University of South Carolina Libraries
m ' 'i-' ' M ■ ■■ v-i, £* Wffljr- iJ^wF f.* - 'V ••■■-. - • '■•. -y • • \ • -' ' ^ ‘ ■, ■- ’': •.'. •*". Xv' . ■' , ■ • • • ? : , v -'■> /CT'-T’Vf, • 53fr?*-' .■ -. - ^ •_* THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1954 THE NEWBERRY SUN PAGE THREE Pr.' Prosperity News Sen r e Easy Pizza For Snacks MRS. B. T. YOUNG, Correspondent ; ■■■*' LITERARY SOROSIS The Literary Sorosis will meet Friday, Sept. 10, at 3:30 with Mrs. G. Y. Hunter at the home of her daughter, Mrs. R. K. Wise 1709 Hollywood Drive, Columbia. HOSPITAL PATIENT Mrs. Elbert Shealy is a patient in the Providence Hospital in Co lumbia. ATTEND REUNION The Rev. and Mrs. Ray P. Hook were in Simpsonville Tuesday for a reunion with some of their form er schoolmates at Divinity School. TO NEW HOME Mr. and Mrs. Tommie E. Har mon and their two daughters plan to njpve this week to their newly completed bouse near Newberry. VISIT IN FLORIDA Mr. and Mrs. Boyce Hawkins and their daughter, Miss Kathryn Hawkins have returned from a week’s visit with Mrs. Hawkins relatives in Winterhaven, Flordia. While away they saw many points of interest in Florida. BACK TO SCHOOL Miss Phyllis Wise left Sunday for Aiken, where she will teach in one of the county schools. VISIT IN VIRGINIA Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Williams will leave today (Thursday) to visit Mr. Williams’s relatives in Vir ginia. FLEE BEDS . . . Young Viet namese mother with her three children registers in Haiphong after escaping from the north, where thousands of refugees are Seeing Communist rule. RETURN TO GEORGIA Misses Linda and Nancy Wheel er has returned to their home in Nelson, Ga. after visiting their grandmother, Mrs. J. S. Wheeler. WEEKEND AT SALUDA Mrs. A. R. Chappell and her daughters, Averett and Claire, Mrs. C. E. Hendrix and her son Danny Newton spent the weekend in Saluda, N. C. MISS HANCOCK HOME Miss Lida Hancock, who has been Dietary Aid at the Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem for the summer will come home Thursday to spend two weeks before return ing to Erskine College. LEAVE FOR CLEMSON Billy Hendrix and Andrew Pugh will leave Monday to enter Clemson College. ON MOUNTAIN TRIP Mrs. P. E. Singley and Mrs. Mabel Filler of Columbia are va cationing in the mountains of N. C. this week. ON SCHOOL FACULTY B. R. (Bo) Taylor has returned to Gilbert where he is a member of the school faculty. VISIT CHERRYVILLE Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hamm spent the weekend with Mrs. Hamm's parents in Cherryville, N. C. SPARTANBURG GUESTS Mr. and Mrs. James Hunt and their daughters, Misses Janet and Joan Hunt of Spartanburg spent Friday night and Saturday with Mrs. A. B. Hunt and Mrs. Frances Spotts. WEEKEND VISITORS Mr. and Mrs. Joe Webster and their little daughter Lois were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Byrd Gibson. BACK FROM CONN. The Rev. and Mrs. Ray P. Hook have returned from a two weeks’ visiting trip in Hartford, Conn., New York City, Richmond, Va. and other places in N. J. and N. Y. The Hooks’ children, Sammy and Mary, spent the two weeks with their maternal grandparents in Kannapolis, N. C. N. Y. VISITORS Mrs. Ada Blass and her son Ronald of Orchard Park, N. Y. spent last Monday and Tuesday with Mrs. R. W. Pugh. EN ROUTE GUESTS Mrs. J. C. Taylor, Mrs. Clyde MV ONLY NEW 5-D PREMIUM GASOLENE HAS ALL 5! Some gasolenes have none of these features! Some gasolenes have some of these features! But only Cities Service 5-D Premium has them all! ANTI-CARBON EXTRA-HIGH OCTANE ANTI-RUST UPPER- CYLINDER LUBRICANT ANTI STALLING CITIES SERVICE FARMERS ICE & FUEL CO. GJ20RGE W. MARTIN, Manager Wholesale Distributor CITIES SERVICE Petroleum Products i m. :s % i “Hello, Purcells? Everything has hit us at once!” Goodness, was Henry relieved when he came to and learned that we could con solidate all our bills with an easy auto