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IDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1548 THE NEWBERRY SUN PROSPERITY Friday afternoon Mrs. P. W. Smith was hostess to the first meeting of the Literary Sorosis since the summer vacation. Mrs. J. C. Taylor of Charles ton and Miss Grace Sesse were guests of the club. “Other Peoples’ Lives” is thq subject for study for the year. The subject for the afternoon was “The Many-sided Presi dent Roosevelt,” interestingly given by Miss Blanche ICibler and Mrs. Smith. During the social hour a salad plate with iced tea was served, the color scheme of green and yellow making the plate very attractive as well as REGISTER NOW For JUVENILE PIANO CLASSES /• Newberry College Piano Instructors: Miss Mary Fowler, M.M. William Hurt, M.A. Those interested in piano lessons phone MILTON MOORE at 363-W palatable. The Missionary Society cir cles of Grace Church will meet Friday afternoon at 3:00 as follws: Gertrude Leonard with Mrs. W/ L. Mathis, Sr.; Lillia Kyzer with M!rs. Forrest Shea- ly: and Anna Kugler with Mrs. Wilbur Taylor. Kenneth Epting of Varnville and Mrs. Voight Epting of Estill spent the weekend in Prosper ity with relatives. Miss Dorothy Shealy spent the weekend in Lockhart as the guest of Miss S4ra James. Mrs. Minnie Kibler had with her Sunday Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Milstead and son, and Mr. and M!rs. Alvin Kibler and son. Miss Sara Mae McFerren left this week for Great Falls, where she is a member of the school faculty. Weekend guests of Mrs.A. B. Hunt were Mr. and Mrs. James Hunt and their two daughters, Janet and oan, of Spartanburg. Mrs. Hunt also had with her several days last week Mrs. J. H. Morris of Newberry. Dennis Bedenbaugh is attend ing the University of South Carolina this year. M. P. Connelly, Sr. and Mar ion P. Jr. of Panama City, Fla. visited relatives in Prosperity las*, week. Marion is staying with his aunt. Mrs. G. S. Win- gard and will attend Newberry College. (Miss Miriam Bellentine has gone to Wtest Columbia, where she will teach home economics in the Brookland-Cayce school. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hill and their son. Frank, Jr. spent Thursday in Charlotte. Misses Jeannie Ballentine and Nelle Harmon will leave Satur day for Winthrop College. Miss Rosa Mae Mitchell has returned to Piedmont where she will teach again this ses sion Frank McMillan III of Latta. arrived Saturday to spend the winter with his grandmother, Mrs. L. W. Harmon and attend Newberry College. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde E. Beden baugh of Kingstree spent the weekend with thir parents. Mrs. J. C. Taylor of Charles ton is visiting her sister, Mrs. J. Frank Browne. Miss ' Patricia Luther will leave this weekend for the Wo man’s College of the U. N. C. at Greensboro. Miss Luther is in the senior class. Mrs. J. C. Counts returned home Monday from the Colum bia Hospital where she had been under treatment. Mr. and Mrs. Heyward Sing- ley and their two doughters, Anna Kay and Denby, and Tommy Thomas of Columbia were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Luther. (Spending the weekend with Mrs. Jacob S. Wheeler were Mr. and Mrs. Murray Hughes Jr., and Murray HI of Lancas ter. Mir. and Mrs. Earl Livingston and their three children of Laurens spent Saturday tyith their parents Mr. and Mrs. B. M. D. Livingston. The Rev. Alxander of Ora was the guest preacher of the A. R. P. Church last Sunday. The Newberry College group from Prosperity who will com mute to college every day in cludes Missfs Clare Chappell, Jennylee Counts, Martha Counts. Maxine Shealy, Helen Sandford and Betty Ross; Mar ion Connelly, Grady Wingard, Carroll Connelly, Bennie Be denbaugh. Charles Dawkins, Roger Taylor, James Mills, and Billy Leaphart. By 7W Kestmg Many an angler has seen his favorite stream ruined by ero sion or pollution. Throughout the country thousands of small- mouth streams have gone to cats and carp. But those chan nel cats are the ace in the hole that offers hope to angling folk. He gives some pretty fair sport for the man who knows how to take him. according to Outdoor writer Lee Yeager. Playing Old Whisker’s game calls for radical departures from standard angling tech niques. (Methods, tackle, bait, hours . . . are all different. Instead of the usual 10- or 12-foot cane pole, Yeager uses a 5%-foot tubular rod. Rest of his equipment is the standard strong casting line and a 2-0 hook. Channel cats will occasional ly strike at artificial gnats or nymphs, particularly at ni ’ ASA r. BOWERS Asa Furman Bowers, 57. died last Friday at the Providence hospital at Columbia. He had been in ill health for several years. Mr. Bowers was born and reared in the St. Luke’s section of the county and was the son of the late Nathan Evans and a prosperous farmer and a de voted and faithful member of St. Luke's Lutheran church. Funeral services were held Sunday afternoon from St. Luke’s Lutheran church con ducted by the Rev. C. E. Sea- strunk. the Rev. W. D. Halti- wanger and Dr. J. B. Harman. He is survived by his widow Mrs Frances Robertha Cromer Bowers and the following children. William P. Bowers, Mrs. Harvey Lake, Mrs. Eu gene Bowers, all of prosperity; Mrs. Ernest Kinard of Ppmaria. Mrs. Grover Lawe of Columbia, Mrs Ira Dominick of New berry and Miss Shirley Bowers of Prosperity. ght. bait This Advertisement Sponsored By The Following: South Carolina National Bank Sears, Roebuck and Co. Purcells £Your Friendly Banker^} Battery C, 107 AAA AW Bn. pays off. The cat’s submarine shape and bottom-feeding habits make him the perfect crawdad, dam and diving bug catcher. You’ll have better luck fish ing after sundown. The chan nel cat is called by some “the owl of the river.” They can be taken in the daytime too, but you have to take the bait to them. Never waste time in riffles during daylight hours unless they are deep and have cover in the form of boulders or sunken logs. Wade slowly downstream, drifting your bait through the deeper holes. Work carefully around logs, stivmps and steep, overhanging banks; pools be low dams and falls are often good. Many short, quiet casts will aid in working likely spots where the current will not drift the baited hook. Channel cats feed avidly through the late spring, sum mer and fall. There are those who swear the only way to catch them is with blood bait. However, this is difficult to keep on the hook, particularly in currents. And then there is dough bait. Most' are mixtures of wheat flour and corn meal, flavoring added. Some use cheese; others clam juice. The kneade ovals, an inch long, are dropped into boiling water, which serves to make them rubbery and tough. You can cast or dunk them in the swiftest current with no fear that they will come off the hook. Cats like it fine. Business Opportunity — Inter ests away from Newberry nec essitates owners Newberry Laundromat to- leave Newberry. Owners offering this progress ive business for immediate sale to person or persons, preferably local, who will continue its development to the maximum of its potential, which is con siderable. Equipment in ex cellent condition. Plenty of operating supplies on hand. Reasonably priced. If inter ested contact owners at 901 Main street. NEED MONEY? SEE US FOR A QUICK CONFIDENTIAL PERSONAL LOAN, AT . . . 1307 Friend St. HANDY FINANCE 60. WANTED — Scrap Iron, brass. copper, lead, zinc, aluminum pewter, old batteries, radiators, all kinds of rags, old waste cot ton. mattress cotton. We also have n nioa line of groceries. W. H. STERUNG, VINCENT ST. BLDG. SUPPLIES — Rock lathe, ceiling tile 16 x 32. Bldg. Board, Asbestos Siding and Shingles, Asphalt shingles No. 210 any color. Fir panel doors and windows. French doors, glass doors. We deliver truck load lots. Get our prices before you buy. Phone 14-J. ML W„ Crouch & Son, Johnston, S. C. 10-3tc NOTICE TO CREDITORS All persons having claims against the estate of John C. Goggans deceased, are hereby notified to file the same, d u ly verified, with the undersigned, and those indebted to said i tate will please make payment likewise. Sarah Houseal Goggans Executrix September 2, 1948. W. M. BRAZEL Funeral services for William McKinley Brazel, 59, prominent farmer and merchant of the Tranwood community, who died Thursday night at the county hospital from injuries received late Friday afternoon when a tractor with which he was hauling logs on his farm over turned and pinned him under neath, were held Saturday morning at Bush River Bap tist church with the Rev. A. G. Todd and the Rev. M. A. Bry ant officiating. Interment was in the church cemetery. His second marriage was to Mrs. Leona Tinsley Hoxwprth of Wisconsin, who survives with the following step-sons, Pyt. Fred Hoxworth of Wisconsin. Fred Hoxworth of Fgtt Bragg, Donald, David and Eugene Hox worth, all of Newberry. Also surviving are seven grand children. FEDERAL Offers You Something GOOD... An investment where your dollars work consistently for you. Our last dividend was 3%, and any money deposited by the 10th of any month will draw the dividend from the first of the month.- In addition your dollars have insured safety up to $5000 in each account and are available when the need arises. Although you may deposit any amount at any time, by making regular deposits you will write a story which some day you’ll enjoy reading. Remember, a year from today you will have twelve times the amount you deposit each month—or over fifty times the amount you deposit each week. < . v -,vy NEWBERRY FEDERAL Savings & Loan Association 1207 COLLEGE STREET PHONE 246 NEWBERRY, S. C. Each Savings Account Insured up to $5000 by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation ' V* The WOODS keep your food Paper is the answer—waxed paper, paper board, cellophane, glassine and wet strength paper—all made from wood. And paper is only one of many necessities for which we depend on forests. Everyday, science is finding new uses for the products of our trees. Our forests are one natural resource we can’t do without. Fortunately for America, we need never be without forests. Trees, because they grow, can be replaced. Today, growers of trees, called "tree farmers”, are raising trees for use. They are making a profitable business of forest management. The forest industries of America are encouraging "tree farming” as a method of assuring tomorrow’s wood supply—as a practical way of assuring the economic future of forest dependent communities. I We cAre Qrowing, T)ree& Fairfield Forest Products Co. Newberry, S. C. :sa