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FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1949 THE NEWBERRY SUN * ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft 8- 3 ft ft JOHNNIE’S News and DoNut Stand XKXWK'CW'C’CX'CXXXXX'OCXV’CX'CXX'CCW*™ 1 **'*** i Toxirirtl WIT'. Gvery good wish for your happiness ot this joyous Christmas Season And a sincere thanks for your courtesies in the past twelve months. , \ Pete’s Grocery Pete Parrott Harman-Hayes St. Mark’s Lutheran church was the scene of a wedding of beauty yesterday afternoon at •1 o’clock, when Miss Margaret Aleen Harman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Calhoun Har man of Charlotte, became the bride of Francis Reid Hayes, son of Mrs. Robert Griffith Hayes of Charlotte and the late Mr. Hayes. Dr. Walter B. Freed officiated assisted by Dr. Warner L. Hall, pastor of the Second branch of Covenant Presbyterian church. The double ring ceremony was used. The church was decorated with Baskets of white gladioli agah.st a background of palms, southern smilax, and lace fern interspersed by seven-branched candelabra holding white tapers. Mrs. J. M. Howie, organist, played “Etude in E,” Chopin, ‘Calm as the Night,’’ Bohn, “In vocation,” Mailly, “I Love Thee,” Grieg, “To An Evening Star,” Wagner, and Robert Rhyne, vocalist, sang “I Love You Truly,” Bond, and “O Per fect Love,” Barnby. The wed ding march from “Lohengrin,” by Wagner was played for the processional, and Mendelssohn's march from “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” was used as the recessional. The bride was given in mar riage by her father, and Robert Griffith Hayes of Concord, bro ther of the bridegroom, was best man. Ushers were Robert Parks Baynard, Alan Wilson Hayes, brother of the bride groom, Calvin Garnett Greear of Charlotte and Farmville, Va., and John Henry Sadler of Greenville, cousin of the bride groom. Acolytes were Conrad Grimes and Carl Thomas. The bride wore a gown of pale ivory satin fashioned with a shallow bateau neckline with scalloped edge embroidered in seed pearls and crystals, and epaulettes of embroidery. The bodice was fitted, the long sleeves ended in points over the hands, and the bouffant skirt ended in a bell-shaped train. Her tiered veil of im ported silk illusion was worn with a coronet of twisted satin entwined with pearls. Her only ornament was a cameo on a single strand of pearls which had belonged to her maternal great-grandmother. She carried a cascade bouquet of white roses, split carnations and an orchid. Mrs. Henry Meadors Young, Jr., of Clinton, S. C., matron of honor and only sister of the bride, wore a white satin dress fashioned with a fitted bodice, tulip neckline, three-quarter length sleeves, and a full skirt of net. She carried a wedding ring design of American Beau ty roses tied with matching rib bon. Linda Cousins, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Cousins of Newberry, S. C., and flower girl, wore a dress identical to that of the matron of honor and carried a miniature bouquet of the same design. The mother of the bride wore a mauve crepe dress trimmed with amythest iridescent beads and a purple orchid shoulder bouquet. The bridegroom’s mo ther wore a grey costume and a purple orchid shoulder bou quet. The couple greeted their guests in the vestibule of the church. Later they left for a wedding trip through Florida. For traveling the bride wore a costume of navy, with navy and white accessories and a white orchid shoulder bouquet. They will return to Charlotte and will be at home at 2715 Haverford place. The bride attended the schools of Newberry, S. C., and Newberry college, where she was a member of the Beta Sig ma Phi, social sorority. The bridegroom attended the Charlotte city schools and Pres byterian college of Clinton, S. C., where he was a member of Kappa Alpha fraternity. He served three and one-half years in the air forces. Out-of-town guests included Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Shealy and Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Shealy, Columbia, S, C.; Dr. Ralph Sad ler, Whiteville; Mr. and Mrs, W. L. Harman, Mr. and Mrs. F, G. Harman, Mrs. J. P. Schumpert, Saluda, S. C.; Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Hayes, Con cord; Mr. and Mrs. Sadler Hayes. New York; Dr. and Mrs. J. B. Harman, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Reeder, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Cousins, Newberry, S. C.; Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Gamble, Green- ELGIN NOEL NOEL The greatest joy of Christmas is giving- . . . Don’t forget to send your loved ones blooming plants to enjoy in their home and a lovely corsage to wear to CHURCH on Christmas Day. VERNA and HAL KOHN Only ELGIN has the Dura Power Mainspring* tf ~Sfeaev~ mmL ?