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§§811® THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 1965 THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA PAGE THREE Miss Johnson, bride-elect, is honored Miss Mary Elizabeth Johnson, a student at Agnes Scott College, Pecatur, Ga., visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. Duncan Johnson Jr. during the Spring holidays re cently. While here Miss Johnson, ■wrhose marriage to James Hugh Mallory of Atlanta will take place on June 12, was honored with sev eral pre-nuptial social affairs. Last Thursday, Mrs. Gerald Paysinger and her daughter, Miss Nancy Paysinger and Mrs. Carol Hipp and her daughter, Miss Doris Hipp, were hostesses at a tea ^iven at the home of Mr. Ida Sum mer. Nancy and Doris are also students at Agnes Scott. About forty guests attended the tea. In the receiving line with Miss Johnson were her grandmothers, Mrs. Gordon Blackwell and Mra. P. Duncan Johnson Sr.; her mo ther, and the hostesses. The hon- oree was attractively attired for the occasion, and wore a camellia corsage given to her by the host esses, who also presented her a crytal hors d’oeuvre dish. Camellias in light and dark shades of pink were used about the home and centered the punch table, from which Mrs. Carol Hipp poured punch. Guests enjoyed dec orated sandwiches and sweets. Another tea honoring the popu lar bride-elect was given on Sat urday by Mrs. R. R. Bruner and her daughter, Miss Betsy Bruner of Anderson Junior College, and Mrs. Earl Summer and her daugh ter, Miss Laura Summer of Co lumbia College. Fifty guests en joyed this occasion, including the grandmothers of Miss Johnson. In the receiving line with the honoree were her mother, and the mother and sister of the groom-elect, Mrs. Thelma Mallory and Miss Frances Mallory, both of Columbus, Ga. A pink camellia corsage given by the hostesses complimented Miss Johnson’s costume. The hostesses also presented her a trousseau gift. Pink Perfection camellias and pink tapers were used in the color motif and guests enjoyed punch, poured by Mrs. Howard Kirke- gard, aunt of the bride-elect, sandwiches and cakes. Mr. and Mrs. Kibler Williamson and Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Paysinger entertained on Saturday night with a dinner party at the home of Mrs. Sara Wallace, for the couple and fnends. Places were laid for 12 guests and white and green colors were used to deco-' rate the dinner table and the home. An arrangement of white gladiolus was used to center the table. Miss Johnson was presented a white carnation corsage and a knife in her silver pattern. for the JUlMji ITEM: An idea growing in pop ularity these days is the use of twin shower heads. One head is placed about six feet from the floor for use by adults, the second head placed about two feet lower for the children. With such a twin installation, a lever is used to direct the flow of water to the desired head. • • • ITEM: Ground meats, such as beef or lamb, or stewed meats are good protein foods for older people who have difficulty with dentures. Eggs and milk are other high-quality foods. • • * ITEM: For spots on woolen clothes, try sponging with cold water if they’re from coffee, sweet food, fruit or powder. If they are caused by lipstick or pancake makeup, a light detergent should be used. And for grease spots, put fabric right side down on a blotter or towel and sponge the back with cleaning fluid. • . * * ITEM: When using mirrors, re member that the mirror reflects a picture of what is opposite. So be sure that something attractive and interesting will be reflected. GO FOR FLAVOR, GO FOR PET. yf saw fust be sure it's \RX...you bet! r V . TOTAL LOSS? Not on your life ... simply because you had the foresight to buy crop-hail insurance in the spring. It's time to see or call us... this week! "YOUR PRIVATE BANKERS" 1418 Main Street Phone 278-1422 Silverstreet School News BY HARRIET BURGESS The holiday on March 18 was enjoyed by the students of Silver- street school. The teachers attend ed the meeting of SCEA conven tion in Columbia on Thursday af ternoon and night. They reported very interesting programs and everyone enjoyed the reception on Thursday night. We have had a lot of illness in our community—mumps, measles, colds, and flu, have caused a large number of absences among stu dents. Two of our faculty members have been on the sick list. Miss Folk was ill several days and Mr. Long was out for one day. Our faithful substitute teachers, Miss Ruth Martin and Mrs. Sara Lake were here to efficiently carry on. We are glad to report that Miss Folk and Mr. Long are back and absenteeism is on the decrease a- mong the students. Citations have been awarded to the following students for each selling $25 (or more) worth of magazines during our recent Mag azine