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Page Eight THE NEWBEBRY SUN FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1252 Miss South Carolina Is Typical Southern Beauty yXfjVJSs-' -S-sSs .'SSSS- • • wwmw'/M Harriet Brown Bride Of Chappells Man MISS SOUTH CAROLINA—Sarah Hall, of Anderson, has been named “Miss South Carolina" for Charleston’s Azalea Festival April 30-May 3. The appointment was made by Mrs. James F. Byrnes, wife of South Carolina’s governor. Miss Hall will act as official representative of the state at the Festival. She is the 17-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wilton E. Hall. Her father is a former U. 8. Senator and is owner of the Anderson news papers, Radio Stations WAIM and WCAC, and the Palmetto Radio Network. As “Miss South Carolina," Miss Hall succeeds Mary Risher of Bamberg, who was appointed for the 1950 Azalea Festival by former governor J. Strom Thurmond. Patricia Paris Maid of Honor At Marriage of Saluda Girl ■Marked by lovely simplicity was the wedding of Miss Charlotte Rankin and Norman Jerome Crouch, which took place at 4 p.m., April 4, in Zoar Methodist church. The Rev. John A. Hipp of Startex, cousin of the bride, performed the double ring cere mony, assisted by the Rev. F. H. Bouknight, pastor of the church. Tall floor baskets of spirea, white gladioli and iris against a background of fern and ivy, seven branched candelabra with tall white tapers decorated the church. J. Herman Crawford, Willie Shaw, William Jay and James Williams, all of Saluda were the ushers. Marion L. Crouch, broth er of the bridegroom was best man. Miss Vvian Ellis, pianist, and Miss Beth Force, soloist, furnish ed the wedding music. Miss Patricia Faris, cousin of the bride, was maid of honor and the only attendant. She wore a light blue satin gown with fitted bodice, with low scalloped neck line, a full gathered skirt and lace mitts. * Her headdress was a shoulder length net veil attached to a blue satin tiara. She carr ried yellow gladioli tied with matching ribbon. The bride, given in marriage WANT ADS by her father, was lovely in her wedding gown of white satin, de signed with fitted bodice with small scallops on the yoke of tulle and on the 'short sleeves. Small satin covered buttons were K. used down the back of the bodice. Three rows of scallops at the hip line gave a bustle effect to the full skirt which ended in a train. She wore long mitts. Her finger tip veil of illusion fell from a cornet of seeded pearl orange blossoms. She carried a satin covered Bible topped with a white orchid showered with sat in ribbon. Miss Harriet Brown of New berry became the bride of Ralph Boazman of Chappells and New berry in a lovely candlelight cere mony Saturday evening, April 19, at eight o’clock in the As sociate Reformed Presbyterian church of Newberry. The Rev. P. L. Grier, pastor of the church performed the double ring cere mony in the presence of a large gathering of relatives and friends. The vows were spoken before a background of white , with arrangements of palms, smi- lax, magnolia foliage and floor baskets of white gladioli and fern. A low bowl of white gladioli was placed in the center of the rostrum. The family pews were marked with white satin bows and fern. Miss Betty Baker, organist, and Miss Mary Lee Hutto, soloist, presented a program of wedding music. The ushers were Guy Dominick of Chappells, Scott Boozer of Clinton and Robert Able of Sa luda, all brothers-in-law of the bride groom; John Brown of Fayetteville, N. C., brother of the bride, and Adam Williamson and J. W. Ringer, both of New berry. Carl Boazman of Chappells, brother of the bridegroom, was best man. Mrs. Gerald Hite of Florence sister of the bride, was matron of honor and the bridesmaids were Mrs. John C. Brokm of Fayetteville, N. C., sister-in-law of the bride; Mrs. J. W. Ringer, Newberry; Mrs. Scott Boozer, of Clinton and Mrs. Robert Able of Saluda, sisters of the bride groom. They wore sky blue Chan tilly type dresses. The fitted bodice was made with a yoke of nylon net, lace peter pan col lar and cap sleeve and the bouffant skirt was nylon net over taffeta. They wore rhinestone ear rings, gifts of the bride, and car ried old fashioned colonial nose gays of yellow carnations tied with wide yellow ribbon. The flower girls, Rachel Hite, of Florence, niece of the bride, and Kay Dominick, of Chappells, niece of the bridegroom. They wore dresses identical to those of the other attendants and scat tered rose petals from yellow IABY & STARTER CHIX—Hamp. White Rocks, Cornish Rocks & tarnish Hamps. Non sexed, top uality & pullorum clean. ROSS 1URTON, Whitmire, S. C. 49-3tp WANTED TO BUY—Iron, Metal Batteries, Radiators and Rags. W. H. Sterling. 1708 Vincent street. Phone 731-W 28-tb OLD GOLD WANTED—Cash paid promptly for old broken jewelry, dental gold. Scrap silver, plati num, etc. Ship to Otis Russell. Waltersburg, Pa. 35-tfc. 3 - ROOM APARTMENT FOR RENT—Couple without children. Call 384. - 41-tfe. JSED PLUMBING — New ship ment of tubs, sinks, lavatories, tame excellent built-in tubs, foah’s Ark, Abbeville, S. C. 46-6tc FOR SALE—on Lake Murray, near Sinclair's landing, private cabin 16x20 with 8x16 screened porch, 300 feet off paved road, fenced, and have REA current, 2 1-14 acre lot with 500 feet shore line. Can be cut into several nice lots. Priced to sell. . L. MAGNUS SHEALY, Little Moun tain, S. C. Telephone Little Mountain. 49-3tp LOST—Diamond wrist watch in neighborhood of A.R.P. Church. Reward. Mrs. Clem Youmans. Phone 302. The bride’s mother wore a navy blue dress with a pink corsage. The bridegroom’s mother also wore a navy dress with a pink corsage. A reception was held at the home of the bride immediately after the ceremony. The bridal couple left during the afternoon for a wedding trip to the mountains of Tennessee. For traveling the bride changed to a light blue wool suit with navy and white accessories and the orchid from her Bible. Mrs. Crouch is the only child of Mr. and Mrs. D. Hoyt Rankin of Saluda. She is a member of the junior class of the Saluda high school. Mr. Crouch is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Tyrie E. Crouch of Sa luda. He is a graduate of the Saluda high school and is em ployed in the Saluda Hoisery Mills. baskets. The ring bearer, Jim my Brown, nephew of the bride, wore a full dress suit and car ried the rings in a calla lily. The bride, given in marriage by her brother, James A. Brown, of Newberry was lovely in her wed ding gown of white Chantilly lace over satin, featuring a waist with a nylon net yoke piped in white satin with lace ruffle fitted sleeves with calla points over the hands and buttoned down the back with small satin covered buttons. The skirt, reidengote style, had a nylon net pleated front panel and ended in a cathedral train. The finger tip veil of illusion fell from a bon net style cap of lace with satin and pearl trim. She wore her mother’s cameo lavalier. She car ried a colonial nosegay of gar denias showered with valley lilies, and streamers of white satin ribbon dotted with gar denias and valley lilies. Mrs. A. D. Byrd, aunt of the bride, wore a black taffeta dress with a pink rosebud corsage. Mrs. Guy Dominick, sister of the bridegroom, wore a dress of blue net over taffeta with a cor sage of pink rosebuds. A reception was held immedi ately after the ceremony in the church parlors. The couple left during the evening for a wedding trip. For traveling the bride changed to a navy blue going away suit, white blouse and other acessories in navy and a gardenia corsage. Mrs. Scurry is the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Alvan Brown of Newberry. Her moth er was the former Edith (McGill of York County. She is a graduate of the Newberry High school and the business department of New berry College. She is now, book keeper for the Richard L. Baker Furniture Company. She is a member of the Newberry Busi ness and Professional Womens club. Mr. Boazman is the son of J. J. Boazman and the late Mrs. Boaz man of Chappells. His mother is the former Janie Reel of Edge- field county. He is a graduate of Newberry College and is a vet eran of World War II. He is now employed with the Newberry Rural Electric Association. Sign in a Colorado restaurant: “If our steak is too tough for you, get out; this is no place for weak lings.’’ American Cancer Society clini cal fellowships annually give 70 young doctors special training in cancer diagnosis and treatment. Chivalry is the instinct which inspires a man to protect a wo man from all men other than him self. An optimist figures that when his shoes wear out, he’ll be back on his feet. NEWBERRY DRIVE-IN Phone—1533-J FRIDAY Hi Jacked Jim Davis, Marsha Jones, Sid Melton Remember, “WAHOO” is played Every Friday Night. SATURDAY Boss: “Shame on you. Do you know what ye do with office boys who tell lies?” Boy: “Yes, sir, when they ket old enough the firm sends them out as salesmen.” NOTICE — Jimmie Stephen’s Bi cycle Shop at 707 Morgan St. is now open for business. Paint ing, Repairing. Also have a couple of beautiful Hand Built Bikes for sale. Stop in and look them over or call 850-M. Call before 8 a.m., from 12 till 1 p.m. and after 6 p.m. Off Drayton on road to City Dump. 51-3tp TAILORED SEAT COVERS We are equipped to give you the best of service in automo bile seat covers, tailor made. Convertible tops, auto head- linings and other interior work done promptly and at reason able prices. Stop by or phone us today. Frank Wilson 1515 Martin St. Phone 1116-J Cargo To Capetown Broderick Crawford, Ellen Drew, John Ireland Also The Red-Blooded stars of “All The Kings Men.” SUNDAY & MONDAY Happy Go Lovely (In Technicolor) • David Niven, Vera Ellen, Cesar Romero Love—Fun—Youth—set to music! TUESDAY ONLY Walk Softly Stranger Joseph Cotton, Valli, Paul Stewart She surrendered herself to him! WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY and FRIDAY Have Another Adopted from "Ten Nights In A Barroom” The Greatest Story of Alcohol Ever Filmed! Admission 50c Children Under 12 Free! Always A Color Cartoon ‘Bright Victory’ Plays At Ritz Theatre Monday-Tuesday Universal-International's "Bright Victory,” starring Arthur Ken nedy and Peggy Dow and open ing Monday at the Ritz Theatre, comes to the screen as one of the most tender motion picture love stories of the past decade. Kennedy, a Broadway stage fa vorite, and Peggy Dow, named the “Discovery Girl” of the year, play their most important screen roles to date in “Bright Victory.” The film’s strong supporting cast is headed by John Hudson, James Edwards, Will Geer, Jim Backus and Julia Adams. “Bright Victory” was directed by Mark Roberson and produced by Robert Buckner who alsp wrote the screenplay. It was adapted for the screen from the best-selling novel “Lights Out” by Baynard Kendrick. The American Cancer Society advises that all men over 40 have a thorough physical examination once a year. BOYS ARE THAT WAY By J. M. ELEAZER One summer day my mother, brother, sister, and I were re turning from grandmother's, 6 miles down the Kinley road. In a horse and buggy and over very bad roads, that was quite a distance. In fact it was about as far as we ever went, and took two hours. A thundercloud was building up in the west, and we kids grew quite afraid, for there were few houses along that road. As we neared a Colored friend’s house, we figured we had better stop, for there was not another house in a mile of lonely pine woods.- No one was home. We hitched to the garden fence and went up on the porch. I passed there the other day. The house is just as it was. The pillars reach to the ground be yond the edge of the porch, thus giving a considerable over hanging shelter to the porch. We huddled there in the cen ter by the door, as lightning chashed and gusts of wind blew dust and debris about. I was awfully frightened, for at such times I had always been deep in the house, where I could hide from the storm. Now I was all but in it, and it was terrifying. Soon the deluge came, and I cried, thinking we would never get home. It blew under there and we got pretty wet. I was frantic and they did all they could to console me. I don’t think my mother was frightened at all. Soon the sound and fury pass ed. And, as we were leaving, the bright sun came out. Our clothes dried, as we jogged the four miles home. But to this day I look back on that as one of my most horrifying exper iences. For a kid to be out in the storm away from home the first time is really something to remember. Newspapermen Praise Decision To Make Relief Rolls Public WASHINGTON — South Caro lina’s decision to open its relief rolls to public inspection July 1 won praise at the annual meeting of the American Society of News paper Editors here this week. James S. Pope of the Louis ville Courier-Journal, chairman of the committee on information, re ported significant gains in the editors’ efforts to get access to more news about the government at all levels. Pope noted that three states, Indiana, Illinois, and Alabama, have opened their relief rolls since the ASNE met last year, and that South Carolina will do likewise July 1. RITZ THEATRE THURSDAY & FRIDAY Edmond O'Brien, Yvonne De- Carlo, Barry Fitzgerald, Richard Arlen Silver City (In Technicolor) Fox News & Short—Football Er- pert SATURDAY WELLS THEATRE FRIDAY and SATURDAY Johnny Mack Brown in “Montana Desperadoes” Added — ROAR OF THE IRON HORSE and LITTLE RASCALS Comedy MONDAY and TUESDAY Also Late Show 10:15 SATURDAY Hell-Riders of the Heavens! The Wild Blue Yonder with Wendell Corey, Vera Ralston and Forrest Tucker Added—Greece WEDNESDAY A THURSDAY Secrets Of Monte Carlo with Warren Douglas, Lois Hall and June Vincent Added—AMERICAN HARVEST Admission 12c and 40c every day DOUBLE FEATURE Martha O'Driscoll, John Car radine, Eddie Dean Down Missouri Way Also Bela Lugosi, The East Side Kids (Leo Gorcey, Bobby Jordan, Huntz Hall) Spooks Run Wild Also Short MONDAY A TUESDAY The love story of our generation. Arthur Kennedy, Peggy Dow, James Edwards, Julia Adams Bright Victory M.G.M. News and Cartoon WEDNESDAY A true story of six women’s amaz ing battle against the desperadoes. Glenn Ford, Gene Tierney, Ethel Barrymore, Zachary Scott The Secret Of Convict Lake Also Cartoon Coming Soon Quo Vadis, Carbine Williams, Ma & Pa Kettle At The Fair LITTLE ITEMS OF INTEREST ABOUT FOLKS YOU KNOW Mrs. L. C. Chappell and moth er, Mrs. Ella B. Webb of Wash ington, D. C. and Mrs. Harvey Booth of Charlotte, N. C„- spent Wednesday and Wednesday night in the home of Mrs. George L. Epps on Calhoun street. Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Lipscomb, Jr., and daughter, Debbie, spent the weekend in Florence in the home of Mr. Lipscomb’s brother- in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Gregg and family. Mrs. E. M. Lipscomb spent a few days the first of the week in Florence in the home of her son- in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Gregg and family. Mrs. Mattie Williams, who has been seriously ill in the Self Memorial Hospital in Greenwood for the past two weeks, is report ed to be some better. Mrs. Wil liams was visited Sunday by her sister, Mrs. Bennie Livingston. ■Mrs. Truex Padgett of Lees- ville visited her aunt, Mrs. J. M. Wilson and Mr. Wilson on last Wednesday. Mrs. Katherine Greer and Miss Sadie Shevlin, sisters of the late S. U. Shevlin from Hastings, Minnesota, returned home from California where they have been visiting their sister who is ill. They stopped over a short while In Newberry last week with the family of the late Mrs. S. V. Shevlin. Mrs. iMary Nance Fair Walker of Memphis, Tenn., is visiting in the home of Miss Lucy McCaugh- rin on Harper streeL Mrs. Alec Craig of Columbia, was a weekend visitor in the home of Misses Sarah and Margaret Gary on Calhoun street. Mr. and Mrs. (Metts Fant and daughter, Martha Sue, of Decatur, Ala., spent the past week in the home of Mr. Fant’s parents, Mr and Mrs. P. Metts Rant on Glenn street. Miss Mary Wheeler of Conway spent the past weekend with her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. P. Metts Fant on Glenn street. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Jacob and two daughters, Jan and Kay, of Columbia were weekend visitors in the home of Mrs. Jacob's par ents, (Mr. and Mrs. Lee Boozer on Hunt streeL *- Mr. and Mrs. V. H. Crowe have moved to 2702 DeLoach Avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Gene M. Harris are now making their home at 1232 McMorris street in the Dr. Heisey apartment ‘Wild Blue Yonder’ - Saga Of Air Force Shows At Wells Coming to the screen with smashing impact is “Wild Bine Yonder” which plays at the Wells Theatre Saturday Late Show and Monday and Tuesday. It unfolds for the first time on film, the spectacular . saga of the B-29 Super-fortresses and their gallant role in World War II. A stalwart cast of film names have bqen assembled for the pro duction which stars Wendell Corey, Vera Ralston, Forrest Tucker and Phil Harris with Walter Brennan and Ruth Don nelly. Each present individually strong characterizations and the audience will live with these heroic B-29 crews, share their laughs, tragedies and thrills from | the Smokey Hill training base at Salinas, Kan., to ' the sky-Scrap- ing Himalayas forming the bar rier between India and China and onward to the far flung island outposts of Saipan and Tinian. “The Wild Blue Yonder” traces the • colorful history of World War II’s greatest Bird of battle from Its Inception, which was once labeled a preposterous Air Force gamble, to the devasta ting long range bombing runs on Japan, in a moving story of courage, action and fortitude. xM Newberry No. 1 Commercial Investment Com pany to R. Melvin Attaway and Joyce Attaway, one lot, $260. Lillian Hare to- Robert Hare, one lot, % undivided interest in lot 60’xl20’ on Drayton street, $16.00. Collie Lula Havard, et al to George Wilson, one lot 60’xl25! on New Street (portion of 25 acres tract) $360. Newberry No. 1 Outside Ollie T. Bedenbaugh to Charles E. Humphries and Francis C. Humphries, one lot contains .6 of an acre, $800. Whitmire No. 4 Bruce Campbell to Beattie L. Scott and Mary W. Scott, one lot 50’xl86’ on south side of Nance street, $600. Pomaria No. 5 Charlie C. Lominick to W. Frank Lominack, 76^6 acres and one building, $7,000. John Davis to Orlander Davis, 4.16 acres, love and affection. This deed was made on 15th October 1932 and recorded April 19, 1962. Orlander Davis to James F. Kibler, 4.15 acres, $1,350. Little Mountain No. 6 Marjorie M. Draft, et al to Floyd Martin, 30 acres, $6.00, love and affection (O. O. Martin, Estate). Lillie Belle Martin to Floyd Martin 30.26 acres, $5.00, love and affection. Calvin E. (Metts to George E. Metts, 40 acres, $5.00, love and affection. The surest way to keep a thin_ out of the newspapers is not to do it ■ n V * IXPANSION MRS. CATALANO UNDERGOES MAJOR OPERATION Mrs. “Missy” Catalano, who underwent a major operation in the Newberry Memorial Hospital last Thursday returned to the home of her mother, Mrs. Bennie Livingston on Boundary street, Tuesday of this week and is re ported to be improving nicely. FENNELL’S Jewelry Store • - sMi - - • , Sure I Bank At The South Carolina National - - H % : This business man like thousands of others bank at the SOUTH CAROLINA NATIONAL BANK because of its complete banking ser vice and the convenience in banking. 'Xm, - •vs Savings account, checking accounts, loans and many other services for personal and company business. Won’t you join the many satisfied customers and let us serve you? ‘v. Play safe! Use Travelers Cheques when you - take that vacation trip. South Carolina National Bank JOHN T. NORRIS, Mgr. JOE L. KEITT, Asst. Mgr. m m