The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, July 14, 1966, Image 3

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THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1966 THE NEWBERRY SUN. NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA PAGE THREE BRIGHT IDifiS TO AVOID EYESTRAIN You can eliminate eyestrain by using proper lighting. For intricate sewing and de tail work, recessed window lighting provides necessary illumination. An 8-ft. troffer containing two rows of fluorescent tubes makes it easy to thread a needle. Muted background or in direct lighting is ideal for watching television. A continuous row of single tube, 4-ft. 40-watt Syl- vania fluorescent lamps may be placed behind the television set—con cealed by a cornice. Three-way incandescent bulbs used in desk and table lamps give ample light for close work. Never use less than a 40-watt lamp to avoid eyestrain. Writing and drawing can be made easier by the use of proper illumination. Know Vow Enemy CREEPY CLOSE-UPS Don't be fooled by appear ances. Although polka dots all over your refrigerated food may look “artistic,” they're really a frightening disgracel And tinges of color emerg ing around the bath- room fix tures are not nearly so appealing when you look close and find out that it’s— MOLD! MOLD Cute little fellow, isn't he? Creative, too. Why he can change a plain white shirt into a speckled wonder! He's great too for touching up hand- bags and boots with colorful overtones. A really charming house guest, if you happen to like—MILDEW! Poor little things—they can’t get in. It must be a disinfected house. If you hate uninvited company, want to show the door to Mold, Mildew, Fungus and Bacteria, get an effective disinfectant. Even bad odors and viruses move out when a tenant like Pine-Sol Disinfectant moves in. bad odors Bud Collins of the Boston Globe, left, accepts Martini & Rossi Sports- writers Award from Gov. Dan K. Moore of North Carolina. Looking on is previous winner. Will Grimsley of the Associated Press. SALISBURY, N.C.—You wouldn’t find as many big name sportswriters and sportscasters at the World Series as you would have found down here in this quiet North Carolina town recently. $ Red Smith was here. Chris Schenkel was here. There was Jim Murray and Lindsey Nel son and Will Grimsley and dozens more. And there wasn’t a sports contest of any kind go ing on within a hundred miles. These men, and dozens of their colleagues, were here for the Seventh Annual National Sportscasters & Sportswriters Awards which was organized in Salisbury and which makes its home here. They were here because they’re the tops. Each year the 7,000 members of the NSSA vote for the best sportscaster and the best sportswriter in each of the fifty states. They also select a national finalist in sportscasting and in sports- writing. Then, each year, all the winners gather here for the presentations. This year Vin Scully, who broadcasts the Los Angeles Dodgers games and Red Smith, the nationally syndicated col umnist of the N. Y. Herald Tribune were the national winners. Another award presented here each year is the Martini & Rossi Award for outstanding writing or sportscasting in sportsman’s sports such as fencing, riding, boating, auto racing and tennis. For the past three years this award has been taken by a ten nis writer. This year’s winner was Bud Collins of the Boston Globe. Previous winners were Allison Danzig of the New York Times and Will Grimsley of the Associated Press. Among the nominees for this award this year were three women, each of whom was selected as outstanding in her field. They were Eileen Crim- min of Seattle, Washington for her stories on power boating; Alice Higgins of Sports Illus trated for horse show coverage; and Betty Moore of the New York Morning Telegraph, steeplechase and hunt. Other nominees selected for outstanding work in their fields were Ted Webbe of NBC-Moni- tor for motorsports, and Lin coln A. Werden of the New York Times for his coverage of fencing. Rx For Success: Poise 1 Someone once said, “It’s poise that gets the boys.” But, poise, like the weather, is something that everyone talks about without really doing anything about it—mostly because so many people think it’s an in- <>- born trait. Poise, however, is acquired. It’s the ability to be super-confi dent in any situation. One girl who has this ability is Linda Johnson, who won the John H. Breck, Inc. Poise and Appear ance Award given at America’s Junior Miss Pageant in Mobile, Alabama. To keep her “cool” in mo ments of stress or whirlwind activity, Linda has found that a well-groomed appearance is the best insurance. If you’re, not as self-assured as you’d likj* to be, perhaps you need a groom ing check-up. For example, investigate your wardrobe to find out why you like wearing certain clothes and dislike others. Chances are it’s a matter of fit. Even the loveliest girl can look ill-at-ease in a dress that’s too tight or too long. A bad make-up job can also ruin self-assurance. Practice with new beauty aids in private before you brave them in public. Peruse the fashion magazines and try to enlulate their groom ing techniques—adapting them to your own personality. Hair that won’t settle down to look calm and collected is another hang-up that can leave poise dragging behind you. Linda Johnson’s method of cop ing with fly-away frizz is to use Breck Creme Rinse right after her shampoo. It helps turn sulky locks into silky tresses with a minimum of muss and fuss. Mastering these fine points of self-assurance will help achieve poise and all that comes with it. After all, if you look your best it’s only natural that you’ll act that wav. IT'S A FACT! RIGHT OF WAY Wator-cooled engines may become over heated in summertime, especially in prolonged stop-and-start driving. It's a good idea to keep a can of water in your car. And for long hauls, stop often to have the radiator checked. Drivers may become overheated, too. Keep tempers from boiling by mapping out route, resting often, and making advance reserva tions for overnight stays. Stock glove compartment with candy pack, moist towelettes, sun glasses, sun tan lo tion and first aid kit. Trying to see consumes 25% of your nervous energy even in normal conditions; in summer’s glare the percent age is higher."Summer Squint” leads to fatigue, headache and stomach up set. Ray Ban sun glasses, for safe driving, filter the sun’s rays properly, protect you, your eyes and your amily. Z^he Sportsman's Corner w u.. n. l indutka. Reminaton Wild Life Expc by Dr. Joe Lindujka, Remington Wild Life Expert 150th ANNIVERSARY^ ' *' In 1816,23-year-old Elipha- let Remington, proud of the gun he had hand-forged at his llion. New York farm house, entered a shooting competition. He beat all but one man who was so im pressed with Remington's rifle that he placed an order for one right there on the field. Several years later. Remington’s big chance came when the U. S. Government awarded a rifle con tract—to someone else! Because his com petition couldn’t meet the order. Remington lumped in and began making 1,000 rifles monthly on. his new production line. This year, the Remington Arms Company is cele brating its 150th anniver sary. Modem research as well as the heritage of superior gunmaking skill make this large industrial complex successful in serving the needs of Amer ica’s sportsmon. -j Looking A head ..by Dr. G«org« S. Bsnson PRESIDENT—NATIONAL EDUCATION 7ROORAM Ssarcy, AHmmm Since April 1964, the U. S. Department of Labor’s “Con sumer Price Index” has climb ed upward, with only three months out of the 36 showing even a temporary dip. This is the cost of living meter show ing how much less our dollars will buy each month in the requirements of living. Thus it measures the degree of infla tion. Two major causes of in flation are (1) deficit spending by Government, and (2) ris ing production costs of goods and services without corres- sponding improvement in man hour productivity. The “Consumer Price Index” dpllar has lost approximately four-cents in purchasing power since April 1964. In one month — last- February —inflation set a 15-year record. It was following the announcement of this big jump that President Johuson began to talk about imposing a “7 or 8 per cent tax increase — to combat in flation.” Such talk amidst one of the most extravagant out pourings of Federal deficit spending, in our nation’s his tory stirred many people of the grassroots into protests, and this appears to have slow ed the tax hike talk. But it remains to be seen whether a halt is in prospect for the “Great Society” multi-billion- dollar programs “to abolish poverty. ” One such program came into an area of the Ozark moun tains last summer. The local people who were appointed to run the program passed the word around through the hills that they were looking for re cruits for a number of “War on poverty” projects. A friend who operates a small business in one of the mountain towns gave me the following account of what happened: “ In our section bf these mountains, one of our most valuable industries is stave milling. We have lots of hard wood timber, rig- saw it into ‘stave bolts’, then haul it to the hills where the bolts are stacked, seasoned, and ship ped. Very little skill is in volved. “The wages have been what we in the hills call ‘reasonable’ but certainly not high by any standard. A small stave mill will make jobs for from 20 to 30 hill people, most of whom do a little farming on the side. They all make a comfortable living, but they have to work at it. “Last summer the War-on- Poverty program came into our area. At first it didn’t af fect the stave mills. But when some of the mill workers saw what was going on, they quit stave milling and joined the poverty forces. They found they could draw pretty good hourly pay for practically no work. Our stave mills slowed down for lack . of workers. Some actually went out of business. Their creation of wealth and their contribution to the economic stability of the region now is lost.” My friend shook his head. “This kind of thing has far-reaching dangers.” he said. “It’s not the way to help lift our country in to a great society. It makes loafing popular, and it may make loafing a profession.” Feeding Inflation One of the dangers of such programs is their spread of “printing press” or “deficit” money. The stave mill money was genuine because it was paid to people who had pro duced new wealth - by pro cessing a raw material into a product somebody would buy. The poverty program “wage” in this instance was deficit money (borrowed) that had no production of wealth behind it. It went into our economy without having pro duced goods. Thus it added to the number of dollars in cir culation to buy an unchanged amount of goods, causing in flation, or a cheaping of every dollar in circulation. Instead of throttling pro duction, and raising taxes, and v igidly manipulating all of the normally dynamic forces in our market economy, the Government’s soundest role, in good times or bad, is to keep vital the incentives in the private enterprise system, so that it will continue to ex pand the production of new wealth, create the new jobs for our expanding population, and increase genuine purchas ing power. Governmental con trol of our economy, mixed with politics, can take the whole nations to the poor House; and only a wholesome expansion of private produc tion can promise . prosperity for all. world . > / news in f©cus JULY SALE Old Maine TROTTERS (Disc, styles) Regular $12.99— The Christian Science Monitor One Norway St v Boston, Man. 02115 Please enter my subscription to the Monitor for the period cheeked be low. I enclose $ (U.S. Funds) □ 1 YEAR 524 □ 6 months 512 Q 3 months 56 Name ADORE’ LIZARDS (Disc, styles) Regular $23.00— It’s Our Pleasure ' ’ '• y'~’- : To Announce That Effective July 1, 1966 The Bank of Commerce Will Pay INTEREST GUARANTEED ON PASS-BOOK SAVINGS ACCOUNTS We Welcome New Accounts— Open a Savings Account Today! For Your Convenience The Bank of Commerce in Prosperity HAS RECENTLY COMPLETED Modem Renovation of Its Facilities Making it possible to give our friends and customers COMPLETE “FuM Service Banking” Watch for Our Formal Opening Coming Soon In Cooperation With all other banking facilities in Newberry and Lexington Counties ~ the following New Hours will be observed: MONDAY thur THURSDAY 9A.M.tolP.M. FRIDAY 9 A.M. to 1 PJH. — 4 P. M. to 6 P. M. CLOSED SATURDAY V > , - The Bank of Commerce TWO MODERN BANKS TO SERVE YOU PROSPERITY CHAPIN