The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, August 18, 1955, Image 4

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PAGE FOUR THE NEWBERRY SUN THURSDAY, AUGUST 18, 1955 I REMEMBER BY THE OLD TIMERS GHURKAS SAVE COPTER ... It took 100 men, 25 Tekicleai and 4 days to salvage British navy heli copter mired in swamp near Jshore Buhru during war on Reds in Malaya. Newberry No. 1 William" Howard Templeton to Claude W. Werts, «t al, one lot and one building, $6500. Mattie C. Livingston to Lula Rebecca Livingston, two lots and one building, $5 and other valua ble considerations. John M. Livingston to M. O. Mayer, one lot and one building, $5 and other valuable considera tions. Newberry No. 1 (Outside) Robert N. Workman and Nell Barrett Workman to Everett Kin- ard and Sadie W. Kinard, one lot and one building on Armtield ave nue, $50(0 and assumption of mortgage. The Kendall company to Leon ard J. Perry and Shirley J. Perry, one lot on McCravey street $100. Hal Kohn to Mattie Sub^r, one lot on Mt. Bethel Garmany road, $5 and other / valuable considera tions. Bush River No. 3 McCrackin & Company, Inc. to A. W. Murray, 52 1-2 acres, $10 and other valuable considerations. Whitmire No. 4 J. P. Stevens & Co. to Newber ry County Board of Education, one lot on Glenn street, $1. Littfe Mountain No. 6 E. R. Fellers to Carroll Counts, 47.2 acres $2596. Prosperity No. 7 Mrs. Zella G. Koon to Bobbie Lee Koon, eight acres, $500. HAWKINS-HIPP , Mrs. Sarah N. Hawkins of Pros perity announces the engagement of her daughter, Shirley Frances, to Emory Hunter. Hipp. The wed ding will take place Sunday after noon, October 2, at 4 p. m. at St. Lukfe’s Lutheran church, near Prosperity. RINGER HOME FROM COLUMBIA HOSPITAL David Ringer, who underwent surgery in the Providence hospi tal in Columbia Tuesday of last week, returned to his home on the Cut Off road Wednesday and is recuperating nicely. While' in the hospital, he was visited by Mrs. Cecil Ringer, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Addy and Mrs. David Ringer, on Sunday. , If not Happy Days, are certainly From Mrs. Reuben EL Weiteel, Sinking Springs, Pennsylvania: Do you know what “rush the growler” means? Years ago when I was a little girl my mom and pop and the neighbors would sit out front in the summertime and along about 8 or 8:30 several of the men would go to a neighborhood hotel and fetch pitchers of beer which cost IQ cents a pitcher. That was “rushing the growler.” Then at 9 o’clock the flyer (which was a train that made omy several stops between Reading and Harris burg) would roar by. That was bed time in our neighborhood since everyone had to get up at 4 or 5 o’clock to go to work. They worked 10 to 12 hours, a day and thought nothing of it. Winters my pop would get a SO gallon barrel of cider and put grapes and sugar in it. Then when we would get company in the long winter evenings (which was often) he would fetch a pitcher of cider and mom would get a dish of cakes and a dish of apples and. Oh Boy! No talk of diet and calories in those days. % My father lived to be 81, his twin brother 98, their aunt 103 and their mother died at 89. I wouldn’t go back to the good old days in some things, but I sum like to reminisce. ones! w Lift* ... Kff: iSjfer. The boy or girl without some formal education in this day and age is certainly handicapped in earning, a living . . . machines do the hard work today. Our young people must be trained to man the machines of technology. . \ • 1 ’ ' I ■ . . This bank would urge every boy and girl to take full ad vantage of the wonderful opportunity they have for learn ing. Your lives will be enriched and your pathway to earn ing made smoother. 4 ' * And, when the days of school and college are over and you enter the business world you will find this bank willing and anxious to help you along the way, just as it has helped your parents. Newberry County Bank NEWBERRY JOANNA T HE title of a highly successful movie—High Noon—may go down in history as the hour of doom for a guy who opened his yap when he should have been using his ears. My dear wife—rwho’s not really so stoutish as she thinks she is— went around for months and months announcing to all our friends that she intended to put herself on a diet and pare off 15 pounds “or so”. In a moment of jocularity, I in terrupted while she was explaining her