The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, March 03, 1955, Image 5
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THURSDAY, MARCH 3, 1955
THE NEWBERRY SUN
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Kinney Caldwell, President of the Junior 4-H Club of Prosperity and son of
George H. Caldwell, Prosperity, who recently purchased Berkshire Gift.
4-H TEACHES CITIZENSHIP
This is what one young 4-H’er wrote
on “What Citizenship Means to Me”:
I’m learning the meaning of citi
zenship* by adventure . . .an adven
ture with a Holstein calf, which my
father gave me for a 4-H project. I’m
trying to do a good job of raising her,
so I can make money without being
a nuisance in my home or neighbor
hood.
I have been told how important it
is to keep her from getting loose on
the neighbor’s fields or the public
road. My parents call that “civic re
sponsibility.’
ft
I try to learn new ways of trying
her for grazing. This is “initiative.”
Giving her plenty of feed, bedding,
and exercise develops “industry and
dependability.” Caring for my sis
ters’ calves is “cooperation” or “help
fulness.”
Grooming my calf regular and
training her to pose for Show Day is
what my 4-H leader calls “noticing
details,” And finishing my calf
chores in time for school is “prompt
ness.”
With the adventure I have caring
for my calf, “citizenship” doesn’t
look like such a forbidding word
after all!
During 4-H Club Week, March 5 -13, we’re happy to extend
hearty congratulations to our- local 4-H Club Members and
their leaders.
*
Whitaker Funeral Home
COLLEGE STREET
NEWBERRY, S. C.
Hospital Patients
VISITING HOURS AT THE NEW
BERRY COUNTY MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL ARE 10:00 A. M. to
11:00 A. M.; 2:00 P. M. to 4:00
P. M.; and 7 to 8:30 P. M. CHIL
DREN UNDER 13 ARE NOT PER
MITTED TO VISIT.
Mrs. Helen Buzhardt. Rte. 1,
Box 28, Newberry.
Mr. Ben H. Caldwell, Rte. 1,
Newberry.
Little Miss Tressie Cromer, Rte.
1, Prosperity.
Baby John Sammuel Count, P.
O. Box 131, Prosperity.
Mrs. Wm. R. Cromer, Rte. 2,
Pomaria and Baby Boy.
Mr. H. L. Dominick, Chappells.
Mr. Ed Dominick, Rte. 4, New
berry.
Mrs. Drayton W. Davis, 2043
Montgomery St.
Mrs. W. E. Elmore, 1602 Cal
houn St.
Mrs. E. H. Epting and Baby Boy,
Prosperity.
Mrs. G. B. Fuller, 2010 Rivers st.
Mr. Nelson W. Gallagher, P. O.
Box 426, Jonesville.
Mrs. Charles E. Holmes? 52 High
land Park, Columbia and Baby Boy.
Mr. Henry B. Hendrix, Rte. 3,
Newberry.
Mrs. Junius H. Long, 1305 Jeff
erson st.
Mrs. Sam Marlowe, 1519 Har
rington St.
Mr. A. J. Merchant, Rte. 1, Kin-
ards.
Baby William Richard Mills,
Box 96, Prosperity.
Mrs. Dwight M. Miller and Baby
Girl, Rte. 1, Saluda.
Mrs. J. T. Mitchell, Rte. 4, Sa
luda, and Baby Girl.
Mrs. Ray Nobles, and Baby Boy,
934 Cline SL
Mr. J. H. Phibbs, Rte. 1, New
berry;.
Mrs. Joe Phibbs, 895 Fair St.
Mrs. Amelia Reeves, 1315 Mil
ligan St.
Mr. Fred Rice, Rte. 3, Newber
ry.
Mr. Frank Rice, Rte. 3, Newber
ry.
Mrs. Hayne Shealy, 1416 Trent
St.
Mrs. Harold Seibert, and Baby
Boy,' Prosperity.
Mrs. Daniel Shealy, Rte. 2, Cha
pin.
Mr. L. A. Wilson, 2123 Brown
St.
Mrs. J. W. White, 1003 Cald
well St.
Mrs. C. E. Wiggers, 2127 Ade
laide St.
COLORED PATIENTS
Richard GIHiam, 820 Coleman
m 1- 1
Newberry Students
To Get BS Degree
Grover Davis, McCormick, Har
vey Dickert, Newberry, Paul Wil
liams, Abbeville, Sam Derrick,
Little Mountain and Rudy Sheely,
Little Mountain are five students
at Newberry College who com
pleted the requirements for the
Degree of Bachelor of Science in
January.
These men will receive their
degrees at the commencement
exercises in June.
ATTEND ICE VOGUES
IN COLUMBIA
Among those from Newberry
who attended the 8th Annual Ice
Vogues in Columbia last week
were Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Mims,
Mr. and Mrs. James H. I^avis, Miss
Nonie Layton, Noble Terrell, Bill
Attaway, Miss Joyce Ann Hughes,
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Wiggins,
Mr. and Mrs. George Summer,
John L. Epps and son, Charlie,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Matthews and
daughter, Loretta.
Baby Paul Gary, Rte. 3, Box
182, Newberry.
Daniel Hunter, 2015 Benedict St.
Scott Pitts, County Jail.
Oliver Ruff, 2334 Holloway St.
Emme Lee Sligh, Rte. 4, Box
99, Newberry.
Albert Singley, Reece Square.
Dora Wilson, Rte. 1, Box 81, Sil-
verstreet. .
MR. AND MRS. HENRY LONG-
shore have bought the house on
Calhoun street vacated this week
by the Hugh Shannons. The Long-
shores plan to move there this
weekend.
H. D. AGENT
SCHEDULE
The County Home Agents, Mrs.
Margie D. Freeman and Mrs. Mar
garet R. Coleman announce the
following schedule for the week
of March 7th through the 12th:
Monday, March 7—Stoney Hill
Girls and Boys 4-H Chapel pro
gram : Office.
Tuesday, March 8—Pomaria Jr.
and Sr. 4-H; Pomaria HDC at 3:30
p. m. at the school with Mrs. R. H.
Setzler as hostess. Jalapa HDC at
3:00 p. m. with Mrs. G. H. Wise,
Mrs. W. P. Shealy and Miss Cora
Shealy as hostesses. Jolly Street
HDC at 3:30 p. m. at the school
i
with Mrs. Otis Kinard and Mrs.
Ella Cook, hostesses.
Wednesday, March 9th—Silver-
street 4-H; Stoney Hill 4-H;
Vaughnville HDC at 3:00 i>. m.
with Mrs. W. A. Watkins as hos
tess. Tran wood HDC at 3:15 p. m.
at the Agirculture Building in
Newberry with Mrs. Henry Mills,
Mrs. Nora Mills and Mrs. Oscar
Bouknight, hostesses.
Thursday, March 10—Farm and
Home Development Training
School, Newberry at Agriculture
Building for County Farm and
Home Agents from Newberry, Lau
rens, Union, Cherokee and Fair-
field counties.
Friday, March 11—Same as a-
bove.
Saturday, March 12—Office.
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MR. AND MRS. FLOYD MILLS
have moved to Apartment No. 2
of the Murray apartments on
Speer street.
— ...... I 1 , Ml- | I...
JANE GOODMAN WHITE
Mr. and Mrs. Albert S. White
of Statesville, N. C. are receiving
congratulations upon the arrival of
a daughter, Jane Goodman, born
on Wednesday, February 23 at
the Iredell Memorial Hospital in
Statesville.
Mrs. White is the former Jane
Goodman, daughter of Dr. and
Mrs. R. A.
Campus.
Goodman, College
T T
—
JUST A REMINDER
i r.
A reminder that Chfidreafe
Story Hour, sponsored by the Pro-
School Mother's Club, is beine
held 'each Monday afternoon
the Newberry - Saluda.
Library from four to five
with Miss Mary Timberlake, libra- gg|g
ripn of Newberry College Library,
in charge.
Subscribe to The Newberry
—
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Vernon Jenkins, son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Jenkins, Route 1, Whitmire, a member of the County-Wide
4-H Club, won one of the first prizes in the timber thinning contest in 1954. The prize was $15.00, given by
the Champion Paper and Fibre Company who sponsors the 4-H Timber Thinning Contest.
4-H Club work is a community affair ,•... widening
out across the nation for betterment of all. These 4-H
young people and their leaders are ours... and we feel
that 4-H Club Week, March 5-13, is a good time to say
to them: “We’re proud of your progress...
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In palp and paper mill laboratories all around the
country research chemists are at work developing
new and better products. Results of their labor and '
study are evident everywhere in the thousands of useful
things made from wood pulp. The paper mill chemist
not only gives us more and better products, he
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makes it possible to obtain them from fewer trees. He
is a member of the forest industry^ team that
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keeps this country's wood production second to none.
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FOREST INDUSTRIES PROVIDE THE RAW MATERIAL FOR NEARLY 6,000 USEFUL PRODUCTS
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