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THURSDAY, JULY 29, 1965 THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA PAGE THREE PATIENTS IN THE HOSPITAL Miss Annie Bynum, City Mrs. Sallie Brown, Newberry Mrs. Jeanette Bedenbaugh, City Ernest Baker, Newberry J. Dewey Crossland, Newberry Mrs. Annie S. Dickert, Whitmire William R. Folk, Denmark W. B. Henson, Newberry Miss Grace Hazel, Newberry Mrs. Judy Kessler and Baby Girl, Prosperity. BANK NOTES . by Malcolm DID YOU KNOW. BANKING IN THE UNITED STATES BEGAN WITH THE CHARTERING IN PHILADELPHIA Of THE BANK OF NORTH AMERICA WHICH OPENED A FEW MONTHS AFTER THE REVOLUTION-W WAR ENDED. /C BARTER WAS THE COMMON FORM OF EXCHANGE BEFORE MONEY WAS IN VENTED. BARTER STORES STILL FUNCTION ON SOME AMERICAN INDIAN RESERVA TIONS EXCHANGING ONE FORM OF GOODS FOR ANOTHER. ^ »o. ■* , AVAILABILITY IS THE WATCHWORD Or THE BANKING INDUSTRY- BANKING HAS FOLLOWED THE TREND TO SUBURBIA SO THAT BANK OFFICES ARE AS COMMON IN SHOPPING CENTERS AS SUPERMARKETS. Mrs. Nettie Lester, City William Lyles, Newberry Joe Miller, Newberry Mrs. Janie Ouzts, Newberry Mrs. Cora Padgett, Newberry Jim Price, Newberry Hollard Ruff, Newberry Mrs. Louvenia Smith, Kinarrs Mrs. Carrie Slice, Newberry Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Shealy, Newberry Mrs. Blanche Summer, City John W. Wilson, Silverstreet R. Herman Wright, City Mrs. Minnie Lee Wicker, City Mrs. Barbara Abney, Silver- street Baby Boy Bookman, City Little Miss Betty Jo Farrow, Silverstreet Rayford Hall, Pomaria Master Luther Jones Jr., City Mrs. Mary Len Ruff, Newberry Willie Mack Reeder, City Mrs. Lucille Smith, Leesville Mrs. Pauline Summer, City John Williams, Pomaria George E. Wise, Newberry Mrs. Bessie Dawkins, Newberry Mrs. Lois Cannon, Newberry Mrs. Ruth Cothran, Newberry Mrs. Francis Griffin, Pomaria G. W. Jacobs, Newberry Mrs. Leah Longshore, City Mrs. Janie McEntire, City Miss Betty Sue Rinehart, City Donald Wilson, Newberry. Miss Marcia Copeland Todd Weds Malcolm Wood in Saturday Rites Wm ■ ' i • " : ; x : : : x •Xv: . ::x • >x-x:*^-cwx-x*;5? use HONOR LIST Ronald E. Bowers, Silverstreet, James H. Counts Jr., James E. Kibler of Prosperity and Charles Ragland Jr., of Newberry, are among the seniors and juniors at the University of South Carolina who earned Dean’s List honors by achieving a grade point ratio of 3.5 or higher. Thou shalt not muzzle the ox that treadeth out the corn. -Deuteronomy 25:4 Paul the Apostle used these words to impress upon Timothy the fact that the laborer is en titled to a reward. The elder who serves wisely and long, is entitled to a just measure of respect. The worker who dutifully performs his job is entitled to his pay. This is something we can all under stand. This is something we often ---- - »* hear referred to as “fair play.' The trouble with some of us may be that we are always look ing for personal recognition and personal rewards to the extent that we never take the oppor tunity to show our own apprecia tion for the efforts of others. We forget that our friends and our family feel somewhat re warded when we extend a “thank you’* or .a “well donef*—and it doesn’t cost a cent. Read your BIBLB dally and 00 TO CHURCH SUNDAY TOO SMALL TO QUALIFY HE COULD G-ET HURT. { ^-^MALL. ^THeONL-Y NOTHING- DO I MG-. 'U GUY WE COULD GET. L jy v < 'ib V/>V •'I'm <1, Th e marriage of Marcia Cope land Todd of Newberry and Mal colm Onnie Wood of Edgefield and Camden took place at 5:00 P. M. Saturday, July 24 in Aveleigh Presbyterian church. Dr. Neil E. Truesdell officiated, in the pres ence of the immediate families, using the double-ring ceremony. The bride was becomingly at tired in a white doveknit suit with a blue blouse and a pillbox head- piece which held her circular veil. Her only ornament was a diamond and platinum pin, the gift of her maternal grandfather to her ma ternal grandmother, which had also been worn by her mother at her wedding. Mrs. Wood is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Wilton Todd Jr. She is a 1961 honor graduate of Newberry High school and a 1964 graduate of Winthrop col lege with a B.A. degree in biology. At Winthrop she served as a House Councilor and is a member of Beta Beta Beta and Zeta Alpha honor fraternities. During the past year she attended the Columbia Hospital school of Medical Tech nology from which she graduated on July 22. Mr. Wood is the son of Mrs. Bruce Malcolm Wood and the late Mr. Wood of Edgefield. He grad uated from Edgefield High school in 1958 and Newberry College in 1962 with an A.B. degree in Edu cation and Psychology. He is a member of Kappa Phi social fra ternity and is an instructor at Camden Military Academy. After a wedding trip to the mountains, the couple will make their home in Camden. D.A.R. Defended By Jesse Helms, WRAL-TV Raleigh, N. C. While Independence Day holi day was drawing to a close, we fell to thinking about an amusing little skirmish that took place on the floor of the United States sen ate the other day. The somewhat windy Senator from Pennsylvania, Joseph Clark, blew up a gale that whistled for a couple of hours around the senate chamber. In the end, Senator Clark and his hand ful of collaborators lost their lit tle fight. Generally speaking, it is always a good thing for the coun try when Senator Clark loses a fight. In our view, the gentleman frequently makes noise, but he seldom makes sense. The Senator from Pennsylvania becomes emotionally indignant at any proposal relating to economy in government or free enterprise or Constitutional fundamentals. In recent months, he has repeatedly directed sarcastic insults at North Carolina’s Sam Erwin on occasions when Senator Erwin was gently trying to remind the Senate that there is, after all, a Constitution. Senator Clark’s recent flurry was prompted -by his determina tion that the Senate should cease to pay its respects to the Daugh ters of the American Revolution. The Senator could hardly have been more picayune. Since before the turn of the century, the Con gress has each year printed the proceedings of the annual DAR convention. This is done at a nom inal cost and was begun, we sup pose, as a tribute to what the DAR stands for—such as, for example, respect for the nation’s heritage, the Constitution, American his tory, etc. All of a sudden, the very liberal Senator Clark was in the midst of an economy binge. It was all a bit curious. He is eternally a front-running advocate for the spending of billions of taxpayers’ dollars for every conceivable gov ernmental program. But when it came to spending a few hundred dollars for a document calculated to keep alive some of America’s fundamentals, he was ready to tighten the government’s money belt. Senator Clark lost his little skirmish, as we say. The Senate laughed him down, and went a- bout its business. We might add, with a measure of pride, that North Carolina’s Everett Jordan led in the defense of the DAR. Reading of this little incident, as we said in the beginning, serv ed to tie together the observance of Independenc Day and the ef forts of the Daughters of the Am erican Aevolution to. keep alive some principles that deserve to survive in a world crazed by un rest and confusion. If Senator Clark and others like him ever succeed in their efforts to destroy the effectiveness and influence of the DAR, it will be a bad day in deed for the country. The ladies are concerned citi zens and, yes, they dare to say so. They have been unwilling to trade in their basic ideas about freedom for the new models of something for nothnng and government con trols. They emphasize history. They discipline themselves to con stant rededication to fundamentals that were once regarded as im portant in a great nation. For this they are constantly ridiculed. Cartoonists for liberal newspapers sarcastically, and er roneously, portray the ladies of the DAR as fat and fatuous. The ladies are castigated and misrep resented. All of this the ladies have learned, by hard experience, to endure. It is to their credit that they stick by their principles in the face of such withering attacks. The attacks upon the ladies tell more about the attackers than about the DAR. Those who cry the loudeft because communist are not given a forum at taxpayers’ ex pense are the very ones who ob ject most strongly to the voice of the DAR being heard in the land. Th argument is, apparently, that our young people can learn from those who preach communism, but CANNOT learn from patriotic ladies who preach Americanism. It is, then, a curious sort of ^“independence” that some demand. Whatever it is, it ISN’T the spirit of 1776. PROPERTY TRANSFERS Newberry No. 1 W. Fulmer Wells and Henry B. Wells to Lutheran Church of The Redeemer, one lot on Osborne Ave. $5. James P. Bishop to A. W. Cor ley, one lot and one building $5 and assumption of a mortgage. Alice S. Chandler and Burke M. Wise, Clerk of Court of New berry County, to William A. Bal- lentine and Georgia Welborri Bel- lentine, one lot and one building, $10.00. James W. Kinard, et al, to Mat- tie W. Kinard, two lots and two buildings, $5 love and affection. Mattie W. Kinard to Martha C. Neeley, one lot and one building, $5 love and affection. Lutheran Church of The Re deemer to Robert N. Clark, and Virginia W. Clark, one lot $5. Mattie F. Lominack to Edward F. Lominack and N e ll B. Lom inack, one lot and one building $5. J. L. Long to Essie E. Daven port, one lot and one building $5. Modern Homes Finance Co. to Ernest Brooks, one lot and one building on Emory street $1300. Marguerite B. Parkman to A. W. Corley, one lot, $5 love and affection. Adrian M- Summer Jr. to Margaret B. Buckley, one lot $5. Newberry No. 1 (Outside) Addie G. Hawkins to Ezell Hiller, one lot and one building on Boundary street $5. Mary E. Jones to Mildred and Andrew Mangum, one lot and one building in Helena $10. Silverstreet No. 2 Mrs. Maggie S. Havird to Ollie F. Nance and Vinnie R. Nance, one lot, $5. Thomas Blair to Earl E. Stock- man Jr. and Anna McK Stock- man, one lot and one building on Lake Greenwood $7500. Bush River No. 3 Fred H. Johnson to Daisy John son 4.42 acres and one building, $5 love and affection. Whitmire No. 4 Mary Dial and Lillie Mae Dial to Kenneth Roy Wallace and Edna P. Smith, one lot on Railroad Ave. $300. Thomas W. Suber to Edna P. Smith, one lot on Duckett street, $5.00. Doris S. Horton to Southeastern Fund, one lot and one building on Railroad Avenue $10. Southeastern Fund to Blair J. Rankin and Dorothy W. Rankin, one lot and one building on Rail road Avenue $10. James E. Harrison to R. V. Rhodes and Maggie F. Rhodes, one lot and one building on Sims street $10. Ralph V. Wallen and Barbara M. Wallen to Larry E. Maness and Brenda T. Maness, one lot and one building on Grant street $10. Little Mountain No. 6 Samuel L. Gladden Sr. to Vel ma O. Manely, one lot and one building on Lake Murray $5. Prosperity No. 7 Fred M. Cook to Mrs. Eula Mae L. Bedenbaugh, 1.58 acres $5. Pat A. Stockman to Edgar A. Shealy and Annie Shealy, 22 acres $3950. Helen Wilson to James Men denhall and Estelle Mendenhall, one lot $5. Thelma Rawl to Investors Sec urity, Inc. three lots $5. Investors Security, Inc tb Larry B. Easterling, one lot, $5. Investors Security, Inc. to W. W. Wise, two lots $5. Mamie L. S. Dominick, William H. Dominick, Mary Frances D. Nichols, Rebecca D. Alewine and Mildred D. Martin to O. Floyd Martin, two acres $5. Randall B. Epting and Paula C. Epting to Newberry Federal Savings and Loan Association, one lot and one building $5 and as sumption of a mortgage. Claude W. Partain to Euston H. Mayer and Lola Y. Mayer, one lot and one building on Lake Mur ray $10. SPORTS AFIELD Maffett goes to 2nd Armored FORT HOOD TEX. — Army Specialist Five James M. Maffett, 29, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas T. Maffett, Route 1, Chappells, was assigned to the 2nd Armored Division at Fort Hood, July 12. Maffett performs the duties of a supply sergeant in Company B of the division’s Engineer Battal ion. He entered the army in July 1963 and has serv*d in Europe. IN A CAVE . . . Margaret Mahler of Wilmington, I>«4 outshines the gUtteriagjrtdag- mites of Bersutda’s Crystal Cave on a recent rtaft thwre. Margaret was recently elected College Week Queen during