diet plans to a neighbor and declared jocundly that I would be happy to perform a hula dance on the busiest corner of Main Street the day she successfully whittled off that 15 pounds. I should have known that this would be the spark, the incentive that would get the show on the road. Now she is really playing for keeps and, what’s worse, she is playing it scientifically. Next day she visited the family doctor and returned with some little pills. Decatur. These powerful little pellets have made it possible for her to resist all the ice cream, candies, dough nuts and delicacies I can afford buy. I am now at the stage where I feel it foolish to bring these things home. The kids and I are getting extra poundage, and, besides, I can better spend my money taking I some hula lessons. The little worm an is talking up our “bet” all over town and apparently the demon stration is going to draw a capacity audience. Unless I can manage to break a leg in an apparently acci- -^tal fashion, it’s time to lean “swing and sway" so the per nn’t be disappointing Miss Yann Bride Ch as. Landrum The First Presbyterian church of Citronelle was the setting for the marriage of Miss Virginia Ruth Vann, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Vann of Citronelle, and Rev. Charles Logan Landrum, Jr. son of Rev. Dr. C. Logan Landrum and Mrs. Landrum of Brunswick, Georgia on Wednesday, July 20. Mr. Landrum is a grandson of Mrs. H. M. Boozer of Newfberry. The vows were exchanged at seven in the evening with Rev. Frank E. Bagby of Plantersville, Alabama, grandfather of the bride, and Dr. Landrum, father of the groom, officiating at the dou ble ring ceremony. Long white tapers burning in graduated brass candelabra glow ed softly over the beautiful back ground of greenandwhite. On the altar a tall brass cross loomed over an open Bible, illuminated by two gleaming tapers in brass candlesticks. Tall standards oi white gladioli, chrysanthemums, and green foliage completed the decoration of the chancel. A program ,ot nuptial music by Clarence Lucas, of Calvert, Ala., preceded the ceremony. Given in marriage by her fa ther, the bride was lovely in a gown fashioned of French Chan tilly lace and nylon tulle over bri dal satin. The molded bodice of lace was appliqued to a yoke of illusion with hand-clipped motifs of lace and seed pearls, which al so covered the tiny cap sleeves. Long mitts of lace over tulle, caught with tiny satin. covered buttons, extended over the wrists in calla lily points. Hand-clipped motifs from the lace were appli qued on the bouffant skirt of tulle that swept to the back in a chapel length train, A very full finger-tip veil of bridal illusion fell fijom a coronet of seed pearls and irridescent sequins. She car ried a cascade arrangement of feathered carnations \ and white lilies of the Nile. Miss Josephine Vann, sister of the bride, was maid of honor. Oth er attendants were Misses Eliza beth and Mary Vann, sisters of the bride, and Mrs. Frank W. Brown and Miss Gayle Landrum of Brunswick, sisters of the groom. The attendants were gowned in blue crystalette, fash ioned with fitted bodices, draped necklines, and full waltz length skirts. Each carried a corsage made of a single giant Chrysan themum centered in pedals of Crystalette and white tuttfe. Their half-hats also were ot crystalette. The Rev. Frank M. Brown, Of Georgia, served the Monday Rites For Mrs. Wilson ~ Mrs. Jessie Mae Dominick Wil son, 68, wife of Joe M. Wilson, died Sunday morning at the New berry county' Memorial hospital She had been a patient at the hospital for, several ‘ days but her death was unexpected. Mrs. Wilson wao a native of the Colony section of the county, daughter of the late A., M. and Mary Jane McCullough Dominick. She had made her home in New berry on Glenn Street for a num ber of years. She was an active member of Colony Lutheran church where she was a member of the Women of The Church. Besides her husband, she is sur vived by one sister, Mrs. Leslie Dominick Shealy, of Batesbufg; one brother, John M. Dominick of Newberry; three nieces, Evelyn Langford, Frances Padgett, • and Pauline Rhodes; two nephews, A. M. Dominick, and Rev. A. H. Boozer. Funeral services were conducted at 4 p. m. Monday from Colony Lutheran church by Rev. Thomas F. Weeks and Rev. W. t>. Halti- wanger. Interment was in the church cemetery. Active pallbearers were Leroy Wilson, Ira D. Wilson, W i 1 s o p Long, McSwain Dominick, Grady Lee Halfaore, and; T. J. Kinard. Honorary escort consisted of members of Colony church coun cil, Dr. B. M. Montgomery, Dr. V. A. Long and Dr. ,L. W. Mills Flower attendants were Rosine Longshore, Evelyn Langford, Jo Nell Griffin, Sarah Nichols, Lur- line Bargle, Hazel Dominick MISS EPTING AT CHAMBER OFFICE Miss Celia Epting of Silver- street is now employed in the office of the Chamber of Com merce. Miss Epting was graduat ed from Silverstreet high school in 1954 and was class salutator- ian. She attended the business de partment of Newberry college and received a certificate this past June. j* Miss Epting replaces Miss Judy Satterwhite, who has accepted employment with the Southern Bell Telephone company. NO NEED TO SPEND COUNT LESS HOURS AND ENERGY LOOKING AROUND TO RENT, FIND LOST ARTICLES OR TO BUY AND SELL.WHEN AN AD IN THIS NEWSPAPER WILL DBJVER YOUR NEEDS QUICK AND EASY., ^ m as best man. Ushers were •les Vann, brother of the ;h * bride, and Jimmie Eubanks. to For her daughter's wedding, Mrs.Vann chose a sheath dress of beige lace, beige and/ brown pill box toque, with which she wore a white carnation corsage. Mrs. Landrum, mother of the groom, wore ico-blue shadow lace with a white hat and a corsage oi white carnations. i Following the ceremony a re ception was held in the social par lor of the church, which was beautifully decorated with green ery and white flowers. The bride's table, covered with an exquisite lace cloth was centered with a three-tiered cake beautifully em bossed with spun sugar roses, topped with a miniature bride and groom, and circled 1 with ivy and baby mums. Crystal candel abra, bearing white tapers, com pleted the bridal fable. Delicious fniit punch was served from crys tal punch bowls, banked with ivy and baby mums on individual serving tables. For their wedding trip the bride chose a rich brown shantung- sheath dress topped by a fitted jacket. Completing her outfit was a beige pill-box toque with beige accessories. Her bridal bouquet was sent to the groom’s grand mother, Mrs. H. M. Boozer, of Newberry who was unable to at tend the wedding. * Among, the many out of town, guests were Mr. and Mm David M. Boozer and their son Marion of Gaffney, S. C. After a trip through points in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, the Carolinas, Virginia and Tenness ee, the couple are /residing in Citronelle, where he is pastor of £he First Presbyterian church. The bride attended Belhaven college, Jackson, Mississippi her freshman year, then transferred to Mississippi Southern college in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, where she received her Bachelor of Mu sic Education degree in May. » Mr. Landrum is a graduate of Newberry (S. C.) High School where he lettered in football qnd basketball. He is also a graduate of Southwestern at Memphis where he received his Bachelor of Arts Degree in Philosophy, and was affiliated with the Alpha Tau Omega social fraternity. He re ceived his Bachelor of Divinity degree from Union Theological Seminary in Richmond, Ya. LADY FROM ISTANBUL . . . Mme. Belkls (she uses no first name), Turkish actress, displays f^n and checkered pants as she arrives in New York. T HE best way to wrap meat for refrigeration (not freezing) is with waxed paper all the way around the meat, leaving ends open for free circulation of the cold air. Try a hot and 'cold bath to bring out the full flavor of dried herbs. Place the herbs in a tea strainer, dip briefly in hot water, then ha cold water before using. RECIFE OF THE WEEK (Serve* 6) 2 pound round steak Salt and pepper 3 tablespoons shortening % cup ‘minced onion % cup-minced celery % clove garlic minced 1 can condensed tomato soup 2 tablespoons brown sugar 2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce 2 tablespoons lemon juice * 2 teaspoons prepared mustard Dash of tabasco, sauce Sprinkle stegk with salt and pepper. Pound thoroughly with mallet Melt shortening and brown meat onion, celery and garlic in fat Add remaining in- redients, stir wdL and cover, look on top of range over low heat for 1% hours. CITY the peoplp A-bomb. Clemson To Plant Now Clemsoii, August 13.