The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, February 03, 1955, Image 7
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1955
THE NEWBERRY SUN
PAGE SEVEN
For Expert Repair Bring
Your Radio and Tolovlalon
GEO. N. MARTIN
Radio and Television
•ALES and SERVICE
1309 MAIN STREET
84 HOUR SERVICE
Telephone S11
BOYS ARE
THAT WAY
By J. M. ELEAZER
HITAKER
FUNERAL HOME
UpgM--
n-
PHONE 270
C 41 ns for your dry cleaning
needs. You will like our mod
ern. supercareful methods that
actually add months to the life
of yonr clothes! You will like
our prompt ' delivery .our cour
tesy, and our reasonable prices.
ROYAL
DRY CLEANERS
Phone 1? 1107 Caldwell
Newberry, 8. C.
As a kid we warmed only by an
open fireplace. The rooms were
large and airy. So there wasn’t
usually much comfort except on
the side towards the fire. It often
got too hot, and you had to keep
turning. But we were used to that
and enjoyed it. v
Today we have a furnace, auto
matic! It comes on and has the
whole house warm when we get
up. Now, folks, to me that’s one
of the greatest luxuries our times
have brought. Compare with it the
cold, clammy house of the past,
with frosty floors and icy air com
ing through the cracks, when you
had to get up in your shirttail and
barefooted before dawn and start
a slow fire in the fireplace. For
bath robes and house slippers
were unknown to us then.
But I still like the wood fire.
It sings as it burns, and casts
soft dancing shadows on the floor
and walls at hight. It is a cozy
and friendly thing, surely in league
with the goddess of sleep. For
who can resist its mellow, flicker
ing glow and gentle crackle when
the hour is late.
As when a kid, I still like to
poke into it, and see the sparks
fly, and the flame leap higher.
And, best of all, on a cold night,
when no duties are calling for
early tomorrow, I like to snooze
before it with the children, as they
sit on the floor there and pop corn
or roast peanuts on the hearth.
Yes, that furnace is still mighty
fine to* moderate the house. But
there is no substitute for the open
fire to sit around and read, or talk,
or just soak. A living room is a
sort of empty thing to me without
it. Reading is cramped, conver
sation is hard, and complete re-
s *
NEED EXTRA MONEY
TO PAY YOUR RILLS
$5 to $50
We have the , money to make a quick, courteous and
confidential loan to help you with your clothing problems.
SERVICE FINANCE COMPANY
"Ours la A Friendly Service”
1506 Main 8L Phone 1158 Open 8 A. M. to 6 P. M.
NEW
5-D
PREMIUM
GASOLENE
HAS ALL 5! I
Some gasolenes have none
of these features!
Some gasolenes have
some of these features!
But only Cities Service
5-D Premium has them all!
1 ANTI-CARBON
! EXTRA-HIGH
OCTANE
» ANTI-RUST
e
UPPER-
CYLINDER
LUBRICANT
I ANTI-
STALLING
ernes
SSftVICE
FAR M'E'R S
ICE & FUEL CO.
GEORGE W. MARTIN, Manager
Wholesale Distributor CITIES SERVICE
Petroleum Products
§
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prt. ■
*
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'A\:
^3.
‘T mortgaged the house to buy a car, then I mortgaged
the car to fix up the house . . . maybe I shoulda seen
Purcell’s in the first place.”
h
About the on'y thing I’m sure of is that
kids will be kids and Purcell’s will help
me live through it.
reeled
“Your Private Bankers”
1418 Main St. Newberry
Pontiac Safari, New Custom Station Wagon
luxury of a flue passenger car with the utiUty of a station wagon. The two-door car,
whose unique styling innovations and ultra-modern streamlining are featured in this
rear view, is only 59 inches high. The Safari was introduced at the General Motors
Motorama in New York. Its customized interior is finished in hand-buffed leather which
matches the exterior body colors. Pontiac is putting the car into production immediately.
*»
I REMEMBER
BY THE OLD TIMERS
From Mrs. Jessie Bush Wriedt,
Mesa, Arizona: My mother and
family of six children left South
ern California in 1892 and joined
my father at Gila Bend. Arizona,
when I was nine. Father had been
there several months and had a
freighting business.
We children had some strange
experiences In this land, so dif
ferent from our former home, but
we never wanted to return. There
were stray burros, several in a
band, and we had fun riding them.
At one place we lived the watet
was so salty we had to haul water
from the*Gila River In a big bar
rel that gave the warm water a
very decided whiskey flavor
We came to Phoenix In 1893 in
big wagons . . . camped six weeks
at the edge of the Old Cemetery
while father and a friend searched
for a home in the valley . . When
we reached our pretty 20-acre
home there was no well but a ditch
with running water . . Many In
dians passed frequently, the bucks
riding a pony while the squaw
with a big load on her head jogged
along side the horse ... When an
animal in the fields died from nat
ural causes, several Indians would
arrive on the scene from "no
where’*: they were orderly,
worked fast cutting up the meat,
nc- fussing among themselves.