loan! PURCELLS “Your Prlvarwe Bankers’ 1418 Main St Newberry smtM Pizza is becoming as popular a supper or snack item in this country as the perennial favorite franks or hamburgers. Anyone who has eaten this wonderful combination of sausage, tomato, cheese and oregano baked on a crisp crust knows that it is real goodness which has made Pizza a food rage from coast to cpast. If you’ve hesitated to make this exciting mam dish pie, here s an easy recipe from the Ann Pillsbury Home .Service Center: Pizza 1 6-ounce can tomato paste 1 teaspoon salt l A teaspoon oregano % teaspoon garlic salt Grated Parmesan or sharp cheese 1 Package Hot Roll Mix 1 or 2 pounds Swift’s Brookfield Sausage Meat or Links % pound Italian or sharp cheese, shredded % cup minced onion 1 8-ounce can tomato sauce Parsley, finely cut Cooked r mushrooms, sliced Prepare dough as directed on hot roll mix package. Let rise until light, 30 to 60 minutes. Pan fry sausage (if links are used, brown lightly, slice). Divide dough into 4 parts. Flatten each Piece and pat into bottoms of four 9 or 10-inch pie pans (or divide dough in half, roll out two 12x8-inch rectangles and place in baking sheets). Brush with olive oil or sausage dripping-. Arrange half of cheese on dough. Cover with tomato mixture. Top with remaining cheese and sausage. Sprinkle with grated Parmesan or sharp cheese, parsley and mushroom slices. Bake immediately in a very hot oven (450°F.) 16 to 20 minutes. Serve hot. Umphlett and her son, Wynn, en- route from their homes fn Char leston to visit relatives in Virginia were dinner guests of Mrs. J. Frank Browne last FYiday. ATTEND FUNERAL Attending the funeral of Mrs. Harvey M. Montgomery, in Winns- tboro, last Wednesday were Mes- dames D. H. Hamm, Sr., J. Walter Hamm, Mrs. G. F. Clarkson, Mrs. W. L. Mills, Mrs. W. C. Barnes, Mrs. Vida C. Thomason and Misses Susie and Mary Langford. HOME FROM FLA. James Mills, who has been working in Jacksonville, Fla. is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Mills. VISIT COLUMBIA Mrs. J. L. Counts and Miss Annie Hunter spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Richard Foster in Columbia. TP N. AUGUSTA Miss Mary Langford left Mon day for North Augusta to resume her work in the school there. VISIT PARENTS The Rev. and Mrs. P. FI Shealy of Fincastle, Va. are visiting Rev. Shealy’s relatives in and near Prosperity. MISS WHEELER HOME Miss Ellen Wheeler, secretary of the music department at Win- throp College, spent several days last week at her home here. WEEKEND AT HOME Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Bedenbaugh of EJasley spent the weekend with their parents, Mrs. J. A. Counts and Mr. and Mrs. Maxcy Beden baugh. SUMMER HERE Mr. and Mrs. James Luther, who have spent the summer here with Mr. Luther’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Luther, have returned to Columbia where they are mem bers of the city school faculty. OHIO VISITORS Mrs. S. S. Bierley and Mr. and Mrs. Dick Bennett of Portsmouth, Ohio, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Pat Wise. VISIT PARENTS Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Brissie and their two sons, Robert and George, of Woodruff spent the weekend with Mrs. Brissie’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Mills. VISIT ASHEVILLE Mrs. W. E. Taylor, Mrs. B. R. Long, Misses Annas and Leah Long and Patent Long spent the weekend In Asheville with Mr. and Mrs. Everett Edmunds. VISIT MRS. PUGH Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Price of Co- I lumbia are visiting • Mrs. Price’s mother, Mrs. R. W. Pugh. With Mrs. Pugh for the weekend were Mr. and Mrs. Carl Russell Caugh- Bibfe Comment: We Owe Much to St. Matthew ’• '.'W* T*'* V-V.- h ' r PHE Gospel by St. Matthew, *■ the first ,in our New Testa ment, * • ’ stinctive in that it offers that is lacking in the otht:*. -iree Gospels, and in the consolidated and well-ar ranged way in which it presents the teaching of Jesus. ‘ It is doubtful, for instance, that the passage that we call “The Sermon on. the Mount,” in Matthew was all delivered at one sitting, though SL Matthew opens it with Jesus going up to the mountain, and closes it with Him coming down. * The same teachings in Luke’s Gospel are in a different setting and are not all in one passage. As presented by Matthew, the collected sayings of Jesus be come a charter of Christian faith and practice, the constitution of the Kingdom which Jesus pro- claimed. It is here that Mat thew’s Gospel excells, as Luke's excells in the Christmas story and in the wonderful recordings of the Parables of Jesus. Another ' distinctive and im portant contribution of the Gos pel by Matthew.is the chapter of “Woes.” How distinctive this is, and how much Matthew re cords, unmentioned by other writers, may be semi by com paring it with similar passages in Luke. This is important, for it emphasizes an aspect of Jesus' and His ministry that is widely disregarded or. neglected. We think of tTesus as the gen tle Christ, illustrating His truth concerning God’s grace and the love of man to man with the simple, wonderful tales that we call the Parables. It is a profound mistake to believe that Jesus was only a teacher, preacher and Saviour, with a Gospel only for individ uals. His whole Gospel was social. It struck at the deepest motives in social conduct and social welfare 5? . '• IJ 77' . . 1 T ; man and their son Rusty of Orangeburg and Pvt. Bobby Pugh of Camp Gordon. VISITING AUNTS .Miss Rebecca Taylor of Char leston is visiting her aunts, Mrs. J. F. Browne and Mrs. L. W. Har mon. SUNDAY GUESTS Mrs. Vida C. Thomason and her daughter. Miss Joy Thomason spent Sunday in Newfberry as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Olin Counts. Weights, Measures Has New Director Columbia, S. C., Aug. 23—“Re cent publicity given to the appoint ment of Ralph M. Magoffin as Di rector of the Weights and Mea sures Division of the State De partment of Agriculture has brought inquiries to mv office which indicate that the* general public is not too familiar with the importance of a weights and mea sures law and its effect,” said Agriculture Commissioner J. Roy Jones today. “The inspection of scales is just one of the many details of the duty of the Weights and Mea sures ’ Division,” Mr. Jones de clared, “but the inspection of the scales alone is a tremendous job. "Virtually , everything that is bought and sold is weighed many times,” according to the Commis sioner, “and, even in a medium sized city, there may be tens of millions of weighings in a year. “So that means that the people and the honest businessmen . of this city are betting millions of dollars — literally — upon the weights and measures department to do its job right. Losses on weighing errors can easily exceed losses by robbery. “Members of the .public have a huge investment in the accuracy of the scales used by merchants. If these are incorrect by only a few cents on each purchase, the net loss to buyers can reach stag gering sums. Multiply a few pen nies millions of times, and you have a really huge amount of mon ey involved. “There’s another side of the pic ture, too. Weights and measures inspection and enforcement often save honest merchants from.giving aT|ay their entire profit—or more —toy scales which are ‘slow’. If a scale has friction in it, it may not show as much on the dial as there is weight in the pan. The Nation al Association of Scale Manu facturers, Inc., reports that there are many cases in which honest merchants have gone bankrupt, literally giving away their busi nesses In overweight, without ever knowing their scales were wrong. “'Frequent inspection of scales ; is the only proper safeguard, be cause a scale, unlike other pieces of equipment, can go bad without warning. It will continue to weigh, but will give incorrect results. This, naturally, causes