The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, July 09, 1964, Image 4
PAGE FOUR
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
THURSDAY, JULY 9, \9M
RITZ
Theatre
WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY,
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
Jerry Lewis, Ina Balin, Everett
Sloan, Phil Harris, Kennan Wynn
THE PATSY
Children 25c Adults 60c
~ MONDAY & TUESDAY
Olivia de Havilland^pAna Sothern
Lady In The Cage
CLOVER LEAF
DRIVE-IN
Theatre
THURSDAY
To Catch A Thief
Cary Grant, Grace Kelly, Jessie
Jtoyce Landis
FRIDAY and SATURDAY
Siege Of The
Saxons
Janette Scott, Roland Lewis
Sunday, Monday and
TUESDAY
The Caretakers
Robert Stack, Joan Crawford,
Polly Bergen
Always a Color Cartoon
THE
Accurate
Complete
News
Coverage
Printed in
BOSTON
LOS ANGELES
LONDON
1 Year $24 6 Months $12
3 Months $6
Clip Hi is odvortisMimt and
ratum it with your chock or
money order tot
J Tho Christian Science Monitor
One Norway Street
Boston, Mass. 02115
PB-16
l 1 "’ " 1
ft
ft
♦ ft ft
Distinguish
Yourself
TOWLE
STERLING
Tnrio Starting CmdlMticki, '
and
Many other attractive gifts
for the Bride.
$3.00 and up
Make our store your Gift
hetadquarters
W. E. Turner, Jr.
1103 Caldwell St.
PLAN FIELD TRIP . . .
(Continued from Page 1)
change and picked up a gift for
the girls who were left behind.
General Pinckney entertained
visitors with a reception at the
Officers Club Friday night, and it
was a pleasure to see almost ev
ery officer from Newberry, as
well as many from out of town.
Several retired Generals were
present, including Generals God
frey, Hennegan and John Billing
sley. Also in attendance were the
Governor and Lt. Governor.
It was an especial pleasure to
again see Col. Barringer Wingard,
who was with the Newberry Group
for a number of years and is now
in the office of the Adjutant Gen
eral in Columbia.
Up at 5:30 Saturday morning,
I had breakfast with the 163rd
Group, and there enjoyed a chat
with Headquarters Battery’s First
Sgt. Longshore and members of
the messhall unit, including Jim
mie Bowers and Tennie Longshore.
After breakfast, we visited
Headquarters of the 101st Batta
lion. I had seen the Battalion’s
commander and executive officer,
Col. Jim Henderson and Major
James Lester the night before.
M-Sgt. J. C. McLeod and CWO
Carroll DeVore were up bright
and early making plans to go to
the field. I found the same in Bat
tery C, where Commanding Offi
cer Emerson Jones and his men
were poring over the field map,
and in Battery A, which Capt.
Bobby Underwood commands. M-
Sgt. Jim Perry of Battery C had
a cheery greeting, as did all the
others, and I wondered h6w they
all could be so cheerful so early
in the morning. Perhaps it was
because in another couple of hours
most of them would be on their
way home.
Newberry’s postmaster and as
sistant PM, Lt. Col. Harry Moose
and Major Jim Counts, were per
forming their assigned tasks,
which had nothing to do with de
livering mail. Lt. Dave Sokevitz
found a newspaper background of
no experience in dealing with
maneuvers in the swamps. Sgt.
Curtis Chapman was busy oversee
ing the clean-up of his unit’s ve
hicles in time for inspection, and
Sgt. James Stone forgot about
camp long enough to remark how
much he enjoyed the 1939 Class
Reunion held recently. His wife
was a member of the class.
Lts. John Derrick and Jimmy
Longshore didn’t show any more
inclination than the rest to leave
the comparative comfort of their
squad tents for several days in
the swamps, but they were also up
early making preparations.
Capt. Dick Vaughan was giving
his Headquarters battery a once
over before the inspecting officers
came around Saturday morning.
Capt. Joe Hipp, Chief Warrant
Officers Floyd Dennis, Jim Clamp
and Bobby Sanders were hard at
work in Headquarters, while Sgt.
Eddie Lominack was wandering
around with a tape recorder look
ing for someone to talk to the
folks back home via radio.
