The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, June 17, 1955, Image 6

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PAGE SIX THE NEWJJERRY SUN THURSDAY, JUNE 17,195& TE1AJI OLYMPIC PLANS Avery Bmadeje. president of ittonol Olympic commti- oays Melboon^, Aostrnlio. will be reedy for remes by Nov., 1956. He seid Olympics ere not pert of cold wer, but ere contests Between Individoel ethletes, not Buffalo have 14 ribs on each side.—-Sports Afield. This an' That John J. McManus, president of the American Bowling Congress, has been the only president of the Hudson County Industrial League of New Jersey since it was organ ised In 1925 ... In East Liverpool, Ohio, a daughter was born to Mrs. Clarence Francis. Proud Pop was known as Bevo during his head line days as a basketball player at Rio Grande College . . . Canada to send 155 athletes offi- te the winter and summer Olympic games hi 1956 at an esti mated cost of $296,594 . . . Newton J. Randall, 71. former outfielder for the Chicago Cubs and Boston Braves, died recently in a Duluth hospital . . . Bay Ashcraft, presi dent of the Elisabethtown. Ken- Country Oub, beamed at Ms wife after hitting a tee shot on the 157-yard No. 4 hole which stopped four Inches from the cup. Mrs. Ashcraft fol lowed him to the tee and proceeded to knock a hole-in-one . . . The “Cinderella’* rowing crew from the University of British Columbia which wen the eight even to at the British Empire games last sum mer, will compete In file Royal Henley Regatta to England. i n g t o n Q—-Can yen tell me hew many uranium oialme have been filed with the Atomic Energy Commission? A—These claims are filed with the Defense Minerals Exploration Ad ministration of the Department of Interior and as of May 1, 1965, a total of 2,554 applications for exploration assistance have been filed. M—What is the highest military hoaer awarded by flee Halted States? Ar—The Congressional Medal of Honor. « Hew and when did fids country acquire Me Samoa Islands? A—By s treaty between Germany, Great Britain and the United States in 1899 the United States obtained right to the islands east of 177 longitude, west, and in 1925 alter the World War 1, the U.S. annexed Swains Island to the North of Samoa. W—Whs waa It who said, ’What this country needs Is a geed flve-oeat cigar?” A—Vice President Thomas Marshall, in the Wilson administration. yen tell me the first cabinet offices pet up In the Government? -In file Administration of President Washington, file cabinet con sisted of Secretary of State, Secretary of Treasury, Secretary of War, Attorney General and Postmaster General. you tell me the name ef the Vice Pr said tut whs waa sleeted hy Me Senate? Bichard M. Johnson, of Kentucky in 1826. There were three Candida tea, but Johnson failed, to get a majority of the total electoral votes, hi such ease the eonstttutiaa provides tbs Senate select from the two highest candidates. ce Seaatera first elnntrid hy direct veto ef fibs people? A—Upon adoption of the 17th amendment to the constitution May M, 1912. Prior to that time Senators were elected hy State FOR POWER TO SPARE WITH FAR LESS WEAR! ...GET M Only gasolene with ALL 5 top performance features! It*a 5-Dimensional! NEW PREMIUM GASOLENE 1. Anti*Carbon 2. Extra-High Octane 3. AntnStailing 4. Anti-Rust 5. Upper-Cylinder Lubricant NEW KOOLMOTOR OIL 10W-30 The oil for every season that you need every day! h*s 5-Dimensional! 