a series of College Weeks in Bermuda. The beginning backpack camp er, not really knowing, attempts (like a squirrel preparing for a hard winter) to be supplied for all conceivable situations (most of which never develop). Thus there is a weight surplus that ends up complicating or even ruin ing his all-important first trip. Conversely, the beginner may take go-light advice too literally and again snafu his outing for lack of needed items. One eminent backpacker advises about 1 1-4 pounds of entirely de hydrated food per person per day. This is average for most people. Some require a pound, some an additional half pound. This stand ard is for short trips, two to 7 days. It may not suffice (a) for trips of longer duration or (b) if two trips follow one after the other—as a person will use up some body fat on the first short trip to meet his energy require ments. On a two-week backpack trip, increase the daily amount of dehydrated food (meals), as no doubt you’ll be happy you did. Don’t ever depend on game, fish and edible plants for enhancing the ol’ diet, by the way. The overall and daily menus should be planned at home—well in advance. This is quite time- consuming but absolutely manda tory for beginning backpackers (especially). Refer tq your menu at each mealtime, and follow it. Some of the newer camping enthusiasts may ‘.be amazed to learn that many Veterans of the game make exceedingly successful backpack camping trips toting les.~. than 18 pounds. “The secrets,” points out John Job son, Camping Editor of Sports Afield magazine, “ar* (1) proper planning, (2) light weight equipment and (3) mod ern hydrated foods.” A complete modern pafck frame weighs from around three to four pounds, and a sleeping bag about three pounds. Some prefer a light mountain- type, backpack tent; others sleep with,a poncho and/or light ground cloth as thehr protection from the elements. Many experienced cam pers prefer to pack the little tent (the two-man type ranges from two to over five pounds)—espec ially above timberline, where high winds are encountered, and in rainy regions. Id- County Permits Roy Kibler, repairs, 502 Wright street. i H. L. Riggins, locate Trailer, 2705 Fair street. Mr. Folk, repairs, 1230 Summer street. Mrs. M. A. Hedgepath, repairs, 1623 Harrington St. Mrs. Sterling, repairs, 1831 Johnstone street. Mary Tucker, erect dwelling at 720 Langford street. Total for abqya permits is $16,- 760.00. 1 1 V i -riirji • • Glenn Wade Shirey and Margaret Jeanette Harmon of Newberry, were married on July 18 at New berry by* Rev. Enos C. Rikard. OK HNWI com 1 BtfUOS MCN! | Rev. ROBERT H. FIRST WOULD WAR O N JULY 28, 1914, the First World War began. The United States, at last drawn into “entangling allianceg’Mvas forced into the great conflict after re peated attacks upon American shipping. When the American army ar rived in France, General Pershing placed a wreath at the tomb of e noble friend of our people and his aide uttered the immortal words, “Lafayette, we are here.” The words have gone into history; reminiscent of the great debt of our Country to the people of France for their aid to the Col onies in their Revolution and a pledge of American aid in the time of dire need of France and the other Allies. These things are written, not to inform you but to remind yon of the achievements of our dough boys in battle beyond the seaa and to warn you that, in this time when wars and rumors of wars are noted around the world, oar Country may be drawn into a Third World War. If so, we look to the Americas Eagle and we see that while his head is turned toward the olive branch that he holds, he still clutches a sheaf of arrows, grins token of the fact that he win fight if he must HOME LOANS... Economical Rates Rapid Service • For Home Purchase • For Home Const ruction • For Home Improvement STATE Building and Loan Association '1117 Boyce Street Newberry, S. C. 5 Dial 276-5660 DIRECTORS: Ralph B. Baker J. Dave Caldwell 'Pinckney N. Abrams Louis C. Floyd Thomas H. Pope R. Aubrey Harley One Day i'sir*** . Service on Rubber Stamps at the Sun office