The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, March 04, 1965, Image 3
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THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
PAGE THRET
PROPERTY
TRANSFERS
Nw. \
H. BviiiuU iv‘ Ka11h Kvan-
t vhuiA*h, one lot
Hv^hway Tt', $3000.
k-. to Janie S.
a»jua> lot ami one building 1
ou Cbiw S'Tviwet, $5 and assump-
tiiua oi a mortgage .
H. Ham bin to B. A.
BWUrn, ©oae lot and one building
OJa BA‘undary street, $5 and as-
sumption of a mortgage.
George Huggins to Thomas C.
Sfeealy and Nancy F. Shealy, one
lot and one building on Nance St.
♦5.00.
Tom B. Johnson to Mildred E.
Chaplin, one lot and one building
on Drayton street $5 and assump
tion of a mortgage..
Mary B. Newton to Maude M.
Mayer, two lots and one building,
$3000 and assumption of a mort
gage.
W. Elton Summer to Mrs. M.
B. Summer, one lot and one build
ing on Clarkson Ave., one half
undivided interest, $5 love and af
fection.
Newberry No. 1 Outside
J. B. Moore to Dorothy Jean
Bundrick, one lot on Belfast road,
$5 love and affection.
Silverstreet No. 2
Ralph W. Waldrop to William
B W.aldrop, 14.27 acres, $5 love
and affection.
Bush River No. 3
Hozie Bridges and Ona Lever
Bridges to William S. Bridges and
Ruth McCullough Bridges, two
acres, $5 love and affection.
The Citizens and Southern Nat-
SAVINGS
placed with us are insured
for safety
Federal Savings
and Loan
Insurance
Corporation
An Instrumentality of the
United States Government
Save by March
10th and Earn
from March 1st
The
STATE
Building and
Loan Association
1117 Boyce Street
Newberry, S. C.
Dial 276-5660
DIRECTORS:
Ralph B. Baker
J. Dave Caldwell
Pinckney N. Abrams
Louis C. Floyd
Thomas H. Pope
R. Aubrey Harley
mual Bank of S. C. as executor of
tho estate of Allen W. Murray to
11. Lee Smallwood and Pearle M.
Smallwood, 61 acres, $3366.
H. Lee Shallwood and Pearle M.
Smallwood to Henry F. Miller and
Marjorie C. Mills, 51 acres $5.
Henry F. Mills and Marjorie C.
Mills to H. Lee Smallwood and
Pearle M. Smallwood, 51 acres $5.
Whitmire No. 4
Frank A. Reed and William L.
Reed to Cleland T. Reed, one lot
and one building, $10 love and af
fection.
Whitmire No. 4 Outside
James Calvin Hanna and Janice
L. Hanna to Cecil B. Langford and
Myrtle S. Langford, 1.8 acres $10.
Pomaria No. 5
J. Alvin Kinard to William A.
Hentz 5 acres $5.
Little Mountain No. 6
William H. Farmer and Gladys
J. Farmer to Eva Jane W. Brooks,
four lots $.5
Prosperity No. 7
Elbert Morris and Louise Wil
liam Morris to Floyd E. Morris.
7.92 acres, $5 love and affection.
W. Eugene Martin to Lynn Dav
is and H. Earl Payne, 80 acres $5.
D. L. Bedenbaugh to D .A. Bed-
enbaugh, one lot $60.
D. L. Bedenbaugh to D. A. Bed
enbaugh, one lot $150.
S. C. Electric and Gas Company
to David E. Bedenbaugh and Earl
J. Bedenbaugh, 1.02 acres $1.
Jacob Shelton Moore to Lenore
Boland Moore, five acres, $5 love
and affection.
Quick Suppers
What should you serve on a
Sunday evening that takes only
a short time to prepare? Scramble
eggs, add anchovies toward the
last and serve with* toast wedges
or English muffins.
Make Welsh Rarebit, adding
caraway seeds for that touch of
something different and serve on
toast rings or biscuits with a
fruit salad.
Cream chipped beef quickly
with thinned canned mushroom
soup. Add some drained artichoke
hearts for the gourmet’s touch.
Scallops and cooked or canned
lobster go readily into a cream
sauce. Serve them together in
patty shells.
Saute chicken livers and add
some milk to the skillet along
with mushrooms and canned peas.
Serve on toast points with hard-
cooked egg garnish.
Top tomatoes with slices of
canned corned beef hash. Place
a slice of processed American
cheese over this and let heat
while the cheese melts in the
broiler.
Helen’s Favorite:
Onions Au Gratin
(Serves 5)
2 (1 pound) cans whole
onions
2 tablespoons butter
3 tablespoons grated
Cheddar cheese
2 tablespoons bread crumbs
Vz teaspoon salt
Drain onions. Mix together
grated cheese, bread crumbs,
salt. Place onions in a buttered
8-inch square baking dish.
Brush with melted butter,
sprinkle with cheese-crumb
mixture. Place in pre-heated
hot (400°F.) oven and bake
15 minutes or until slightly
brown.
>)
Make Your
Blood Boil?
When you need your
insurance agent and
can't reach him.
Then try doing busi
ness with a local, in
dependent agent. He
is highly available
when you need him,
at your side instantly
in case of an emer
gency.
We would like to be
your agent.
"YOUR PRIVATE BANKERS"
1418 Main Street Phone 276-1422
By Mary Whitman
Jigsaw puzzles never lose
their popularity.
Did you know that children
have enjoyed puzzles through
the years in America?
Back in the 1800 period, “dis
sected maps” were a best seller
in toy stores. These were geo
graphy puzzles, and they are just
as much in demand today.
A new boxed puzzle of the
United States and another one
of the world are on their way to
the toy counters of your local
stores now. Adding Alaska and
Hawaii to our states has made
puzzles even more colorful and
fascinating.
“The nation and the world
change often enough so that geo
graphy puzzles never go out of
style,” points out H. M. Ben-
stead, Jr. of Whitman Publish
ing Company of Racine,
Wisconsin.
Most people don’t realize that
not too long ago families had to
paste down and cut out their*
own puzzles.
In museums we can see that
puzzle-making was not a task
to be undertaken lightly. A suit
able picture might be glued to
wood or painted on it. Then it
was cut by saw into as many
confusing pieces as possible.
After that, sanding was needed,
and often a finishing coat. It
might take a year to make a
few puzzles for Christmas. Puz
zles came under the heading of
play and few free hours were
available from chores and work.
Today low cost puzzles abound
for every age group. Toddlers
enjoy puzzles of the frame-tray
type with perhaps a dozen color
ful pieces to be fitted. Of course
a puzzle aids & child’s memory,
color perception and manual dex
terity. But mostly it’s fun.
Schoolgoers enjoy puzzles
they can learn from, and scenic
spots and landmarks are as pop
ular with this age group as
with adults. Putting together
Mount Rushmore, Yellowstone
Park, or Niagara Falls stirs
the imagination.
Dedicated puzzle fans vote for
the 750-piece sets. Some say that
puzzles help them concentrate or
think out a problem. Others pre
fer to work in a sociable family
group. Puzzled about a gift?
Puzzles are perennial favorites
PATIENTS IN I Building Permits
THE HOSPITAL
Mrs. Carrie Mae Asbill, City
Mrs. Eunice A. Bradley, City.
Mrs. Caroline Butler, City.
Mrs. Dolly Blaunt and Baby
Girl. Pomaria.
Miss Annie Bynum, City.
Mrs. Corine L. Berry, City
Mrs. Narvis Cook, City
Mrs. Ida Cromer, Pomaria.
Mrs. Alice R. Cothran, City
Miss Fannie Mae Carwile, City.
Mi's. Reba Chapman, Prosperity.
Oliver Davis, City.
Mrs. Ann Folk, City
Mrs. Shirley Fellers, Prosperity.
Mrs. Bessie Floyd, City.
Matthew S. Fulmer, Prosperity.
Mrs. Allie M. Gunter, West Col
umbia.
Mrs. Betty Lou Hyler, City.
Little Miss Debbie Kesler, Sil
verstreet.
Ira Koon, City.
Charlie King, City.
Mrs. Kathleen Lester, City.
Lloyd Layman, City.
Alton Otis Livingston, City.
John Henry Lipford, Kinards.
Mrs. Josie McAlhany, City.
Rev. James Richard McKittrick,
Kinards.
Mrs. Viola Mather, Prosperity.
Mrs .Eugenia H. Mayfield, City.
Mrs. Helen Martin and Baby
Boy, City.
