The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, November 03, 1966, Image 6
£
PAGE SIX
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3 r 1966
SPECTATOR
President Johnson's trip to
Asia may give us an oppor
tunity to cool off and recover
our poise. However, wasn’t it
our vice president who made a
trip to India and thereabout,
scattering a few million as he
*went. So, it is within the
range of probability that Pres
ident Johnson will scatter more
millions than the vice presi
dent could imagine, for Mr.
Johnson has his whole time in
the presidency to prove that no
man can scatter more Govern
ment money than he, even tho
the poor taxpayers groan in
spirit and have to appeal to
Poverty Relief.
One may think that the
whole world is crazy—and it
must be so; but it may be that
we shall recover and recoup—
or re-something in order to
live a well-ordered life again.
The record of our national
spending, giving and what not
would make all the early nat
ional leaders turn over and
perhaps, try to renounce and
Griffith
wm
FOR
STATE
SENATE
to represent
NEWBERRY,
SALUDA and
LEXINGTON
Counties
VOTE FOR
EUGENE C.
GRIFFITH
Senate Seat No. 2
This ad paid for by Newberry
County Republican Party
THE FIRST
STEP . . .
THE DOWN
PAYMENT
Build it here—
quickly,
safely
When you are ready to buy
or build, you’ll want the
lowest possible interest rate
on your home loan. Your
biggest advantage will be a
substantial down payment.
Build it here, through syste
matic, profitable savings.
STATE
Building and
Loan Association
1117 Boyce Street
Newberry, S. C.
Dial 276-5660
DIRECTORS:
Ralph B. Baker
Pinckney N. Abrams
Louis C. Floyd
Thomas H. Pope
R. Aubrey Harley
denounce us as wasteful sons
of those great men who once
established this nation on a
foundation of common sense,
more or less.
Today even If the Congress
doesn’t dabble in all our con
cerns some ambitious Federal
bureaucrat will assume and ex
ercise far-reaching powers of
meddling in all our concerns.
I do not hesitate to declare
that virtually all the program
of Mr. Johnson is so far in
opposition to our Constitutional
principles that the trend of the
day not only gives to Congress
vast powers, but the President
and Cabinet seem bent on hav
ing the Federal Government as
sume the functions of the
States, and of the Cities and
School districts also.
Along with our supine ac
quiescence in Federal assump
tions of power, but our Federal
Courts (some of them) seem
imbued with much the same
spirit of aggrandizement.
Now we come to the states:
they, too, are on the high road
of extravagance. Sometimes it
seems that we recover our san
ity only when we have a i real
and calamitous break and col
lapse. Even so.
South Carolina will have Re
publicans, as well as Democrats
in office, at least in most of
the counties.
Joe Rogers is making a good
race for the Governorship on
the Republican ticket; and
Strom Thurmond and Albert
Watson are outstanding for
Congress.
I think Mendel Rivers, Bryan
Dorn, and Marlboro’s son, Mc
Millan, are probable winners.
So you see, we seem likely to
have a number of Republicans
to share control with the dem
ocrats.
In general except in such
cases of meritorious and out
standing service as is being
rendered by Mendel Rivers,
Bryan Dorn and John McMil
lan the people seem somewhat
tired of the National Democrat-
is party.
You will remember that S. C.
voted a majority of 94,000 for
Goldwater in the recent Pres
idential election. Quite a num
ber of Counties in this state
have voted Republican during
recent four national elections.
All the talk of inflation
seems more or less beside the
point. All of us talk about it
but what does it mean ?
Recently I had a long talk
with a man who was a clerk in
a grocery store years ago. He
recalls side bacon as selling for
six and a half cents a pound;
flour at three dollars and a
half a barrel—and all the other
things more or less in the
same category of high prices
today.
1 am reminded of the fact
that probably only electricity is
cheaper today, cheaper by far,
than it was in the days of six
cent salt meat. Our great pow
er companies are face to face
with high and higher wages,
much higher coal, much higher
cost of wire and poles, higher
every thing; but they generate
and sell electric power at only
a small fraction of the price
which is charged for salt ba
con today.
It may be that grandfather
can tell you about cheese at
ten cents a pound, bread at five
cents a loaf, coal at four dol
lars a ton and now the only
preeminent product at a great
ly reduced price is electric pow
er.
When we talk of inflation
that brings the subject down to
where we “live and move and
have our being,” as used to be
said. When the groceries, ana
clothing and shoes, even ciga
rettes, join the air service and
sail above our reach, we feel
the pinch at what w r e call In
flation.
Everything—rents, well to
day you pay probably three
times as much for rent as
grandfather did.
Do you remember when you
could buy shoes for $3,50? Try
it today. As a fact, only elec
tricity is down and down, be
cause of notably fine manage
ment.
That is enough about infla
tion. It may be that you al
ready knew about it or at least
had a mild suspicion of it.
LEADER!
Cyril B.
BUSBEE
PROVEN LEADER.
Served as president of
every major education asso
ciation having been elected
by his fellow educators. In
die primary, those who know
him b e s t—home - county
voters—gave him 68% of the
total vote.
BUSBEE
PROVEN BY EXPERIENCE.
Offers 36 years’ experience
in school administration as
teacher, principal, coach, and
23 years as Superintendent
of a school system now em
ploying 590 people.
BUSBEE
PROVEN ENERGY.
In addition to the demands
of his job, has contributed
thousands of hours to worth
while civic endeavors and his
church. Offers the knowl
edge, dedication, and tireless
energy this job requires.
BUSBEE
FORWARD-LOOKING.
Will press for adequate
educational opportunities for
all with greater emphasis on
vocational opportunities.
Continue the progress
in education!
For Supt. of Education
VOTE
BUSBEE
Political ad paid by Battar Education
Committaa, W. .L Gantt, Chairman
Now, now. Here is some
thing about paper frocks for
the ladies. Paper frocks! Well
now, if I know the ladies they
will so fashion even paper
frocks as to make them eleg
ant and expensive. Even if hub
by tries to dress his lady in
paper he will have to buy a
dozen dresses a week and even
the paper dresss will soon have
fur neck-pieces! What!
Now contemplate this effu
sion:
“You’re a bachelor, and
you’re invited to Mrs. Leon
Meltzer’s big dinner dan<;e in
Philadelphia Saturday night.
You’re to escort a lady you
have never riiet. You’re to meet
her at the party. I’ll be wearing
a floor-length gown with a
green, white and black paisley
design, she tells you. I’ll be
easy to spot.
Don’t go.
For all 100 ladies at-the af
fair will be wearing floor-
length gowns with green, white
and black paisley designs.
What’s more, the gowns are
made of that new wonder fab
ric: Paper.
Mrs. Meltzer, an attorney’s
wife with a puckish sense of
humor, is sending the so-called
A-line dresses this week to all
her guests. She is doing it, she
says, because she is intrigued
with the idea of a party where
all the women are dressed alike.
The function could prove a field
day for sociologists, but it
points up something else as
well: Paper clothes, talked of
hopefully for some years by
the paper people, are here.
And how they’re here. In
less than 6 months, Scott Pa
per Co. has sold more than 500,
000 paper dresses, which have
been available only by mail or
der. (Price $1.25). Mars Man
ufacturing Co. shipped 120,000
pieces of Paper apparel in June
and July, and estimates that
its fall line, which includes the
$4 paisley model Mrs. Meltzer
bought for her friends, will
exceed 1,200,000 pieces. Pills-
bury Co. this month start of
fering a paper dress for $1
and a box top.
The sky’s the limit on future
production says Ronald Bard,
vice president of sales of Mars,
Abraham and Straus, which
has been selling paper dresses
for $2 to $9 at its six New
York area stores, says sales
are ‘astounding.’ Felix Lilen-
thal and Co., a buyer for more
than 200 department stores,
says, ‘Every store that has put
them in has done well.’
So, far the frocks are sold
in only a handful of stores, the
largest being A&S and Day
ton’s in Minneapolis. But with
in the next few days they will
start appearing in dozens of
other big stores, from Lord and
Taylors and Gimbel’s in New
York to Neiman-Marcus in
Dallas to Joseph Magnin in
San Francisco. Yesterday, they
went on sale at New York’s
Bonwit Teller and B. Altman
stores.
Regardless of what anyone
may say the cost of a lady’s
wardrobe, paper or wool or
cotton, or what, not, will cost a
lot of paper-^paper money,
that is. you know!
ANGLERS
BOOST YOUR CATCH BY MAKING A
"WINDOW* THROUGH THE WATER
WITHOUT
POLARIZING
^SUNGLASSES
WITH
POLARIZING
^SUNGLASSES
ALL IT TAKE'S
IS A GOOP PAIR OF
SUNGLASSES WITH
POLARIZING LENSES TO
ELIMINATE REFLECTED GLARE.
Like every angler who has ever wet a line, you probably
dream about finding a wonderful transparent lake or pond
where you can actually see right through the water and all
but lift the fish you want right 0
onto your hook.
The problem, of course, is to
turn the shiny mirror-like sur
face of the water into a gin-
clear “window” which will en
able you to see your catch
below. It sounds impossible, but
is not as difficult as you might
think. All it takes is a good
pair of sunglasses equipped
with polarizing lenses to elimi-
tiate the reflected glare. (
When the sun strikes the sur
face at an angle, most of the
light rays bounce off the water
and produce a phenomenon
called “.linearly polarized light.”
This is more commonly known
as reflected glare.
Instead of the water appear
ing as a semi-transparent me
dium, the reflected glare gives
its surface a shiny, unpenetra
ble sheen much like the blind
ing reflections off a mirror. The
float on your line, your hook
under water, the approaching
fish — all disappear behind a
screen of harsh and annoying
brilliance.
It doesn’t have to be that
way.
That blinding sheen is elimi
nated from your view if you
are looking through polarizing
lenses. While ordinary sun
glasses only darken the glare,
the polarizing lenses in Cool-
Ray Polaroid Sunglasses wipe
out up to 98 per cent of it.
The molecules in Cool-Ray
Polaroid lenses are arranged,
so that they act like a row of
invisible. vertical bars. When
reflected glare, which vibrates
horizontally as it comes toward
your eyes, meets the invisible
molecular “picket fence,” it is
stopped dead.
Only the useful light reaches
your eyes, so you see clearly
and without strain. The annoy
ing sheen is eliminated and you
can actually see beneath the
surface of the water.
Choose your sunglasses with
care, and they may help boost
your catch. And, if the fish
just aren’t biting, at least you’ll
see comfortably.
Hmnrmsey zj*
V
[THE DISCOMFORTS OF AGE
IS
V
Not the least of the dis
comforts of the elderly
is an affliction called
Xeroderma (pronounced
Zoro-dmrma), an irri
tating skin condition
characterized by a
tight, dry itchy feeling.
Dermatologists (skin specialists)
have found a capful or two of a
therapeutic bath oil greatly helps
the condHien. But they also know
that some alderly people are en-
y dangered by the oiLfUm clinging to
» the bath tub, occasionally causing
accidents.
V/K.
p-
Now, there is a new
therapeutic bath oil
called Alpha-Keri
Spray which may be
applied after the bath
when the skin is still
wet. As effective as
soaking, it eliminates
the danger of slipping^
Non-prescription Al-
pha-K eri Spray is
available In pharma
cies.
IT'S A FACT!
FOREST CONSERVATION
•Jv Before the 20th cen-
fury, loggers chopped
*their way haphazard
ly through forests
leaving razed areas
in their wake. The
Vbillion acres of natu-
k *^al wilderness were
'.in danger of being
rseriously depleted
and ruined.
U#'
>4^
Theodore Roosevelt stopped this waste
by pushing a strong conservation policy
through Congress and purchasing land
for the national preserves. Today’s 750
million acres of woodlands are due to
such concerted public and private con
servation efforts.
TV/
•HA %
There are three methods for
preserving and maintaining
those forest resources. The
modem chain saw, as devel
oped and produced by Rem
ington Arms, aids substanti
ally in clearing land for new
jseediings, frequent pruning
and essential selective cutting.
z
i* i i • » • *
A-WW//
The American who is truly
concerned about the future of
his country sometimes wonders
if everything rsn't just “inevi
table.” No matter what he does
or how he voets the things
he objects to happen anyway.
Such is the case with the de
fense system of our Nation.
Millions of Americans are lit-
terally afraid for their lives—
because of the always-present
threat o fnuclear destruction at
the hands of our Communist
enemies. It is known that our
defense program under Secre
tary McNamara Is woefully in
adequate. How terribly lacking
it really is was described vivid
ly over a recent Manion Firum
broadcast by Mrs. Phyllis Sch-
lafly, the well-known author
and radio commentator. Here
is what Mrs. Schlafly told her
radio audience over broadcast
No. 617:
“For the past six years, the
McNamara policies have been
weakening our Nation’s defens
es by scrapping three-fourth of
our strategic bombers, aban
doning overseas missile and
bomber bases, scrapping three-
fourths of our multi-megaton
missiles, canceling Skybolt,
Pluto, Orion and other wonder
ful new U. S. weapons, and
refusing to produce the Nike
X, an advanced manned bomb
er.
“But Congress has broken
out in open revolt against these
McNamara policies. The House
Armed Services Committee un
animously issued a report
which was an across-the-board
indictment of McNamara’s stra
tegic disarmament of America.
The Committee recommended
appropriations for the Nike R
anti-missile system 'McNamara
has been blocking, for the fol
low-on strategic bomber he
has been trying to kill, for the
nuclear surface ships he has
been stolling, and for the mil
itary space developments he
has been delaying.
“ The Senate Preparedness
Committee ' Investigating Sub
committee produced evidence
of the ammunition and equip
ment shortages in Viet Nam
and made McNamara admit his
misleading figures on our
“combat ready” divisions.
Chairman John Stennis further
accused McNamara of making
an ‘unwarranted gamble with
our national security at a
time that we can ill afford it.’
Senator John McClellan has
announced he will soon reopen
hearings on the TFX contract
which McNamara awarded to
the highest bidder, instead of
j the lowest bidder.”
Mrs. Schlafly’s testimony
gives little comfort to the con-
J cerned Americans we are talk
ing about. What, after all, can
you do about the situation ?
McNamara is unelected. To
make matters worse, a Penta
gon survey reveals that 66 out
of 100 Americans don’t even
know that our defense program
is inadequate. They are under
the mistaken impression that
we already have an anti-missile
program.
But Mrs. Schlafly’s is not a
voice of doom. On her broad
cast, she gave great hope to
those who want to defend their
Nation against the enemy’s nu
clear designs. It is, she' said,
our courageous Congressmen
who are leading the way in the
effort to repudiate McNamara
and reverse his policies. It is up
to the American voters to back
them up in the 1966 electione
and to send more patriots to
Congress who will vote for a
strong military defense”.
i 4 s
l ' 'i
H r "... I
:li!l§
:V;V-
mxM-
Old Southern cooks who spent their days in the kitchen used
to be the only ones who held the secret of com bread. Now the
busiest homemaker can bake homemade com meal muffins, com
bread and even com fritters in the time it takes to set the table
and call the family to dinner.
Prepare com meal batter from self-rising com meal, refrigerate
it and then bake it... up to three days later. The leavening action
is held in check until the instant the batter meets the neat of
the oven or skillet.
The new leavening agent, a product of Monsanto Company, is
the modem baking secret. Hush puppies for dinner? Pancakes or
hoe cakes? With prepared batter in the refrigerator, they are
quick, easy and just as delectable as the old Southern cooks used
to make.
Corn Sticks or Corn Muffins (
; IV2 cups self-rising corn meal mix
or self-rising com meal
IVi cups milk
1 egg
y 2 tablespoons melted butter, shortening,
' or cooking oil
Sugar may be added to taste
Generously grease 12 com stick molds or muffin tins and place
in oven while preheating to 450°. Mix milk, egg and butter in a
two-quart bowl. Add self-rising com meal mix and blend until
smooth. Pour batter into a closable pitcher or other container for
use and storage. The batter can be kept in this type of container
and stored in the refrigerator for up to three days. This simplifies
the preparation of delicious com sticks over busy weekends and
during last minute dinner planning. Fill the preheated molds or
tins approximately % full with fresh or stored batter. Bake 15 to
20 minutes at 450® or until a golden crust forms. Serve hot with
plenty of butter and stand back!
INCREASED
PROTECTION
FOR YOUR SAVINGS has been made possible by a
recent act of Congress which raises the insurance pro
vided by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Cor
poration from $10,000 to $15,000 at no cost to the cus
tomer.
This added safety combined with our attractive
dividend rate make a savings account in our associa
tion one of the finest investments on the market today.
Add to your account regularly and watch it grow.
SArCTV
J F VOVA
fAVINOf
INSURED
Anticipated Dividend
Rate 4!/2% Effective
July 1st, 1966
lean
rAVTJVOS AJV2? LoAKT ASSOCIATION
AVINCS INSTITUTION TOUNDLO 103