The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, August 12, 1954, Image 7
241 Donors Turn Oat At Two Blood
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GEO. N. MARTIN
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BALES and SERVICE
1309 MAIN STREET
24 HOUR SERVICE
TolapHona 311
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irm
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ROYAL
DRY CLEANERS
Phone 12 1107 Caldwell
Newberry, S. C.
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AT LOMINICK’S
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THE SUN
Prompt Service
m?
Centers: 196 Units Are Collected
White Donors
The list of white donors of
blood, listed together with those
rejected, include the following,
listed with their representative or
ganizations:
Lion’s Club—'James Clamp.
Aveleigh Presbyterian Church—
Leon Nichols, Mrs. Leon Nichols,
Henry W. Longshore, Harper
Wherry, Mrs. Sallie B. French,
Mrs. Annie L. Laird, and C. E.
Laird.
First Baptist Church—Miss Bes
sie Campbell, and William Turner,
Jr.
Newberry County Medical So
ciety—Dr. C. A. Dufford, Dr El
bert Dickert, Dr. Ralph P. Baker,
Dr. R. E. Livingston and Dr. V. A.
Long, Dr. Reyburn Lominack.
Colony Lutheran Church—Char
les E. Paysinger and Elizabeth R.
Fulmer.
A. R. P. Church—Miss Cynthia
Martin, George E. Halfacre, Henry
Fellers, James N. Parr, Ralph S.
Boazman, J. W. Ringer, Jr., Boyd
Robertson and Robert Renwick.
Wightman Methodist Church —
Mrs. Dan Hamm, Mrs. Walter
Hamm, and Carlisle Clarkson.
Lewis Methodist Church—Mrs.
John T. Drummond, Robert Wes
son and William Edgar Taylor, Sr.
Marion Davis Mothers Club —,
Mrs. Harper Wherry.
Newbery B. & P. W. Club—Rus
sell Addy, Mrs. Kathryn W. Jar-
rett. Miss Miriam Hendrix and
Miss Margaret Paysinger.
Bachman Chapel Lutheran
Church—Mrs. Janig Partain.
V. F. W—T. Ed Senn. /
FRIDAY
8:30 P.M.
Under the lights of Soldiers* Flstd
ttie ALL-STAR
FOOTBALL GAME
Detroit Lions
vs.
College All-Stars
WKDK
1240 on your dial
MUTUAL BROADCASTING SYSTEM
O’Neal Street Methodist Church
—’Rev. J. W\ Tomlinson, Terrell
Sease, R. E. Beck, and Mrs. Reba
Wood.
Lebanon Methodist Church —
Mrs. Horace Cromer.
Central Methodist Church—Miss
Sara Boozer, Mrs. Jeanette Crooks,
Joe Hipp, Miss Mabel Boozer, Miss
Frances Boozer, Mrs. Meredith
Harmon, M. D. Hoffmeyer, Fran
cis H. Shealy, T. J. Eskridge, Tho
mas Crooks, Mrs. Maude Cart
wright, Mrs. Aubrey A. Werts,
Mrs. Josephine Camp, Robert
Boozer, Elbert Long, and Paul
Whitaker.
St. Matthew’s Lutheran Church
—Mrs. Raymond Ringer andj Mrs.
David Ringer.
Epting Memorial Methodist
Church — Margaret Boozer, O. H.
Davis and Mrs. O. H. Davis.
Registered Nurses’ Club — Vir
gil Kinard.
Newberry Shrine Club — Mrs.
Marion B. Lipscomb, and Ralph A.
Stanley, Dallas, Texas.
Glenn Street Baptist Church—
James D. Seymour, Mrs. Vanessa
Sessoms.
Mayer Memorial Lutheran
Church—James G. Shealy, Harold
BOYS ARE
THAT WAY
. By J. M. ELEAZER
We ate a lot of corn products in
the Stone Hills. And I still like
’em. It is remarkable’ the number
of good things that can be made
from corn. Bringing the fullness of
that corn flavor ont is an art that
cooks in whole wide areas of this
country do not have.
Wheat is regarded as the staff
of life at most places. But with us
it was corn. It was a bit of scalded
corn meal or leftover hominy that
added the tang, tough crust, and
moist consistency to our beloved
“Mixed Bread.” Now, folks, that’s
the delightful staff of life that the
confirmed Dutchman will turn
down famed pound cake for.
I said leftover hominy went in
to it. By that I don’t mean the
whole corn. We called that Big
Hominy. To us hominy was the
fine, ground stuff that most folks
call grits. And that, with country
™ ^ ^ J . ham, red gravy, and a soft fried
Cook, T. Kenneth Cook, and Gerald egg mixed in it tQ make it look 1Ike
WHITAKER
FUNERAL HOME
AMBULANCE
PHONE 270
FOR
financial Security
AND
Peace of Mind
BUY
Hat/ Insurance
on Your Crops
SEE OR CALL US TODAY
Purcells
Phone 197
Newberry, S. C.