•«••• fiOeJ trmfce. 937.50 Elgin DtLmx*. 17Jewel*. 10K natural gM/UMcu**. GoUfilUdband $OOM Lady Elgin. 19 JeumU. 14K natural gddJUUd earn. High try aal. #67.50 Other* m* low a* 939.75 including the Federal Tea Fennell's Jewelry Store FEATHER PINNER Among unusual jobs, we find that a feather pin ner is the fellow who removes the pin feathers from picked chickens. An insurance agent is the fellow who removes the risk from your shoulders, when you insure your property. PURCELLS "YOUR PRIVATE BANKER" Phone 197 $6000 Elertrolux is paying over $6000 this year to the young man who will teach a worthy dependable mar ried man with serious ambition, for sales, service dep’t of large mfgr. You will get practical sales ed ucation (not theory) that no one can ever take away from you. Must oe able to stand strictest investiga tion. Three character rers. and car required. For personal interview right away, full time job open now. Write details to P. O. Box 5112, Columbia, S. C. By Ted Kjettmg Our wild sheep herds are not in very healthy shape from the standpoint of numbers. After years of protection, their num bers still decrease. Game man agement men are puzzled about what to do. It is a grand ani mal, living among grand sur roundings, and we hope some one finds the solution soon. The Rocky Mountain bighorn ranges through the Rockies, from British Columbia and Al berta, southward through Mon tana, Wyoming and into the Colorado Rockies and New Mexico. Subspecies of the big- horntype shee extend into Mex ico; these include several kinds of so-called desert sheep. The true Rocky Mountain big horn is a sturdily built animal, sure-footed, fleet — even in laces where a man must pick is way with care .— keen of sight, hearing and smell. He is wary, but not quite enough, or his numbers would not be dwindling. He is still found in good abundance In British Columbia and Alberta, and It is there that the hunter must go to experi ence the supreme thrill of big horn hunting. A few are still hunted in Wyoming, but only under special permits. They will eat about any kind of vegetation. In tne summer they feed on th e short grass and mosses of the high slopes; P 1 h: in the winter they retire to the valleys and meadows. Here mountain lions, wolves and coy otes prey on them, and in the summer when they are on the high peaks, eagles are said to take their toll of the young lambs. This last is disputed by some naturalists, but wildlife artist and hunter Walter J. Wilwerding writes this: “All I can say is wherever I have found flocks of bighorn ewes and lambs, I have also seen eagles soaring close over head. It is hard to believe that with hungry young in a nest, a golden eagle will pass up a lamb to go hunting' further for marmots and ground squirrels.” The lambs, often twins, are born on the most awful and precipitous peaks, usually from the middle of May to late June. Rarely will you find a ram with the ewes and lambs. Usu ally they band toether and roam by themselves, wanting nothing to do with nursery troubles. / The wild sheep’s life is said to be about 12 years. If a ram succeeds in keeping his head that long, his horns will grow into a double spiral, which is rarely seen these days. The growth rings on the horns are quite distinct, and accurately show his age. wood, S. C.; Rev. and Mrs, Le roy Trexler, Mr. and Mrs. Wil liam Coltrane Cannon, Concord; Mr. and Mrs. W- G. Reeder, Florence, S. C.; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wilson Sadler, Charles ton, S. C.; Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Younb, Jr., and daughter, Carol. Clinton, S. C.; and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Conner of Win ston-Salem. —Charlotte Observer, Dec. 18. For a BUY GAS IN MORNING Since gasoline expands as the temperature rises, a gallon has less actual fuel in hot weather. This means you get more gaso line per gallon in winter than in summer, and you even make a real saving if you buy gaso line in" the morning rather than afternoon. CHRISTMAS GIFTS The best thing to give to your enemy is forgiveness; to your opponent, tolerance; to a friend, your heart; to your child, a good example; to your father, deference; to your mo ther, conduct that will make her proud of you; to yourself, respect; to all men, charity. COTTON GROWERS APPROVE QUOTAS Washington, Dec, 15.