We had a sheep pasture and
some fig trees in it. The cranky
big ram would guard the figs from
boys on their way to a big canal
nearby to swim . . . He always
failed to catch them, big kept them
there (up the trees) for long pe
riods of time
V
Newberry Men In Service At
Stations Around The World
luxation is just not there like
when a living fire is with you.
It sooths as it burns. And, as
the hour latens, the dying embers
cast fainter shadows, leading to
drowsiness and forgetful sleep.
But when crip and cold morning
dawns, I want to be awakened by
the click of that furnace coming
on.
CPL. NORTHERN J. REID
9TH DIV., GERMANY — Cpl.
Northern J. Reid, 23, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Northern Reid, Route
1, Newberry, is serving with the
9th Infantry Division in Germany.
As part of the U. S. Seventh
Army, the 9th Division conducts
rigorous training exercises, in
cluding realistic maneuvers and
field problems. In southern Germ
any.
Corporal Reid, an ammunition
corporal in Company A of the di<
viajon’s 47th Regiment, entered
the Army in January 1952 and ar
rived overseas the following July.
He received training at Fort
Bliss, Texas
CPL. DAVID W. BISHOP
Marine Cpl. David W. Bishop,
son of Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Bishop
of Main street, Newberry is
scheduled to participate in a large
scale amphibious training exercise
In the Puerto Rigan area with the.
Atlantic Fleet Marine Force Train
ing Group from January to March,
1856. • ( .: r jjjifcl
The exercise is designed tif
familiarize Marines with the latest
fighting equipment and to test
their combat readiness in full
scale amphibious maneuvers^ Units
of the 2nd Marine Division from
Camp LejeUne, N. C„ and units
of the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing
from Miami, Fla., are taking part.
After a six-week training phase,
the Marines will board ships and
storm the beaches of tfae island of
Vieques in an amphibious attack
against aggressor forces dug in on
the island. While in the area, the
Marines will visit cities in Puerto
Rico and other Caribbean islands.
SGT. 1/C VERNON A. HARRIS
U. S. FORCES, ALASKA—Army
Sergeant First Class Vernon A.
Harris, son of Mrs. Ida Belle Har
ris, 614 Main St., Newberry, is
participating In "Exercise Snow
Bird”, a joint Army-Air Force
training maneuver, in Alaska.
Airborpe units, ground troops
and equipment are being tested in
the exercise for operation in tem
peratures as low as 50 degrees
below zero.
Sergeant Harris, a chief com
puter in the Heavy Mortar Com
pany of the 71st Infantry Divi
sion’s 607 Armored Field Artillary
Battalion, arrived in Alaska in
September, f951.
PVT. JACK D. PERRY
Pvt. Jack G. Perry of Saluda,
is participating in “Exercise Fol
low Me”, a simulated atomic war
fare maneuver at Fort Benning,
,Ga. Perry, whose wife, Margie,
lives on Route 1, is regularly as
signed as a detail orderly in Com
pany H of the 47th Infantry Di
vision’s 7th Regiment. He entered
;the Army in 1951 and served in
Korea from June 1951 to March
1962. His parents, Mr. and Mrs.
S. Perry, live oh Route 1, Chap
pells.
ALBERT C. ©ARLINGTON, JR.
Albert C. Garlington, Jr., elec
tronics technician third class,
USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. C.
Garlington of 1229 Calhoun st.,
Newberry is aboard the destroyer
USS Gatling, scheduled to arrive
in Newport, R. I. January 28th.
The Gatling left the United
States early in September for duty
with the U. S. Sixth Fleet in the
Mediterranean.
During her stay in the Mediter
ranean she visited Lisbon, Portu
gal; Palermo, Sicily; La Spezia
and Taranto, Italy; Cannes, Mar
seilles, Toulon and Golfe Juan,
France; Salonika, Greece and
Izmir, Turkey.
Sports Afield
(By TED KESTipG)
Rev. Robert H. Harper
The Grac* of God. .
Lesson for February 6:1 John 4: 10;
Ephesians 2: 4-9; Titus 2:11-14.
Golden Text: 1 John 4:10.
John tells us that God has re
vealed himself to us as the God
of love. And he reminds us that
God so loves us that He gave
Jesus to be the propitiation for
our sins.
Paul wrote the Ephesians that
God in the richness of his mercy
and the breadth of his love toward
men had given them life through
Christ that in ages to come they
might have reason to show the
"exceeding riches of his grace in
kindness toward us in Christ
Jesus.’*
So it is by the grace of God
that we are saved through our
faith in Jesus. It is not by works
that a man does that he is saved,
for he would then have reason to
boast. It is not by any worth or
merit of his own. Nor by any
goodness of his own that he may
plead. By the grace of God a man
is to be saved, by the benevolent
and loving attitude of God toward
the man he has created, and
with the power to turn toward God
as the flowers turn toward sun.
It is the bounty or favor of God
in which he offers a man life and
hope if he will believe in the
Saviour.
And this same grace is given to
men in the doing of all good things,
to fit them for loving service in
their Master’s name. It sets be
fore them the bright hope of see
ing Jesus face to face in Hie aft
er-time, it leads them to look be-
yond the grave.
After going over the January
issue of Sports Afield, one sen
tence stuck in my mind; A
trained nose should be standard
equipment for woodland trips.
This was a brand new idea. .As
Ewart Autry, author of the ar
ticle commented, ‘T had always
thought of my beak as something
stuck on my face to breathe
through and to get a bad cold in.
The odors it picked up were
merely incidental.”
You expect your eyes to note
the difference between a bird and
a squirrel and with your ears,
you can sort the cry of a goose
from the bark of a dog. The sense
of smell isn’t as highly developed
as the sense of sight or hearing,
but it can be pretty effective
when you’re in the woods. Did
you know it is possible to smell
a snake?
One day afield a friend of
Autry’s stopped dead in the path
and announced he smelled a
snake—a moment’s search and
there it was, coiled behind a
nearby log. This man had “trained
his nose.” He explained that when
he was in the woods and caught
a special scent, he always took
time to try and locate its source.
If he found it, he'd sniff at it for
several minutes and try to file it
away in his mind. After doing this
for several years, he found that
the odors of the woods were no
longer just jumbled mixtures hut
separate and distinct things that
he could usually pin down.
After the snake experience,
Autry decided it might be a good
idea to give his sniffer a little
education. The first lesson was
hard. Down in a creek valley he
caught a faint but very pleasant
scent.
“I started to crisscross and
sniff the air like a hound search
ing for a lost trail. It took me
15 minutes to pinpoint the scent
to a vine of wild grapes. I pulled
down a bunch and sniffed it care
fully, then stuck it in my pocket
and gave it an occasional sniff
during the rest of the day. From
then on I could easily identify
the scent of wild grapes the mo
ment my nose caught it From
grapes I progressed to other things
and was soon able to sort many
odors of the woods that formerly
meant nothing.” *
Here’s an even better example
of what “the nose that knows”
means to sportsmen: One day I
came across a friend who had just
shot a 10-point buck. To my
question “How did you get him”
he answered “Caught his scent
first.” A buck gives off a lot of
scent when he’s alive and moving;
with a little practice you can
smell a buck a good distance,
especially if the wind is right.
Of course, it's different with a
doe. Her scent is a lot weaker
than a buck's.
When you are making sand
wiches for the lunch box, never
use melted butter for spreading
the bread before adding the
spread. Melted butter has a ten
dency to make the bread soggy;
use creamed butter or margarine
instead.
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Clemson College Extension Service And
State Agricultural Committee
a
FORESTRY: Give farm woodlands better manage
ment Do a better job of marketing the timber crop.
Reforest lands best suited to trees. Provide protec
tion from fire, insects and diseases.
Successful farming is based upon the production of
field and forest crops adapted to the land on which they
‘ r | *... J- 1.. . *v, ‘ •* t s r.i , ■ » . <, t i. \ : ,T » 4 ‘-.4 ...
grow. Use modern methods of efficient production to
obtain highest yields and returns.
-vi
913 Cline Street
L
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Phone 56
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FARM i HOME DEVELOPMENT
1955
AGRICULTURAL
PROGRAM
CAR^L 1 na offette. &p[/u&tcl£u/ic&
C&tntcit Ca&eae Sict&njxon
»?'■ f'fUPss®'
WE ENDORSE POINT 4
i '
4. LIVESTOCK, DAIRYING & POULTRY: Produce the
high quality meat, milk, eggs, and other livestock products
needed to meet home and market demands. Practice closer
culling; improved breeding, better feeding, and efficient man
agement to improve quality, and increase income per animal
and per man. Produce and store reserve feeds for emergency.
How do you rate in the care of your dairy & barn equipment?
Do You— - ' . . % | i
Clean it regularly?
Have it checked periodically?
Make needed repairs?
Use it with care?
Oil it as needed? .
Follow manufacturer’s direction in using it?
See Us For Quality Dairy Equipment and Supplies
DeLaval Sales and Service Jamesway Barn Equip.
Milkers and Milk Coolers Stalls and Stanchions
Cleaning Powders and Sterilizers
Highest Market Prices Paid For Cream .
NEWBERRY MAID BUTTER OUR .SPECIALITY
Newberry Creamery
PHONE 14 NEWBERRY, S. C.
r *S.
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