—There, are several chores for vegetable gar deners this mouth. These include planting the fall garden, keeping down weeds and grass, gathering and conserving crops already pro duced, and controlling insects and diseases. In the August Extension Garden Letter, A. E. ShhMatter, Clemson extension associate horticulturist, points out that crops for the fall garden should be planted shortly. He says that each day counts, as the time for . Jack Frost gets near er. Suggested crops to be plant ed now include three kinds of t4r- nips—rutabagas, which should be ed at onoe; Extra early Pur ple tops and White Egg, which may be planted up to Setptember 15 for turnips; and Shogoln, which may be planted as late as Octo ber 1 for greens. Other mope for immediate planting are beans, beets, carrots, and com. Collard, celery, (and cabbage plants should be transplanted. Mr. Schdllotter advisee garden ers to keep down grass and weeds so they won't go up to seed, and to clean up the ground where veg etables and plants left on the,gar den are likely to increase disease and insect damage next Reason. “Keep your vegetables, fruits, and flowers gathered to encourage longer bearing,” Mr. Scbdllletter suggests. “And prepare vegetables for cooking, canning, or freezing immediately after they are gather ed to retain their fooQ value and taste. This is especially necessary for sweet corn, which loses some of its sugar if gathered and allow ed to stand long enough to wilt before oooking. He cautions gardeners to be on the lookout for insects and dis eases,’ and to a/pply recommended controls promptly when, they are found. mm, s Spread brown or waxed phper on your kitchen surfaces when you’re doing peeling, cutting and scraping jobs. Wrap the paper after finish ing and discard it, leaving a dean surface fou you. When you cook egg mixtures like cake fillings, scrambled eggs or custard, use a wooden or stain less steel spoon. Silver spoons dis color quickly when they're used with egg mixtures. NOW 6 THE TIME TO BUY. SELL OR TRADE—PEOPLE ARE ALWAYS LOOKING FOR BARGAINS SO MAKE SOME COLD CASH WITH AN AD. IN THIS NEWSPAPER TODAYI CALL OR COME BY , The Newberry Sun Phone No. 1 . (From The Sarasota (Fla) H« Tribune. „ Berea, Ky., June 13.- College has pased the test time. And it’s as happy as a boy with hir drat A-plus. A hundred year* have gone by —but the college has yet to charge a penny' for tuition. All students work their way through. Today, Berea give* ^ ‘ education to 1500. uses the interest from a 17 million dollar help pay the bills. Most ^ of all, it has made education possible tor the ot the southern AppalacJ mountains.—and each year hsui times as many applicants as can accept. Berea isn’t feeing to let success go unnoticed. There is going to be a celebra tion, one that is probably unprh cedented. - This summer, Berea will- stage a two-million dollar centennial birthday party/ paid for entirely by patrons and alum- i^L x Between June $9 and September 5, up to 60,000 persons are ex pected on the campus.. They will come primarily for a look at the school itself-—a school exclusively for mountain hoys girls, who, for the lack of funds, “need Berea.” There will be merrymaking too. For 60 nights running, Berea will stage a new outdoor drama “Wil derness Road/' especially written for the centennial by Pulitzer Prize- w tuning Paul Green. The story, Yomplete with hero ism, romance and a cast of 70, goes back to Berea’s infancy to tell of the dreams and courage of mountain people, whose willing ness to learn but inability to pay became Berea’s great challenge. Berea, by its own description a “strong, independent college,” has •thrived on this challenge. It out its costs by becoming nearly self operative. It set up its own farm, dairy, bakery and other Industrie* and gave its students many of the jobs running them. The program not only proved economically sound for the col-. lege and the students—who earn from 26 to 34 cents an hour—bu^ caught the imagination of philan thropists and resulted in an en dowment that is one of the larg est in the country for a school of its size. Business men among Berea’S' 3500 townspeople are spending $400,000 to dress up and expand ’their businesses for the centen nial. , Major Johy Gay says: “W e want to do our part. After all, if it weren’t for the college there would not be any town,” Gay, 90, the only mayor Berea ever had, has been reelected each four years since the town was in corporated in 1909. Watch for Mystery Farm picture*