The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, September 29, 1966, Image 5
5i ! Joi a;>A c i
THURSDAY, SEFfEMBER 29, 1966
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWGERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
PAGE FIVE
dpipp 1 b
mm.
Mi
'.ssM
•/'%'S?,
%<&&*?
m
wmk*
m
A UNIQUE GRILLE and wide lower body stripe highlight the fresh styling of the
1967 Dodge Coronet 2-door hardtop shown above. Coronet offers its new Took for
1967 in 26 separate models, all featuring bumper-recessed parking and backup lights.
The 1967 Dodge Coronet
takes aim at a broader share
•of the market. Still a favorite
of the ever-growing family car
servative to sporty for the new
model year. But the economy-
car-turned-sport features the
same generous 111-in wheel-
market, Coronet holds some base, roomy interior, large, safety, with the addition of 15
surprises for performance and cargo space and smooth hand-! new standard-equipment items
4-bbl are available.
Emphasis on Safety
Dodge engineers have again
placed much emphasis on driver
sport car enthusiasts. The 117-
inch wheelbase Dodge has been
•expanded to include a new
series called the Coronet R/T
(indicating ability to perform
■on the road or track ( which is
powered by an all-new, high-
performance V-8 “400 Mag
num". Besides its new high-
performance engine, the R/T
comes standard-equipped with
red - streak tires; a special
Torqueflite automatic trans
mission; heavy-duty rear axle
and suspension; and heavy-
ling characteristics that have to bring the total to 26. All of
made it a best seller for the | these items either meet or
last three years. The all-new surpass Government Services
Administration standards.
Chief among Dodge’s safety
“firsts" for 1967 are a dual
compact’s triple - threat chall
enge now ranges from a bare-
essentials 6-cylinder sedan to
a top-of-the-line hardtop with t braking system and an im-
bucket seats, floor console shift 1 pact-absorbing steering column
and high-performance V-8 pow-! and wheel. The brake system
er plant. Dart’s powerplants has two independent hydraulic
include the standard 170 cu in. j circuits operated by a “tan-
engine with 115 horsepower; an dem” master cylinder. A spec-
optional 225-cu-in. 6 cylinder ; ial warning light in the safety-
with 145 horsepower; a 273-cu designed instrument panel
in. V-8 with either 2-bbl or 4- warn the driver when fluid is
wduty drum brakes. Aside from bbl. carburetion, the former low in either one of the inde
actual performance, special rated at 180 horsepower and pendent lines or when his park-
United Fund
drive underway
Robert E. Summer Jr. chair
man of the 1967 United Fund
Campaign for Newberry coun
ty, reported that the drive was
progressing smoothly. Division
chairmen and captains are
scheduled to meet Monday af
ternoon at 4:00 P.M. at City
Council chambers for a report
meeting.
This is the third United Fund
campaign for Newberry coun
ty. In 1964 a group of citizens,
spearheaded by John F. Clark
son, organized the United Fund
of Newberry county. Through
the cooperation of many citiz
ens the number of drives has
been greatly reduced. Only
those organizations which re
ceive separate support are con
tinuing to wage separate cam
paigns.
The overwhelming fund rais
ing load which in the past fell
on the same citizens year after
year has been eliminated and
their time has been made avail
able for more worth-while ac
tivities. All of Newberry
county’s major industries and
most businesses permit only
one fund raising drive each
year; the United Fund’s fall
campaign. ‘
Campaign goal this year is
$43,030 which will provide suf
ficient funds to meet all ob
ligations and programs of the
20 agencies supported through
the United Fund. All organiza
tions who regularly solicit
funds in Newberry county are
invited to participate in the
“open door” policy which has
always been maintained.
lli
■
lip
ill
WMmM
.
ry Baker Summer, who invited
guests into the music room.
Here they enjoyed piano and
organ selections by Miss Eliza
beth Ann Ruff of Newberry
and Batesburg, and vocal se
lections—favorites of the hon
ored couple—by their grandchil
dren, Misses Beth and Mary
Baker, accompanied by Miss
Ruff.
Indians have
second win
The Newberry College In
dians marched to a 14-7 victory
over Catawba in a Carolinas
Conference match Saturday
Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. *Ba- | night. Newberry traveled into
ker and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth j the North Carolina hills and re-
| Baker of Clinton greeted visi- j turned with a second.win which
‘ tors in the music room and placed the Indians Number 0ne
Miss Leila Norris of Columbia i n the Conference and tied for
and Walter Baker Summer in- the top placement in N.A.I.A.
vited them into the hall, where District 26.
they were directed to the for- j Newberry returned to the
mal dining room by Dr. and'field after surviving a slow
Mrs. Sydney Carter, Ralph Ba- t first half and scored two third-
ker Summer and Ralph Parr quarter touchdowns within nine
Baker Jr.; also Mr. and Mrs., minutes. The two scores put
David Boyd Parr of Edgefield.; Newberry ahead to stay when
Delightful refreshments of halfback Tommy Thompson in
punch, individual, decorated tercepted a Catawba pass late
cakes, sandwiches and cheese m fourth quarter ending a
, straws were served with Mrs. j 54-yard drive by the oppon-
F. D. MacLean and Miss Hattie ; e nts.
j Belle Lester presiding at ’the j Halfbacks George Taylor and
punch bowl, and little Miss Neal Dufford led the offense
Catherine Baker passing mints. I collecting 2 13 of the 223 yards
In the family dining room, gained on the ground. Dufford
the anniversary cake centered carried the ball 22 times for 136
the large round dining table. | yards and received three Benji
side-body, grille and trunk lid
nameplates, paint stripes.
the latter at 235. For 1967 the ing brake is on. The new Dodge
Dart is a refreshing picture of steerling column is designed to
chrome-plated valve covers and beauty, economy, and perform- collapse on impact in accordian
•oil filler cap and black-crackle ' ance that will be hard to beat fashion at a controlled rate
air cleaner with special 440 with its traditionally low price and is braced so that it can-
Magnum decal set the R/T tag. 'not be driven backward to in-
apart from its sister models, j For 1967 Dodge has a dou- jure the driver in a collision.
The Coronet 500 is available ble surprise package—com- i Safety-rim wheels, emergency
in two-door hardtop, convert
ible, and 4-door sedan models.
"They combine luxury and high
style with handling ease, low
pletely restyled versions of its flashers, backup lights, safety
two “prestige” models—the door latches, padded instru-
Polara and Monaco. Longer, ment panels and sun visors,
lower profiles, a semi-fastback reduction of protruding knobs,
cost and economical perform- 1 roof for hardtop models, new remote-control outside mir-
ance. body-sculpture sheet metal, rors, non-glare interior mir-
Coronet and Coronet Deluxe crisp angular front ends and a rors. two-speed electric wind-
models carry the distinctively rakish rear-deck treatment shield wipers, windshield wash-
Dodge delta-shaped tail lamps strengthen their roles as the ers, and many ohter safety
and offer economy, comfort, top luxury leaders of the Dodge
performance, and low price to line. In addition the Polaras
the family market. , and Monacos boast strikingly
The widest range of engine new interiors. They are half a
options ever offered by Dodge foot longer overall and have
-on a moderately priced car 122-inch wheelbase for better
await Coronet buyers. He may, ride and handling. The result
choose the standard 225-cu in is a combination of beauty,
-economy-tuned, 145-hp 6- cyl-1 comfort and performance un- i A three-day training pro-
inder; a 273 cu. in V-8 rated matched in the medium-priced gram for Jehovah’s Witnesses
items are standard equipment
on all 1967 Dodges.
Witnesses go
to Greenville
at 180-hp. with 2-bbl. and 235
with 4 bbl. carburetion; a 318-
field.
coming from 17 congregations
Extra luxury with sporty— and 3 states is slated for Octo-
•cu in. V-8 at 230 hp; a redesig- car flavor is offered again in ber 7-9 at the Greenville Me-
ned 383 cu in that develops, two bucket-seat, floor-console morial Auditorium.
270 hp. with 2 bbl. and 325 hp ! and fancy trim versions, the | Timothy L. Brooks, presiding
-with 4-bbl. carburetion; a Monaco 500 and Polara 500. minister of the local congrega-
street-tuned version of the Bucket seats are also available jtion said, “the assembly is not
famous Hemi-426 racing engine in the Monaco 4-door hardtop a revival but is held primarily
with 425 hp, and the brand- | and for the first time, in Mon- to advance Christian Bible edu-
new 440 Magnum powerplant aco station wagons. The popu-
at 375 hp. 1 lar Polara 318, a special 4-
On September 29, Dodge will door sedan powered by a gas-
set the 1967 automotive styling saving 318 cu. in engine is
- stage for compact cars with back as Dodge’s largest econ-
Tts all-new Dart model. Sweep- omy car. A redesigned 383 cu
ing innovations from bumper in. engine rafted at 270 horse-
to tail lights on the Dart trans- power is the standard engine
form the image of “Ameri-in both cars. Other engines,
cation.”
Local Witnesses are making
preparations to attend the semi
annual event.
Highlighting the gathering
will be the main address on
Sunday at 3 p.m. entitled, “Sat
isfying Mankind’s Greatest
Need.” Upwards of 700 are ex-
Newberry men
to attend meet
Many Newberry area Baptist
men will be among those from
five counties who will attend
the Lexington Area Brother
hood Workshop scheduled for
October 10-14.
Beginning nightly at 7:30
the Lexington Baptist Church
in Lexington will host th e
meeting of baptist men from
Lexington, Fairfield, Newber
ry, Richland and Saluda coun
ties. ‘
Two outstanding learers
from the Southern Baptist
Brotherhood Commission in
Memphis, Tenn. will direct the
workshop. Donald E. Morie,
associate secretary in the men’s
nepartment in charge of Bro
therhood leaders will direct a
workshop for leadership in
Brotherhood. Frank Black, field
services representative in the
Brotherhood Commission’s Roy
al Ambassador Department,
will direct a training program
for leaders of Royal Ambassa
dors.
A host of friends and rela
tives visited Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Barre Baker Sunday afternoon
to honor the couple on the oc
casion of their 50th wedding
anniversary. Hosts for the four-
to-six reception at the Baker
home on Main Street were Dr.
and Mrs. Ralph Parr Baker and
Mr. and Mrs. C. Walter (Mary
Baker) Summer.
The couple received visitors
in the same home in which
they were married on Septem
ber 25, 1916 by the late Dr. J.
W. Carson. Mrs. Baker was.
The three-tiered cake, topped
with “50” in gilded numerals,
Kirkland passes for 19 yards.
Tailor picked up 77 yards on
was iced in pale yellow and. the ground and one pass recep-
decorated with white calla li-^tion of three yards,
lies with pale jjfreen leaves.J The Catawba Indians SCor
Talking with
room were Mr. a!
Lakin Parr and
W. W. Parr, Miss
Parr, Beth and Ma
On the sunporCh,
beautifully attired for the occa
sion in a costume of cranberry
lace with matching shoes. She
wore a white orchid corsage,
gift of “the groom.” Receiving
with the couple were Dr. and
Mrs. Baker and Mr. and Mrs.
Summer.
Guests were greeted at the
front door by Mr. and Mrs.
Gallic Boyd Parr and Dr. and
Mrs. Stanley C. Baker of Green
wood. Entertaining in the par
lor, where the receiving line
stood, were Miss Mary Neel
Baker of Greenwood and Hen-
eir lone touchdown in the
/'starting minutes of the first
quarter.
ary Bryan
al * E Another son, Hennry Pair
. . . * *• Baker gave his life in service
Kerr, assisted by ErwinSiSakerJ* of hj5 * o duri $ orld
| kept the guests Register and War n A pirst Lieu t nant in
: Mr. and Mrs. James Nance : the United States ^ c he
Parr bade guests farewell. , a ilot with the Jol , R
I “ rs - M Bake I the . f0 ™ T . 1 ers and was missing in action
Eddy Mae Parr*.; dnugSMTlf in New Guinea .
„ , „ ,, „ , The Baker home was beauti-
Boyd Parr Mr, Jlakot 3»a« I fu decorated throughout the
ents were the late Kenfe* and rec / ption r00ms with K arrange _
Beulah Barre Baker.
The Baker’s children and
grandchildren are Dr. Ralph
Parr Baker, Beth, Mary, Ralph
Jr., Erwin and Catherine Ba
ker; Mrs. C. Walter Summer,
Henry Baker, Walter Baker
and Ralph Baker Suipmer.
ments of orchids, chrysanthe
mums, roses, gladioli and car
nations, most of which were
sent by friends of the Bakers.
About 500 persons attended
the reception, sixty of whom
were from out of town, several
from other states.
RITZ
Theatre
«as largest compact” from con- ranging up to the 440 Magnum nected to attend.
mm
\ ' J :: .. I *1 V' - A *1 Li
■ * ■>**
'V ^ ^ x , .
x-m-x avx-:**-: xvx . -x-x-m
m
m&i
' *
mm
'■mm
wm
THURSDAY, FRIDAY
& SATURDAY
Henry Fonda, Robert Shaw,
Robert Ryan, Pier Angeli
Battle of the
Bulge
m
Mi
s.*'
■ >«> , -
n&wKxkv ; sy.’Xk-y./'Xr'.&i-ys-'
• v •■•.•X-.V.v •...
$1111
MONDAY & TUESDAY
Henry Fonda, Joanne Wood
ward, Jason Robards
Big Hand For A
Little Lady
Drive-In
Theatre
c -:
■■■ ■:<&:%. :••••• •
mm'
■
,5V.
LEADING THE DODGE UNE for
able in she separate models, and the
offered in nine models, including the
in its
above, avail-
Haas. Polara is
*««*i't**ri* ! W<-
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
Double Feature Program
King Kong
vs Godzilla
Michael Keith, Harry Holcomb
. —ALSO—
Brides of
Dracula
Peter Cushing, Martita Hunt
SUNDAY
Beau Geste
Guy StockweU, Doug McClure,
Leslie Nielsen
Always A Color Cartoon
■ : tw :
Mr
DODGE
m
WANT
p;?' «i' -sv.
w
*
/TV
, —y.-r ' . f ^ T
See the ’67 Dodge Thursday
v % i ■ . -•Y-,
September 29th.
Smith Motor Co
1309 College Street,
Newberry, S. C.
'h
Stop Soon* ■ ww uivaj
Dodge of your choice'
* » .• .1 * *• • .. t
I
win