somebody to . take an undeserved financial loss. The Weights synd Measures Inspectors will average annually three to four inspections of com mercial weighing equipment.” BOYS ARE THAT WAY By J. M. ELEAZER A For three weeks now we have been talking about the important place corn played in our lives in the Dutch Fork when I was com ing along. I’ve covered about all angles of the subject now except what we did with the shucks and shattered corn, dust, and weevils that ac cumulated there as we shucked the pile up for varied uses. The shucks from the daily ra tion of corn kept the old milk cow going during the winter and at other seasons when the pasture dried up. We thought there was nothing better for a cow than corn shucks, a little trashy shattered corn, and a little cotton seed meal thrown over it. ^And, folks, that winds up the many uses our limit ed but useful corn went to. To supplement that as a cow feed, we usually had something green growing in the garden that we would pull for her. During much of the winter and spring it was chick weed that grew lush and rank in the rich garden there by the lot. And we would some times sow a bed of barley in the garden and cut the cow a basket of that each day. It would come hack out and when we got to one end of the bed it was ready to cut again at the other. In the fall and early winter we did the same with turnips. We had to cut them into chunks so the. cow wouldn’t choke on ’em. Those and the green tops made, fine cowfeed and you could (ell it in the milk bucket when she got them. And, as long as they held out, we staked her on honeysuckle vines in the winter. Cows like them and they were good for milk production too. Yes, folks lived close and hard in the Stone Hills of the Dutch FV>rk. But they were secure and had what they needed. A less frugal people would have starved or moved awiay. They were eco nomical to the extreme. They had to be .It was said we literally skinned fleas for their hides. But no one had a mortgage on his small farm. WE INVITE mmt- - - f,f?s Looking For Safety and Profit For Your Sav ings? You’ll Find Both Here! .... TO OPEN AN ACCOUNT TODAY . . . LARGE OR SMALL, AND UET IT EARN YOU A FAIR RETURN EACH ACCOUNT IS INSURED UP TO $10,000.00 BY THE FEDERAL SAYINGS & LOAtf INS. CORP. -r— WILL BE CLOSED LABOR DAY MONDAY, SEPT. 6 / — Sheet Metal Contractor—Heating—Air Conditioning Licensed Gas Fitters CAROLINA METAL WORKS Itreet Extern College Street Extension Phone 115 'v. 0^^: " A cricket’s song is produced by rubbing of one wing against anoth er and only adult males “sing”. Some entomologists believe the cricket sound is a mating call. Others regard it is a battle chal lenge, and still others say the cricket chirps just to express him self. , Frozen Food Supplies - Pfe.' - • ALUMINUM FOIL ■ ■ '' ^ ; r-; "* -• POLYETHYLENE ALL PLASTIC FREEZ- TAINERS ga STOCKINETTES BAGS PLASTIC POULTRY FROZEN , FOOD CON- . BAGS TAINERS •'•s&n-iP: W. . , . AND OTHER SUP- OAKEN BUCKET CON- PLIES FOR THE TAINERS FREEZER m' . » *. / apaKSge \ r*r m-- %. T— / Monday, Septe Sixth The following Service Stations will be closed ... i / VFW CHIEFS . . . Newly-elected commander-in-chief of Veterans of Foreign Wars, Merton B. Tice (right), of Mitchell, S. D., receives gavel from out-going commander Wayne E. Richards of Arkansas City, Kan., at Philadelphia convention. All customers are asked to please their needs before this weekend since these Stations will not be open on Monday, September 6. Be sure your car is properly serviced for a pleasant and safe holiday. ■ r C. D. Coleman College St. College St. Texaco Station College St. Slaton Service Station College St. City Filling Station “Next to the Post Office & Just As Reliable X 0 ■ , Porters Esso Station College St. Main St. Gulf Service E. Main St. Lipscomb Service Station College St. Roy Mills’ Esso Station E. Main St. Main St. Purol Station E. Main St. • sV . I .