The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, March 06, 1958, Image 4
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PAGE FOUR
THE NEWBERRY SUN
THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1968
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Mrs. Hunter Of
Prosperity Dies
Mrs. Carrie DeWalt Hunter of
Prosperity died at 10 a. m. Sun
day at the home of her daughter,
Mrs. R. K. Wise of Columbia, af
ter several years of declining
health.
She was the widow of Dr.
George Y. Hunter, who died in
1936.
Mrs. Hunter was born August
30, 1874, the iftraghter of the late
George Gray DeWalt and Eliza
beth Caldwell DeWalt. She was
bom in Prosperity and spent her
entire life there until her health
failed several years ago.
She was a life-long member of
Grace Lutheran Church of Pros
perity, a charter member of the
William Lester Chapter, U.D.C.,
and of the Literary Sorosis.
Survivors include three daugh
ters, Mrs. R. K. Wise (Mary De
Walt Hunter) and Mrs. F. Daw
son Beattie (Ruth Hunter) of Co
lumbia, and Mrs. John T. Walker
(Myra Hunter) of Georgetown,
and one grandson, Frank D. Beat-
tie Jr., of Columbia.
Funeral ' services were held
Monday from Dunbar Funeral
Home, conducted by Rev. Ben
Clark, pastor of Grace Lutheran
Church of Prosperity, Rev. Robert
F. Shelby, pastor of Incarnation
Lutheran Church of Columbia.
Burial wus in Prosperity Ceme
tery.
Active pallbearers were Hunter
L. Fellers, Robert T. Stutts,
George S. Wise, A. Birge Wise,
Harry O. Frick, and Cyril Wheel
er.
Cook Succumbs
Suddenly
Darrell Phillip Cook, 93, died
suddenly at his home on Route 3,
Prosperity, early Wednesday af
ternoon.
He was born and reared in
the Bachman Chapel section of
Newberry County and was the
son of Mrs. Ella Marie Kinard
Cook and the late James P. Cook.
He was a veteran of World War
II and was formerly employed by
the Newberry Electric Co-Op. For
the past four years he was engag
ed in electrical work in Newberry.
He was a member of Bachman
Chapel Lutheran Church.
Surviving are two sons, David
Cook and Ray Cook, both of
Clinton; his mother, Mrs. Ella M.
Cook of Prosperity; one brother,
Virgil Cook of Newberry; one
sister, Mrs. J. C. Shealy Jr. of
Prosperity; three half-brothers,
Sidney Cook of Newberry, James
Cook of Edgefield, Paul Cook of
Leesville; two half-sisters, Mrs.
Arthur Livingston of Prosper
ity and Mrs. Tom Metts of Pros
perity.
Funeral services were held
Thursday at Bachman Chapel
Lutheran Church by Rev. J. L.
Drafts. Burial was in the church
cemetery.
BRIGHTEN YOUR FUTURE
with
SAVINGS!
Enjoy the pleasure of planning' for
the things you want . . . and make
sure you get them. Regular saving
does it! Open a savings account
here . . . start now to save for va
cation, retirement, education for
your children.
Bank Of Commerce
PROSPERITY, S. C.
Liquidation Sale
C. T. SUMMER, Inc.
Our stock of High Grade Gro
ceries which went on sale Tues
day morning is fast disappearing.
However, we still have many
items which you may obtain at a
real bargain.
All grocery items being offer-
ed at a big discount.
Stock your pantry now while
there are big savings to be had.
Come early — these remain
ing items will not last much long
er.
t
WE ARE ALSO SELLING OUR
FIXTURES OUT TO THE
BARE WALLS.
C. T. Summer, Inc.
Indians Set
1958 Diamond
Schedule
The following is the 1958 base
ball schedule of Newberry College:
March 17, 18 and 19, Parris Is
land at Parris Island; March 24,
Guilford, March 29, Belmont Ab
bey, both at Newberry; April 2,
Erskine at Due West; April 9,
Wofford at Newberry; April 12,
University of South Carolina at
Columbia; April 15, Belmont Ab
bey at Belmont, N. C.; April 16,
Furman at Greenville; April 22,
Presbyterian at Clinton; April 24,
Citadel at Charleston; April 28,
Furman at Newberry, night
game;
Also, May 1, University of
South Carolina at Newberry, night
game; May 2, Citadel at Newber
ry; May 5, Erskine at Newberry,
night game; May 7, Wofford at
Spartanburg; May 9, Presbyterian
at Newberry, night game.
4-H Clubbers
Honor Parents
By J. O. DONKLE,
Asst. County Agent
The 28 4-H Clubs in Newberry
County with their 1000 members
salute the parents of these boys
and girls. Although it is a general
aim of the club to emphasize par
ent-child cooperation in projects,
March 1-8 has been set aside as
National 4-H Club Week and this
year the boys and girls are parti
cularly honoring their parents.
Parents have reason to be proud
of the work their children have
done under the leadership of the
Extension Service, County and
Home Agents, in such projects as
dressmaking, room improvement,
cooking and canning, food freez
ing, and home grounds beautifica
tion for the girls; dairying, poul
try, beef and swine production,
farm crops, forestry, beautifica
tion of the home grounds, safety,
etc., for the boys.
But this feeling of parental
pride should be combined with a
sense of responsibility toward
working more closely with these
club members to create a deeper
interest in personal achievement
and group participation. Parents
are encouraged to cooperate with
the Extension Service in stress
ing the importance of keeping de
tailed records on projects, as well
as helping their child to select the
proper project.
It is pointed out that the 4-H
program is set up for youth be
tween the ages of 10 and 21. Par
ents are urged to encourage the
older members to continue their
projects and not be satisfied with
laurels won during their first
years of 4-H Club work. The 4-H
Club motto “To Make the Best
Better” should be a challenge to
these older club members.
The 4-H Clubs of Newberry
County salute the parents for the
interest the fathers and mothers
show in the formal monthly pro
grams; for the cooperation they
have given the Extension Service
as well as their children in mak-
JtITZ
Theatre
Commencement
Speaker Is
Bryan Dorn
President C. A. Kaufmann an
nounced fhis week that the Hon
orable William Jennings Bryan
Dorn, Congressman from the Third
District of South Carolina, will be
the speaker at the 101st Com
mencement of Newberry College
on June 1, 1958. The program will
be in MacLean Gymnasium at 3:30
p. m. ”
Congressman Dorn is a native
of Greenwood County. He has
served in the South Carolina
House of Representatives and the
South Carolina Senate. In 1946,.
he was elected to Congress and
was one of the youngest members
of the 80th Congress. In 1950 he
was re-elected to the 82nd Con- j
gress without opposition.
Congressman Dorn is a forceful
speaker and is now serving on im
portant Congressional Committees
in the United State House of Rep
resentatives.
nj
Hipp Completes
School In Texas
FORT BUSS, Tex., (AHTNC)
—Second Lt. Curtis W. Hipp, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis C. Hipp,
Newberry, recently completed the
16-week antiaircraft artillery
officer basic course at the Army
Air Defense School, Fort Bliss.
Lieutenant Hipp is a 1952 grad
uate of Newberry High School and
a 1956 graduate of Wofford Col
lege.
His wife, Jane, lives in El Paso,
Texas.
pf Scout
Troop 19, left to right, front row, Jenny Mills, Prosperity, Bunny Chappell, Margaret Wherry,
Myrna Camp, Gwen Snipes, Joan Dominick and Patricia Underwood; back row, Gail Gunter, Debra
Caldwell, Prosperity; Janet Ruff, Clarissa Williams, Bonnie Campbell, Susan Frazier, Ann Smith,
Mary Ruth Armfield, Janice Whitaker, Mary Williams, and Susan Lipscomb. Gail Amick was ab
sent when the picture was made. (Photo by Nichols.)
Kendall Gives
Yearly Report
BOSTON, March 5.—The Ken
dall Company, manufacturer of
surgical dressings and textile
specialties, had record sales of
$106,822,000 in 1957, an increase
of $1,798,000 over the prior year,
Richard R. Higgins, President, re
ported to stockholders today. Net
earnings for the year amounted
to $4,0005,000, equal to $3.80 per
common share after preferred div
idends, compared with $4,114,000,
or $3.90 per share in 1956.
The company operates eighteen
domestic and foreign plants, in
cluding its Mollohon and Oakland
plants in Newberry.
BOYS ARE
THAT WAY
By J. M. ELEAZER
chiterling hash. And there are
others. Strangely, my taste hasn’t
changed much, and foods that
ranked high back then are still up
there in my estimation.
Watermelon! If I was listing
them in order, it would be first.
My, the gastronomic thrill of a
cool, lush watermelon on a sum
mer day! They don’t agree with
some, but they always did with
me. I can eat some of the things
I like until they don’t taste good.
But not so with watermelon. _It
tastes good right up to the very
time I can’t swallow any more.
This state has had a part in de
veloping the 4 best there are, the
Congo, Charleston Gray, the Gar
risonian, and the Blackstone.
And cantaloupes, they vary so.
But a real good one must come in
my list of favorite foods. At last
a high quality one has been bred
for our conditions here. It is the
Edisto, bred by Dr. M. B. Hughes
at Clemson’s Edisto Station.
From childhood too came the
liking for good country ham. To
me, it’s tops in meats. But like
the cantaloupe of the past, they
vary so. Some are not much ac
count, a disappointment. But I’ve
found a source in this state from
which you can get good ones <W.
N.< and Fred Henderson, Ninety
Six, S. C.) Not only their taste,
but their aroma! To smell it a-
fryin’ when you pass a house is
like a magnet tryin’ to pull you
in. For it surely sheds its glory on
the. air.
Common old cowpeas and_corn-
bread, a lowly dish, is fit for
kings. The kids and I often ask
for a meal of nothing else. We
want our fill of it, unencumber
ed by other things. I’m not much
for the streaked meat cooked with
vegetables. But that cooked with
peas is great, a bit with each
mouhtful.
And collards, too, after frost
has added its savor. They come
when we hunger, like a cow, for
greenery. Krout, too, at that sea
son. We always made a barrel of
it each winter when I was cornin’
along. Easy on the stomach, and
good for what ails you, we al
ways thought. And I like it too,
with sweet 'taters always.
On and on this could go. But
this is long enough.
Bought, Sold, Exchanged
We Repair AH Types
Mfuttn Electric Repair Co.
tm Wnte St: Columbia, S. €*
NOTICE—Prepared to assist with,
filing state and federal tax re
turns. Upstairs between Tur
ner’s and doctors offices. Tele
phone 2280; Home phone 2018.
Mrs. A. H. COUNTS. 37-tfe
WHITAKER
FUNERAL HOME
AMBULANCE
PHONE 270
Subscribe To The Sun
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Save Where Your
Savings Are Insured
SEGRET
Of Successful Mortgages Is
Friendly relations between Mort
gagor and Mortgagee
If you’re not sure which is which, if you
want to see how friendly such relations
can be, we’re open 9 to 4.
mmm
Building & Loan Association
1117 Boyce Street Newberry, S. C. The State Building
Pinckney N. Abrams, Sec.-Treas.
"vW
T2S
first wild plums, June apples, and
Favorite foods from childhood!
I touched on 3 last week; the
ing these meetings informative as
well as interesting.
THURSDAY, FRIDAY &
SATURDAY
Robert Taylor, Julie London,
John Cassavettes
Saddle The Wind
Also Cartoon—Let’s Go
MONDAY, TUESDAY &
WEDNESDAY
Lana Turner, Jeff Chandler,
Richard Denning, Andra Martin
The Lady Takes
A Flyer
Also Cartoon—Springtime Cobbler
CLOVER LEAF
DRIVE-IN
Theatre
know your State
r
k
How!
GREATER USED CAR VAIVES
AT VOUR
CHEVROLET DEALER’S
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
The Streets Of
Laredo
William Holden, Macdonald Carey,
Added Color Cartoon—Hollywood
Bowl
SUNDAY
Bundle Of Joy
Eddie Fisher, Debbie Reynolds,
Adolphe Menjou
Added Color Cartoon—Wood
pecker Polka
End
ofthefeinbnw?
Siwtecked
Even fishermen’s luck is improv
ing in South Carolina. The state’s
mountain streams are being re
stocked with rainbow, brook
and brown trout through the
efforts of federal and state hatch
eries. The federal hatchery in
Oconee County supplies streams
in four southeastern states and
the state unit in Greenville
County stocks South Carolina
waters in northern counties.
In today’s South Carolina,
with its emphasis on progress,
the United States Brewers Foun
dation works constantly to en
courage maintenance of whole
some conditions wherever beer
and ale are sold. As in other
states, the program calls for
close cooperation between law-
enforcement officials and beer li
censees throughout South Caro
lina.
Beer belongs... enjoy it.
United States Brewers Foundation
South Carolina Div., Columbia, S.C.
Big doings! Big dealings!
ALL MODELS!
ALL COLORS!
ALL PRICES!
cni:\ non: i
Visit your local authorized Chevrolet dealer now for the
widest choice in good used cars. He’s taking in trades of all
descriptions, and pricing them to move fast to make room Only franchised
for the large number of cars that are being turned in on the Chevrolet dealers display
popular new Chevies. See him soon! Look for the OK sign. the8e famou8 trademark *
See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer
KEMPER CHEVROLET COMPANY
1515-1517 Main St.
Phone 982