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PAGE SIX THE NEWBERRY SUN THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6th, 1965 T Go To Church This Week START ARIGHT, AND YOU WILL END ARIGHT. What kind of a life shall yowrs be? As no two watches run alike, so no two people think alike. They differ in many things they do, but the best start the young man and the young woman can make is to turn their hearts to the great truths to be found in the Bible. Remember that the Good Book does not deprive you of a single thing that is worth while. It doesn’t ask you to give up any part of that which is real and permanent. Coming down through the ages, we see young men who later achieved greatness, build not upon the sands of time, but upon Jbe wise words of the Sacred Writing. > . This Religious Message Sponsored By The Following Automotive Service, Inc. Delco —Jobbers— AC General Motors PHONE 924 Saluda Frozen Food Center FREEZER FOOD SERVICE 1006 Main St. Phone 897 A.IVlIINiR WESTERN AUTO All New Western Auto Store New Management R. M. MAXWELL, Owner Newberry Hotel Under New Management HARRY L. WHITE, Mgr. 4 h Whitaker Funeral Hoi (Established 1847) PHONE 270 . NEWBERRY CREAMERY “Newberry Maid” Butter DeLaval Dairy Farm Equipment NEWBERRY, S. C. The S. C. National Bank Newberry, South Carolina V . ' ■ * Carolina Metal Works Sheet Metal, Heating, Air Conditioning A. G. McCaughrin, Pres. & Treas. GEORGE N. MARTIN # Radie and Television ADMIRAL and CAPEHART Phone 311 Newberry, S. C. PETE’S LITTLE SELF-SERVICE “Home of Good Foods” College Street Extension Phone 326 NEWBERRY, S. C. The 1956 DODGE incorporates a new 12 volt elec trical system, with improvements in all components, resulting in performance superior to any now in use. New design spark plugs give a substantial increase in fuel economy and costs less to maintain. % Smith Motor Co. /CLOTHES are easy to care for if you know exactly what to do about them. Using these tips will give you a big boast toward that well groomed look for which we’re all striving. Ribbons are easy to press after washing if you’ll just wind them around the shower curtain rod or bathroom pipe. Slip the puffed sleeves of dresses or blouses oyer a lighted electric light bulb and finger press to smooth away the wrinkles. If you’re using a metal hanger on which to dry clothes, fold a towel or clean paper over it so your garment will not have rust marks left on it. Crumpled but clean garments can be hung in the bathroom with the hot water turned on in the closed room for 15 minutes or so. RECIPE OF THE WEEK Raisin Pie (Makes 1 8-inch) 1 cup raisins % cup lemon juice 1 egg yolk 1 can sweetened condensed milk % cup butter or substitute % cup chopped roasted almonds 1 baked (8-inch) pastry shell Rinse raisins; drain and dry. Add lemon juice and egg yolk to sweetened condensed milk and beat with rotary beater un til thick. Cream butter and add to milk mixture In small por tions, beating thoroughly after each addition, using spoon not beater. Stir in raisins, then almonds. Pour into pastry shell Chill | before serving. Wrinkles will disappear in most instances. If you want to dry the garment quickly after this steam treatment, place in an airy room and turn on an electric fan. Remove smudges from black plastic patent and white leather with a soapy cloth or sponge. Wipe with a damp cloth and polish with a lint-free cloth. Dayton, Ohio, and its suburbs have produced 17,000,000 refriger ation units, including air condi tioners, since 1921. BOYS ARE THAT WAY By J. M. ELEAZER Inever saw a stalk chopper un til long after I had left home. We knocked out stalks, mostly cotton. We didn’t double-crop the land much then. Couldn’t. For there was no practical way of handling the spent stalks. The cottons then grew large and late, much larger and later than present . varieties. So, with our one-horse equipment, those old stalks were a problem. There was just no handling them green. Nor after frost struck, until they had dried completely out. And in the fall and winter, with consid erable rains, that took a long time. Usually, along after the first of the year we would eventually have enough open weather for the stalks to get perfectly dry. The folks would go out and kick a few to see if they were dry and brit tle. If they shattered rather easily we would be put to knocking cot ton stalks when we got home from school. That’s a job I never minded much. For one thing, it was cool then. And it was fun to give a stalk a wallop with a long green hickory stick and see it scatter. It would literally explode, if dry enough. We would use a swinging motion, getting a stalk coming and going. The stalks that knocked best were always on the uplands and slopes where they didn’t get so big. The rich bottoms and little washed-in places where the stalks grew rank, were always hard to knock, for the big ones never ful ly dried out in the main stem. After we got tired ‘ of this Job, we always welcomed a rain. For after that the stalks would not knock properly until they dried out good again. My, how times do change!. I wonder if anybody knocks cotton stalks any more? I haven’t seen any in a long itme. 1955 4 Tax Thetas ; • ■' s ‘ :r - - r on will be open taxes ' . . .. ^ and a • > ■ x • : iscount: Of Hi • - -w •. i P . ' ■-*<- ' V/'“ -v > *. c I per cent i . will be allowed on taxes , .7^ paid during the month ■ * : :L -v,- &S mTJvSI . , •v ■ . ... A W K INS WITH THE ALL-MODERN ^OTVin ins erfeotion Terms Can be / Arranged Maxwell Bros. N*. 2212 Is est In sixes 10, 12, 14, 10. JS. 20. Slss 10: Jsmper, 2% yds. 54-in. Blouse, 1% yds. 80-In. Ns. 022—One yard ef S54n°fc tSn for the spron. two bi* bstterflles crocheted In blnek thread, black crochet edylng and tws blr thick hot P 1 **® *?.*** decoration with black crocheted hatter- flics makes this handsome ••£ **•***» actual size motifs, all instructions In P *sin r d 35* for EACH dr*ess pattern. 2 for each Needlework pattern to AUD REY LANE BUREAU, Bo* 809, Madison Square Station. New York 10, N. Y. The new Fall-Winter. Fashion Book, with scores sf additional 'styles, 25* an tra; Needlework Oslde 25* extra. "N Furniture 1313 Main Street Newberry, S. G me