Frank Nichols, City.
Mrs. Florence Nobles, City.
Mrs. lone Nichols, Saluda.
Mrs. Evelyn Rister, City.
Wilson Rowe, City.
Mrs. Mae Ruff, City.
Mrs .Maggie L. Rayfield, City.
Mrs. Evelyn Reed, City.
Mrs. Maude G. Ross, City.
Holland Ruff, City.
Floyd Smith, City.
Mrs. Annie Shull, City.
Mrs. Mary Taylor, City.
Mrs. Rachel Turner, City.
Paul Taylor, City.
Ira Taylor, City.
Johnny Wilson, City.
Mrs. Veda L. Wilson, Chappells.
S. T. Boyd, Prosperity.
David DeWalt, Prosperity.
Miss Betty Jo Farrow, City.
Mrs. Elizabeth Glymph, City.
Tally Greenwood, City.
Mrs. Pauline B. Gary, City.
Bertha Hiller, City.
Julian Rutherford, Pomaria.
Mrs. Laura Suber, City.
Marion Waters, Greenville .
Building permits issued by the
City during the past two weeks
totaled $47,038. They were issued
as follows:
Mrs .T. L. Rogers, 1606 Har
rington St., repairs to dwelling;
Mr. Minick, repairs to dwelling,
508 Dryton St.; First Baptist
Church, repair to building, Cald
well St.; F. D. Cortner, erect
dwelling, Forrest Drive; Pete Liv
ingston, erect dwelling, Preston
Road; Keitt Purcell, erect dwell
ing, Benedict St.; Mrs. Wilson, re
pairs to dwelling, 224 Boundary
St.; J. C N.eel, repairs to build
ing, Main St.; Carpenter’s, re
pairs to building, 1516 Main St.;
Jesse Dominick, repairs to dwell
ing, 214 Hardeman St.; C. F.
Sterling, repairs to dwelling, 808
Pope St.; Newberry Agricultural
Bldg., repairs to building, Martin
St.; Valerie Rushing, locate trail
er, Tarrant St.; W. W. Bennett,
repairs to dwelling, Lindsay St.;
John G. Drayton Jr., repairs to
church, Bouknight St.
By Mary Whitman
Soon the season for patriotic
parties will be here.
These can be held any time,
bat February and July are fav
orite months.
Lincoln’s and Washington’s
birthdays are both good dates
for children’s parties. A birth
day party held in February
might have a patriotic theme too.
You can be prepared with games,
prizes and play materials that
children win enjoy and
remember.
For example, the first game of
the day could be a contest in
Yankee Doodling. Just give each
child a box of crayons and some
drawing paper or scrapbook
pages. Let them all draw cherry
trees or log cabins or flags or
Liberty bells or whatever sym
bol of history strikes their
fancy.
The drawings can be mounted
on strips of ribbon hung from
the walls, and prises awarded.
The hostess has decorated the
scene and managed the first
game all at once.
“Every child enjoys getting a
small prize at a party," points
out Mary Hilt of Whitman Pub
lishing Company of Racine,
Wisconsin. “A prize could be
awarded for the best -drawing,
the one with the most red or
blue in it, the one with the
clearest signature, and so on."
Small prises can also be awarded
to the child who recites or sings
or knows the answer to easy
I history questions.
| The game counter at local
: variety stores will yield many
i Ideas. Red, white and blue bal
loons coaid be used as prizes or
decorations. There are puzzle
maps of the United States, a!
color by number set called High
lights of United States History, j
colorful help yourself workbooks j
In American history, and books
such as Trailblazers of America, i
Wagons Ho, Pioneers, or Walti
Disney’s American Folklore.:
Coin holders are good prizes too
if you Insert a few bright pen--
nies or nickels with the likenes
ses of U.S. Presidents.
Fruit punch, a cake or gelatin
mold in the shape of a bell and
other -refreshments can carry
out the red-white-and-blue theme.
You may go down in history
as the best party giver on the
hlc^.
SETTLEMENT
I will make a final settlement
of the estate of Ella Marie Cook
in Probate Court for Newberry
County, S. C-, on Tuesday the 16th
day of March, 1965, at 10 o’clock
in the forenoon, and will immed
iately thereafter ask for my dis
charge as executor of said es
tate.
Virgil W. Cook,
1255 Kinard St.
Newberry, S. C.,
Executor
Feb. 22, 1965 45-4tp
Marriages...
Jerry R. Anderson of Cooke
ville. Tenn. and Brenda Louise
Carter of Whitmire were married
on February 13 at Whitmire by
Rev. B. R. Nichols.
Bernard Lawrence Boozer, of
Prosperity and Mary Edna Stou-
demire of Little Mountain, were
married by Rev. J. Hilton Roof
at Prosperity on February 14.
Frederick Duncan Pitts of New
berry and Marian Teresa Harley
of Edgefield were married Feb
ruary 13 at Siverstreet by Rev.
Robert F. Fraser.
James Lawrence Hawkins, of
Prosperity and Brenda Clara
Jackson of Newberry were mar
ried at Prosperity by Rev. J. Hil
ton Roof on Feb. 26.
Bargains in
Cotton Materials
39” 100% Cotton Carded Sateen
39” 100% Cotton Oxford
45” 100% Cotton Slab Poplin
Values from 69c to 77c per yard
NOW 58c per yard
25 yard packages Cheese Cloth
For many household and business jobs. Was $3.00 pkg.
NOW $2.40 package
Embossed Cloth — Many Patterns
35c yd or 3 yds for $1.00
Unfinished Mill Shorts and Seconds
10% off List Price
These items are being offered due to many requests
from our customers.
Complete Line of Sewing Notions
Drop by and see the many styles and patterns in our
FIRST QUALITY SELECTION.
Newberry Mills, Inc.
1005 Drayton St, Newberry
t: f it, 1 > - ’ • , - ' *
Free Customer Packing next to Store
Miss McCarreFs
engagement told
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hicks Mc-
Carrell of Newberry announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Margaret Kinard, and Joseph Key
Taylor Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Key Taylor of Hartsville.
Miss McCarrel is a graduate of
Newberry High school and will
receive a Bachelor of Arts degree
in Art from Coker college in June.
The bride elect’s grandparents
were the late Mr. and Mrs. John
M. Kinard of Newberry and the
late Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hicks
McCarrel of Columbia.
Mr. Taylor is a graduate of
Hartsville High school and at
tended Wofford college and the
University of South Carolina. He
is presently employed by the So-
noco Products company of Harts
ville.
The bridegroom elect’s grand
parents are the late Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Augustus Miller of Harts
ville and the late Rev and Mrs.
Seymour Taylor of Boone, N. C.
A late spring wedding is plann
ed.
The complete cast of “The Glass Menagerie”, a Tennessee Williams play to be present
ed Friday and Saturday nights by the Newberry College Theatre, is shown during
a rehearsal scene. From left are Dale Willis, Trenton, N. J., who portrays Tom; John
Wolff, Lexington, who plays Jim; Eva Jane Price, Newberry, as Amanda; and Carol
Blum, Waldwick, N. J., as Laura. The play will be presented in Holland Hall at 8 P.M.
both evenings. (Newberry College Photo).
w
SCOUT PROMOTIONS
Troop 66: William Renwick,
Second Class; Mike Bryan, Jim
mie Coggins, Sandy Fretwell,
Star.
Merit Badges, Troop 66: Bob
Brooks, textiles; Mike Bryan, 1st
Aid; Jimmie Coggins, athletics,
home repairs; John Frasier, camp
ing; Sandy Fretwell f,irst aid,
music, scholarship; Marcus Les
ter, landscaping; Carl Stazler and
Charles Setzer, first aid; Hugh
Wessinger, nature.
Merit Badges, Troop 101: Randy
Cotchcroft, fishing; Mike Duffie,
camping, nature; Vernon Lee
Koon, painting; Eddie Mundy,
fishing.
PRAYER SERVICE
AT CENTRAL CHURCH
The World Day of Prayer Ser
vice will be held this year at the
Central Methodist church on Fri
day, March 5 at 4:00 P.M.
MW*,
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When they build their real homes,
we’ll be here to help them with home loans.
If you need a home loan now,
talk it over with us today.
We are home loan specialists.
BRANCH OFFICE—BATESBURG, S. C.
rAVTJVOS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
0
DIRECTORS
JOHN F. CLARKSON
M. O. SUMMER
W. C. HUFFMAN
J. K WILLINGHAM
E. B. PURCELL
G. K. DOMINICK