage drippings to grease
casserole. Reserve 3 tablespoons
drippings and combine with
tomatoes, rice, salt, onion, sage
and pepper. Place mixture in
greased casserole. Arrange
browned sausage links on top.
Bake in a moderate (350°F.)
oven for 30 minutes.
pie dessert. Another meal can be
something broiled if the dessert is
to be fancy.
When making a dish, measure
your ingredients out and set on a
tray. Then the dish can be put to
gether quickly and probably un
interruptedly so you won’t have
a chance for a mistake.
Save trips to the refrigerator
by taking out all foods at one time
which you’ll need. Use a tray on
which to place and carry them to
your preparation area.
Fair-Calmes Section
At Rosemont Opened
Persons interested in the pur
chase of lots in Rosemont ceme
tery are advised by officers of the
association that Louis C. Floyd,
1117 Boyce street, is in charge
of sales.
Announcement was also made
that the services of M. K. Wicker
had been secured and that Mr.
Wicker will be in charge of main
tenance and upkeep of the
cemetery.
Mr. Floyd said that annual care
for lots may be had for $7 per
year, and that cost of perpetual
care is$5. 00. Application for either
of these services should be made
to Mr. Floyd.
The public was also issued an
invitation to visit the cemetery
and inspect the new Ffeir-Calmes
development at the rear of the
original section of Rosemont ceme
tery.
Mrs. Park’s Sister
Dies In Columbia
Mrs. Dollie L. Long, 83, of 1312
Heyward street, Columbia, died at
8 o’clock last Thursday night at
the Columbia Hospital’ following
an illness of several weeks.
Mrs. Long had lived in Colum
bia for the past 24 years, moving
there from Newberry. She was the
widow of G. A. Long.
Survivors include two sisters,
Mrs. Alice Wilson of Columbia and
Mrs. T. N. Parks of NeWberry;
and a sister-in-law, Mrs. H. O.
Britt, of Columbia, and several
nieces and nephews.
Fhmeral services were held- at
4 o'clock Friday afternoon from
the Thompson F\meral Home, con
ducted by the Rev. Wynne C.
Boliek. Interment followed in Elm
wood cemetery.
Correict your faults by observ
ing those found in others.
1. Sepia Is another word for (a) brown: fb)
2. The fir* that took the most Bros In
happened at (a) Chicago; (b) Poehitigo,
Mississippi.
S. Portland cement got its asms from (a)
lb) Portland, Oregon; (e) the Isle *
l <•»
I (o)
Ticklers By George
SECOND WIND
By Ada McElfresh
I T WAS Spring again and Joe
was restless.
And miserable. Tormented with
the bitter truth that he—“The
Great Lefty Cramer," they had
called him last Fall in what had
amounted to an obituary for the
part of him that was baseball—
was, in his own words, “the great
has-been."
To Joe’s way of thinking, ho
. was through. And since he was
through, he was no good for Julie.
He seemed to have forgotten that
their wedding vows had included
*ln sickness and in health . . .
till death do us part . . .* Julio
bit her lip. Joe mustn’t see her
fear.
She looked up, smiling, but ho
walked past her, toward the bed
room closet where he kept his
treasures, his mitt and mask that
ho wore when he did double-duty
behind the plate, the ball with
which he had tapped Andrus out
as the big slugger galloped to
ward home plate.
"Darling—" Impulsively, Julie
went to stand beside him. “You’ve
had to slow down. All right. Lots
of men do. But you’ll get your sec
ond wind. You can do things, we
can do things—together, like we
always have."
“What, for instance?" he de
manded bitterly, without looking
at her. “Collect stamps? Or knit?
For God’s sake, Julie, can’t you
let me alone?"
He slammed out of the house,
catcher’s mitt and mask clutched
in one hand, the precious game
winning ball in the other.
But Joe didn’t come. He still
hadn’t come by mid-afternoon. Bpt
Joe wouldn’t do anything, he’s too
sensible, Julie told herself. He’s
just walking off his huff . . . But
walking — fast — Suddenly frantic,
Julie jumped up from her chair
by the window. Dear God—please!
He wasn’t down by the river,
where he usually walked. He
wasn’t at the cigar store on the
corner, where he often swapped
tides with oldtimers. Julie hurried
on in the warm-for-April late aft
ernoon sun, her mind shut against
the unreasoning fear that rose
again and again. Joe’s heart, his
gallant stubborn heart . . .
She paused, of necessity, to catch
her breath, aware of the loud shouts
of small boys without knowing—or
caring—what they were shouting
about.
. “Eye on , the ball now—watch I
it!” Cr-rack!
That voice—t That dear, fami-
tyar yet almost forgotten, happy
voice i
He didn’t, see her at first, Joe
didn’t, but he was happy. She
could tell from the way he stood,
feet apart, hands on hips, watching
the kid with the bat. It had bean
a lousy swat but what did that
matter?
Julie stood, transfixed, as
Freckle-face threw to Towhead who
missed and the ball rolled toward
her. Joe was looking at her now.
not grinning, just looking. Julie
caught her breath. What if he
weren’t . . . what if she were the
one who was wrong—wrong for
Joe . . .
Quickly, she scooped up the ball
which nad rolled to her feet and
stopped, Invitingly. As surely, she
hefted the ball to get the feel of
it—it had been so long, she real
ised suddenly—and, drawing her
arm back, let it fly like a homing
pigeon straight for the plate.
Joe's grin was slow. He held
out his arms and she ran into
them.
“I’m getting that second wind
you’ve been harping on, honey,"
he said long kisses later. "I can
take that job at tha cigar store
and still have time te coach the
kids, that towhead looks like an
other Slugger Andrus.**
"He does, d-doesn't ha?" Lc ?y
swat and all, she p i£ t
Joe said so— "Let's make t
better stilL The irrenfi
Cramer—” she giggled—"evv.. t
he is a righthander."
For answer, the first I s-
Cramer planted a hearty* sp.
ing kiss on her lips.