The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, August 21, 1958, Image 4
PAGE FOUR
College Holds
Open House At
New Buildings
Newberry College will hold
Open House for the two new build
ings which have just been complet
ed, the Student Union Building
and the new Girls’ Dormitory, on
Sunday, August 31, from 4:00 to
7:00 p. m. The public from the
•city, county and throughout the
suporting synods are invited and
urged to come see these two new
modern beautiful buildings.
The Student Union Building
contains a cafeteria that will seat
400, with additional space for 200
more, the faculty dining room, the
book store, the post office, the can
teen, a recreation room.
The new Girls’ Dormitory is ful
ly equipped and ready for occu
pancy. A central TV antenna has
been installed in the roof.
Members of the faculty and
staff will be present throughout
the two buildings to greet and in
form the visitors. Refreshments
will be served.
THE NEWBERRY SUN
THURSDAY, AUGUST 21, 195*
Dr. Moore To
Direct Workshop
of Music (Voice) and Director of
the Newberry College Singers,
will be the Choir Workshop Direc
tor in the Lutheridge School of
Church Music, at Lutheridge Aug
ust 24-29.
This school of church music is
held annually for the training of
choir directors and choir singers.
Special instructions, in the singing
of the service in the new Luther
an Hymnal, will be given at this
workshop.
Second Polio
Clinic To Be
Held Thursday
A second polio clinic, sponsor
ed by the Jaycees of Newberry,
will be held Thursday, August
28th, to give a second shot of Salk
vaccine to the 837 persons who re
ceived* their first shot at the Jay-
cee-sponsored clinc two weeks ago.
Persons who did not receive a
first shot at that time may do so
next Thursday. Another clinic
will be scheduled later for the
latter group.
Dr. V. A. Long, district health
officer, will be on hand from 10
a. m. until 5 p. m. at the Com
munity Hall to give the shots.
BOYS ARE
THAT WAY
By J. M. ELEAZER
Piano, Voice
Students To Be
In Recital
The piano and voice students of
Mrs. Sibyl Speltz will be present
ed in summer recital Monday
night, August 25 at 7:30 p. m.
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. F.
Sanders on Jessica Avenue.
Students who will participate
are Connie Sanders, Susan Ward,
Beverly Hawkins, Mary Ruth
Armfield, Carol Armfield, Jane
Bedenbaugh, Susan Bedenbaugh,
Jinx Regnery, and Mary. Beth
Regnery, piano students;
Also, Marcia Mills, Mary Linda
Mills, Roger Bouknight and Bar
bara Buddin, voice students.
Newberry To Be
Represented At
C Of C Meeting
The Eloise Welch Wright
Chapter, Children of the Confed
eracy, will be represented by its
full quota of delegates at the
Montgomery general convention,
August 20—23, as follows: Bar
bara and Alice Youmans, Lila
Summer, David and Bill Shealy,
and Charles Boyd III of Birming
ham, Ala. This chapter will also
furnish the top honor member and
presiding officer of the conven
tion, John W. Chappell, President
General of the C. of C.
Mesdames Elmer Shealy and
M. L. Youmans, directors on the
local chapter, Mesdames J. J.
Chappell and D. L. Summer will
also attend.
Two valuable awards will be
offered to the convention for com-
petition in 1958—59: one, the
Eloise Welch Wright trophy, a
large and handsome silver tray
from Gorham’s given by Mrs.
Carabel West Youmans, a member
of the Calvin Crozier Chapter,
U. D. C., to the chapter doing the
best historical work during the
coming year. The other is a lovely
ailver tray from Sylvans given by
Luther Leaguers
Buy Books For
College Library
The South Carolina Luther
League of the Evangelical Luth
eran Synod of South Carolina dur
ing its Forty-Eighth Annual Con
vention, at Newberry College Aug
ust 17-20, presented President C.
A. Kaufmann a check for $150
to be used to purchase Religious
books for the library at Newberry
College. Henry Keummerer, the
treasurer, presented the check.
Recently the Newberry Confer
ence Luther League -gave Newber
ry College a set of green Para-
ments to be used in the Chapel
Services in Holland Hall. With
this gift a complete set of Para-
ments is now owned by Newberry
College, which adds much to the
worship services and is most ap
propriate for the chancel furnish
ings in Holland Hall.
Also, in the spring a gift from
the Georgia-Alabama Luther
League was received by Newber
ry College for the purchasing of
pictures of religious art to be
used in class rooms in Bible and
Religious Education. This ma
terial has been purchased by the
faculty committee on Religious
Activities.
Mrs. Derrick's
Brother Dies
Samuel Lyles Copeland, 54,
brother of Mrs. Louise C. Derrick
of Little Mountain, died suddenly
at his home in Bamberg Tuesday
afternoon. HeH was born in Ehr-
hardt January 1, 1904, a son of the
late Samuel Wingard and Maude
Sease Copeland. He was a mem
ber of Ehrhardt Memorial Luther
an Church.
Funeral services were held Wed
nesday from the graveside of the
Mount Pleasant Lutheran Church,
conducted by his pastor, Rev. Wel
ter W. Shealey.
Com marked the man in the
Dutch Fork where I came up.
Some were able to boast of
never having bought a bushel.
And with droughts to endure,
that was something.
Another thing that indicated
quality in a man was how well
he kept the nubbins and shucks
cleaned up at his corn pile.
Yes, our corn crib was our
fort. And when it ran low there
was hard going. For it meant
many things. It was the power
that went into the mule. It was
a staple everyday food—meal,
grits, and hominy. It meant
eggs, chickens, meat, milk but
ter. It meant cash when we sbld
a few bushels. Corn was large
ly our life. So the man who was
good at growing it and who kept
a neat pile of it in his crib was
usually OK financially and so
cially. It really marked the man,
and marked him well.
We never made much com on
our small farms, except those
few who had rich creek bottoms.
On one and two horse farms,
they’d often make several hund
red bushels. But most of us on
the hills usually came up with a
little over a hundred bushels.
And that, scrupulously hand
led, filled in with oats and fed
fed our critters, when he was at
work and not on pasture.
We snapped our com in the
field with full shucks on. We
wanted them to feed the \cow.
We usually shucked it as it was
needed. The top ears were put
aside for seed, the next best
shelly for milling, and the
other sound com fed on the
cob to the mule. All doty and
damaged ears were put in a
basket for the hogs. And the
shucks too were put in a big
basket for the milk cow.
The slothful fellow had a mes
sy crib, with nubbins and trash
at the foot of the pile. But not
the careful man. He kept his
crib clean, and shucked the ears
as he came to them, from the
foot of the pile.' Every now and
then the ears would cascade
down, but he never picked out
the big easy to shuck ears. He
took ’em as them came. And his
shucks were not thrown back of
him, but were packed neatly in
a basket at his side. And the
trash and shattered corn be
neath his feet was all kept
cleaned up too. That was thrown
to the chickens. They had trou
ble making me do this right. I
wanted only the big ears and
didn’t like to keep it cleaned up.
Next week a little bit more
about corn.
PERSONAL
MENTION
Mrj. Louise C. Derrick of Litcle
Mountain left Wednesday for
Biloxi, Miss, xor a weeks visit
with her son, Lt. Louie C. Der
rick, who is stationed at Keesler
Air Force Base.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur M. Eargle
of Gracewood, Ga. are spending
spending their vacation at their
home on Summer street. They will
return to their school in Grace-
wood on September 5th.
Miss Joy Thomason of Pros
perity, daughter of Mrs. J. S.
Thomason has returned to her
home after studying stage craft
and stage designing at a summer
theatre on Long Island, New York,
for six weeks.
Miss Verna Kohn has returned
to Orlando, Fla. to resume her
work as librarian in the Orlando
schools after spending her sum
mer vacation here with her parents
Mr. and Mrs. Hal Kohn on John
stone street.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Amick and
family and Miss Evelyn Cannon
BOOKMOBILE
SCHEDULE
THURSDAY, AUG. 21
Union Community, Mrs. Grady L.
