University of South Carolina Libraries
' PAGE SIX THE NEWBERRY SUN THURSDAY, JULY 1, 1964| CAPITAL MOSQUE^. . Only moaque In ivtsttrn world, t>*' ll.tM.OOO temple ItoWbij; ballt In Woohlnfton, O. C. by 11 M“ notion* hevlnv ombB*«lo* In our oopltml. LAFF OF THE WEEK wo eon ret jm oomo eor* to fo wttO It, Aoor. BARBECUE MEAT & HASH ALSO CHICKEN BARBECUE & HASH For the July 4th Holiday .Weekend on sale Friday, Saturday and Monday, July 2nd, 3rd and 5th. . All orders guaranteed to be filled un til noon. LAYTON BROTHERS Phone 67 O’Neal Street ONLY NEW ■D PREMIUM GASOLENE HAS ALL 5! 1 ANTI-CARBON 2 EXTRA-HIGH OCTANE 3 ANTI-RUST 4 UPPER- CYLINDER LUBRICANT 5 ANTI- , STALLING CITIES Some gasolenes have none of these features! Some gasolenes have . some of these features! But only Cities Service 5-D Premium has them all! SERVICE FARMERS ICE & FUEL CO. GEORGE W. MARTIN, Manager Wholesale Distributor CITIES SERVICE Petroleum Products FARMS AND FOLKS By J. M. ELEAZER Clemton Extension Information Specialist THE DIFFERENCE Let County Agent Hopktna of Anderson tell It: ••W. K. Sharp, III, and W. K. Sharp, IV, were the only farmers in Anderson who made 100 bush* els of corn per acre In 1953. W. K. Ml, has made 100 bushsls or morb per acre for 6 consecutive years, IV for 8 consecutive years. They have been able to Irrigate their oorn, and this has made the dif* ference between high and low ylelds. M , DYNAMITE DITCHING County Agent WIMte of Chest* erfteld tells me that Clemson'a McKensie gave a ditch blowing demonstration there. The ditch cost 16 cents a running foot and drained 8 acres. “People who ob served the ditch stated that If It had been opened by hand the coat would have been 3 or 4 times as great.” Mr. M c K e n ale Is available through your county agent for such field demonstration!. Scientific knowledge was once called “Rook Farming." But after the early county demonstration agents s t a r te d demonstrating knowledge in the field, It changed from “Rook Farming" Into a practical reality. am'* rue. fet STARS O! By LTN CONNELLY |NCE again Walter O'Keefe, em cee of "Wlaard of Odda" cornea gallantly to the deferuw of the fair er sex . . . "The men who feel that women prefer minks and foreign cars to the more basic things of life are unfair ... A research atudy •hows that as far aa husbands go, the girls' first choice In traits la consideration . . . Their second choice la sincerity, and a good in come rates e poor third * Meredith Willson end his wife, Btni, have been approached by e major network to star te a TV series similar to their present radio aeries on NBC five days a week. Meredith WUleon's lovely Holly wood home contains scores of ex pensive instruments and things musical, but the one he considers priceless la the first he ever played a bent and battered old mall order Bute! Back in Mason City. Iowa, young Master Willson had scrimped and saved and finally got bis precious flute by mail. . . And, on the very first and exciting day —he sat on h and left It with the "warp" which still remains. PLATTER CHATTER y CAPITOL - Billy May has aa unusual arrangement of that tra ditional ditty, "Little Brown Jug" The scientist finds out a new fact. The agent demonstrates It in the field. In a little whiM It has become a common practice. And agriculture movea on to better things. And wa with It. For all must eat and be clothed. FARM INGENUITY NOw let's hear from Alford, down In Colleton: “J. C. Blneath, lalanton, built an applicator to apply chloro-IPC to control grata in cotton last year. Ha also treated tome cotton for a neighbor—« total of 86 scree on the two farms. The results were outstanding, and he la treating about 160 scree in his neighbor hood thla year. He built machines this year for Luoaa Hiott to use on 80 acres and one for B. K. Sanders, treated about 100, acres for himself and neighbors." This spray for grass and weed control was used considerably over the state the past spring, some in prsctically all counties. If you'd like to see how it worked, your county agent could direct you to it. If grass can be thus overcome in cotton, it will be removing sn ex pensive haiard, and it will fit right in with our labor shortage and mechanisation. At Clemson's Blaekville Station they have (been experimenting with various chemi cals for thla purpose for some years. They