B. Taylor.
Trinity Methodist Church—Mrs.
Leora Walker, Herman Pitts, Ray
A. Martin, Mrs. Aubrey Senn, and
David C. Waldrop.
Beth-Eden Lutheran Church —>
Hamilton Folk and Rev. T. H.
Weeks.
Redeemer Lutheran Church —
Mrs. Margaret Tyson, Mrs. Geor
gia Welborn, Mrs. Joe H. Welborn,
Mrs. Dot Ballentine, Mrs. Ann
Hawkins, Mrs. Lula E. Vaughn,
Mrs. Hendrix Monts, Miss Doris
Dufford, Kenneth Long, Mrs. My
ra Trefsgar, Miss Sarah Long, Carl
L. Amick, Earl Summer, Mrs. T. E.
Setzler, T. E. Setzler, and Tommy
Setzler.
Silverstreet Lutheran Church —
Mrs. T. M. Fant. ,
Kiwanis Club—Claude L. Weeks,
Chester Hawkins, and Felix B.
Greene.
King’s Creek A. R. P. Church—
William Rikard.
Zion Methodist Church—Ira H.
Kinard, Mrs. Lyon Fellers, Mrs. J.
D. Hamm, Mrs. Harold Beden-
baugh, Mrs. Jacob Dawkins, Miss
Drucie Connelly, Herman Stock-
man, Lyon Fellers, Frank Dennis,
and J. H. Derrick.
Newberry Jaycees—Preston Mc-
Alhany, Robert D. Schumpert,
Meredith Harmon, Joe H. Wel
born and D. P. Folk.
Summer Memorial Lutheran
Church— Eugene Snealy, Mrs. Ro-
zelle Mills and Bloomer F. Haw
kins.
St. Luke’s Episcopal Church —
E. J. Gatlin, Boyce Covington and
Leroy Anderson.
Rotary Club—Carl Setzler, C. M.
Smith, Mrs. Viola Anderson, Dr.
E. M. Anderson, and T. Roy Sum
mer, Jr. * '
Non-Designated Donors — Coke
Dickert, Mrs. Sara L. Suber, Mrs.
Ann Cromer, Cecil Ammons, Jack
Yates, Wilbur Boozer ,Mrs. Mar
gie Longshore, Ralph W. Young,
Mrs. Tilman Wise, Thomas A.
Harmon, Jim Brownell, William B.
Kitchen, George F. Senn, J. V.
Morris, Thomas B. Perry, Allen N.
Crosson, and Clarence B. Counts.
Negro Donors
Also due credit were the 96
Negroes presenting themselves for
blood donations. The names of the
25 rejected donors appears al
so in the following list, because
they were, at least, willing to try
and donate blood. The list follows:
Leo WilliamiS, Frank Abrams, For
est Werts, Lestine Mayers, David
Sligh, Clarence Hamlin, Bennie J.
Jackson, Clarence Mangum, Rus
sell Hawkins, Jessie Sims, Boiry
Nance, Clyde Martin, Eugene Ruff,
tylelvin Wilson and Fred Pratt, Jr.
Also, Otto Floyd, Willis Bracy,
Jr., Robert Brown, J. P. Cromer,
Richard Rikard, Robert Goodman,
Marie Smith, Milan Martin, Dennis
DeWalt, Lomas E. Baker, Lewis
Davis, George Greenwood, Robert
Sligh, Jimmie E. Carter, J. P. Mor
ris, Hdnry Caldwell, Esther Chap
lin, Nezzie Bishop, Beatrice Bouk
night, Horace Wilson, Buddy Elli
son, Charles Turner, Emtory Gary
Eddie Suber, Major Burton, Mary
A. Williams, David Chapman, Ann
Tugle, and Paul Williams.
Also, Rev. Andrew Wicker,
Thomas Hair, Magnolia Pitts,
James Coughman, Nathaniel Hall,
Maggie Davis, Mattie Worthy,
John Lark, Alberta Satterwhite,
James B. Pratt, Bennie Dewalt,
Thomas Goudelock, Theodore Per
ry, David Riggins, Fred Cureton,
Henry Glasgow, E. McMorris, Joe
Gill, Kate Brown, Julia Gary, Liz
zie Wilson, Georgia Caldwell,
Henry Clark, Jr., Maggie Cannon.
Virginia Glasgow, Jo O. Myers,
Willie Kinard, Rachel Wilson and
Roberta Watts.
Also, Geneva Edwards, James
Watts, Sarah Glenn, Alberta Chap
lin, Rosa Bell Collins, Bulah Kelly,
Annie F. Martin, Ludell Blackwell,
Lizzie P. Boyd, Irene Counts, Mary
Alice Baker, Lourene Sapp, Addle
Lee Suber, Louise Boyd, Kitty
r^al gold wasn’t far from the
real stuff. r
That sort of hominy we ground
from our own corn at the water
mill down on the creek on Fri
days. That was mill day. And we
Vlso made big hominy from our
corn. We’d soak the wihite kernels
until they had swollen to more
than double their normal size.
