The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, July 09, 1964, Image 4

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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. *udj ou— i Liexe A|pjm| — z beipioM euijieiuos — & .'jeMeiA juenbejj — y ijjedxe — g tjWODS *D|OiBdjd0 *XeujD3 -Buiuieu •p«oi! *ll« uuo 3/0 S SV3M$NV 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”) ANDERSON’S FORMS Haven't you heard! Business forms dant have to look dirty. Why fight carbon smudge and smear on copies, hands and clothing. Buy NCR Paper forms and you'll never have to handle messy carbon paper—over! NCR Paper produces multiple copies without carbon paper. Insertion, extraction and disposal problems with With NCR Paper forms, original and copies are picked up as a complete unit, ready to process. You can pro duce up to five handwritten copies; 8 or more with your business machine. And no carbon paper rsquirodl Switch to cleaner, clearer NCR Paper forms. For mare information ond free samples—CALI: THE NEWBERRY SUN