told me down there a few years ago that it was Just s matter of time before the kinks would be worked out and this ad vanced step would be ready for farm use. WATERMELONS It's about 8,090 acres of water melons for Hampton county, ac cording to County Agent Thomp son. On tha day this la released. July 1, they are holding the State Watermelon Festival there. A fit ting honor to the magic melon. I plan to be there, aa usual. There was once Just a shower of early melons from thla state. But now they grow late ones too in that old belt And heevy produc tion has moved on up through the Sandhills into Chesterfield county, ao that now they are being ship ped from South Carolina almost until froat To a melon fancier like I am. that's all to the good. We can eat 'em now from late June until late October. And that adds a lot of sip to life during warm summer days. Science has helped the melon ^mightily in recent years. We have disease resistant sorts now that keep well. And the vines live on and -keep bearing a lot longer. PIMENTO PEPPERS 'Hie pitnento pepper is fast growing into a dependable money Two" . . . Helen O'Connell * con tinues her fine work with the new "With All My Tears for You"; Flip side has "Just to Be There" . . Comedian Jackie Gleason conducts the orchestra In that oldie "You’re Getting to Be a Habit With Me" with a trumpet solo by Bobby Hackett . . . "Melancholy Sere nade," composed by Gleason who shews his versatility, is on the re verse. "Big Bill" Lister digs deep for a traditional number and comes up with "In the Shadow of the Pine" “Blowing the ^iids Off M> Beer" backs it Jim and Jesse do a good job on "Purple Heart” and "I Will Always Be Waiting for You” . . . "Listen to the Mocking Bird" is revived by Cliffie Stone. REV. ROBERT H. HARPER J9tm, 0*r B.xampU and Lord. Lation for July 4: Luka 2: 40-52. Golden Taxi: Lmka 22: 52. The reader may bs reminded in the lesson text of s famous pic ture of Jesus among the doctors of the law. But we think first of what preceded the appearance of the boy in the temple. The boy had turned away from the sights of a big city and the great throngs to go into the temple. Aa for his compelling motive, he said hs had to be about hit FstherJ builness. Jesus was the product of s godly home. Not in abject poverty but not in wealth Jeaus grew to man hood In Nssareth, in a horns that was sn average one for the re gion. Xt was ths pious attitude of ths home that made it distinctive. Xt was ths custom in that horns for ths Inmstss to go up every year to ths feast of the Passover. This shows the disposition of the home toward religion. Xt was in his twelfth year that Jesus want Into the temple on the occasion of ths Passover and was found thsre in ths midst of the doctors of ths law.-There la also •n indication of the life Jesus had led as • youth In • statement con> cernlng him when he went early In his ministry to Nazareth. As his "custom was," it is said, he went into the synagogue on the Sabbath. Jesus grew up in the church. It is significant that Jesus grew up "subject" to Mary and Joseph Hs was not allowed to do just as he pleased, but was directed. He did not want to do otherwise than he was told. Jesus is our example of right youthful growth and aa the product of tv godly home. BOYS ARE THAT WAY By J. M. ELEAZER Reverse^ hm> ^Cocktails for *crop in the extreme Upcountry. It is grown on contract in a number of counties, and the entire acreage was taken up by farmers early, the county agents tell me. Anderson has 750 acres, Pickens 500, and Oconee 402 acres, and there are several other counties with similar acreages. These peppers all go t<\ a cannery in Georgia. Each county has a market day on which the farmers bring them in and receive pay right there. We mads a dangerous croasing of that fohbidden creek back of our place to get the coveted tall canes. And I’ve told you of the bounty they brought in the form of whistles, water squtrters, and pop-guns, to say nothing of our fingers and blistered hands. But there were other glories too. That deep silent water stimu lated our Imagination about fteh. Our time to flab was always after a shower, when the water was a bit flushed and made murky. We bided" our time, making eecret plans all along. Eventually the shower came out in June, and the fields were too wet to