1. Increases Catalan# Mileage T. Increatet Engine Power 3. Decreatet Oil Consumption 4- Decreatet Knock fi Pre-Ignition S. Decreatet Engine Wear FARMERS ICE & FUEL GO. GEORGE W. MARTIN, Manager Wholesale Distributor CITIES SERVICE Petroleum Products CITIES @ SERVICE At least a third of the fun in bass fishing is sizing up plugs in stores or catalogs, v buying those that look promising, and trying them out to see what they’ll do Yes, it costs money. All sports cost money (generally more than fishing) and in ho sport is one paying for tangible things that one can take home— one is paying for pleasure. But you could have 100 or more plugs and still he poorjy equipp ed, claims angling editor Jason Lucas. With only half a dozen well selected plugs you will have at least one that will catch bass under almost any condition you may encounter. Here are the four main types of bass plugs: Surface plugs — The general rules, to which of course, there will be exceptions, are these: In lakes in the northern and middle states, surface plugs often work well all day in the earliest part of the season. Through mid-sum mer, they are likely to be effect ive only very early and very late in the day. In fall, they wilF get few or no bass. In a river of or dinary size( they may Work well almost any time, except probably in late fall. In the deep (South surface plugs will get some bass almost anytime. Bass don’t seem choosy about color in sur face lures. It’s the retrieve that dounts. Pull-under plug#—These float at rest, but on the retrieve run at a depth of not over two feet or so. Lucas thinks those that the mainly white with some red are likely to get bas.s when they are taking shallow runners. He’s also done very well with orange, and with fairly light yellow ones. About 19 times in 20, plugs In this classification will get more fish when worked quite slowly. Also, some little flips and Jerks will give them much more attrac tive action than if they’re reeled steadily. Mid-dep4h plugs— These are modifications of those in the pre ceding class, but sink when at rest. Let such a plug go deep. Then bring it along slowly, with pauses and twitches, hovering in mid-water. It shoulg neither hob to the surface, as would a deep- running floater, nor sink to the bottom as would a metal lure. In the average lake a plug of this type will get more bass than any other 60 per cent of the time, and in some deep artificial lakes it’s best perhaps 80 per cent of the time. ' BOTTOM PLUGS—During mid summer, there’s only one method of getting bass that is at all pro ductive: fishing right along the bottom. Let your plug sink dear to the bottom, then work it along just fast enough to bring out its action, in jumps of five or six feet, letting it sink to the bottom again to rest a few seconds. Lu cas has a very strong preference for one color here—plain white. jrUARDS JET . . . “Spike”, 2nd fighter squadron mascot, oses In ejector seat of Jet plane t Chicago's O’Hare International 'rport. BOYS ARE THAT WAY By J. M. ELEAZER DUCK BOAT . . . “Jimmy,” Philadelphia zoo hippo, ferries mama mwtA baby mallard ducks across zoo pond, while other ducklings swim about him. In spite of its hump, a buffalo call roll over with the ease of a mule. EEVE T HERE are few things as re laxing to a man as the return to the daily 8 to 5 following a vacation—provided the vacation consisted of a week of cooking, washing and chasing after two wild Indians while mother was gone to visit the stork and see what she could do about getting a new member for the tribe. It’s quite pleasant to put your feet up on the desk, casually con template the pile of papers, memos, pencils, erasers, etc., draw a deep breath of satisfaction, then pitch in with a zest you didn't have the day your “vacation” began. Working doesn’t seem so bad after alL In fact, it’s down right restful. 'This “vacation” was quite ap experience and I heartily recom mend one of the tame for every man who has wondered why it is he seldom gets sympathy at home when he drags the body In and flops down in the chair, bringing with him the aad tale of “a hard day at the office,” and probably a little more mud or dust. The little woman may smile and offer sympathy, but she is just being nice. Her inner self is saying, “Why, you never had it so good!” I may sound like a turncoat, men, but really I’m not. It's just that I’m fresh from seeing how the other half lives, full of first hand experience, so to speak. It’s true I didn’t hold the job long enough to become really adjusted, else I wouldn’t have been washing baby clothes, wielding brooms and pots and pans in my sleep. But I think I gave it enough of a trial to be able to speak with a smell of authority Our critters were a part of our life in the Stone hills of Dutch f\>rk in my day as a kid. The soil waa rough, and unyielding, and we got our all from it. And the faithful critter waa the lever we used in making our existence possible there. Last week we talked here a- bout Old Bill and Frank, the two horses that were our fort. Frank too was deathly afraid of auto mobiles, as I told you last week Bill was. Bill got so old be couldn’t eat corn from the ear, and wasn’t much good for any thing. But he still retained his fire when we sold him for little or nothing to an itinerant horse- trader. And he broke his bridle rein and came hack home from a mile down the road when a rab bit jumped up from the weeds j and scared tyim. We lived some miles from the railroad and our horses seldom saw a train. Both were afraid of the train, but Bill wasn’t uncon trollably so. He’d quiwer and •hake and snort a hit. But calm talk and patting on the neck would enable him to control him self. V' ■ • . .'■< ' ■ • ? > *. “* t ' ' ; . - t •- J}? -J But Frank, as utterly docile and dependable as he was other wise, just couldn’t tolerate train or automobile. Along the lonely road he would be jogging along, half asleep. Let that distant pop ping sound come all so faintly across the hills and he instantly perked up ,looked wild, and start ed quivering all over. And he wanted to get from that road, seeming to know it traveled there. And, folks, 1 want to tell you, we got off that road, one way or another, A few times there was no convenient place to turn off. Frank made one and tore up the buggy each time. When we sold Old Bill, we got our first mule. Later father died and we kept Old Frank just for oldtime’s sake. Just turned him out in the pasture. And I can see him now, come to life down there in the pasture, snort a f»w times, and run for the dense ce dars away back every time he heard one of those demon cars popping and kicking up the dust out there in the old Appalachian Trail that went through our front yard. And he was that way as long as he lived. RESOLUTION Whereas, Y. T. Dickert took a nactive part in organizing the South Carolina Poultry Improve ment association in 1928; and served as president for many years; and Whereas, he was the only char ter member who continued his membership in the association since it was organized until his recent death, and Whereas, he always worked for everything progressive and good for the poultry industry in South Carolina; Therefore be it resolved, that the South Carolina Poultry Im provement association in its an nual meeting at the Jefferson ho tel in Columbia, June 8, 1965, ex press to Mrs. Dickert and his family its sincere appreciation for the contributions he made to the Association and to the poul- Others can do it too, as Hugh Woodle points out. For many have land just els good or .better than some of those 100-bushel winn ers. It takes mainly plenty of stalke, fertilizer, and water on average or better land. And more and more are learning to supply the only uncertain element in that, the water, by irrigation els needed. (lor TiFF)t? HERE'S A GOOD BET... SOLVE YOUR SELUNG, BUYING, HIRING, RENTING, PROBLEMS BY PLACING A CLASSIFIED AD IN THIS NEWSPAPER A PEW UNES TODAY WILL MAKE IT PAY! try industry of South Carolina, and deeply regret his