Then we cooked them in lye water
to make the tough bran coat slip
off. And the lye for that came from
hardwood ashes we saved from the
fireplace. They were just dumpted
in the pot and the stuff cooked.
Then the inert matter and lye
watez were Washed from the
gleaming white kernels that had
cooked soft. This we stored in
the smoke-house in a tub of
clear water. In the winter it kept
there for a good while until we
could eat it up.
To prepare the big hominy to
eat, we’d put a frying pan of it on
the stove, stir and heat it well,
and then put a browned milk gravy
made of the fryings from home-
cured side meat over it and let it
simmer in. A plate of that, along
with some of the same meat from
which the gravy was made, is good
eating for sure. And It has sub
stance in it. You could work on
that stuff.
We kids would go to the smoke
house and get handfuls of that
cooked corn to eat between meals.
But it wasn’t much good then as
the salt and seasoning wasn’t put
on and cooked in until ready to
serve. More about this next week.
One of the most beautifully
written letters I’ve ever received
or seen came from a man I don’t
know up at Seneca, RFD 4. With
his permission, I want to quote
you a bit from it. After saying he
enjoyed my stuff, specially the
tales of? boyhood, he gave me a
few of his thoughts.
“I must utterly reject the argu
ments of those who hold the
theory that poverty is degrading.
My father was not only abjectly
poor; he was illiterate as well. He
could barely scrawl his name to
the documents he could not read.
They were • almost universally
worded so that we would have
nothing left after'the landlord and
fertilizer man got their share. In
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Rev. Robert H. Harper
Self-Discipline for Growth (Tem
perance).
Lesson for August 15'. Matthew 16:
24-25; I Corinthians 9: 24-27; He
brews 12: 1-4.
Golden Text: Matthew 16: 24.
The lesson begins with the great
paradox that giving is life; with
holding is death. The man who
takes up his cross and follows
after Jesus will save his life,
though he gives it, while he who
would save his life and live for
self alone, will lose all in the end.
Mr. Emerson writes that some
men live all their lives under the
delusion that they can be cheated
out of the value of anything. We
Really cannot give anything away
What we give, and more, too. will
come back to us by and by.
The lesson of discipline is learned
on the athletic field. Paul observed
that in his day the man who ran
for a prize was careful to keep
his body under, that is, to deny
himself anything that would inter
fere with the rigorous training that
was designed to fit him for strenu
ous effort. As it was in that day
with the runners, it is with run
ners of the present time and with
those who contend on the .field of
football or baseball.
Therefore, we are to run with
patience the race before us, with
our faces toward the Lord Jesus,
not only as an example unto us
in giving himself, but also as our
help and support. It is easy to see
that this lesson admits of nothing
that will disqualify one for vig
orous action and clear thinking and
willing. Beverage alcohol is a ter-
• rible detriment to all worthy dis
cipline and high endeavor.
spite of all this, my father had a
nobility of soul which is not met
with at every crossroads. And if
I have any quality within me
wtorth three cents, it was instilled
in me by that poor, toil-worn man,
who, stooped beneath his unremit
ting toil, still managed to walk up
right in the sight of God and live
with his own conscience. So to
those who harp upon the outworn
theme of the degrading influence
of poverty, I say: the tallest trees
grow up from the deepest valleys.
. . . Admittedly, it does grind away
a lot of the husk, but it leaves
the heart of a man polished and
willing to face his life steadfast
ly.”
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The. smart starter for
the college wardrobe
or the “stay at home”
is a dress that
goes eveiywhere but
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to a ball.
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now have for
your selection^
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I'M 6ETTIN6
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1 5AW A PRETTY 6»RLTC>PAY
AND TRIED TO WHISTLE
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WHEN I INHALED TO BLOW
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THAN MV WHISTLE*
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PEGGY
AUPY WflSOVER
TO DINNER LAST
.NIGHT, PEGGYt.
40HAVA, THAIS
SUPER* SINCE
WHEN?^
MISS UNITERSE . . Miriam
Stevenmon, 21, of Winnsboro,
South CaroBna, was crowned
world’s most beautiful girl in
eompetittm with beauties from
32 countries at Long Beach, CaL
Jackson, Janie Bowman, Ruby
Williams, Lucille Gibbs, Rossie
Mae Clark, Mary Lee Caldwell,
Patricia Coleman, Joseph Means,
and Viola Kinard.
r IT SAYS MERE PATSV COAL
IS 97% PURE COAL,WHY THAtS
NOT EVEN MALE AN OUflCC OP
ASM IN A POUND (
THAT MEANS LESS WORK TOO*
tm ORDER NEXT WINTERS j
WHOLE SUPPLY NOW. NO
SENSE WAITING.
BETTER HU YOU R BIN
NOW AND FORGET
YOUR HEATING
PROBLEMS.
FARMERS
ICE & FUEL CO.
Phone 155
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