work. So. with cans of bait,- we lit > out for thd creek. Our folks thought we were going to our accustomed part. But we were headed for the promising, though forbidden, waters further worn towards Broad River. We went around that pasture, as we had some weeks be fore with our treasure of long canes. Thus we avoided the bull. \The fish were biting and we really caught ’em. Our part of that creek further up had been fished out a lot, but even the grass along the banks down there hadn’t been trampled down yet that sum mer. What we caught was perch, we called ’em, and catfish. We specially prized the latter in the Stone Hills. And I remember one Flowers and Gifts CART Day Phone 719 for All Occasions E R ’ S — Night 6212 TREATS CANCER ... Ten ton $250,000 sixty-million volt atom smasher is shown at U. of Chicago’s * Argonne Cancer Research Hospital. It produces electrons which can penetrate nine inches of human tissue to destroy diseased cells. N OTHING under ths sun peeves ms more than meeting someone who calls ms by nsms when I am unable to return the favor and am forced to half-heartedly attempt polite conversetion while trying to call up a nsms to match the face. A crucial time la when I am walking down the street with a visiting rslstivs or friend. We meet someone who calls ms by nsms and asks about my family. X ask about his and ws carry on this typs of conversation while visiting frlsnd or relative sUnds by twid dling his thumbs and wondering why X don’t have the courtesy to at Isa st Introduce him so he can get into the act. After all, ha hat a family of his own to talk about. You can apologist all you want to la tor on, but tha visitor thinks you're just trying to cover up some had manners, or something. Take what happened to a fritnd who was eating out-with his wits in one of tha better restaurants, Xn walked a girl from ths horns town.' There was a difference of •eversl years In their ages and the last time he saw her she had been cutting out paper dolls. Now she was a freshman In college. They looked at each other and hers Is • summary of the conversation, somewhat cut down to eliminate the old-faithful questions about "how’s ths family?" It went like this: "HI!" "Hi!" (long pause) "I knew I knoww>.. you, uh, uh, I mean I knowed you. I mean . . ." "Yeah, I knowed I knew you. but I didn't know whether you knew me or not." "Well, bye." "Well, bye." "All right, now, who was she?" of them stuck me with his sharp fin. H really ble&d and hurt. But the fishing wac ao good I soon forgot about that, though a bit more cautious. Aa we atrolled up the lane that afternoon, with goodly strlnga of fish, you should have heard the admiring older folks! That night for supper the odor of frying fish came from moat kitchens there in our settlement In the Stone Hills. And all at our house ate heartily, except me. I have always been scared of those bones, afraid one will get stuck in my throat And to this 'day, I never order fish, unless I know it to be a bone- lees fillet UP PROM DEPTHS . . . Exhibiting e-month beards in Now York are Richard Errieksoa, Julius Htrshman and John Wilkie, mem bers of expedition Jost returned on schooaet "Verna" from ex ploring ocean floor. m Shflflt Metal Contractor—Heating—Air Conditioning Licensed Gas Fitters CAROLINA METAL WORKS College Street Extension A. G. McCaughrin, Pres. A Tress. Phone 115 -1 •<«** THE NEWBERRY LUMBER CO. WILL BE CLOSED MONDAY, JULY SUL . in Observance of i Independance Day We will appreciate you taking care of yodr build ing needs this weekend. THE NEWBERRY LUMBER CO. Phone 56 Clfater Stteet mi Telephone your News Items to The Sun, Phone? £ - wmmmmm \ ’ f. - THE OPENING OF OUR i'-.f BUDGET \ K9 Now, you can buy, on your own terms, and for lowest prices^ * , . your needs in m ■ B. F. GOODRIC Farm Equipment, Truck and Passenger Car Tires FRIGI i z IRE Refrigerators, Freezers, Stoves, Washing Machines, Water Heaters <and Air Conditioners — Also — Lawn Mowers, Well Pumps, and Electric Fans of All Types \ T ^ h .Mi r' ’St th JiRr •C'-Sk V*. SS *” V You will be Interested in the price we can give you on electrical and plumbing and building ma terial. » ■** e • We will still continue to handle wholesale accounts. Clarence I. Summer, Inc. 109—PHONES—110 1207 BOYCE STREET NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA ‘