The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, November 25, 1954, Image 7
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THURSDAY, NOV. 25, 1954
THE NEWBERRY SUN
PAGE SEVEN
/-'irwfrr* -
HOME
LOANS
tailored to fit YOUR income
You’ll like our modern, low-cost
financing: plan.
• To Purchase • To Remodel
• To Build • To Refinance
"Save Where Hundreds Save Millions"
J
We will be closed Thanksgiving Day, November 25th.
LEGAL
HOLIDAY
NOTICE
All Offices in the
COUNTY COURT HOUSE
will be closed
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 25
on account of
THANKSGIVING
THURSDAY
NOVEMBER 2*
Being
THANKSGIVING
DAY
WE WILL NOT BE
OPEN FOR BUSINESS
A:.
NEWBERRY
Federal Savings
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
OF NEWBERRY
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Buick’s New Front End Styling for 1955
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James Bundrick
Returns To States
From Far East
James F. Bundrick, yeoman sea
man, USN, of Route 1, Newberry,
was scheduled to return to San
Diego, Calif, last Friday, Novem
ber 19 aboard the attack aircraft
carrier USS Philippine Sea from
an eight-month cruise in the Far
East.
The carrier and her air group
were off the communist held is
land of Hainan during the rescue
operations of survivors of the
downed British Cathay airliner.
More than sixty-thousand miles
were traveled during the cruise.
Visits were made to ports in the
Philippine Islands, Japan and at
Hong Kong, British Crown Colony.
Honors Won by South Carolina 4-H f ers
'
H ONOR awards were received by 4-H Club members for their im
pressive records in the 1954 National 4-H Food Preparation,
ing. Poultry, and Tractor programs. An educational trip to the sam
4-H Club Congress, Chicago, November 28-December 2, was received
by each teen-ager. Highlights of their club careers follow:
Planning, selecting and prepar
ing nourishing foods has been a
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BUICK’S FRONT END, long one of the most
easily identified in the antomobile industry, sets
a new style fashion in 1955. It paces the trend
toward a more compact appearance with a recessed
hood, more massive bumpers and a completely new
wide-screen grille. Two “bombs” protect the grille
itself while " ’llart new roll-edge wing guards shield
the fenders ’id lights. Headlights are visored in
a distinctive fashion. The Buick tri-color medallion
is located on a bar across the front of the grille,
and the letters “B-U-I-C-K* in brilliant chrome grace
the center of the recessed hood. The hood orna
ment, mounted on four concentric rings, symbolic
of Buick’s four great V-8 series, is bright chrome
on the Special, Century and Super, and is finished
in gold on the Roadmaster.
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Lindsay Completes
Medical Training
At Brookes Center
Private James R. Lindsay, son
bf Mrs. Annie Bell Dominick,
Chappells, has completed the Medi
cal Training Center’s eight-week
course of advanced" basic training
at Brooke Army Me/dical Center,
Fort Sam Houston, Texas.
The training at the Army’s only
basic training center for combat
aidmen and medical corpsmen has
prepared him for duty with the
Army Medical Service. The Medi
cal Training Center offers inten
sive instruction in field medical
care and hospital ward manage
ment, and trainees make practical
application of their instruction
during a field problem conducted
for five days under simulated bat
tle conditions.
Medical Training Center is one
of eight units of Brookes Army
Medical Center, the Army’s larg
est medical installation. The cen
ter carries on virtually all phases
of professional and technical train
ing in military medicine as well
as patient treatment and reseaoch.
Private Lindsay, a 1951 graduate
of the Bell Street High School
in Clinton, entered the Army last
July.
challenge to Margaret Langston,
18, of Timmonsville, during her
nine years in 4-H Club work. Dve
to her outstanding record, she has
been named state winner in the
4-H Food Preparation program.
As a result, she will attend the
Natihnal 4-H Club Congress in
Chicago as the guest of Kelvina-
tor. Margaret has cooked and
served 2,225 meals during her 4-H
Club career. She says she has
learned more from her Food
Preparation project than any
other. Margaret’s club activities
include: junior and assistant lead
er to Mrs. Carolyn S. Bacot, and
vice president of county counciL
• • • •
Edith Godwin, 17, of Coward,
has been selected as state winner
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pairs have been minimized by
Robert, 17, South Carolina winner
in the 4-H Tractor program. H®
was awarded an all-expense trip to
the National 4-H Club Congress in
Chicago as a guest of American
Gil Company. Robert has devoted
four years to the study of prac
tice of tractor operation and
maintenance. In this program*
which emphasizes care, not re
pair, Robert has been a winner imp
county and district contests and
has made four demonstrations of
tractor driving. He has made 38
talks on 4-H subjects and been on
radio three times. He has served
his,club as an officer every year*
three times as president. As Jun
ior Leader, helping E. C. Ander
son, be has built up the club
membership to 62.
• - • • •
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Margaret Langston Edith Godwin
in the 1954 Poultry Achievement
program. Her trip award to the
National 4-H Club Congress was
provided by the Tractor and Im
plement v Division, Ford Motor
Company. Edith has been in 4-H
Club work for nine years. She
started with 100 chicks, and
raised 200 chicks this year. She
has won blue ribbons in the coun
ty eight years in a row. She has
won over 8300 in prize money,
and has realized a profit of 81,500’
on sales of poultry. Edith was
president of her local group for
five years, and this year was secre
tary-treasurer. Despite the hours
of effort devoted to the poultry
program, Edith found time to
carry on seven other projects and
to win many awards.
Robert Workman Harriet Sinkler
By making 38 garments suit-*
able for work, school and parties*
Harriet Sinkler, 17, of Eutawville,
was proclaimed South Carolina *
champion in the 4-H Clothing
project. Her reward is an ail-
expense trip to the-National 4-H
Club Congress in Chicago, pro
vided by Coats & Clark, Inc. Gar
ments madfe by Harriet included
wool suits and formals. Harriet
joined 4-H in 1947. She made sev
eral garments and placed third In
the county Dress Revue. She won
her first blue ribbon in 1960, and.
many since then. She Ivas I
dent of her local 4-H club for i
years and secretary of the
4-H club for one year,
has engaged in Home 1
ment. Beautification of
Grounds, Safety, Frozen
Canning, Leadership, and
Grooming.
• •
Subscribe to The Newberry Sun Cooperative Extension Service.
Production costs on the Work
man farm near Timmonsville have
been kept low because tractor re- . . # >
All these programs are conducted under the direction of to#
iprative Extension Service*
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at MAXWELL BROS. & LINDSAY
' Ford’s longer, lower body style and wrap-around windshield, available on all models:,
is shown above in the Fairlane four-door sedan. The ’55 Fords are available with Y-Blocl*.
V-8 or I-Block Six power, and Fairlane models have diial exhaust as standard equipment
They will be. introduced by Ford dealers November 12.
Sports Afield
(By TED KESTiNG)
Sportsmen in every state of the
Union have been demanding to
know what has happened to the
$35 million collected since the
origin of the Duck Stamp in 1934.
So Sports Afield asked Cleve
land van Dresser to find out.
He reports that the Fish and
Wildlife Service has never spent
Duck Stamp funds in any way
that was not legal. The Act
clearly states that funds collected
by the Duck Stamp tax are to he
used for acquisition, development
and maintenance of waterfowl
refuge areas. The Fish and Wild
life Service did just that—tout did
considerably more development
and maintenance than acquisition.
Never has the Service spent Duck
Stamp money on acquiring and de
veloping any refuge areas other
than those directly concerned with
waterfowl.
(As a matter of fact, through
land transfers and other types of
purchases, the Service has ob
tained a total of 2,167,926 acres of
land suitable for water-fowl man
agement without spending a single
cent of Duck Stamp money.)
But the Service is in a difficult
situation. Whenever an admini
stration goes economy minded, the
first agencies to receive cuts are
those dealing with our natural re
sources. The present administra
tion is certainly no exception.
This yeai- the Bureau of the
Budget made cuts in refuge main
tenance, law enforcement and
wildlife research; Congress made
more cuts. The Post Office de
partment got into the act by rais
ing the price of printing Duck
Stamps from 832,000 to more than
8155,000.
Every time a slash is handed
down to the Fish and Wildlife
Service, comes the recommenda
tion, “Take it out of Duck Stamp
money.” These recommendations
are endorsed by the Secretary of
the Interior, and amount to direct
orders. s
Sportsmen thought that Duck
Stamp money would be used as
an extra fund to buy and main
tain more refuge areas. But this
money had to be used to finance
activities that previously had been
paid for by Congressional appro
priations from the general tax
fund.
It is absolutely impossible tor
the Fish and Wildlife Service to
limit Duck Stamp money to refuge
programs alone and still do the
other things it is supposed to do.
The Fish and Wildlife Service,
on Duck Stamp money alone,
simply can’t follow the directives
of the present administration and
at the same time pursue a decent
waterfowl refuge program. The
blame—and the cure—for the situ
ation is in the laps of Congress,
the Bureau of the Budget and the
Secretary of the Interior.
ST. PHILLIPS 4-H CLUB MEETS
AND ELECTS OFFICERS
The 4-H Club held its first meet
ing at St. Phillips school, Tues
day, October j.4, 1954.
They elected the following of
ficers: President, Julia Richard
son; Vice President, Lorraine
Lominick; Secretary, Margaret
Shealy; Treasurer, Deloris Stroud;
Librarian, Linda Stone and News
Reporter, Fran Gibson. Our Local
Leader tor this year is Mrs. Van
Price.
The meetings will be held on
the first Friday of each month.
Fran Gibson
Reporter
A delegate-at-large is a gentle
man who attends the convention
without his wife.
Asked Shorty Sorrell if he mind
ed the boys kidding him about
being so short. “Humpf,” he re
marked, “Think a dime feels small
with a bunch of nickels?”
Income Tax Booklet
Now Off The Press
The 1954 edition of the booklet
“Your Federal Income Tax,” ofie
of the nation’s best-selling govern
ment publications, will be distri
buted to South Carolina and North
Carolina taxpayers by the Charles
ton field office of the U. S. Depart
ment of Commerce as soon as
available, and orders are now
being taken for it, it was an
nounced.
The booklet will soon go to
press in Washington and it should
be ready for distribution through
the Commerce Department office
in Charleston around January 1 or
shortly thereafter, it was, stated.
According to C. W. Martin, Com
merce Department manager, the
forthcoming publication, a revis
ion of previous issues which have
found their way into the hands of
thousands of residents in South
Carolina and the Southeast, will
be especially important to taxpay
ers this year because It will in
corporate the new changes made
in the Federal income tax law at
the last session of Congress,
which will inure to the benefit of
the taxpayer.
Distribution will also be made
by the Charleston office of the
Commerce Department of the
booklet relating to determination
of deductions for depreciation and
obsolescence, known as “Bulletin
F,” and the leaflet, “The Small
Businessman and the Declaration
of Estimated Tax,” which have
been popular among taxpayers in
past years.
No sales price has been placed
on the booklet “Your Federal In
come Tax, 1954 Edition,” but it is
expected to be 25 cents. The book
let “Bulletin F” is 30 cents, and
the leaflet on declaration of esti- Main St.
mated tax is 10 cents.
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FOREST FIRES CAN BE PREVENTED!
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MILLIONS OF TINY TREES
HIDDEN IN THE GRASS
CAN GROW INTO PRODUCTIVE
..WE MUST KEEP FIRE
AWAY FROM THEM
S4HF TOMORROWS JR&S
TODAY HELP PREVENT
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