—Partial returns for half the states in to day’s farmer referendum gave a comfortable margin for a gov ernment proposal to put pro duction controls on cotton. With 16 of the 20 cotton-growing states reporting, unofficial re turns gave 455,045 votes for control and 51,056 against. This was a majority of about 90 per cent for the proposal. The favorable vote of at least two-thirds those voting is re quired. States reporting included Vir ginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Tennessee, Kentucky, Illinois, Kansas, Texas, Arkansas, Missi ssippi, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Missouri and Arizona. Only one state—Illinois—reported a majority of less than two thirds. Incomplete returns from 152 of 153 of Georgia’s cotton pro ducing counties showed 42,392 for and 5,795 against. South Carolina growers ap- oroved quotas by a 46,439 to 3,297 vote. At stake was a department proposal that marketing quotas be set up on the 1950 crop as a means of preventing production of unmarketable supplies. The proposal was advanced because current supplies are far in ex cess of prospective market needs. Quotas require the affirma tive vote of at least two-thirds of the farmers voting. Official* estimated that more than 1,750,- 000 persons in the nation’s 20 cotton-growing states were eli gible to vote. Reports of the unfavorable weather and light vote in the Southeast were disturbing to department officials. They held the view that the larger the vote, the greater would be the chance of the control program winning. The quota program has run into sharp opposition in some parts of the Southwest, particu larly in the Western half of the belt—from Texas into Califor nia. There have been com plaints that the larger farms have been asked to take sharp cuts in production, Government officials anxious ly awaited outcome of the ref erendum. They recognized that defeat of the quotas could easi ly bring about a selling wave in the cotton and other farm commodities market tomorrow. Rejection of quotas would re quire the department to cut the price support on the 1950 cotton crop from 90 per cent to 50 per cont, or from about 28 cents to about 15 cents a pound. hieres Hoping You Always Have a Merry Christmas We con think of no more fitting expression to soy whot we wont to soy, thon— MERRY CHRISTMAS It's o time worn phrase, it's true, but somehow, to our way of thinking, these two words stand for the true spirit of the occasion. A 5 ufi » rl FTI 5 ^ 3 ; Home Furniture Co. ft y ft y * y ft At this season of Peace and Good Will, we cannot fail to try to express ot least in some measure our appreciation to those whom we hove served during the past year. We sincerely hope you will enjoy the very best Christmas ever. So here's wishing you oil the joys of Christmas and o New Year of true happiness. May the com ing year reword you with the fullest amount of CARTER’S 1 Flowers & Gifts kkkkkkkkkkkpkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkl Kkkkk NOTICE FOR BIDS Office of The Newberry County Board of Com missioners, Newberry, S. C., will receive sealed bids by 10:00 o'clock A.M. Tuesday January 3rd, 1950 for the following items to be used by Newberry County during the fonths of January, February and March 1950. Lumber, nails, tires, concrete pipe, repair parts, groceries, clothing (convice), janitor supplies, office supplies, books and equipment. Complete specifications on special forms may be obtained at the Supervisor’s office in the Newberry County Court House. All bids must be submitted on forms furnished. The right being reserved to reject any and all bids. S. W. SHEALY, Supervisor. goob totll totoarb men "Peace on earth .. . good will toward men.” . . . ia again repeated in every atory and »ong of all Christendom. Once more it will he our privilege to tell the beautiful story of the Nativity, and now more than ever, wa need to weigh the implications of tht Chusl- mu. message. LOMINICK’S Drug Store fowl CASE DEALER WISHES YOU A Cifristmas AND A VERY HAPPY AND IJrospemts J. Ellerbe Sease CASE Farm Machinery kkkkkkkkitkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk: