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FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1944. THE NEWBERRY SUN PAGE FIVE Supervisor’s Report Third Quarter, 1943-1944 Davis Motor Company, Parts 51.92 R. M. Lominack Hardware, Hardware ~ 162.37 Melton Meadows, Ferryman at Shelton, salary II_I III 50.00 Dominick Oil Co., Gasoline ~~ ~~ 7.28 Lake’ Machine Shop, Machine Shop work 145.83 D. L. Laird, Repair of Radiator ZZZZZZZZZZZZ 25.00 Newberry Machine & Welding Co., Welding, etc.90.00 City Tire and Recapping Co., Recapping tires 23.60 Carolina Rim and Wheel Co., Materials and parts 61.44 Sunrise Auto Supply Co., Supplies • ” ~~ 40.25 Jeff Hunt Road Mch. Company, Repair parts, eac. ~~ 1087.04 Thomas and Howard, Nails ~ 51.80 Tom M. Fellers, salary $ 687.48 ^ da ,T d . 0il Co ^ of ^ J * Gasol >ne and repair parts__:__: 1059.10 C. B. Metis, salary _ 91.64 19 Grl ?*' er s- T »P so > 1 2.50 Brabham E. Bowers, salary " 91.64 °f k i . lumb « r 75.56 P. N. Abrams, salary _ -- 273.76 9 ty 1 F, “ ,n 5 S ^ at,on ’ Ga * ol ‘" e - — -i-—. 23.45 H. K. Boyd, salary and clerical help Z 742 50 Shealy Motor Company Battery and Repair parts 13.48 Ben F. Dawkins, salary 384.99 ' -. otor Company, Ring Gear and putting in same 4.00 SALARIES F. B. Dawkins, salary ^ : oov.uu 1 n ,, . .. _ , J. Ray Dawkins, salary 273.75 | s Gulf Station Gas a nd oil 48.59 330.00 I E. M. Lipscomb, Anti-freeze tester 2.25 Johnnie C. Johnson, Repair work Southern Bell Tel. and Tel. Co. 25.00 9.78 964.83 39.87 88.20 C. E. Hendrix, salary 600.00 Theresa Lightsey salary 330.00 , w p „ • , . „ _ . . j-- Rufus Livingston salary. 307.98 | * .£ 0 ’ Lumber 1 r Mol oUrv 549 69 ( ’U1t Oil Corporation, Anti-freeze __ _ H. J. Quattlebaum."salary - :::::::::::::::::::::::::::: 549:99,f°“t b Carolina Granite Co., Crushed Stone - Claude W. Sanders, salary 496.00 ! J, oh " so " McCrackin Company, Repairs for Mower, etc. 14.31 J. C. Sease, M. D., salary 439.98 J C- D. Coleman Co Fuel oil, gas and oil 281.42 14 SrvAwrmnn ualm-v 600.00 „ ' . Cal Wicker, Top Soil 14.10 Lugene^H^Spearma , . _ 99.99 i Tidewater Supply Co., repairs and supplies 271.63 . sa , y 4-in on Royal Tire Service. Inc., tires 40.00 ilt r wtAaC ry 330:00 3»™es e. shealy & Sons, we.d^:::__:::::::::::::::::: 5.25 ,, r ^ ,4 k ™ a „.' " 150 00 , Jenklns Automotive Parts Service, parts 45.66 s&err7aia-ry-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: 150.00 ^ Texas company, tractor ^1 J. E. Fagan, salary 330.00 O. H. Lominick, salary ’13-50 B. V. Chapman, salary 100 "® Leroy Wilson, salary ' i co on J. G. Watts, salary ! 1 53-0» W. D. Hatton, salary : °“-5“ H. B. Senn, M. D., salary John B. Dreher, salary E. Haskell Dominick, salary A. L. Dominick, salary “ • W. R. Koon, salary _ ^ Ralph Lancaster, salary' ioo.uu W. H. Davis & Son, repairs 10.45 ^WILD LIFE SOUTH CAROLINA IN | with PROF FQANKLIN 5HERMAN MCAD-ei-eMSON COU-t«C 'D«PT or ZOOLOOV Frank Sanders, freight and express 3.42 COUNTY HOME Newberry Electric Coops., Inc., 79.32 T. P. Adams, salary — 330.00 Cook, wages 7 5'"" Gilder & Weeks, drug? °.15 T. A. Williams, undertaker : 12-50 20.oo Ideal Super Market, groceries , Lominiok’s Drug Store, drugs l”-49 The Southern Cotton Oil Co., fertilizers i 7 “>.00 R. M. Lominack Hardware, hardware 33.54 Paysinger’s Super Market, groceries 7.0b Jas. R. Leavell Funeral Home 50.01 B. C. Moore & Sons, clothing _ T. P. Adams, mileage ‘U.zu . Epes _ Fitz(rei . ald papp,. Co., supplies 18.24 Shealy Motorcycle Co., parts 36.04 A. P. Pugh, lumber 137.50 G. R. Wicker, lumber 23.10 COURT COSTS Tom M. Fellers, official trips 157.25 Leroy Wilson, empanelling coroner’s juries and mileage 32.00 J. Ray Dawkins, jurors pay, vital statistics, inquests and magis trates courts 260.05 Nichols Studio, negatives and prints 10.50 OPERATING COSTS & MAINTENANCE Commissioners of Public Works, water and lights 248.51 Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co. 288.91 Farmers Ice & Fuel Co., coal and ice 763.60 Olon Price, Frigidaire repairs, motor and gas 24.73 R. M. Lominack Hardware, hardware 36.09 Lake’s Machine Shop, soldering water cooler 1.50 Reamer Ice & Fuel Co., stoker coal 50.22 Belk-Beard Co., cheese cloth 1.50 Clarence T. Summer, Inc., coal and hardware 318.40 C. D. Coleman Co., light bulbs 11.35 Ben T. Bushardt, furniture 38.15 L. A. Wilson & Son, lumber and plumbing at jail 23.48 Thomas & Howard, groceries Spartan Grain & Mill Company .sacks for grain 133.34 i pitch Dustdown Co., paper towels 1.20 6.00 OfJctI belli VJI > I W/ ~ 1A QQ Belk-Beard Company, clothing and shoes Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co. Clarence T. Summer, Inc., syrup G. V. Clamp’s “M” System, rice Commissioners of Public Works Snelson Seed Company, seeds — —- - Columbia Farm Equipment Company, repairs for grain drill Epting Distributing Company, seed oats '” J. Drake Edens, meats 6.50 5.70 4.75 3.00 10.65 43.70 L. G. W’right, Gulfspray and deodorant blocks 45.00 Royal Mfg. Co., paper towels 18.88 ( Phoenix Oil Company, deoderant and sweeping compound Sam Beam, installing condenser on Frigidaire at the jail TIGER-BEETLES Have you walked along a bare path and seen a small hole in the ground suddenly appear a yard in front of you? And did you insert a weed stem gently into the hole for a few inches? Did it wiggle so you knew something was at the other end? And then did you quickly jerk up the straw and thus toss out a somewhat humpbacked “worm” or grub about three-fourths of an inch long? j.nat was the larva (grub stage) of a Tiger beetle, and was one of the 25 known forms to inhabit this State. That grub or worm is preda ceous, feeding on such small insects. It constructs that burrow as its home. When hungry it comes to the top and lies with head plugging the hole and jaws open, awaiting a vic tim. At the approach of a large animal (like you) it drops down the burrow (whereupon the hole “ap pears”), but if a small insect comes within reach it will sieze it, drag it into the burrow and devour it. This larva is hump-backed, and on the hump are several little hook ed spines; if it happens to sieze an insect large enough to possibly drag it from its burrow it will anchor its«4f by sticking these hooks into the sides of the burrow, thus gain ing a moment to let go its hold. That’s why you fail to “catch*’ the worm unless you jerk the straw out quickly. When that larv a is full grown it changes into a pupa (still in the burrow) and from this it changes into the adult Tiger beetle, so named because the beetle is also preda ceous, and, also, the adults are us ually marked with spots or stripes. These adult Tiger beetles live along paths, roadsides, on sand-bars, 1 clear areas, etc., and are one half to one inch long, and will often fly up and ahead for a few yards and alight, usually facing you. The adults of some species are ! brilliantly colored, green, bronze, | or coppery, perhaps bordered with brown or blackish but show bronzy under lens, and usually have some marks or dots of white. Several species near our coasts have much white, matching the white sand of the areas where they live. All are rather long-legged, gracefully form ed, and of active, alert habits. They are a favorite group among collect ors of insects. They feed upon in sects in general and are considered to be somewhat beneficial. P. EVANS BOWERS Pink Evans Bowers, 61, died early Sunday at the Newberry County hospital after an illness of several weeks. He was a prominent farmr in Silvarstreet section of the county, a member of the Lutheran church of Silverstreet and on the church coun cil. Funeral services were held Mon day afternoon at 5 o’clock from the Lutheran church with Rev. P. D. Risinger in charge, assisted by Rev. J. B. Harman, interment was in the church cemetery. Members of the church council served as honorary pallbearers. Active pallbearers were Otto Nichols, Bradley Bowers, Pat Bowers, J. V. Havird, Richard Neel, and Ed Werts. Nieces served as flower girls. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Nancy Estelle Dominick Bowers, and the following children: Pink E. Bowers, Jr., Silverstreet, and James A. Bowers, in the U. S. Army over seas; his mother, Mrs. Bessie Bow ers, and the following brothers and sister: A. F. and W. C. Bowens; Mrs. S. P. Hawkins, all of Pros perity, and one grandchild. AT FIRST SIGN OF A or purple; others are dull 1 USE 666 TABLET'.' ".YE. NOSE DROPS Perkins Mattress Co., renovating mattresses 33.75 C. I. Boozer, installing lights labor and materials 15.50 BOOKS, STATIONERY. POSTAGE AND PRINTING Gilder & Weeks Co., office supplies r, 4 " -8 ® The Newberry Sun, printing, advertising, tax notices 282.12 J. Ray Dawkins. Treas., box rent, stamps , 21.75 The Newberry Observer, supplies, printing, advertising 263.10 Ruth Longshore, stamps 5.00 C. D. Gilliam, salary oor on ; Nichols Studio, photographic work _ 14.00 L. V. Bushardt, salary ork on Burroughs Adding Machine Co., repairs, parts 57.20 ^ — salary Monroe Calculating Machine Co., purchase price of calculator and i maintenance 407.00 CHAINGANG M. M. Longshore, salary 30o!oO 55.50 (The Rembert Co., disinfectant, sweeping compound 52.50 5-22 P- N. Abrams, Auditor, box rent and stamps 10.75 People’s Book Store, office supplies 9.25 Kee Lox Mfg. Co., typewriter ribbons 12.38 3.42 459.57 15.00 11.00 7.66 262.50 247.50 231.00 7.94 25.00 23.07 6.00 6.05 37.98 7.45 Kenneth N. Baker, typewriter repairs Claude Wilson C. M. Wicker, salary J. H. Boozer, salary D. C. Wilson, salary William Stuck, salary Will Kunkle, salary Gilder & Weeks, drugs Ideal Super Market, groceries Lominick’s Drug Store, drugs Dr. J. R. Boozer, dental work J. L. Long, groceries Paysinger’s Super Market, groceries Johnson Hagood Clary, clothing .. i —- ~ , . ... Georgia-Carolina Oil Co., disenfectant ’O.&u tr ai ne es leaving at the end of this M. Citron & Co., Inc., stripes - semester, a barbecue, dance, and J. H. Summer, clothing formal military review with visiting Newbery Electric Coops., Inc. officers in attendance is planned for Henry Brown, work on stockade 2-5' 1 the evening of Friday, 9 June. Dennis Shoe Shop, shoe repairs 8.95 | Opening the program for the day The Newberry Packing Co., lard 89.25 the review will begin at 1646 in the Thomas & Howard Co., groceries 315.68 afternoon on the athletics field with Clarence T. Summer, Inc., plumbing repairs 72.56 Captain R. C. Needham, head of the McCrorv’s 5 & 10 Cents Store, dishes L40 Navy ' rogram at the University of G. V. Clamp’s “M” System,, rice pr®- Frank Sanders, express and freight bills The R. L. Brvan Co., books, binders, fillers, supplies Southern Ribbon & Carbon Co., ribbon and carbon paper C. E. Hendrix. Supt., box rent, postage stamps Tom M. FeYers, box rent, postage stamps 29.60 Keys Printing Co., office supplies, books, fillers 225.14 Remington Rand, Inc., typewriter ribbons l.^ Walker, Evans & Cogswell Co., supplies, pencils 83.66 REVIEW, BARBECUE, DANCE FEATURE OF NEWBERRY NAVY V-12 UNIT As a farewell celebration for the POST MORTEMS AND LUNACY AND CORONERS INQUEST Mamie B. Hawkins, preparing lunacy papers, taking and transcrib ing _ _ _ _ 50.00 Dr. H. B. Senn ZZZZZ::: I 41.00 J. Ray Dawkins, Treas., Coroner’s inquest jury bills 16.00 Dr. J. E. Grant 5.00 SHERIFF’S DIETING Tom M. Fellers, sheriff’s dieting 478.00 u. v. » 1 M -System,. rice — — — — — — ——— — — — — — —- , 0 . .... ,.. ... .. Newbery Drug Co Inc., drugs 4.85 visit,n^ofW T. Roy Sumer, clothing T. M. Sanders, shoes ’ Southern Shoe Store, Inc., shoes Mrs. J. W. White, plumbing: work — ° Cromer’s Shoe Shop, repairing shoes R. H. Anderson-, shoes Roddey’s Cafe, meals ___ ____—-------r.--- Eugene H. Spearman, expenses conveying John Byrd to DUKe nosp MISCELLANEOUS CONTINGENT 23.75 11.10 27.85 Nora Lee Dawkins, salary Claire Sligh, salary and mileage Gladvs Ina McDowell, stenographic work w P. B. Ezell, miscellaneous expenses cedure for the review will follow the plan of the event hel d20 May. Following the military perfor mance trainees and civilians residing on the campus will be treated to a big barbecue by the Navy at Mar garet Hunter Park beginning at 1830. Later in the evening the Navy will give a dance in the gym. The V-12 dance band will make its final appearance at the event. The entire personnel of the College and V-12 Unit are invited to attend. The public is cordially invited to Ruth Longshore, stamps be present at the military review on _ __ v—* ■ v t . 1 % f w L . 1 1.1 o 4" 1 /I e* £ A • A ^ Y1 _ J. E. Fagan, 4H club work " J. L. Welling, Rationing Board expenses H. J. Quattlebaum, finger print expenses Laura Maney Whitney, salary T. E. Keitt, salary 495.00 E. M. Suber, salary 70'aq Eugenia Epps, salary — _ _ ____ A. J. Bowers, Jr., rent for Rationing Board and bond prem. Bowers Insurance Agency, prem. on ins. for Treas. against burglary Gilder & Weeks, supplies County Health.Unit •_ Western Auto Assoc. Store, batteries E. Haskell Dominick, office rent A. F. Shealy, towing in car Tom M. Fellers, license motorcycle and gas, oil and repairs car Newberry Ins. & Realty Co., premiums on bonds of.county officers L. C. Boone, Sec. & Treas., membership dues .' 25.00 South Carolina Peniteptiaryi prisoners board 12.75 Blair J. Rankin, Rationing Board expenses 30.00 Y. T. Diek^rt, Rationing Board expenses 30.00 Edgar Paysihger, Rationing Board expenses' i 30.00 L. A. Shealy’s Garage, battery, spark plugs and saddlebags 29.80 P. E. Scott, rent County Agent’s office 75.00 Security Loan & Inv. Co., rent Welfare office and ins. on cars J. Ray Dawkins, Co. Treas., vita! statistics, juries, inquests Newberry County Public Welfare office, relief in the county the athletics field at 1645 (4:45 p. m.). W. O. RUFF MEMBER OF FORCE 175.00 55.00 6.70 4.98 20.00 7.50 227.10 302.50 William O. Ruff has been elected a member of the Newberry police force, filling the vacancy made by the resignation of K. L. Martin, who resigned to accept a position with the S. C. State Forestry. Mr. Ruff, who was a member of the Fort Jackson Fire Department until a few weeks ago, began his police duties on June 1. 190.00 470.05 165.00 Boy. Scouts of America 75.00 Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co. 4.90 S. C. Youne. .Board of Registration 110.00 J. Alonzo Kinard, Board of Registration 110.00 B. D. M. Livingston, Board of Registration 110.00 J. C. Neel, elevator service 24.00 ROAD MAINTENANCE F. M. Shealy, lumber _ _ I 710.69 Prosperity Lumber Company, lumber 3133.07 Geo. W. Senn, salary 375.00 ,T. c. Baxter, salary 330.00 D. C. Pnearman, salary 247.50 ’V W. Kinard. salary ' ; 247.50 Labor, wages 4352 on Smith Motor Company, parts 64.21 Lominack’s Hardware. Inc., hardware 88.43 Scott's Auto Supply Co., Parts and Supplies 182.02 You Can GetQuick Relief From Tired Eyes MAKE THIS SIMPLE TEST TODAY /75zeKO#om ON THE HOME FRONT, TOO! Eyas Overworked 7 Just put two drops of Murine in each eye. Right away it start! to cleanse and soothe. You get— Quick Relief! All 7 Murine ingredi ents wash away irritation. Your eyes ieel refreshed. Murine helps thousands — let it help you, too. T HIS is IT! This is the big push you have been waiting for! This is the "zero hour”! 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