Halfacre.
Union Community, Eugene Horton
Jolly St. Community, Mrs. E. J.
Shealy
Midway Community, Mrs. J. C.
Wheeler.
Little Mountain Community, Rev.
Garth Hill
Wheelers Bridge, Mrs. Joe Fulmer
Mt. Pilgrim Community, Mrs. G.
W. Cooper
Mt. Pilgrim Community, Mrs.
Luther Hawkins.
Prosperity Public Square.
LAFF OF THE WEEK
Army Recruiter
Is Back In Town
M-Sgt. Thomas J. Corbitt has
returned to his duties as recruiter
for the U. S. Army in Newberry
after having attended a four-
weeks course at .the Adjutant
General School at Fort Benjamin
Harrison, Indiana. He completed
the school, which consited of ad
ministration public speaking and
allied coures, with honors.
Sgt. Corbitt is at the Court
House on Tuesday and Friday of
each week to discuss Army ca
reers with interested young men.
Kendall Company
Dividends
BOSTON. — Directors of The
Kendall Company have declared a
regular quarterly dividend of 50c
per share on the common stock
payable September 15, 1958 to
stockkholders of record August 25,
1958; also a regular quarterly div
idend of $1.12 Vz per share on the
$4 .50 cumulative preferred stock,
payable October 1, 1958 to stock
holders of record September 15.
the South Carolina Children of
the Confederacy honoring John
Chappell who is also a past pre
sident of this division. This is to
be known as the “ John Chappell,
Trophy,” and is offered to the
state having the largest attend
ance at a General convention, on
a percentage basis.
Barbara Youmans and David
Shealy will serve as pages to Mrs.
Archie Watson, director for South
Carolina
SCAMH To Hire
Field Agent
Dr. James C. Kinard of New
berry, Chairman of the Personnel
Committee of the South Carolina
Division of the National Associ
ation for Mental Health, has an
nounced that his Committee is
accepting applications for the
position of Field Representative
with the States Mental Health
Association
Made posible through a budget
increase for 1959 approved by
the Admissions and Budget Com
mittee of Carolinas United, for
the Community Chests and United
Funds of South Carolina, the ad
dition of a Field Representative to
the SCAMH Staff will mean that
the organization of Mental Health
Chapters and the program of edu
cation, volunteer services, legis
lative activities, and services to
patients and their families will be
speeded up and intensified, Dr.
Kinard explained. The Personnel
Committee is accepting applica
tions so that the applicants can be
screened in time for the State
Board of directors to make a se
lection before November 1st.
More complete information on
Receives Degree
From Iowa State
Gene Elizabeth Gary, 636 Cald
well street, received the Master of
Arts degree awarded by the State
University of Iowa at summer
Commencement exercises held
Wednesday, August 13.
the position, and application
forms, are available from the
State Office of South Carolina
Asso<£ation for Mental Health,
732 Harden Stret, Columbia, S.
C. Telephone AL-68668.
know your Stole
ft-*.
Save Where Yonr
Sayings Are Insured
MOVE INTO YOUR HOME
SOONER THIS EASY WAY
Once you have your down payment in hand, the rest
is easy when you finance the balance on a low-cost loan
from us. You will get friendly understanding and at
tention to detail from a staff which specializes in
home financing. You can repay your loan just like rent
in a single monthly repayment which usually includes
principal, interest and property taxes. Come in and
get all the facts.
Building & Loan Association
1117 Boyce Street Newberry, S. C. The State Building
Pinckney N. Abrams, Sec.-Treas.
s.-h-.-*
ixl—*—.
fori Frederick
The oldest tabby fort in America,
built in 1732 from oyster shell
cement, Fort Frederick near Port
Royal in Beaufort county, is now
being preserved by local civic
groups. It is sometimes called the
Spanish Fort, probably because
it was built as a defense against
possible Spanish attacks on the
British settlement.
In today’s South Carolina, with
its emphasis on progress, the
United States Brewers Founda
tion works constantly to encour
age maintenance of wholesome
conditions wherever beer and ale
are sold. As in other states, MJie
program calls for close coopera
tion between law-enforcement of
ficials and beer licensees through
out South Carolina.
Beer belongs... enjoy it.
United States Brewers Foundation
South Carolina Div., Columbia, S.C.
The beverage
of moderation
"Not only is it my masterpiece, bat the big toe is hinged
so yon ran crack wahints!”
S«r, ' ’■ 'll '
FFF
HARDWOOD BAM
DOOR BOLT
ekted is Quickly
the door as shown.
• • • A
by screwing
for
the lifts
were Sunday visitors in the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ford
in Cassatt.
Sunday guests in the home of
Rev. and Mrs. L. E. Bouknight
and their sons, Stephen and Allen
in Mooresvile, N. C. were Mr. and
Mrs. Claude Amick, Mrs. Carroll
Pugh, Mrs. David E. Cannon, Miss
Ruth Cannon and Lawerence,
Cannon.
Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Pitts III,
and sons, Bobby and Walter re
turned to their home in Sebring,
Fla. Wednesday for a three-week
visit here with Mrs. Pitts’ par
ents, Mr. and Mrs Roland Felker
on Harper street, and with relat
ives of Mr. Pitts.
Forrest Carpenter of Baltimore,
Md., arrived in the city Sunday
night for a few days visit with
his mother, Mrs. E. A. Carpen
ter. Mrs. Carpenter and Forrest
spent Wednesday in Orangeburg
with Mr. and Mrs. A1 Fischer and
children, Bert and Lila.
Mrs. Julia R. Smith spent her
vacation last week in Florence
with Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Griggs.
Mr. and Mrs. David Ringer and
son, Cecil and Mrs. Russell Addy
spent their vacation last week on
a tour in the mountains of North
Carolina and Tennessee.
Mr. and Mrs. B. P. Ringer move
last Wednesday to their new
home on Glenn St*
NOMIdA, MBXeUf
a urns
V
,.iB0TUr^ FAee trf
'jgO'M-W-W-W-W
CLOVER LEAF
DRIVE-IN
Theatre
THURSDAY
(In CinemaScope & Color)
Deborah Kerr, David Niven, Jan
Seberg
Added Color Cartoon—Slick Up
Pup
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
Cowboy
(In Color)
Glenn Ford, Jack Lemmon, Anna
Kashfi
Added Color Cartoon—Polar Pest
SUNDAY, MONDAY &
TUESDAY
First Run Picture In Newberry
Another Time,
Another Place
Lana Turner, Barry Sullivan
Added Color Cartoon—His Better
Elf
RITZ
Theatre
WORLD OUTDOORS
THURSDAY
Anthony Perkins, Silvana Man-
gano, Richard Conte, Jo Van
Fleet
This Angry Age
(In Technicolor)
I, Also Cartoon—Riot In Rhythm
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM
Peter Cushing, Eunice Gayson,
Francis Matthews
The Revenge Of
Frankenstein
(In Technicolor)
Dana Andrews, Peggy Cummings,
Nial MacGinnis
Curse Of The
Demon
T HE doctors of our country
would not be so overworked if
more people would take up some
form of activity in the world out
doors.
This is not to say that fresh air
will cure disease or that a walk
in the woodlands will chase away
rheumatism. IPs not that simple.
The facta are that our way of
life, while it is a good one, also
has its drawbacks. To begin
with, the leiesre time that is a
part of osr modern civilization
is both s blessing and a danger
in disguise.
Many use their leisure time
well, devoting it to hobbies? or
sports activities which offer both
exercise and a needed change of
pace for the mind and body.
Others occupy this time by simply
doing nothing, with the result that
the body does Yot get the exercise
it needs to keep it perking ef
ficiently.
