The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, May 30, 1963, Image 3
THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1963
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
Page Three
By LINDA NORRIS
npHE KINGSTON TRIO has re-
A corded a new group of songs
for Capitol under the title of “New
Frontier” . . . “When I first heard
the words ‘new frontier' I said to
myself, ‘a phrase like this needs
to be sung” says John Stewart*
new singer with the trio . . . The
need is filled rousingly as the boys
introduce Stewart’s new composi
tion, “The New Frontier” which
is offered as an unofficial theme
song of the Peace Corps to whom
the album is dedicated ... As
in previous recordings, the trio
ranges far afield to find the songs
which best suit their irrepressible,
buoyant singing . . . New to their
songbag are “Greenback Dollar,”
“My Lord What a Morning,”
“Some Fool Made a Soldier of
Me” and others.
Brahms' “A German Requiem”
is now available in stereo for the
first time in the United States of
one of Angel Records’ major sets
of the year . . . The assemblage
of artists includes the Philhar
monic Orchestra and Chorus, un
der Klemperer, assisted by Bay
reuth Festival chorus master Wil
liam Pits . . . The performance
is complete on two records and
included is a libretto with Ger
man text and English translations.
After several months in Britain,
the recording has gathered ac
claim as the definitive interpreta
tions of the work as well as a new
standard in stereophonic repro
duction of choral performances
. . . The respected British music
journal, The Gramophone, referred
to the production as “a master
piece in stereophonic skill” and
stated flatly that “at its best this
recording is sensational.” They
do not exaggerate.
From Kate Prince, Youngstown,
Ohio: I remember the day but not
the date. It was fall, 1900 and I
was a small, six-year-old, unedu
cated child.
I arose with the sun. Dressing
was a complicated process. Un
mentionable, scratchy undies, long
black cotton stockings, high top
button shoes, buttoned with a but
ton hook that always pinched
near the top. Three petticoats, no
less. A longish dress with long
sleeves, buttoned down the back,
trimmed with fancy braid. To top
all this, a niffy, big-shashed dimi
ty pinafore.
Combing and braiding long hair
was a painful process. My hair
was parted north to south and
east to west in four divisions. The
front sections were braided so
tightly my eyebrows were arched.
The front braids were worked into
the back braids, tied with a big
ribbon.
After a big breakfast, mother
took me only as far as the high,
opened iron gates. A brick wall
surrounded the campus and this
low wall had an iron grill fence
on top.
The school building was far
back in the shady campus. The
only redeeming feature was a lat
ticed gazebo (summer house)
where small girls played.
Armed with McGuffy’s First
Reader, I started on that part of
learning that extended sixteen
years. This was the formal part,
then more than fourty-four years
of learning by living.
(Send contribution* to thl* column
to The Old Timer, Box 39. Frankfort,
Kentucky.)
hiitributej (rot*!
BOSTON LOS ANGELES
LONDON CHICAGO
Interesting
Accurate
Complete
Intdmotionol Ndw* Coverage
The Christicui science Monitor
One Norway St., Boston 15, Moss.
Send your newspaper for the time
checked. Enclosed f:nd my check or
money order. □ 1 year $22.
□ 6 months $11 □ 3 months $5.50
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Zone
State
BY HELEN HALE
Fruit Elegance
Combine mandarin orange sec
tions with coconut, pineapple bits,
maraschino cherries and soured
cream. Let stand for 3 hours in
refrigerator and serve as a fruit
salad.
Heavy cream, whipped, into
which is then folded orange sec
tions, bananas, toasted almonds,
plumped, pitted prunes, and brok-
Helen’s Favorite:
Cocoa Sendee Sauce
(Makes 1 cup)
% cup cocoa
Vt cup sugar
% cup water
Va cup butter
Combine cocoa and sugar in
saucepan. Mix thoroughly, add
water and cook over low heat
5 minutes. Remove from heat,
add butter and stir until
blended.
en meringue pieces makes a Dan
ish Melange dessert.
Serve a compote with your main
course: chilled cooked prunes,
canned apricots and seedless
grapes are nice together.
Add a bit of mincemeat to cran
berry-orange relish for a novel
taste treat.
For fruit punch combine: V4 cup
lemon juice, cup pineapple
juice, 1 6-ounce can frozen orange
juice, diluted, 2 tablespoons mara
schino cherry juice and 3 cups
gingerale. Top with scoops of
lemon sherbet.
