University of South Carolina Libraries
THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 1957 THE NEWBERRY SUN PAGE THREE UMO laOO 1^0 titO PM—Oral Roberts 3:M PM—Churches of Chrtst PM—This la The Life PM—Welch Mr. Wizard Forum Ttw Parade Color PM—Frontiers of Faith PM—Outlook AM—Today—!>•▼• i Arlene Francis AM Treasure Hunt AM—The Prlce ls Right XldM AM—Tie Tee DoacAk r 11:90 AM—It Could Be You IV—Tex and Jinx PM—Club 80—Color 1:90 PM—Bride and Groom PM—Queen for a Day 4dM PM—Comedy Time fe90 PM—Western Theater MOITOAY, SEPTEMBER 9. 1MV •HM PM—Cartoons 0^9 PM—John Daly and 8:90 PM—Georgia Gibbs 0:48 PM—Evening Edition 8:55 PM—Weather 7:00 PM—This Is Your Ufa 7:30 PM—Disneyland 9:90 PM—Arthur Murray Party 9:80 PM—Ted Mack's Amateur Hour 9:30 PM—Science Fiction Theater MhOO PM—Lawrence Walk liras PM—Warren ***♦— Hews 11 .*08 PM—Budwelser Scoreboard 11:10 PM—Weather 11:19 PM—Tonight «:90 AM—Sign Off TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3. 1957 9*0 PM—Cartoons 0:19 PM—John Daly and The Hews 8:99 PM—Andy Wmiaxns - June ▼alB 9*9 9:55 7*0 7:90 9*0 9:30 10:00 19*0 11:00 11:05 11:10 11:15 Edition PM—Weather PM—Festival of Stars PM—Mr. District Attorney PM—Meat McGraw PM—Conflict PM—Wyatt Earn PM—Moment of PM—Mark Saber PM— Warren Hites News PM—Budwelser Scoreboard PM—Weather PM—Tonight AM—Sign Off WEDNESDAY, 8:00 8:30 6:45 6:55 7:00 7:90 8*0 9:00 10*0 10:90 11*0 11:05 11:10 11:15 19:90 PM—Cartoons PM—Town PM—Evening PM—The PM—Jim Bowie PM—Kraft TV PM—Wednesday PM—Panic PM—Uncovered PM—Warren PM—Budwelser PIC—Weather PM—Tonight AM—Sign Off 0:00 P9C—Cartoons 8:15 PM—John Dali 8*0 PM—Andy 8*5 7*0 7:90 9*0 PM—Evening EdMan father 9*0 29*0 11*6 19*0 n*s 19*0 Dragnet PM—Dr. Christian PM—High Low PM—Lux Video Theatre PM—Groucho Marx— You Bet Yc PM—People's Choice PM—Warren HUee PM—Budwelser PM—Weather PM—Tonight AM—Sign Off ' FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 6. 8*0 PM—Cartoons 6*0 PM—Sports Focus 9:15 PM—John Daly and The Ho 6*0 PM—The Helen O'Conned 8 8:45 PM—Evening Edition 6:55 PM—Weather 7:00 PM—Cisco Kid 7:30 PM—Life of Riley—Color 8:00 PM—Crossroads 8:90 PM—The Big Moment 9:00 PM—Gillette Fights 9:45 PM—Red Barber 10:00 PM—Mark Saber 10:30 PM—Date With The Angsts 11:00 PM—Warren Hites Hews 11:05 PM—Budwelser Scoreboard 11:10 PM—Weather 11:15 PM—Tonight 12:30 AM—Sion Off SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2997 9:00 AM—Howdy Doody 9:30 AM—Gumby's Show 10:00 AM—Fury 10:30 AM—Birthday Party 11:00 AM—Cartoons 11:15 AM—Story Lady 11:90 AM—Mystery Theater 12*0 N—Ga.-Car. Farm 8c Home Hour 1:00 PM—Industry On Parade 1:15 PM—Major Laague Baseball 3:30 PM—The Big Picture 4*0 PM—Reserve Revue 4:30 PM—Saturday Playhooee 0*0 PIC—Ramar of the Jungle 6:30 PM—People Are Funny 7*0 PM—The Julius La Rosa Show—Color 9*0 PM—George Sanders Mystery Writers' Theatsr 9:90 PM—Dollar A Second 9:00 PM—Encore Theater 9:90 PM—Adventure Theater 10:00 PM—Lawrence We Ik 11*0 PM—Western Theater 12:00 PM—Sign Off Schedule Subject to Last Minot* Changes and Corrections. : Dress Pattern No. 1578—DESIGNED to eompBnoat the slightly larger figure tmd a sewing treat for the beginner or expert. Lovely afternoon style enhanced with a contrasting collar. No. 1578 with PHOTO-GUIDE Is In sines 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50, 52. Size 38 bast, 4% yards of 35-inch, % yard eoe- • -* Needlework Pattern No. 214—Creole • set of beautiful linens by adding these louety ladies In crochet and embroidery. No. 214 has hot -iron transfer, embroidery and crochet directions. Send 35c for each dress pattern, 25c tor each needlework pattern to AUDREY LANE BUREAU, Dept. "NV/NS," 367 West Ad ams Street, Chicago 6, Illinois. NOW! Enjoy Hie FLORIDA vacation you've wanted but couldn't afford! J * * • * n FLORIDA’S GLAMOUROUS *,* v..** -• - - ‘O T wonderful DAYS-6 romanlic NIGHTS FREE EXCITING EXTRAS $24.00 Summer-Fall Ratos par person, double occupancy. April 16th thro December 15th Beach Cabanas Sorototo Beach at Horn's Cars of Yes terday Circus Hall of Fame Hotel Swimming Pool Yachting ensiso thru Florida Kays Swimming in the turquoise waters of the sparkling Gulf of Mexico . . Golfing on the world-famed Bobby Jones course . . . Relaxing amid palm trees ond sweetly scented masses of Homing tropic flowers . . /. Dancing and romancing — that's year Millionaire's vacatien at the celebrity-fiHod new Sorosoto Terrace Hotel! Yet aR this fabulous luxary will cost you as LITTLE as $24.00! So don't wait another minute for reservations! Water tour to Sun shine Springs with 4 SEE YOUR LOCAL TRAVEL AGENT FIRST, water shows daily NEW SARASOTA TERRACE HOTEL P. O. BOX 1720 — SARASOTA. FLORIDA — TEL. RINGLING — 6-4111 FREE % iifci YOUR T^ictcwe WITH EACH I YEAR SUBSCRIPTION TO THE SUN IF • • • could Have cultf o*te foaiutiuq. fion, tyoun. Heme, evHeee /detune eaeuld you cHoeoe? •->' I ’ ' - You can render a Christian service to yourself, your family and friends, by hanging this beau tifully colored masterpiece in your home. r»» This Famous Painting INSPIRATION’ By J. M. McConnkll FULL COLOR . . . SIZE 14 X 20 Retail price $2.00 each. Come by and subscribe to The Sun at the regular price of $2.00 per year and get your print at no additional charge. Offer also good on renewal subscriptions. This offer is limited, so get yours soon. . The Newberry Sun FARMS AND FOLKS By J. M. ELEAZER Clemson Extension Information Specialist BETTER CATTLE The general quality of our cattle is constantly improving. This is reflected in the pastures, sales barns, and show rings. And the 4- H youngsters continue to lead in this emphasis on quality. I can well remember when the large state and district shows might have one or two.or maybe no fat cattle in them that graded U. S. Prime. But now we haye a good many. W. H. O’Brien, assistant county agent at Greenwood, tells me they had 15 steers at their spring fat stock show. Six of these graded “Prime,” seven were close to that and graded “Choice,” and only two graded “Standard.” It hasn’t been many years since most of the animals at our shows fell in that latter class. JOBS IN AGRICULTURE A national survey shows there are 15,000 jobs for new men in ag ricultural work each year, while only 8,500 are being graduated from our colleges to fill this need. Thqre is a big demand for all sorts of agricultural and mechani cal college graduates and there is generally several jobs available to each graduate. Boys, it has not always been so. When I finished in 1916, I didn’t find the slightest prospects of a job from June to September. Then I tried to get a job teaching school, but it was too late. By chance, a $2-a-day of fer came from Savannah, and I took it, gladly. Worked at that for a year and got up to $2.50 a day. Not bad then, and I saved some money! How different now. This new world we are living in calls for trained men, and the cost of an education is small compared with its rewards. COMMUNITY IMPROVEMENT IN OCONEE Our present statewide com munity improvement work was started up in Oconee several years ago and spread. It practically cov ers the county there now, with 15 communities and four towns ent ered in it. Recently 52 leaders from these met with County Agent Morgan and those and discussed just how to report their accomp lishments, for there are substan tial prizes, you know. The results from this Work in Oconee are evident as you ride over the county. Uniform mailbox stands; clean ditchbanks and hedgerows; neat painted homes with lawns, flowers, and shrub bery; unsightly spots and dumps cleaned up; churches, schools, and cemeteries beautified; etc. Yes, these are the visible evi dences. But the lasting ^ thing about it is the civic pride it builds up. For when folks waht better things that are within their reach they will usually have thetoi. URBAN PROBLEM OF GARBAGE Much of our state, specially in the upcountry, is getting so thick ly settled it’s hard to get out in the open country, as we once knew it. * Houses dot every hilltop, and now they are filling in between. These urbanized rural areas have no garbage collection. So the usual rule is to pile it in the car and on the way to town or to work dump it at the first convenient roadside place. This brings manjr problems to landowners. I was talking with one the other day, Doug Greer, of Taylors, up in Greenville County. His land is in a triangle between prominent roads. So much garbage is dump ed on his land, he has to haul truckloads of it away. I suggest ed that landowners might donate gullies and mark them for such purpose. There the rubbish could do some good. He thought it a good idea and said he’d be the first to donate such a place. These, properly marked, along the high ways, might help a lot on this problem. M DATS NOW 80 HOURS . . . Jean Claude Verne de Lassee, 15, grand, nephew of Jules Ver- ne, pauses in Los Angeles on round-4he-world air tour. SEEKS CLAY PIGEON . . . Careen Peck of Garland, Utah, illustratee reason for popularity of trapshooting at Sun Valley, Idaho. Are you a hurricane driver? You are if you drive 75 miles an hour or more, the National Safety Council says. At that pace you can destroy yourself and anything in your path as quickly as a hurricane. "The U. S. weather bureau con siders winds of 75 miles and over of hurricane proportion,” says the Council, “and motorists should re member that a car driven at the same speed is propelled with the same destructive force.” At high speeds the human body becomes increasingly vulnerable. If an accident occurs at 60 miles an hour or more the victim is eight times more likely to die than if he had been injured in an accident at 20 miles an hour. Speed not only increases your chances of having an accident—it decreases your chances of coming out alive if you do have one. To determine a safe speed take into consideration: 1. Weather and visibility. 2. Mechanical factors. 3. Road conditions. Whether a road is rough, smooth, hilly, flat, curving or straight. 4. The driver’s physical and mental condition. 5. Traffic conditions. A safe speed on a country road can be unsafe on a city street. uk Jut Bakg 1 THOUGHTS it ' BOYS ARE THAT WAY By J. M. ELEAZER RICH prize'. . . Dick Mayer, 33, National Open champion of La Jolla, Cal., shows wife $50,000 check he won at Tam O’Shan- ter’s Men’s World Golf tourna ment in Chicago. Dick’s 279 beat Sam Snead and A1 Balding by one stroke. Here V There Marilyn Smith of Wichita, Kans., succeeded Louise Suggs, Sea Island, Georgia, as president of the Ladies P.G.A. . . • George Hall, Cornell University pro, will supervise the P.G.A.’s Latin American tour next winter ... Gustav Brlckner, Charter©, Pa., abandoned an attempt to swim the English Channel after straggling with unfavorable tides for more five hoars . . . Max Warm an, who managed fire world champi ons and spent 25 years as business manager for Jack Dempsey, died recently in New York after suf fering a heart attack . oe» Da* Waern of Sweden broke the four- minute mile twice in less than three weeks. Waern ran the mile in 3:59.3 July 19, the same day Derek Ibbotson of England set a world record of 3:57.7 at London’s White City Stadium. Waern was clocked at 3:59.7 in an intertional track meet at Malmoe, Sweden on August 6 . . . The City of Chi cago has agreed to use any profit Last week here I started tell ing you about my goat, my greatest possession as a young ster in the Stone Hills. That goat never grew old to us kids. He was one of us, and the only w’ay we ever got away without him was to slip off. And that was hard to do, as he usually stayed under the house. After several years he got mean, that is to others, but nev er to me. Most of the kids liked .that. They’d pick at him, and then run for a fence or easy climbing tree. For he could bruise them right much with that hard head and horns. We had a red June apple tree out there near the woodpile. He us ually got ’em as they fell. But one afternoon my mother went out there to get some chips to start a supper fire in the. stove and saw a bright red apple that had just fallen. She bent over to pick it up, not seeing the goat. And as she did, he did the ex pected thing, left his feet in a lunge, and hit her at the place you can imagine, throwing her forward on her face. She drop ped the apple, he got it, and was well, except she was sore for a few days and did not en joy sitting very well. He would climb anything he could. Up on the cellar shed was a favorite place. And he slept upstairs in the barn. I’ve heard Chinaberries are poison. But they must not be, for all dur ing the winter we’d get great bunches of ’em for this goat and he never tired of ’em. And he visited the wild plum thick ets with us too. He’d swallow seed and all. Then at night up stairs there in the barn he’d re gurgitate them, chew them, and spit out the seeds. Next morn ing at least a pint of plumseed in a pile showed where he had spent the night. And mulberries too, he liked them. We had a big tree by the lot gate that bore for several months. He spent a lot of time under it trying to beat the chickens to the berries that fell. On the crude wagon my broth er made, I’d haul as much as a 200-pound sack of fertilizer to the field with my goat. He was well broken to the wagon, and I drove him a lot. He’d follow us to the washhole too. I’ll have to tell you of that next week. AUG. 17, 1942 ... 75 marines, veterans of Carlson’s Haiders, re-enact historic Makin Island land ing of 1942, first U. S. land victory of World War U. Scene is Lake Michigan as raiders leave sub in robber rafts to attack Chicago beach. , FLOOR and DECK ENAMEL 4 that JIgaU! . . ikcJJi Athey’s For beauty plus years ond years of protection it pays many ways to insist on ATHFY’S Floor and Deck Enamel • Use on wood or concrete /Vt Key’s • No brush marks ha* V #u £ *V 'sSTer pro of Manufactured by THE C. M. ATHEY PAINT CO/ BALTIMORE 30, MD. ^ FLOORS DECK ENAMEL Lominacks Hardware Inc. Phone 13 Newberry, S. C.