Some experts contend that we
are becoming a nation of "over
weights” because sf the soft life
that we lead. We’re slow to posh
oar selves away from the table
and often net tnclihed to get the
exercise we need to keep down
the avoirdupois.
All of this, of course, refers to
the “white collar” set. A few peo
ple in this economy of ours still
have jobs that call for physical
exertion. For these, leisure time
is a needed time for relaxation.
But the world outdoors has some
thing to give to everyone. It offers
no panacea, only strong medicine
for the mind and body. In this
season, the gams may be golf, or
the more strenuous tennis; the
sports of fishing, boating, at water
skiing; hiking, tennis, an after
noon walk in the sun. and even,
bird watching.
On Visit From
Puerto Rico 1
F. L. Cox, a dredge engineer
for the Gahagen Dredge Corp. of
Cantano, Puerto Rico, wig At
home the past week. He Ahitj
Mrs. Cox visited their daughter
and son-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. Him*
man Shelley and family in Jade*'
sonville, Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. James Norton eaul
children, Laurens and Marilyn, gf
Columbia, were Sunday higl)$
guests in the home of Mr. and*
Mrs. J. Chesley Abrams on the
Bush River Road.
.
NOTICE OF JURY
DRAWING
We, the undersigned Jury Com
missioners of Newberry County*
shall on Wednesday, September
3rd., 1958, at 9 o’clock, A. in
the office of the Clerk of Court*
openly and publicly, draw the
names of thirty-six (36) men to
serve as Jurors for the Cogrt of
General Sessions (Criminal) r
which will convene in the Neit,'
ry County Courthouse on M
September 15th, 1958, at
o’clock, A. M.
BURKE M. WISE,
Clerk of Court
RALPH B. BLACK,
Auditor.
J. RAY DAWKINS,
Treasurer.
August 20th, 1058.
Newberry, S. C.
"m
: }***-W
m
TO RETURN FROM
HOSPITAL
James E. Wiseman Sr., who was
taken to the Newberry County
Memorial Hospital Tuesday after
noon for treatment, is reported to
be much better and expects to re
turn to his home at the Hotel
Wiseman in the near future.
& Apple Juice
For Sale
Call 787-J
George E. Stone
Rt 1
Newberry, S. C.
mi i i n—J‘ ■:fc-
ELECTRIC MOTORS
NEW- XJSEflD-REBUILT
Bought, Sold, Exchanged
We Repair All Types
Satisfaction Ouavantaad
Mann Electric Repair Co.
2329 Mala St. CohuaMa, €»
jci
USED PLUMBING — New lead.
Built-in or leg tubs, sinks, lava
tories. Very good. Noah’s Ark*.
Abbeville, S. C. 14-6tc
RELIABLE PARTY J"
MALE OR FEMALE
wanted to service and collect frona
a route of CIGARETTE machines.
No selling. Route is fully estab
lished for operator. Full or part
time. Up to $300 per’ month to*
start. $1,000 to $2,000 cash requir
ed which is secured. Write, giving*
full particulars and phone number
to P. O. Box 4728, Dallas 6, Texas-
h.
WHITAKER
FUNERAL HOME
' 3
m
AMBULANCE
PHONE 270
Make Your Bid for Good Looks Today!
COME IN AND LOOK OVER OUR SELECTION
OF THE FINEST IN MEN’S WEAR.
T. ROY SUMMER, INC.
‘THE MAN’S SHOP”
MONDAY, TUESDAY &
WEDNESDAY
Rock Hudson, Cyd Charisse,
, Arthur Kennedy
Twilight For The
Gods
Also Cartoon—Gastons Easel Life
Notice to Parents
Now is the time to select fall attire for
your school children.
One of the “Musts” in the wardrobe
of school children is a Carcoat.
GIRLS CARCOATS
Sizes 2-3 $4.98
Sizes 3-14 - - r $5.95
BOYS CARCOATS
Sizes 2 - 3 - $4.98
Sizes 3-7 - $5.95
Sizes 8 -12 - 2 r
ALL WASHABLE
TOTS TO I
1214 Main Street
Phone 1474