Apple sauce folded into whipped
cream, makes a nice filling for
miniature cream puffs. Pass with
chocolate sauce, if desired.
Rev. ROBERT H. HARPER
FINE FIGUKE OF SPEECH
T HE harp has always seemed
a superb instrument, both for
its appearance and the music it
may produce under a skilled hand.
My admiration for it goes back
to days in college when in a
lyceum course we had a reader
who was supported by a harpist.
And song and story have been
woven about the harp. For in
stance “The Harp that Once
through Tara’s Hall the Soul of
Music Shed,” which I heard John
McCormack sing in Portland, Ore
gon. But I submit that one of the
most beautiful figures of speech
is to be found in Locksley Hall.
It is as follows:
Love took up the harp of life and
smote on all the chords with
might,
Smote the chord of self that,
trembling, passed in music
out of sight.
There is a wondrous harmony
and sympathy between identical
tones of different instruments.
Once while a college mate tuned
his violin, I felt an answering
string of the same note tremble
under my finger, on my guitar.
As swiftly as the wings of the
humming bird pass out of sight
so do the swiftly-vibrating strings
of thi harp pass in music out of
sight. When love reigns in the
heart, selfishness has no place.
ATTEND CONVENTION OF
DENTAL ASSOCIATION
Drs. E. M. “Andy” Anderson,
Fuller A. Truett, and J. E. Wise
man Jr., of Newberry, attended
the 95th annual convention of the
South Carolina Dental Association
May 19-22 in Charleston.
%
Association members attended
scientific lectures and business
sessions, and reard an address by
Dr. Gerald Timmons of Philadel
phia, president of the American
Dental Association.
Dr. Howard Higgins of Spartan
burg succeeded Dr. Jack Rosen of
Charleston as SCDA president
during the meeting.
PB-K
BROTHER OF DR. GRADY
COOPER DIES IN KINGS
MOUNTAIN. N. C.
Dr. E. C. Cooper, brother of
Dr. L. Grady Cooper of Newberry,
passed away Sunday night in
Kings Mountain, N. C. He had
been in ill health for some time.
Funeral services were held
Tuesday at 3 p.m. at the Luther
an Church in Kings Mountain.
Dr. Cooper was a former presi
dent of the Southern Seminary in
Columbia, and held pastorates in
Albemarle, N. C., Lynchburg, Va.
anr Philadelphia, Pa. He was pri
son chaplain at N. C. State Pris
on and also at the Federal prison
in Atlanta for a number of years.
Besides his brother, Dr. L. C.
Cooper of Newberry, he is surviv
ed by his wife, three children, a
brother and four sisters.
VPd
,0 3>-
West
North
East
Pass
14
24
Pass
3 ¥
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
BY MARY STONE
North and South vulnerable.
South deals.
NORTH
4 J 9 4 2
V A J2
♦ Q 10 6
+ K J8
WEST EAST
4)8753 4* A Q 10 6
¥ Q8 ¥ 6
¥95 ¥ K 8 7 4 3
¥ 7 6 5 3 2 ¥ Q 10 9
SOUTH
¥ K
¥K 10 97543
¥ A J2
¥A4
The Bidding:
South
1 ¥
2¥
4¥
Opening lead: Two of clubs.
South played the jack from
dummy, East covered with queen
and South won with the ace. South
then drew trumps in two rounds,
ending in the dummy. South next
led queen of diamonds, East cov
ered with the king and South won
with ace in the closed hand. South
then took two diamond tricks, end
ing again in dummy. The king of
clubs was played next, then the,
eight of clubs on which South
sluffed the king of spades, losing
this trick only to East’s 10 of
clubs.
COMMENT: This was a slam
hand regardless of the lead. South
should have jumped to three
hearts over the two diamond bid
but, even so, North would have
bid four hearts and South would
have passed. In the discussion
which followed playing of the
hand, everyone agreed that it was
the in-between hand held by North
which stumped the bidding.
THE HANDY FAMILY
PROPERTY
TRANSFERS
NEWBERRY No. 1
Frank H. Ward to Hal Kohn,
four lots on Johnstone Street
(Frank Means, Est.) $4,360.
Lester B. Paysinger to E. L.
Becley, one lot and one building
on Harrington Street, $5.00.
Administrators of eVterans Af
fairs to Grace S. Oswald, as Com
mittee for Grover A. Oswald, one
lot and one building, fronting on
Harrington Street, $5,000.
Sara H. Cox and William Jordan
SILVERSTREETT No. 2
Holloway to Mayme H. Scurry,
two acres, $160.
Charles Pinckney Teague Jr.
to Ralph Waldrop, 72 acres and
one building, $5.00.
BUSH RIVER No. 3
C. P. Teague Jr. to Willie H.
Teague, 2.11 acres, $5.00 love and
affection.
C. P. Teague Jr. to Una Mae
H. Teague, 7.65 acres, $5.00 love
and affection.
WHITMIRE No. 4 OUTSIDE
Forrest Finney to J. T. Nelson
Jr., 16 acres and one building,
$10.00.
POMARIA No. 5
H. Lionel Suber to H. H. Smith,
1/3 acre and one building and 7
acres, $5.00.
LITTLE MOUNTAIN No. 6
W. K. Swygert and H. B. Shealy
to Ray Morgan, one lot, $5.00.
J. N. Hamm to Mrs. lone H.
Fulmer, four acres and one build
ing, $780.
PROSPERITY No. 7
George W. Counts to Troy L.
Hyatt, one lot and one building,
$5.00 and The Mutual Conveyance
of said lots.
Troy L. Hyatt to George W.
Counts, one lot and one building,
$5.00 and The Mutual Conveyance
of said lot.
Mark N. Boozer to Ronald R.
Boozer, 18 acres, $5.00.
BY LLOYD BMRNF.YAM
.SO two AWE A DUSTBIN
FOR. USE IN GARA&E, SHOP OR
BASEMENT-...
Make AW SIZE DESIRED-USE 1**4*
STOCK FOd FOP,
BOTTOM.*.
BEVa FRONT
EC&EOP
BOTTOM
ATTACH
STRIP
SO THAT RAN
TUTS FORWARD
?W*#**
!i«
“I presume you know that ‘A’ stands for ‘All Right’—TP la for ‘Better*
—‘C’ is for ‘Colossal’ and *D’ is ‘Doggone Good!..
*Wi.
“That cow that jumped over the moon ... was
it Russian or one of ours?”
NEW
BULOVA
• 23 JEWELS
• SELF-WINDING
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RECEIVE AWARDS AT NEWBERRY COLLEGE
Four Newberry County Students at Newberry College
were recipients of scholarships during Awards Day, held on
May 20th.
MISS BRENDA KAY LESTER, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin S. Lester of Newberry, received the Newberry
Business and Professional Women’s Club scholarship.
MISS CHARLENE GOLDEN, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
C. E. Golden, received the Graves Scholarship in Music.
MISS ROBERTA COOPER, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. L.
G. Cooper, received the P. E. Monroe Scholarship.
MISS MARGARET KELLY, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Phillip T. Kelly Jr., received the Sease Memorial scholarship.
Bachman Honor Society Certificates were presented to
Jerry Koon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eldre&e B. Koon of Pomaria
and George L. Mayer Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Mayer
Sr., of Newberry.
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Utah, the 45th state, was admitted to the Union, January 4, ISM.
The last spike was driven in the Great Northern Railroad, January
5, 1893. The American Red Cross was chartered, January 5, 1905.
Poet Carl Sandburg was born January 9, 1878. UJ5. Marines were
ordered to Nicaragua, January 6,1127.
The first balloon flight across the English channel was completed,
January 7, 1785, by Blanchard and Jeffries. The first Soviet Russia
ambassador arrived in the U.S., January 7, 1934.
A tabulating machine was patented by Herman Hollerith, Janas y
8, 1888. Mississippi was first state to ratify the prohibition amend
ment, January 8, 1918.
Photography (by Daguerreotype) was first used, January 9, 1839.
General MacArthur returned to Luzon. January 9, 1945.
A lend-lease bill was introduced into Congress, January 10, 1941.
The UJS. Army contacted the moon by radar, January 10, 1946.
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W. E. TURNER
Jeweler
1103 Caldwell Street
Phone 276-4714
Convert Now To
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FREE LABOR
For Installing Water Heaters,
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THROUGH AUGUST 15th
CONVERT NOW!
Natural Gas costs only one-third as much as electricity for heating water. A 30-
gallon natural gas heater equals a 100 gallon electric water heater (the recovery
rate is greater.)
SEE OR PHONE US RIGHT AWAY!
Clinton-Newberry Natural Gas Authority
Phone 276-4352
Newberry, S. C.
1207 McKibben Street