The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, June 17, 1954, Image 4
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PAGE FOUR
THE NEWBERRY SUN
THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1954
Miss Jean Dawkins Is Wed
To Velio Norman On June 6
• A lovely wedding of widespread
interest was that of Miss Jean
Dawlvins of Newberry and Green
ville and Mr. Velio Norman of
Chapel Hill, N. C., which took
place here Sunday afternoon, June
6, at 4 o’clock in Central Methodist
Church. The impressive double
ring ceremony was solemnized by
the Reverend Herbert L». Spell,
pastor of the bride.
The young couple exdhanged
their vows in a traditional setting
of white and green. Basket ar
rangements of daisies and fern, in
terspersed with white tapers in
branched candelabra, were used as
a background for the lovely
scene.
Nuptial music was furnished by
Miss Vivian Ellis of Saluda, organ
ist, a cousin of the bride, and Miss
Mamie Bishop, soloist. Organ se
lections included “Through the
Years” (Youmans); “My Hero”
(Straus); “I Love You Truly”
(Jacobs-Bond); "The Sweetest
Story Ever Told” (Stults); “Sa
lute d’Amour” (Edgar); “Because”
(d’Hardelot); and “Traumerei”
(Schumann). Vocal solos were “O
Promise Me” (de Koven); “O Per
fect Love” (Barnby); and “The
Wedding Prayed” as a benediction.
Traditional wedding marches were
used for the processional and re
cessional.
Wallace Dawkins of Atlanta and
Dawkins Dennis of Newberry,
cousins of the bride, served as
ushers and also lighted the
oandles.
Mrs. Dorothy Dawkins Hunt of
Greenville, cousin of the bride, was
matron of honor. She wore a
charming dress of crystal taffeta
in an antique gold shade and a
matching picture hat. She carried
a nosegay of daisies tied with rib
bon in the antique gold shade.
Miss Linda Hickman of South-
port, N. C., was maid of honor. She
wore a lovely dress of crystal taf
feta in a woods violet shade and
a matching picture hat. She also
carried a nosegay of daisies, tied
with ribbon in a woods violet
shade.
The bride was given in marriage
by her father. She wore a tradi
tionally styled, afternoon-length
bridal dress of white embroidered
taffeta, with a full skirt and fitted
jacket. Her short veil was gather
ed to a Juliet cap of the same ma
terial as her dress. She carried a
White Bible, topped with daisies,
and she wore a pearl brooch, a
gift from her bridegroom.
The bride’s mother w r ore a blue
pure silk dress with white acces
sories and a lavender orchid cor
sage.
Immediately after the ceremony,
the newly-weds received in the
vestibule of the church, where the
guests wer invited to register by
Mrs. David Ringer.
Before leaving for a honeymoon
at Myrtle Beach, the bride chang
ed to a beige linen dress with a
cocoa jacket and matching acces
sories. After their wedding trip,
the young couple will reside in
Chapel Hill, N. C.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Fitzue B. Dawkins of
Newberry. She graduated from
Newberry High School and com
pleted a business course at New
berry College. For the past two
years she has been employed with
the Liberty Life Insurance Com
pany of Greenville in the medical
department.
The bridegroom is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. August Norman of
Santa Fe, New Mexico. He at
tended the University of Ohio,
served with the U. S. Air Force
for two years, and is now a sen
ior at the University of North
Carolina, where he is majoring in
chemistry.
Out-of-town guests included Mrs.
Leila C. Lortg, Saluda; Mr. and
Mrs. H. E. Long, Ridge Spring;
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Dawkins,
Mrs. C. N. Timmerman and daugh
ter, Mrs. C. H. Chumley, Atlanta;
Norman Hawley, Durham; Buddy
Hunt, Ft. Denning, Ga.; also Mr.
and Mrs. J. A. Allen, Misses Betsy
Highsmifh, Cornelia Roper, Betty
Clard, and Betty Chapman, Green
ville.
Flowers and Gifts for All Occasions
CARTER’S
Day Phone 719 — Night 6212
CinemaScope Be
Shown 1st Time
Monday At Ritz
Already on record as the best
selling novel of all time, Lloyd C.
Douglas’ “The Robe” is now being
hailed in many quarters as the
greatest movie of all time, an
opinion reflected in the record-
shattering attendance polls of the
film’s kick-off engagement at the
Roxy Theatre in New York. The
opening of “The Robe” at the Ritz
Theatre this coming week in one
of the first engagements in the
country for this first CinemaScope
production produced by Twentieth
Century-Fox in Technicolor, ranks
as the entertainment event of the
year and may eclipse anything
within memory.
Producer Frank Ross has at last
fulfilled a ten-year dream to see
the masterpiece created in all its
historic pageantry on film and has
been rewarded for his patience to
have it unfold in the panoramic
splendor that the new screen pro
cess affords. All the great scenes
are preserved in the story of what
happened to the cloak Christ wore
to the Crucifixion and the effect
it had on the lives of Marcellus,
the Roman soldier who won it
gambling at the foot of the Cross,
and those close to him.
“The Robe” will play at the
Ritz next Monday through Thurs
day. The management of the Ritz
said yesterday that engineers are
working at the theatre this week
installing stereophonic sound. The
new spreen for CinemaScope was
installed, some weeks ago at the
theatre. The new screen and sound
system is said to achieve vast
dimension, lifelike depth and
hitherto unknown brilliance. With
out being required to wear glasses,
the viewer is said to be engulfed
by the picture he witnesses in
CinemaScope.
Schumpert-Sanders Marriage
Vows Exchanged On June II
H. D. AGENT
SCHEDULE
The County Home Agents Miss
Margie Davis and Mrs. Barbara G.
Brown, announce the following
schedule for the week of June 21
through June 26:
MONDAY, JUNE 21
Office; Trinity HDC at 3:30 p.
m. Mrs. Pinckney Teague, hostess.
TUESDAY, JUNE 22
Office; Silverstreet HDC at 3 p.
m. Mrs. J. F. Havird, Mrs. B. M.
Havird and Mrs.. Lois* Huckabee,
hostesses.
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23
Office; St. Phillips HDC 3 p. m.
with Mrs. Grady L. Halfacre, Mrs.
Essie Halfacre and Mrs. James
Dominick as hostesses; Mtv, Bethel
Garmany HDC at schoolhouse,
Mrs. J. C. Counts, Mrs. Marvin
Holsonback and Mrs. P. G. Riley
as hostesses.
THURSDAY, JUNE 24
County Program Planning Meet
ing 10 a. m. Agriculture Building
in Newberry.
Little Mountain HDC at 3 p. m.
Mrs. H. C. Shealy and Mrs. B. M.
Wise, hostesses.
FRIDAY, JUNE 25
Office; O’Neal HDfc ait 3 p. m.
Mrs. Mary Long and Mrs. Dove
Connelly, hostesses.
SATURDAY, JUNE 26
Office.
All Home Demonstration club
presidents and secretaries are urg
ed to attend the County Planning
meeting Thursday, June 24 at 10
a. m. at the Agriculture Building
in Newberry.
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MRS. DERRILL ERNEST SCHUMPERT
Women’s eyes naturally water
more than men’s. In both sexes,
tear production decreases with in
creasing age, so that at 40 one’s
eyes water only half as much as
they did at 10. As a rule, one eye
produces more tears than another.
Sunday
June
20th
Any father young or old, will be proud to
have a GIFT from this store—^because he
knows that we sell only merchandise of
good quality . . . made by world-famous
firms. -
Give him something good . >. something
you KNOW is good ...
Arrow Sport Shirts $3.95
Dobbs Panama Hats $5.00
Interwoven Socks •••••• — 65c to $1.50
Jantzen Swim Trunks • • • • $2.95 to $5.95
Palm Beach Suits $32.50
Hickok Sport Belts $1.50 to $2.50
Crosby Square Shoes — $10.95 to $16.95
Wembley Ties $1.50
Arrow Handkerchiefs • • 35c—3 for $1.00
Summer Slacks $7.95 to $10.95
All gift items for Father’s Day attrac
tively boxed.
Johnson Hagood Clary
“A Step Ahead in Style”
Caldwell St. Newberry
Bible Comment:
t
We Cqn Move
Mountains
In Jesus' Name
J>ERHAPS the most distinctive,
and at the same time the most
pOzzling, thing that Jesus said
about faith is in the words re
corded in Matthew: **If ye have
faith as a grain of mustard seed,
ye shall say unto this mountain,
remove hence to yonder place;
and nothing shall be impossible
unto you.*’
These words offer no puzzle
ment for us today, when we see
such things actually being ac
complished.
Hills that have stood for cen
turies are daily leveled by huge
power equipment of puny man’s
devising.
This is an interpretation of the
words of Jesus that we could
easily make today of the greater
works that were yet to be accom
plished. Perhaps it is the in
terpretation that Jesus intended.
What did the words mean to
the disciples, to whom they were
spoken, and what did Jesus in
tend them to mean?
Jesus was about to give to
these disciples a seemingly im
possible task. He was sending
them out to preach the Gospel
to every creature, to make dis
ciples of all nations.
What a vast, mountainous task
that must have seemed to those
few unknown men as they faced
the immense Roman Empire,
with its materialism, its power
and its paganism.
Perhaps it was those very
words of Jesus that they must
have recalled as they fdced that
mountain-moving task.
And with what amazing results
the power of faith was vindicat
ed, both the Roman Empire and
the whole world have known. *
It is that sort of faith that we
need today.
4
NOW! “-WAY
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lief. Bisma-Rex is available in
powder, liquid gel, and tablet form.
It's sold on Rexall's money-back
guarantee. Ask for a FREE SAMPLE
of Bisma-Rex Powder today at
Gilder & IUeeks
THE RIGHT DRUG STORE
Miss Frances Sanders, daugh
ter of Mr. Lewis H. Sanders and
the late Mrs. Mary Poole Sanders
of Union became the bride of Der
rill Ernest Schumpert of Newber
ry, Friday, June 11.
The Rev. Albert S. Harvey of
Clover, former pastor of the bride,
officiated at the double ring cere
mony at 8 p.m. in Foster’s Chapel
Methodist Church.
The church was decorated with’
white gladioli and fern, and seven-
branched candelabra holding ca
thedral tapers.
Wedding music was presented
by Miss Billie Rae Cobb of Lock
hart, organist, and Miss Judy Ruff
of Columbia, soloist.
Miss Cobb played “Clair de
Lune” (Debussy), “When Thou Art
Near” (J. S. Bach), “Venetian
Love Song” (Nevin), “Traumerei”
(Schumann), “Poem” (Fibich) and
during the ceremony “To A Wild
Rose” . (MacDowell). The tradi
tional wedding marches were used.
Miss Ruff sang “ If I Could Tell
You” and “Because” (d’ Hardelot).
As a benediction she sang “O Per
fect Love.” c
.The bride, given in marriage by
her father, wore a gown of hand-
clipped rosepoint lace over double
net and satin. The dress was fash
ioned with a low curved neckline,
fastened down the back with tiny
covered buttons and long lace
sleeves ending 1 1 points over the
wrists. The full skirt flowed into
an aisle wide train.
She wore a veil of imported silk
illusion attached to a headpiece of
ruffled illusion with rows of pearls
forming blocks.
She carried a cascade of bride’s
roses centered with a white pur
ple-throated orchid.
Miss Eugenia Adams of Union
was maid of honor and Mrs. Jim
mie E. Adams of Santuck, matron
of honor. They wore dresses of
blue nylon net. The tight fitted
strapless bodice was finished with
a net stole, fashioned on one
shoulder. The extremely full net
skirt was designed With three deep
full ruffles finished at the top of
each ruffle with two rows of
braid. They wore matching blue
headpieces of double ruffles of net
with satin ribbon and seed pearls.
Bridesmaids were Miss Doris
Schumpert, sister of the bride
groom, and Miss Betty Floyd, both
of Newberry, Miss Betty Little of
Union, Miss Mary Louise Rodrigue
of Florence, Mrs. Ray Owens of
Taylors, and Mrs. Frank Wilson of
Anderson. They Wore dresses
identical to those of the honor at
tendants. They carried cascades
of deep red roses with ribbon of
the same color.
Mrs. Paul B. Inman, aunt of the
bride wore blue dhiffon and lace
dress and an orchid corsage.
Mrs. Schumpret, mother of the
groom, wore a pink chiffon and
lace dress and an orchid corsage.
Billy McCutcheon of Newberry
was best man. Usher-groomsmen
were John Davis, Joe Hipp, Gene
Sowell, Jimmie Davenport, all of
Newberry, George Robert Daven
port of Laurens and Frank Wil
son of Anderson.
Following the ceremony, the
bride’s father entertained at a
reception at his home. The bride’s
table was overlaid with an import
ed cutwork linen cloth and held a
three-tiered wedding cake and ah
arrangement of white gladioli and
fern. Wedding cake and punch
were served. Assisting at the re
ception were Mrs. Harold Fowler,
Mrs. James H. Poole, Mrs. J. T.
Gallmlan, Mrs. Fred G. Sanders,
Mrs. Harry Farr, Mrs. W. G. Poole
of Mullins, Mrs. Grantland Wagner
of Woodruff, Mrs. E. K. Hall and
Misses Hazel Cox and Patsy Hall,
all of Spartanburg. ’
For their wedding trip to
Florida, the bride wore a navy
blue two piece dress with navy
and white accessories and an
orchid corsage.
Mrs. Schumpert is a senior at
Converse College where she will
receive her Bachelor of Music de
gree in piano next February.
Mr. Schumpert, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Frank M. Schumpert of New
berry. attended Clemson College
and completed his studies at New
berry . College in February of this
year. He received his Bachelor of
Science degree from Newberry
College during the graduating ex
ercises this June.
At present he is employed by
Union Federal Savings and Loan
Association in Union.
The couple will make their home
with the bride’s father on Route
4, Union.
PVT. LIVINGSTON ON
DUTY IN KOREA
Pvt. Horace Livingston, is now
serving with the 2nd Infantry Di
vision in Korea.
Livingston is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Horace Livingston, Sr., Rt. 1,
Pomaria. He entered the Army last
November and completed basic
traning at Camp Chaffee, Ark.
BOOKMOBILE
SCHEDULE
Thursday, June 24, 1954
Mrs. Minnie Leitzsey, Mt. Bethel
Garmany Community.
Bryan Nichols.
Mrs. Arthur Mayhin, Maybinton
Community.
Mrs. Jeff Suber, Strother Com
munity.
Homer Crooks, Crooks Store.
Miss Olive Eargle, New Hope
Zion Community.
Mrs. Ben Johnson, Pomaria.
Peak.
Mrs. G. Y. Taylor, St. Phillips
Community. , ,
Mrs. John Stone, St. Phillips
Community.
The common angleworm will
take just about any species of
fresh-water fish.—'Sports Afield
NIKE ON DISPLAY . . . First NIKE guided missile is shown in
San Francisco, where series of NIKE launching sites will be part of
West Coast anti-aircraft defense.
EARN $50.00 IN PRIZES!
HoBingshesd Cutlery Set
Spartan 5-Pc. Cleaver Set
Time-All Appliance Timer
And many other Prizes
play.
the only show in radio
where select the calls!
THE MARKET BASKET
WKDK 1240 ON YOUR DIAL
9:30 A. M. Monday through Friday
SMOtcey PRESENTS— a short, short story on how
FORI ST FIRES WEAKEN AMERICA!
mu
/ _
P P
let Peeve
lik
S OMETIMES I wonder where the
r*dio quiz shows find so many
unusual people to serve as con
testants. Don’t get me wrong: I
know that this planet is inhabited
by a goodly quantity of nuts and
screwballs — excluding, of course,
you and me and overlooking the !
fact that even then we sometimes
doubt one another.
The thing that amazes me about
the people who appear on quiz
shows is that practically all of
them have been married from 20
to 50 years and. in their own
words, the marriage has been “one
continual honeymoon.”
Marriages should be made in
heaven, and a lot of them are. But
the honeymoon doesn’t last It’s
not supposed to, either, and I
don’t think folks should keep kid
ding themselves for years on end.
In some cases the honeymoon is
ended when the husband no longer
gets his morning coffee in bed.
It’s only a memory when hubby
“forgets” to open the car door for
his “bride” before getting under
the steering wheel. And, when Ma
and Pa engage in a verbal differ
ence of opinion about what’s best
for one of their offspring—face it,
friends, you’ve had it.
Personally, I wouldn’t want to
endure a honeymoon that lasted
for 50 years. I was very happy
the day the little woman and I
stopped trying to impress each
other with our intelligence and
wit, courtly manners, and, let’s
face it, “put-on.”
When we began to act our nor
mal selves, we found a comfort
able feeling we expect to share
during years of wedded bliss, an
“at home” feeling no one ever
enjoyed on a honeymoon.
Secret Weapons r
no. .but just os deadly - in Gsre/ess Hands
T HIU is a great deal of talk these days about
atomic bombs, guided missiles, and germ war
fare. As a matter of fact, so much talk and concern
that most Americans ignore other dangers that are
far greater because they are more immediate and
most times underestimated. What an they?... the
carelessly discarded cigarette and match, the un
tended camp or brush fire that may set off a rag
ing forest fire. Til bet you would never guess that
something as commonplace as one of these in a
carelcssjiand started a tragic fire that caused greater
destruction in many respects than the atom bomb
at Hiroshima or Nagasaki. Well, ft actually
happened at Peshtigo, Wisconsin. CsrtUssmst
killed 1,300 people and burned
out over 1,280,000 acres of pine
forests and whole towns and com-
munities. This could very easily'
happen again. So when you
are in or traveling through the
woods, he canful with jin—help
keep America strong.
fte/nemver— only you con
PREVENT FOREST FIRES!
Uki Attar Americai Mmss fires, it ktOivi that fcntawt has i nsMisNttv ta mtflrti ta III nMc wrifan. Hit
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