Band member Nobles was think
ing home, as he took time during
a break at the General’s reception
to speak of his daughter, Beth,
who was in the same classroom as
our Connie the past year. Band
Director CWO Charlie Pruitt and
other members of his combo play
ing for the reception agreed to
stay a little overtime at the recep
tion to play a request number—
and ended up staying about half
hour overtime. Theband, on all
occasions, particularly at the 7:30
parade Saturday morning, was an
excellent advertisement for New
berry. The members marched with
as much, and in some cases, more
precision than some of the “fight
ing” troops.
After inspection Saturday morn
ing, the troops were excused for
the remainder of the weekend, and
visitors made their way back to
the bus. All were sleepy and tired,
but without exception, all were
looking forward to a similar trip
next summer.
FORT SILL, OKLA. (AHTNC)
—Pvt. Charles F. Walker, son of
Mrs. Jaunita Walker, 715 South
street, completed advanced artil
lery training as a cannoneer at the
Army Artillery and Missile Cen
ter, Fort Sill, Okla., June 26.
Walker was. trained to serve in
field artillery gun or howitzer
crews.
The 23-year old soldier entered
the Army in February 1964 and
completed basic combat training
at Fort Dix, N. J.
Vo one vulnerable.jEast deals.
NORTI#^
ft* "v
V J
4 J 10 9 8 3
ft K Q 10 7 4 2
WEST EAST
ft 10 7 ft 8 5 2
V K 6 4 2 HI V A Q 8 7 5 3
ft A 5 4 *ft 6 2
ft 9 8 6 3 ft J 5 ,
SOUTH
ft AKQ964S
V 10 9
ft K Q 7
ft A
rhe bidding:
East
South
West
North
pass
2ft
pass
3ft
pass
3ft
pass
4 ft
pass
4 N.T.
pass
5ft
pass
5ft
pass
pass
Opening lead: three of clubs.
After the lead. South cleared
trumps, then led the king of
(diamonds. West won the trick
(with the ace and returned a
diamond. South then played his
remaining diamonds, sluffed his
two losii.g hearts to make six.
Comment: The slam bid was
not there and as East asked his
partner after the play, West would
surely have led a heart after win
ning the diamond trick if the
bid had been six.
HOW A WIFE CAN BE DEPRIVED
OF A HUSBAND’S INSURANCE
W hat follows here will disturb
some older people, and anger
others. Many will believe it is not
true.
It is true, and since it deals with
one of the most vital assets of
retired people—life insurance—it
should be said.
A short time ago a 61-year-old
wife and her 63-year-old husband
came upon difficult times with
each other. A personal issue
started it, the one thing led to
another. Bitterness came.
There was no thought of di
vorce, or even separation. They
just mutually agreed they would
hereafter have no more to do with
each other, beyond what an ex
istence under the same roof would
require.
The husband's life insurance
vas substantial, about $25,000. It
sras paid-up. All the policies
named the wife as beneficiary.
The wife, looking to her own se
curity and expecting no reconcili
ation with her husband, quietly
took the policies from her hus
band’s desk and hid them.
When the husband discovered
this he laughed at her. He said he
could report to the insurance com
pany that the policies had been
stolen, could request duplicate
policies, and on them change the
beneficiary as he saw fit Or cash
the policies in.
The wife laughed back and
dared him to try it
That’s where the matter stands
now. And it will come as a shock
to many wives to learn that the
husband is right The policies she
has hidden are worthless, if the
husband chooses to make them so.
The authority for this comes
from the institute of Life Insur
ance, which represents many of
the country's largest life insur
ance companies.
Husbands taking out life lnsu»
ance policies own those policies,
pure and simple. They usually
name their wives as beneficiaries,
the Institute says. But they usual
ly have in the policies a provision
giving them the right to change
the beneficiary any time they
choose. Most husbands, expecting
no trouble, seldom give this pro
vision a second thought.
But if trouble comes and the
wife grabs the policies and hides
them, “the husband can go to the
insurance company, obtain dupli
cate policies, and name whatever
other beneficiary he would like to
replace his wife.
“The wife does not have any
rightful claim to the benefits ot
the policies, for the husband has
remained the owner ..
The Institute pointed out that
in these cases, great sympathy
might sometimes accrue to the
wife, and that this sympathy might
be reflected in a court decision if
the wife sued. But if the wife used
“such stratagems as appealing to
the company and waving the poli
cies in its face and saying SHE
is the beneficiary—assuming the
husband has, as in most cases, kept
the policy on a revokable basis—
the company could be sued by the
husband, the insured, if it dared
to refuse a request to change the
beneficiary, or cash it in, or any
thing else he wanted to do with
the policy.
“The wife does not have a leg
to stand on, legally speaking!”
Nmw GOLDEN TEAKS SC-par* booklet
now ready. Send SO# in coin {no stamps),
to Dopt. CSPS, Box 1(72. Grand’ Central
Station. Now York 17. N. Y.
Skewer meal above baa pineapple and olive* spaced between pieces
-r cheese and meat, pin# salad based on cottage cheese.
A STREET IS RENAMED . . . Republican guards take their
position after ceremonies were held for the renaming of the Quai
de Passy in Paris as Avenue du President Kennedy. The French
were deeply moved by President Kennedy’s assassination. This was
one tribute they paid him.
g VJOU iG games for,
ne wHrre son. in toes
Mt> WAS THE AMERICAN
£A6UE , S EARNEP ROM
LEAPER WITH A 2.3^
HE LC66ED A
ars er&A THE
f
l
Buy at Home: It Pays
NEW HABITS . . . Sister
Mary Ann, right, of the Mis
sionary Sisters of the Immacu
late Heart of Mary models the
new habit of the order in
Yonkers, N. Y„ contrasted with
the traditional garb worn by
Sister Mary James.
East and West vulnerable.
South deals.
NORTH
ft K 10 9 6 4
ft —
ft AK10
ft A K J 10 5
WEST
ft 2
ft AQ J62
ft Q97543
ft 8
EAST
ft A75
ft K984
ft 862
ft Q 6 3
SOUTH
ft QJ83
ft 10 7 5 3
ft J
ft 9742
Ihe bidding:
South
West
North
East
pass
1ft
2ft
pass
2ft
pass
6ft
double
pass
pass
pass
Opening lead: ace of hearts.
The opening lead was ruffed in
the dummy. A low trump led
from the board fell to East’s ace
and East returned a diamond. This
gave South a free diamond finesse
and gave him two sluffs for dubs.
South cross-ruffed the hearts and
remaining clubs from the dummy.
West was left with the choice of
sluffing hearts on the last two
dubs that South ruffed or using
small trumps, which South would
surely overtrump. East could have
set the hand one trick by re
turning either a spade or a heart
after taking the ace of spades
trick.
r Mk£ t/OWl dUhi
. TEST
(Circle correct personality with pencil.
Add score at bottomJ
1. Female singer. Poor’s April 17
guest star.
Renata Tabildl. Maria Callas.
Helen O’Connell.
2. Fan dancer, narrator of
"Corny” news special.
Mae West. Sally Rand.
Betty Blue.
3. Host on new game show,
"Jeopardy."
Bill Leyden. Bill Smith.
Art Fleming.
4. He Is troubled father in "A
Day Like Today"
Clark Gable. Ed Wynn.
Art Carney.
5. Host for 90 minute: "Baseball:
More Than a Game."
Bud Palmer. Yogi Berra.
Joe Garaglola.
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FOR AND ABOUT TEENAGERS By C. D. Smith
Should Girls Continue To Go Steady in High School?
GO
WITH ME OR.
WE WILL BREAK
UP FOR 6000.
THE WEEK’S LETTER: “I
have been going steady with a boy
for three years. This year I will be
entering the tenth grade and I
told this boy I didn't want to go
steady in high school I told him
that I still wanted to go with him
but that I also wanted to go out
with other boys. He said, “You
either go steady with me or we
will break up for good.” I like
him very much. What should I do?
Keep going with him only or
break up with him and go with
other boys?”
OUR REPLY: You have been
more than fair with the boy in
telling him your feelings. Since
you obviously do not want to con
tinue going steady, you will be
making a “sacrifice” if you give in
to his demands that you go with
no one else.
The question that you must an
swer for yourself is whether you
are ready and willing to go
through high school with a
“steady” and miss out on the ac
tivities to which both of you will
not be invited. This, of course,
works both ways. The boy who has
a “steady” doesn’t get around as
much as the boy who is foot-loose
and fancy-free. One reason, as
stated above, is that boys and girls
are often left off invitation lists
when inviting one of them means
inviting them as a “twosome.” An
other reason is that “steadies” get
so involved in going steady they
just don’t have the time to join
organizations and participate in
activities as much as their class
mates do. This isn’t always true,
but it turns out this way more
often than not
If jee h*T« a teenage problem Tern want
to diacaaa, or an obaervatien to mako,
address your letter to FOR AND ABOUT
TEENAGERS, COMMUNITY AND SUB
URBAN PRESS SERVICE, FRANK
FORT, KY.
Mrs. B. B. Crouch
Service Friday
Mrs. Sudie Elizabeth Schumpert
Crouch, 74, died Wednesday in a
Columbia hospital.
She was a daughter of the late
James Jacob Schumpert and Sue
Sligh Schumpert, and lived in Sa
luda for 49 years.
Survivors include her husband,
Bennie Belton (B. B.) Crouch;
two daughters, Mrs. Garner Matt
hews of Batesburg and Mrs. Mar
tin L. Berry of Saluda, and six
sons, Joe Ben and Jete of John
ston, and Jim Carroll, John and
Bobby Crouch of Saluda; also a
number of relatives in Newberry
County.
Funeral services were conduct
ed Friday at 3:30 p.m. in Saluda
Presbyterian Church and burial
followed in Travis Park Cemetery.
-mm
BY HELEN HALE
Cooking Capers
When cooking beets add a
tablespoon of vinegar to the wa
ter in which you boil them.
They’ll keep their bright red col
or better.
Prepare a package of rasp
berry-flavored gelatin according to
directions. Add to this % pound
marshmallows melted in 2 table
spoons milk and 1 eup of drained
raspberries. Pour into a crumb
crust and chill for a nice pie.
Prepare corn sticks according
to your favorite receipe and add
to the batter some shredded
American cheese and ham bits
for a most delightful hot bread.
Make smell “boxes” out of un
sliced bread and toast Fill with
crumbled bacon, jelly and omelet
for a breakfast or luncheon treat.
Stewed tomatoes acquire an in
teresting flavor when they’re
heated witn some pickling spice
tied in a bag which can be re
moved when you’re ready to serve
’ ^the .vegetable.
Helen’s Favorite:
Salmon Souffle
(Serves 4-6)
Vt cup butter
3 tablespoons flour
V4 cup dfy milk
% teaspoon salt
1 cup water
3 eggs, separated
1 cup salmon
Melt butter, add flour, dry
milk and salt, stirring until
smooth, Gradually add water
and cook over medium heat,
stirring constantly until thick
and smooth. Beat egg yolks
until thick and add to sauce
with salmon. Fold In stiffly
; beaten whites. Pour into un
greased casserole, set in pan of
hot water and bake in a slow
(325°F.) oyen for an hour or
until brown.
Miss Dicker!
Died Of Attack
Miss Marie Dickert of 1618 :
Gladden St., Columbia, owner and
operator of Marie Dickert Mill
inery, died Sunday night at the
Columbia Hospital after suffering
a heart attack Saturday.
She was born in Pomaria, a
daughter of the late George Mar
ion and Alice Cannon Dickert. She
spent most of her life in Columbia,
and was a member of St. Paul’s-
Lutheran Church.
She had operated her shop at
1229 Hampton St., Columbia, for
the past 27 years.
Survivors include two sisters,.
Mrs. Earl B. Sligh Sr. and Mrs.
Beryl D. Smith, both of Columbia;
one brother, G. Robert Dickert of
Columbia; and the following nieces
and nephews, Earl B. Sligh Jr.^
Mrs. Moody S. McElveen andDon-
ald D. Smith, all of Columbia, M.
Bartow Dickert and Mrs. Frank
U. Hayes, both of Ann Arbor,.
Mich.
TAKE soil away ihe Blue Lustre
way from carpets and upholstery^
Rent electric shampootr 51. Whit
aker Floor Coverings.
YOUR
FUNDS
Received Here
By July 10th
Will Receive Earnings from
JULY 1st
HOME LOANS
INSURED SAVINGS
Building and
Loan. Association
1117 Boyce Street
Newberry, S. C.
Dial 276-5660
DIRECTORS:
Ralph B. Baker
J. Dave Caldwell
Pinckney N. Abrams
Lonis C. Floyd
Thomas H. Pope
R. Aubrey Harley
JULY CLEARANCE
Keds, Kedettes $2.99 & $3.99
(Discontinued patterns, Reg. to $5.99)
Children s Shoes$4.99 & $5.99
(Summer styles by “Lazy Bones”,
“Dress-Ups”)
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THE NEWBERRY SUN