passing, and, be it further resolved that, this resolution be sent to Mrs. Dickert, the press, and recorded in the minutes of the association. T INE the bottom of your vege- table crisper with waxed paper or aluminum foil to keep It neat Vegetables and fruits will net stain the container and it’s easier to discard the paper or fofl than to scrub it dean. Kitchen floor areas which hate to take a great deal of wear should have a floor mat on them. You RECIPE OF TOE TfEEK Garden Salad Bowl (Serves 4) 2 cucumbers, sliced 10 radishes, sliced % cup sliced green anions 1 bunch watercress, separate^ ft cup chopped celery % cup shredded cabbage French .dressing % teaspoon salt Toss vegetables together with French dressing and salt Serve in a wooden salad bowl which has been rubbed with a cut. clove of garlic. If desired. might try one at the back en trance, as well as a fatigue or cushioned mat at the sink where you spend much time. If your dishpan is too low for you to wash dishes comfortable, get a plastic rectangular tainer on which to piece it, raising it to a * height When your sink use a diluted ehloriae bieech In It for a few minutes to whiten It This is also a good time to bleach the dish doth or stained since they can sit to to solution. After grating some soft rub a hard crust of breed over the grater to dean the off easily. have rusted can be a rust remover. Use stool on them periodically to nut from forming. FARMS AND FOLKS Continued from page 3) about soybeans, and my, look where I’ve drifted. I’ll write a whole piece on that latter sub ject some day. For we have too long faltered in a veritable wil derness of unused potentials that no spot I know of on earth can match. Nitrogen For Corn Our State Corn Contest has served to further prove what ex periments have shown, ft takes a lot of stalks, a lot of water, and a lot of nitrogen to make a lot of corn. As low as our state corn yield has been (it’s been rising since more and more are using the 6- point Clemson Plan for growing it), farmers here and there are consistently making good corn. One of these Is W. K. Sharp, of Anderson county. I law him again at the banquet in Oolumbia last winter where the 100-bushel corn club members receive their a- wards for the year. I spoke of having seen him the^e before and asked how many times he had been there. He said every year except the first. He didn’t hear of the contest in time for that year. The next year his son too started in the contest, Find he has been down there every year since too. Making 100 bushels per j acre is not hard for those fel lows. CHANNEL / HAil AUGUSTA • GEORGIA SUNDAY, JUNE 19, 1959 .1:00 AM Farad* ot Quartats 12:30 PM—Th# Wondar Boy 1:00 PM—Raaaarcd Raport X 1:15 PM—Industry On Parado 1:30 PM Ctaurcnaa ol Chrisl 2:00 PM—Oral Robarta 2:30 PM—Amarican Forum 3:00 PM—Comment 3:30 PM—Zoo Parado 4:00 PM—Charm ol th# Book 4:30 PM—This Is Th* Llf* 5:00 PM wrestling rrom Hollywood 6:00 PM—Th* Lon* Rangar 7:00 PM—"Remambar .... 1339“ 9:00 PM—Goodyaar TV Playhous* 9:00 PM—Loretta Young Show 9:30 PM—Amos 'n Andy 10:00 PM Stu Erwin Show 10:30 PM—Bob Cummings Show 11:00 PM—Sign Off .i t icsnu r HID AY /:09 AM Today with ' uav# Garroway AM—mg Dong School AM—Star rims AM—Snailab Graham Show AM Homs AK fannaasoa Ernie Ford AM Feathar Your Nest PM—Today to Dixie PM—Midday Roundup PM—Feature Playhouse ~ Ids Matinee Liras Consaonenees d:00 9:30 9:45 10:00 11:00 11:30 12:00 • :00 1:30 2:00 2:30 t:4S ;;s 9:45 4:00 4:30 ktOO 9:30 0:00 0:25 0:30 0:45 7:00 0:00 9:30 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:30 5:30 9:00 9:25 9:30 9:45 7:00 PM-Ted Mack's PM-The Greatest Gift Itar I TV Kitchen Nolee World oi Mr. •Pinky PM—Howdy Doody PM Let's Plavskoo! MONDAY. JUNE 20. 