Sales Contest—Dillard Brad ley, Danny Moore, Anne Long, Sally Berry, Henry Longshore and Danny Senn. The Spelling contestants for the school have been chosen from the respective grades as follows: Lisa Bishop grade 5; Diane Longshore, grade 6; Anne Long, grade 7; Ka ren Stewart, grade 8. In the finals Karen Stewart was the winner, and will represent our school in the county contebt. Mrs. Mabel Nichols, one of our caterers, is absent due to the ill ness of her parents. Mrs Cather ine Long is helping in the cafe teria. The science projects of the 6th 7th, and 8th grades are now on display in Mrs. Werts‘ room. It is a very interesting and attractive display which shows some excel lent work being done and it is a credit to the pupils and their teacher, (Mrs. Werts.) The TV was on during the day Tuesday, March 22, and many of the students saw some of the Gemini Space Flight which was very interesting. Debbie Epting and Betty Mar tin gave a very inspiring devo tional at the chapel exercises on March 18. A large number of students and several teachers enjoyed the play “The Wizard of Oz” at the __ew- berry High school on March 15. Some of the recent films enjoy ed by the students are “How Quiet Helps at School,” “Light and Its Storv,” “This is Louisiana/' and “A Desk For Billy.” The Young Farmers sponsored a highly successful chicken barbe cue on March 10 in the cafeteria. There was a poultry meeting held in the auditorium on March. 11 which was well attended. The next PTA program will be on April 9 when the students will present a musical program. Miss Workman attended the meeting of the Newberry Histori cal Society on March 15. The student body enjoyed two basketball games on Tuesday, March , the 6th and 7th grades boys, and the 7th and 8th grade girls. The Gunnells family have moved from our area and the Koons have moved into the area. Two faculty meetings have been held recently to view and discuss the purchase of some new equip ment. •1( S C TIAfFM S4im CMWCX. M. n BY HELEN HALE I T’S AS American as the flag to take your dinner out-of- doors to a breezy, tree-shaded corner of the patio, porch or back yard. Food just seems to taste better served outside, especially when it’s simply seasoned, cooked just right and there’s plenty of it! If you’re cooking meat outside and your attention is needed at the grill, it might be wise to bake a vegetable casserole which needs no checking in the range. Helen’s Favorite Marinated Vegetables (Serves 4) 8 canned artichoke hearts 8 large fresh mushroom caps 8 small cooked onions 4 snuOl firm ripe tomatoes 4 smaH cooked potatoes 1 small green pepper, cut In squares y 4 cup salad oil Yi cop vinegar 1 teaspoon salt Place vegetables in single layer in large shallow pan. Combine oil, vinegar and salt Pour over vegetables. Let stand, basting often, 2 to 8 hours. Drain, saving marinade. Thread vegetables alternately on 4 skewers. Grill over glow ing coals or under broiler unit of oven, basting with mar inade, about 10 minutes, or until heated through. Vegetables can be so good when you treat them a bit differ- ently from the old ways! In these; days when barbecuing is so popu lar, why not skewer them and roast over the charcoal, as you lo meats, for example? In any recipe where the ingred- ts are many, most women pre- 'o double the recipe and thus "o meals out of it Colorful Fruit Desserts To H cup of syrup from canned pears or peaches add an equal amount of red jelly and the juice of a lemon. Heat, pour over fruit and chill before serving. Poach canned dark cherries in their own juice* flavor with g-uted orange rind, serve hot over vanilla ice cream. Have you ever tried a double berry shortcake? like straw berries ’vith raspberries or blackberries? Or peaches and strawberries, apricots and red raspberries? It’s delicious, espe cially when you have to extend one fruit or berry with another. Carry a home-baked cake to a picnic in its own pan. For an easy frosting, place chocolate pep permint candies over cake as soon as it comes from oven, let stand to melt, then spread over. top. Use a quick pudding mix and peaches as filling for a cake. It’s best to slice off part of the top of an angel food cake, then hollow it out, fill, replace slice on top and frost with whipped cream and extra fruit Helen’s Favorite: Tuna Burgers 6 hamburger buns 7 ounce can tuna 1 cup chopped celery Mt cop diced American cheese Vx cup chopped ripe olives Ya cup mayonnaise 1 small onion, minced Mix all ingredients. Add salt and pepper to taste. Split buns, butter and sprinkle with pap rika. Fill with tuna mixture, replace tops and place in waxed paper sandwich bags or aluminum foiL Just before serving, heat on baking sheet in moderate (35Q*F.) oven 15 to 20 minutes. Income Tax Tips Surviving Spouse and Head of Household Widows and widowerers are en titled to special tax benefits, Har old McLeod, Director of Internal Revenue, Columbia, said today. A widow or widower who has not remaried by December 31 may file a joint return, taking advan tage of the lower rate applicable to this return, if his spouse died during the tax year. For the next two years, if the taxpayer hais not remarried, the tax is computed at the rates ap plicable to joint returns if he maintains a home for himself and his dependent child. Although in these two succeeding years the joint return rates may be used, no exemption is allowed for the deceased spouse. Special benefits to a surviving spouse are allowed only if Form 1040 is used in filing his return. He added that unmarried per sons who qualify as “heads of households” benefit from lower tax rates. The law provides tax rates for you if you are unmarried (or leg ally separated) on the last day of the year and furnished over half of the cost of maintaining a home for the full year for at least one relative. Whether the relative must qua lify as a dependent and whether he must actually live in your home depends upon the relationship. All relatives, other than your parents, must actually live with you. With the exception of your unmarried child, grandchild, or step-child, all other relatives must qualify as your dependents. E. T. Long, 82, dies Thursday Ernest T. Long Sr., 82, died early Thursday morning at the Newberry County Memorial hos pital after several weeks’ serious illness. Mr. Long was born and reared in this county and was the son of the late Hillard and Missouri Bal- lentine Long. For a number of years he had made his home on Route 3, Newberry and was a member of St. James Lutheran church. He was a retired farmer. Mr. Long is survived by his wife, Mrs. Beatrice Fulmer Long, Newberry; one son, E. T. Long Jr. of Newberry; one daughter, Mrs. B. T. Mills, Newberry; one sister, Mrs .Sallie Moore, Prosperity. Funeral services were conducted Friday from McSwain Funeral home with Rev. J. L. Heyer and Rev. Tommy Daum conducting the service. Interment followed in St. James church cemetery, near Jalapa. Active pallbearers were Richard Long, Lionel Long, Talmage Long, Richard Wicker, ’B. T. Mills, Jr., and Tom Riser. Honorary escort was composed of the members of the church council and D. H. Hamm, T. M. Fellers, Ira T. Cousins, H. C. Mar tin and C. C. Wallace. Rev. ROBERT H. HARPER AFTER FATHER’S DAY W hile I was pastor of a certain church in New Orleans, a bright little girl waited at the close of a service on Mother’s Day and asked me why we did not have a Father’s Day service. By this you will know that was quite a few years ago. I do not remember what I told her. And to this day I do not know why the Christian world had been honoring only one parent of the home. Did you remember your father last Sunday? Now let us be glad that we have a Father’s Day observance. We find warrant for the observ ance in both the Old and New Testaments. The long lists of genealogies in the Old Testament are familiar to all readers of the sacred pages. And these indicate the high place of Father in the ancient home. Certainly every reader of the New Testament knows of the high place of Father in the home. Every day let us honor him as Father. Of course we should ex empt a father who is unworthy of the name. But we look to the ideal father as a symbol of the One whose name is above every name. It is so sacred a name that we are to use it when we pray. When we pray we are to say, “Our Father which art in heaven.’’ Surely, this is glory enough for our earthly fathers and a man date to them to strive day by day to be like God. j LOVE OF HOME ; AT COLLEGE I struggled ^ through the pages of Xeno phon’s Anabasis which tells of the ten thousand Greeks as mer cenaries who followed Cyrus to the heart of Persia in a cam paign to wrest the throne from Artaxerxes, his brother. And after the death of Cyrus in battle, the remnant of the Greeks fought their way back through incred ible hardship and almost innumer able foes until they reached the sea that would bear them home. And file weary Greeks went into transports of joy. They embraced one another and wept, crying, the Sea, the Sea! Thus the love of home makes all the world akin. And whether it be the Scotch in outer trenches guarding who chose to sing An nie Laurie, the Englishmen who asked to die with his face toward old England, or the Negro who asked a nurse of the First World War, “Lady, do you know which way is Alabama,” and the nurse inquired of him why he wanted to know. He said, “I just want to die with my face toward old Alabama.” All were filled with the love of and longing for home. The American who turned from the maddening throngs of Paris and climbed to his garret and wrote a song that will never die, sang of Home. An old reading relates how two