The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, December 16, 1965, Image 7
Thursday, December ie, 1965
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
PAGE SEVEN
Winthrop sets
auditions in Feb.
ROCK HILL.—The Depart
ment of Music at Winthrop col
lege will hold competitive sch
olarship auditions Saturday,
February 26 at 10 a.m. in the
Recital Hall, Winthrop Cam
pus.
The Rock Hill Music Club
Scholarship and the Allegro
Music Club Scholarship, along
“with two other scholarship
grants, are available for the
academic year 1966-67 to pros
pective new students who will
major in music.
Recipients of these scholar
ships will be chosen through
competitive auditions by the
Winthrop College music facul
ty. All students qualified to
enter Winthrop College are eli
gible. Students presently en
rolled at Winthrop are not
eligible.
The amount of the scholar
ship grants will be based on
talent and need. Recipients will
be notified by mail.
Applicants should be prepar
ed to perform one or more sel
ections of their choice and
each applicant must furnish her
own accompanist where needed.
Application blanks should be
sent no later than February 19
to Dr. Jesse T. Casey, Music
Department Chairman, Win
throp College, Rock Hill, S. C.
THE AMfiim um
FINDERS LOSERS?
Learn this lesson well—there
is no reward for finidng fault.
Leitchfield (Ky.) Gazette
In Malaya, piercing a
lime with pins will
cause love pangs in
One’s sweetheart.
Lime’s supernatural
powers are also recog
nized in India where
they play a principal
role in effecting curses.
JIM’S JEWELERS
Jim Connelly owner of Jim's Jewelers recently
completed a special course in servicing of
Accutron Electric Timepiece Watches
conducted by Bulova Watch Co. in Columbia.
1414 Main Street
Newberry
In the early days of British sailing
ships, the tars would die of scurvy.
The consumption of limes—a
scurvy preventive—was required
by law on all ships. The name
“Limey" became the popular
slang term for English sailors.
Limes, because of their pungent
aroma, were used by the Romans
as a bath scent. It’s not surprising
that even today the lime scent is
popular. Recently Old Spice has
introduced a lime aftershave lo
tion called Old Spice Lime. Prov
ing that the amazing lime is still
useful as a cosmetic!
Dishwasher Saves Precious Time
Longing for a dishwasher,
particularly with the holidays
coming, and all those extra
dishes to do? You might consid
er a convertible portable model
that you can use as a portable
now and build it in later. This
new 1966 model by General
Electric has a beautiful cherry
wood carving board top so con
venient for cutting vegetables,
slicing meat or bread. It is
standard height and lines up
with base cabinets to provide
valuable extra counter space.
Loading and unloading dishes
is easy with the swing-down
door, even for young members
of the family. It does the whole
dishwashing chore. All you!
have to do is toss off loose food i
scraps, put dishes in without
scraping or rinsing, push the
proper button for Fine China,
Regular Dishes or Pots and
Pans, and you can go your
merry way. With a dishwasher
in the house, you not only save
time—almost an hour a day—
but energy and hard work, too.
It also saves family arguments
about who will do the dishes. No
one would object to pushing a
button.
Winsome Angel Bears Gifts Of Candy
THE NEWBERRY SUN
Make this winsome angel cen
terpiece offering gifts of candy,
suggests the Norcross Design
Studio. To make her you'll need
cardboard and a package of
Norcross “Tiny Trimmings”
gift wrap. First fold cardboard
in half and cut angel shape as
shown. Open and rubber cement
on gift wrap, cutting off excess.
Glue bands of red ribbon to
skirt, making sure bottom is
even so angel win stand with
out support. Cut arms from
cardboard, covering both sides
with gift wrap. Attach to neck
adjusting forward or back
ward to keep balance even
Cover small box with red gift
wrap. Trim with bow and glue
between angel's hands. Make
head from foam ball, glueing
on face parts. Pin on gold
Lustre-Curl ribbon strips for
hair. FiU box with candy.
Thos. J. Boozer
rites Wednesday
Funeral services for Thomas
By Mary Whitman
Children are often better book
reviewers than adults are.
That’s the word of many ex
perts who find that children give
a candid sum-up without giving
the plot away. A child keeps his
reviews short, too.
Many teachers like to assign
book reviews to children. So do
children’s book page reviewers
at some lively and well-read
newspapers.
“When you ask a child his
opinion on a juvenile book,” says
the reviewer for one southern
paper, “he’ll give you an answer
that’s simple and sound.”
Another book page editor
points out: “No one can criticize
a story better than a child of
the age it was written for.” One
7-year-old recently began a book
review: “I like this book because
the words are almost hard.”
Children are good proofread
ers, too. “When it comes to art
work,” says Betty Ren Wright,
an editor with Whitman Pub
lishing Company of Racine, WIs.,
world’s largest publisher of chil
dren's books, “you can count on
a 3-to-5-year-old to spot errors
that professionals miss.”
Example? Once, in a children’s
book, a dresser scarf appeared
in a sketch on one page but was
missing on the facing page. A
youngster caught it immediately.
Corrections were made. Because
children are so observant, a
child in a book illustration must
never change his hair-parting,
shoe color or mittens in the mid
dle of the action, and must al
ways have the same number of
buttonholes on a coat that he
began with.
A child takes his books seri
ously. They have to be right.
Good juvenile books receive
child-testing by authors, illus
trators and editors.
Parents, too, will enjoy hear
ing book reviews from the sand
box set. It’s a lively education:
And it’s reassuring to discover
iow well the children choose
heir favorites on the basis of
:t. action, and over all quality.
J. Boozer, former Swansea
mayor, were held Wednesday in
Good Shepherd Lutheran church
at Swansea, conducted by Rev.
Ernest K. Counts and Rev. Al
vin Haigler. Interment was in
Swansea cemetery.
Mr. Boozer, 87, died Monday
at Baptist hospital, Columbia.
Mr. Boozer was born in this
county, the son of the late Jac
ob D. and Happock Lindsey
Boozer. He was a retired mer
chant and farmer.
Mr. Boozer was mayor of
Swansea for 15 years, and had
served in the Lexington county
Welfare Board for 20 years and
also had been a member of the
Board of Trustees of Swansea
schools.
Survivingare his widow, Mrs.
Bessie G. Boozer; three daugh
ters, Mrs. Belton D. King, Col
umbia, Mrs. R. S. Galloway,
Due West, and Mrs. Grover C.
Hill, Cayce; and a son, Wilbur
K. Boozer, Swansea.
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On December 31/1965
\
The STATE Building &
Loan Association
7/77 BOYCE STREET
NEWBERRY, S. C.
is paying a DIVIDEND to its shareholders. This fine savings
institution, which has paid a dividend every June and Dec-
♦
ember since being organized, has never had any restrictions
imposed as to dividend payments by governmental agencies
that supervise its operations—a truly significant factor to be
considered by investors.
MEMBER FEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN INSURANCE
CORPORATION
MEMBER FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK
The
STATE
Building and Loan
Association
1117 BOYCE STREET DIAL 276-5660
NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS
R. B. BAKER, President
J. DAVE CALDWELL, Vice President
PINCKNEY N. ABRAMS, Secretary-Treasurer
THOMAS H. POPE -R. AUBREY HARLEY LOUIS C. FLOYD
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