105S PM -Superman PM—Talent Parade PM-The Weatherman PM—Davison's Sewing Center PM—Plymouth News Caravan PM—Caesar's Hour PM It's A Great Mis PM- Robert Montgomery PM—Favorite Story PM—Mark Saber * PM—The Late Show - PM—Sign Off TUESDAY. JUNE 21. 1955 PM—Lafi Time PM- Talent Parade PM—The Weatherman PM—Dinah Shore Show PM—Camel News Caravan PM—Roj Rogers Championship PM—Fireside Theater 9:30 PM—1 Led 3 9:00 PM Truth o> 9:30 PM Ltberac* 10:00 PM—International Playhouse 10:30 PM—The Big Fights 11:30 PM—Sign Oft WEDNESDAY. JUNE 22. 1955 9:30 k'M tolia Sill HtckoS 3:00 PM- Talent Parade 9:25 PM The Weatherman 9:30 PM—Sports Album 1:45 PM Plymouth Newt Caravan 7:00 PM—Orient. Express 7:30 PM big Fowo 8:00 PM Kratt TV t r>«<*:ra 9:00 PM—This is Your Life 9:30 PM Play of tha Weak 10:00 PM I'm The Law 10:30 PM—PoUc* Call 11:00 PM—Sign Off THURSDAY, JUNE 23. 1955 5:19 PM Cisco Kid St Hot Dog Party 6:00 PM—Talent Parade 6:25 PM—The Weatherman 6:30 PM—Dinah Shore Show 6:45 PM—Camel News Cars van 7:00 PM—Groucho Marx 7:30 PM—Justice 6:00 PM—Dragnet 8:30 PM—Ford Theater 9:00 PM—Lux Video Theater 10:00 PM—Wrestling 11:00 PMt—"The Judge" 12:00 PM—Sign Off FRIDAY. JUNE 24. 1955 5:30 PM—Kit Carson 1:00 PM—Talent Parade 6:25 PM—The Weathermen 6:30 PM—The Big Playback 6:45 PM -Camel News Caravan 7:00 PM—Midwestern Hayride 7:30 PM—Life of Riley 0:00 PM—The Big Story 3:30 PM—Badge 714 0:00 PIS—Gillette Fights 0:49 PM—Red Barber's Comae 19:99 PBS—China Smith 19:90 PM—Soldier Parade 11:00 PM—Sign OH SATURDAY. JUNE 25. IMS 0:00 AM-Ptoky Lee 0:00 AM-Star Time 0:49 PM—Story Lady 19:90 10:99 ^ 11:00 AM—Wkteh 11:90 - ---- 11:41 „ 12:00 PM- -Georgta-Cerollne Fa 1:00 1:90 9:90 5:00 9:00 0:90 7:00 7:30 9:00 9:30 9:00 0:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 PM—Feature Playhouse PM—Western Theater PM—Buffalo BQL Jr. PM—Reserve Bandstand PM—People Are Funny PM—So This Is Hollywood PM—Imogen# Coca PM—Donald O'Connor PM—Georg# Gobel PM—Your Play Tima PM—HoUday PM Roller Derby PM—Sign OH 3:00 PM— Schedule Subject to La Changes and Corrections. Last-9Stoute At The Library / Non-Fiction My Philadelphia Father—Cor delia Biddle. Memories—Ethel Barrymore. In Search of Serenity—Ronald Bodley. How To Live 366 Days a Year -r-John Schindler. Verdi, Miracle Man of Opera— Thomas Ybarra. The^ Story of Jesus—Manuel Komroff. The Assassins—Robert Dono van. A Lost Paradise—Samuel Cho- tzinoff. The Art of Fiction—W. Somer set Maugham 1 . Apes, Angels, and Victorians— William Irvine. Four Weeks to Beauty and a Lovelier, Slimmer You—J. Low- man. Hi-fi Handbook—William Ken dall. .Around The U. S. A. In 1,000 Pictures—-Milton Runyon, editors Pickles and Preserves—Marion Brown. Complete Book of Outdoor Cookery—Helen Brown. . 1 ' ... Fiction Two Tickets for Tangier—Van Wyck Mason. f The Rogue and the Witch— John Newton. Hidden Fire—Sherman Baker. Auntie Mame—Dennis Patrick. A Doctor In The Family—Eliz abeth Seifert. Dutch—Theodore BenneL An Aligator Named Daisy— By Charles Terrot. The Royal Hupt-nPlerre Moi- nOL » Oklahoma Run—Alberta Con stant. The Breaking Wave — Nevil Strata. —: ——— PICK UP PAYMENTS ON SPIN- ET PIANO — Adverse dream stances force us to transfer to someone with good credit, a beautiful Spinet Plano. Mahog any finish, full keyboard, direct blow action, matching bench and new piano guarantee. Pay small payment on delivery and assume monthly payments to suit your budget For Information write: Installment Loan Dept 8FC, Box 1402, Salisbury, N. C. 4-2tc t/i i r.:T J r.. % 3-J • ’ Just watch Dad’s eyes light up when he gets a look at what you have bought him for Father’s day, for here are items to' delight his heart • I ..... •• (£k ^J T INTERWOVEN SOCKS k _ . : V '■ SPORT SHIRTS TIES MANHATTAN SHIRTS Slacks — Pajamas SAMSONITE LUGGAGE Stetson Hats FLORSHEIM SHOES Each gift is individually boxed and at tractively gift-wrapped. T. Roy Summer, Inc. “THE MAN’S SHOP” Main Street Newberry