great armies lay facing each other along the Rap- pahanock one night. The bands struck up, on one side the strains' of Yankee Doodle filled the air and back across the stream came the music of Dixie. And when at last each band had exhausted its repertoire and there came a mo ment of silence, a lone soldier began to sing “Home, Sweet Home” and both armies joined. And on many a soldier’s face something trickled down and washed away the powder stain. So may the love of home unite us now. PROPERTY TRANSFERS Newberry No. 1 Lewis H. Frick to Church of God on College street, one lot and one building, fronting on Ros- alyn Drive $5. William J. Metzger to Lula Mae Bedenbaugh, one lot and one build ing, 935 Fair street, $5 love and affection. Clara O. Stewart, attorney-in-fact for Mrs. Eunice A. Stewart, to Charles Welborn Haile, one lot on Orchard street $10. Newberry No. 1 (Outside) W. Fulmer Wells to Hal Kohn, Sr., eight lots, $5 and premises. Hal Kohn, Sr., to W. Fulmer Wells, eight lots, $5 and premises. H. E. Norman to Modern Homes Construction Co., one lot $350. Luther Griffin and Addie Grif fin to Freddie Cook, one lot and one building on Wise street $5 and assumption of a mortgage. W. S. Birge to William Samuel Birge III, Joseph John Martin, William Frank Halfield, John E. Birge, Jr. and Martin Bingham Birge, 262.87 and 159 acres $1. Silverstreet No. 2 J. Carroll Wessinger to Luther H. Nobles, 25 acres, $5. Bush River No. 3 W. S. Birge to William Samuel Birge, Joseph John Martin, Wil liam Frank Halfield, John Edward Birge, Jr., and Martin Bingham Birge, 189 acres, $1. Whitmire No. 4 (Outside) Mollie Oxner to Lillian Oxner Owens, 71.4 acres, $5 love and affection. Mollie Oxner to Lillian Oxner Owens, 69.4 acres, $5 love and affection. Pomaria No. 5 J. Alvin Kinard to John D. Price and Sara Price, 3.73 acres and one building $5. Lou Della Wicker to William E. Wicker, 112 acres, $5 love and affection . J. Cecil Berley to L. L. Koon and Ruby O. Koon, one lot $5. Little Mountain. No. 6 Herman E. Lake, executor of the estate of Grover E. Lake .73 acres $1000. Herman E. Lake, executor to Curtis L. Lake, Sr., .72 acres, $100. Herman E. Lake, executor, to Forrest Frick, 1.1 acre $200. Herman E. Lake, executor to Fred T. Mills, 141.77 acres $5. Prosperity No. 7 Rose B. Dreher to J. Grady Reynolds, Sr. and Beatrice B. Reynolds, one lot and one building $10. W. M. Harris to William B. Mc Gill Jr., one lot $5. MARRIAGES Carroll Raymond Graham, of Pomaria and Judy Berley, of Blairs were married on March 20 at Pomaria by Rev. John P. Griffith. Lj(M - -TV-' VEST L (Orel* wtm 1. Ha wot David In movie “David and Bathsheba.” Gregory Fade. Glen Ford. Caesar Romero. 2. Female surf rider in Kildare episode “Tyger, Tyger.'* Janet Leigh. Yvette Mimieux. Judy Garland. 3. Unemployed actor in “Gome with Glass Pieces.” Peter Falk. George Peppard. James Mason. 4. Distraught father in “Are There Any More Out There Like You?" Red Nichols. Robert Ryan. Laird Cregar. 5. Star of “Davy Crockett's Keeiboat Race." Fess Parker. Andy Griffith. Buck Jones. TO MEET TODAY American Legion Auxiliary will meet this (Thursday) at 4 pjn- at the home of Mrs. M. P. Bow ler. Associate hostesses will be Mrs. Lonnie Gilliam, Mrs. H. M- Hentz, Mrs. Houston Long, and Mrs. Lonnie Franklin. •udj ou — [ j •jdAe X|pJoq — z /jomsja j euiiiauios — C fjeipjOM juanb | — y .'4jedxe — * g : 3803S ’ja^jod 'uoAg ‘pjoddej •xneiuiiw ->pad 'SdaMSNV No one has ever lost a Penny in an ■ FSLIC - Insured Savings Account. SAVE BY APRIL 10th AND EARN FROM APRIL 1st. 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 Hailey Zing into spring! in a new Chevrolet *65 Chemlel Impdta Sport Coupe 65 CheveUe Malibu 5-Door Station Wagon *65 Chevy U Nova Sport Coupe *65 Corvuir Corea Sport Coupe If you've been sitting tight waiting for just your kind of car, with just your kind of power, at just your kind of price-wait no longer! Chevrolet It’s a bigger, more beautiful car this year. Which is why that handsome silhou ette could be mistaken for cars costing a thousand—even two thousand—dollars more. Chevelle. This one’s got lively looks, spirited power, a softer ride—and remarkable room atop a highly maneuverable wheelbase. No wonder it’s today’s favorite mid-size car. Chevy n. No car so trim has a right to be so thrifty. But thrifty it is, with money- savers like brakes that adjust themselves and a long-lived exhaust system, Corvair. Ask any ’65 Corvair owner how it feels to drive a car with such easy steering, tenacious traction and respon sive rear-engine power. And be ready to do lots of listening. CH EVKOLET HIGH TIME TO TRADE AT TOIM CHETtOUT KSLER'S •.if Zing into spring in n new Chevrolet, Chevelle, Corvair, Chevy E or Corvette ■ v KEMPER CHEVROLET 1515-1517 MAIN STREET NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA