The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, January 13, 1955, Image 7
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THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1955
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THE NEWBERRY SUN
AUDITOR’S 1955 TAX
ASSESSMENT NOTICE
,
I, or an authorized agent, will
be at the following places on
the dates given below for the
purpose of taking tax returns
pn all personal property, new
buildings, and real estate
transfers. Persons owning
district must make returns
•for each district.
All able-bodied male citizens
between the ages of twenty-
one and sixty are liable to
$1.00 poll tax.
Thursday, January 13, 1955,
from 10 until 3.
POMARIA
Friday, January 14, 1956, from
10 until 3.
LITTLE MOUNTAIN
Monday, January 17, 1955, from
10 until 8.
ST. LUKES
Moore's Store—Tuesday, Jacu*
18, 1955, from 10 until 12:30.
O'NEAL
Boozer's ' Store—Tuesday, Janu-
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For Expert Repair Bring
our Radio and TalavMon
GEO. N; MARTIN
Radio and Television
•ALES and CERVICE
1309 MAIN STREET
24 HOUR SERVICE
Telephone 311
AT LOMINICK’S
I DRUG STORE
PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED
BY LICENSED
DRUGGIST
PRESCRIPTIONS ARE
CALLED FOR
AND DELIVERED
PHONE 981
GOOD READING
At The Library
Fiction
Benton’s Row — Frank Yerby.
The Cheerful Captive — Louise
Cooper.
Respectable Women — Gilbert
Rees.
One White Star — Gladys Car-
roll.
Fatal In My Fashion — Pat Mc-
Gerr.
Prairie Guns — Ernest Haycox.
Arrow in the Moon — Margaret
Harris.
The Year the Yankees Lost the
Pennant — Douglass Wallop.
No Time for Sergeants — Mac
Hyman.
Best American Short Stories, 19-
54 — Martha Foley, ed.
< *
Non-Fiction
A Child of the Century — Ben
Hecht.
Glory, God and Gold — Paul
Wellman.
MacArthur: 1941-1951 — Charles
Willoughby.
That Reminds Me — Alben W.
Barkley.
Patterns in Reading — Jean C.
Roos.
The Invisible Writing — 1 Arthur
Koestler.
Christmas Lighting and Deco
rating — Theodore Saros.
The Prayers of Peter Marshall—
Catherine Marshall, ed.
Skyrocketing in to the Unknown
—Charles Coombs.
Juvenile
Showboat Holiday — Lee Wynd-
ham.
Two Little Trains — Margaret
W. Brown.
Rodeo — Glen Rounds.
Francis Marion, young Swamp
Fox — William Steele.
Little Bruin — Hasken Christen
sen.
The Horse and His Boy — Clive
Lewis.
Wish on the Moon — Berta
ary 18, 1955, from 2 until 4:30.
MACEDONIA
Rich’s Store—^Wednesday, Janu
ary 19, 1955, from 10 until 12:30.
PROSPERITY
Black’s Store—Thursday, Janu
ary 20, 1956.
At Auditor’s Office to
March 1st, after which a pen
alty of 10 percent will be
added.
RALPH B. BLACK
Auditor Newberry County
35-4tc
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0YS ARE
THAT WAY
By J. M. ELEAZER
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TITO VISITS NEHRU . . . India’s premier Pandit Nehru and Pres.
Tito of Yugoslavia issued joint statement from New Delhi warning
‘H»t world must adopt principles of peaceful co-existence or perish.
Sheet Metal Contractor—Heating—Air Conditioning
Licensed Gas Fitters
CAROLINA METAL WORKS
College Street Extension
A. G. McCaughrin, Pres. & Treas. Phone 115
Flowers and Gifts for All Occasions
CARTER’S
Day Phones 719 & 76—Night 513-R
Staple & Fancy Groceries
Fresh Produce—Meats—Fish & Poultry
Frozen Foods
Friendly Super Mkt.
Phone 517 for Home Delivery
1100 Main St. Joe Hipp, Prop.
gMill
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ONLY NEW
5-D
GASOLENE
HAS ALL 5!
I Some gascJenes 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
FARM E]R S
ICE & FUEL CO.
GEORGE W. MARTIN, Manager
Wholesale Distributor CITIES SERVICE
Petroleum Products
Amis Finds Fanning
Better Than Being
Football Coach
By MRS. A. H. COUNTS
T. B. (Dad) Amis says It was
while he was at Futman Universi
ty he decided to give up coaching
for farming.
He remarked one day to the
,late Bob Smith of Kinards, one of
Furman’s football supporters, he
wished he could aquire a large
farm at a reasonable price—one
suitable for cattle raising. Smith
made arrangements for Coach
Amis to see a farm near his place.
After the two men spent a day
tramping/ over the farm dense
with underbrush, briars and
woods, Smith told Amis, “If you
don’t want this place I do, but I
want you to have it for I would
like to have you for a neighbor.”
The trade was made a short time
later and in 1933 Dad Amis left
coaching to move to his new farm.
Amis now has a 1,50 acre farm
near Jalapa in Newberry County.
A pond in every depression is his
goal.
AMPL^ WATER SUPPLY
“I am a regular Scotchman
when it come to saving soil and
water,” he says. “I want to keep
every drop of water that falls on
my land and I want to keep my
Hader.
The Sugarbush Family — Mir
iam Mason.
Juba’s New Moon — Isabella
McMeekin.
The Little Whistler — Frances
Frost.
Mr. Petersand’s Cats and Kit
tens — Louis Slobodkin.
Babe Ruth, baseball boy —
Guernsey Van Riper.
Voyage of the Luna 1 — Dorothy
Craigie.
Wild Folk at the Pond — Car-
roll Fenton.
The Sod House — Elizabeth
Coatsworth.
Barnum Presents: General Tom
Thumb — Alice Desmond.
The F. B. I. —Quentin Reynolds.
know your State
flower
The fragrant yellow jessamine
is South Carolina’s state
flower. Its golden blooms,
bright green leaves and burnt-
red stems give it a colorful
appearance which, together
with the fact that it grows
throughout the state, makes it
worthy of its official designa-'
tion.
In the flower-bedecked
State of South Carolina, the
United States Brewers Foun
dation works constantly to
encourage the maintenance of
wholesome conditions wher
ever beer and ale are sold. As
in other states, the program
calls for close cooperation
between law-enforcement
officials and beer licensees
throughout South Carolina.
Beer belongs ... enjoy it.
United States Brewers Foundation
South Carolina Dhr., Columbia, S.C
The beverage
of moderation
As a kid we really foraged on
the wild bounty of the woods.
Fall was the most fertile season
for this. Spring had its beauty and
flowers. But they didn’t appeal to
us so ipuch. What interested us
most was something to eat.
Spring had its wild strawberries.
Then came plums, followed by
blackberries that lasted, away out
into summer. But jt wai fall that
brought the greatest variety.
It takes frost to make most fall
things good and ready to eat. We
watched the honey locust/ black
ening on the thorny trees. Frost
knocked the last bit of greenness
out of them and soon they were
good. Our mouths were usually
stained with their hpney goodness
until they became wormy and
dried up. But we tolerated the
worms, as long as the locust were
good and gooey. Sometimes we
saw a half-worm left after a bite
was taken. But that didn’t bother
—
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Your Every
Printing Need
Letterheads
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Statements
FOWL BEGGARS
Swans in'Hamburg, Germany, get feed from
passing motorists who visit parks to
A
H. Harper
Christ, tbs Son of tbs Living God.
Ltsson for Jomusry 16: Msttbsw
16:13-17; John 14: 8-14.
Goldsn Toxt: John 14: 6.
Hie first part of the text con
cerns what has been called the
Great Confession. In the coasts of
Caesarea Philippi, Jesus asked the
disciples to tell him the opinions
of men concerning him. They re
plied that some said he was John
the Baptist, some Elijah, and oth
ers that he was Jeremiah or one
of the prophets. When he asked
them what they thought of him,
Peter, ever ready and ever the
first to speak, said, “Thou art the
Christ, the Son of the living God.”
In the conversation in the upper
room, in answer to Phillip’s plea,
“Lord show us the Father and it
sufficeth us,” Jesus said that he
and the Father are one, and that
no m» n can come to the Father
except through Christ.
Thus we are taught tyrt Jesus
came on a ministry of revelation
unto men, to show them God is,
and what men through him may
become. So may we learn of God
through learning of Christ, in the
record of the Scriptures concern
ing him.
The lesson throws abundant light
upon the nature and mission of
Jesus of Nazareth. “In the be
ginning was the Word, and the
y^ord was with God, and the Word
was God.” Jesus is eternal and
the creator of all things. He and
the Father are one. Through
Jesus, we may come into abun
dant life now and evermore.
son.”
Last summer when nearby
streams went dry, Amis had an
ample- supply of water on his
place. He has 15 ponds, pratical-
ly all stocked with bream and
trout.
He built his first pond in 1933,
believing it to be the first surface
pond built in South Carolina.
Ponds range from a quarter to
three acres in size.
Now he has around 100 pure
bred Hereford beef cattle. He has
around 100 acres of oats, fescue,
clover and rye grass. Dallas grass,
Bermuda, white Dutch clover
furnish grazing lands in the low
lands. Kudzu is planted on the
steep rolling land.
FISH PURIFY WATER
Fish in the ponds help purify
the water and improve the drink
ing qualities for the cattle.
Last summer the Amis y family
moved into a new brick home. It
is rahch type, located on top of
a hill and has a wonderful view.
For summer recreation, the
family spends time in a cottage
near twin lakes at the foot of a
steep hillside abounding in wild
azaleas.
Mr. and Mrs. Amis have three
children. A son, Billy, is an in
structor at the University of North
Carolina. Two daughters are stu
dents. Ruth is a sophomore at
Anderson College and Frances a
Newberry High student
Dad Amis was a three-letter
athlete at Georgia Tech. He was
a freshman coach at Tech before
going to Howard Payne College at
Brownwood, Tex. He came from
there to Furman, which was his
last coaching job.
PRINCE IN SUB . . . Prince
Bertil of Sweden teste periscope
at Stockholm exhibit staged on
50th anniversary of Swedish sub
marine force.
OLYMPIC BOOSTERS . . . Bing
peers from poster at lovely
Denise Darcel st New York pre
mier of Crosby's film "The Coun
try Girl,” proceeds of which go
to U. S. Olympic fund.
COED CLARE . . . Mrs. Clare
Boothe Luce, U. S. ambassador
to Italy, wears Goliardic hat pre
sented her by Trieste University,
making her honary freshman at
the college.
The family Bible is passed from
generation to generation
it gets so little wear.
because
GIVE — GIVE —
GIVE
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GIVE
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1
TO THE
Ul
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MARCH
<
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1
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OF DIMES
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TODAY
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GIVE^ — GIVE —
GIVE
WINS ASYLUM . . . Leonard
Wasowski, captain of Polish
tanker seised at Formosa by Chi
nese nationalists, renounced Com
munists (along with 21 crewmen)
and now lives in New York city.
BOOKMOBILE
SCHEDULE
Thursday, Jan. 2Dt|tr-
Oakland Mill, Mrs. J. L Ringer.
Oakland MU1, Mrs. Reeder
Brooks.
Box factory,. Cause’s store.'
Gary Community, A. P. Ramage.
Bush River Corffmunity, Mrs.
Willie Stngley.
Bush River Community, Mrs.
Lamar King.
Bush River School.
Tranwood Community, /M r s .
Rosa Johnson.
^ Friday, Jan. 21 at.
West End School.
Speers Street School.
Queens Community, Fowlers
store.
Long Lane Community, Ben
Caldwell.
Whitmire Library.
us much. We spat that out. But
often I'm sure we just didn’t hap
pen to leave a half there after the
bites were taken. And this same
thing often happened earlier with
wild plums and fruit from down
in the orchard.
And there were doubtless small
worms at times in the other things
we ate but did not see. Like in
black haws, sand berries, thorn ap
ples and the like, where yon put
the whole thing in your mouth.
But what you don't know along
this line doesn’t seem to hurt yon.
And our worm eating doesn't stop
with just when we were kids
either. Next week well look into
that here.
Subscribe to The Newberry Sun
HEADQUARTERS BATTERY,
LOCAL GUARD UNIT,
TO MEET SUNDAY
Headquarters and. Headquarters
Battery, 228th Gronp of the South
Carolina National Guard will not
hold its regular meeting tonight
(Thursday). The next meeting of
the battery wilt be, on Sunday
afternoon, January 16 from 2:00
until 4:00 p.m.
needs. You will like our mod
ern, supefeareful methods that
actually add months to the life
of your clothes! You will like
our prompt delivery,our cour
tesy, and our reasonable
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DRY CLEANERS
Phone 1? 1107 Caldwell
Newberry* S. C.
FUNERAL HOME
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STATEMENT OF
moN
*n-y&r
sV
OF THE * ’
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Newberry, S. C.
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ME,
Joanna, S.
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CLOSE OF BUSINESS, DECEMBER 31, 1954
Resources
Liabilities
Cash and Due from
Banks
U. S. Government
Securities —
State, County, and
Municipal Securities
«
Loans and Discounts
Banking House, Furniture
and Fixtures
Other Assets 1.
.. 3604^71.79
.. 799,730.00
.. 176,397.50
668,592.13
85,234^0
92.36
DEPOSITS
Tax and Other
Reserves
$2,125,826.34
•’ ' i
T ! - • .
4,941.84
i 1 -. '1
1 <
$2,334,318.58
Common Capital
Surplus
Undivided Profits ...
Reserve for Losses ...
$
1 ■ f ■' T -'Ji/'* W,
125,000.00
35,000.00
27,550.40
16,000.00
$2,334,318.58
—
The Friendly Bank in the Friendly City
SMS
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