The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, June 27, 1952, Image 3
FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 1962
14 4-H Clubs Hold Annual Meeting
At Margaret Hunter Park June 20
THE NEWBERRY SUN
BUND MAN HELPS BUILD CHURCH . . . WtttUm
Berkeley, Calif., is shown helping construct the first Buddhist chursfc
in the U.S. Standage Is bUnd. With him is his seslng eye do?. MitM.
NOTICE OF ELECTION
4-H club members from the
fourteen clubs in the county
gathered at Margaret Hunter
Park Friday, June 20th for the
annual meeting. Around 228 boys,
girls, parents and leaders at
tended.
The group enjoyed a recreation
period which included swimming.
A short program was held at
4:00 p.m. with Carolyn- Crooks,
president, presiding.
Eleanor Ridgeway presented to
the group a most Inspiring de
votion after which James Domi
nick and Susan Crooks led the
group in the pledges to the Ameri
can and 4-H flags.
Doris Ann Parks very gracious
ly welcomed the group and Jerry
Satterwhite responded.
In the absence of the secre
tary, Paul Richardson, Jewell
Connelly called the roll and read
the minutes.
Mary Dove Boozer, treasurer,
gave a report.
Miss Boozer and Jewel Connel
ly gave a team demonstration on
apple pie baking.
A dress revue was held with
9 girls participating. Winners in
the senior group were Jewell Con
nelly, 1st place; Nora Kathryn
Klnard, 2nd place and Eleanor
Potts, 3rd place. Junior group,
Susan Crooks, 1st place; Anita
Killan, 2nd place and Joy Hunter,
3rd place.
After announcements and song
the meeting adjourned.
A bountiful picnic was enjoyed
by the entire group.
David Culclasure
Gets Gold Bars
David F. Culclasure, son of
Louis L. Culclasure, Route 2, New
berry, was one in the group of
109 receiving commissions and
gold bars of second lieutenant at
commissioning exercises held at
Fort Riley, Kans., on Wednesday,
June 18th for Army Officer Candi
date Class 47.
Having successfully completed
the intensive six month training
course there, he will next attend
one of the Army’s specialty
schools for further instruction in
his particular branch' of the ser
vice.
Lieut. Culclasure served with
the 24th Infantry Division on oc
cupation duty in Japan, and ac
companied this unit when It
moved to Korea at the start of
the present conflict. He served
for eleven months with the divis
ion there before returning to the
U.S. in June of 1951 to attend
Officer Candidate Course at Fort
Riley.
Notice is hereby given that a
Democratic Primary will be held
in Newberry County on Tuesday,
July 8, 1952. for the purpose of
electing a solicitor, 2 members to
the house of representatives, a
clerk of court, two commissioners,
a magistrate at Chappells and a
magistrate at Little Mountain.
The polls will open at 8 a.m.
and close at 6 p.m.
The list of managers, clerks
and place of voting in the var
ious precincts are given below.
The boxes will be ready on
Saturday prior to the election at
the usual place in the court
house.
WARD 1—H. D. Whitaker, Mar
ion Baxter, T. S. Humphries, man
agers. J. E. Hazel, clerk. Vot
ing : Police headquarters.
WARD 2—Mrs. W. Roy Ander
son, Mrs. W. F. Partridge, Coke
Dickert, managers. Mrs. R. H.
Felker,clerk. Voting: Smith Motor
Co.
WARD 3, No. 1—Henry T.
Cannon, Mrs. Cyril Hutchinson,
Mrs. Tom Summer, managers.
Voting: Boundary Street school.
WARD 3, No. 2—J. E. McCon
nell, Rev. Horace Lindler, A. N.
Gregory, Sr., managers. Troy
Shealy, clerk. Voting: Mollohon
School House.
WARD 4, No. 1—Mrs. Ethel Fel
lers, Jftrs. Elizabeth Wickein Miss
Clara Bowers, managers. T. P.
Wicker, clerk. Voting: Chamber
of Commerce.
WARD 4, No. 2—A. P. Parrott,
Miss Minnie Havird, Miss Corrie
Lei Havird, managers. Mrs. Helen
Senn, clerk. Voting: Rear Lay
ton’s Store.
WARD 6—Eugene Shealy, Mrs.
O. S. Goree, Mrs. Fred Jones,
managers. Mrs. Eugene Shealy,
clerk. Voting: Corley’s Barber
Shop.
WARD 6—Mrs. Nancy Copeland,
Mrs. Metis Fant, Mrs. Dave
Hayes, Mrs. Mae Fant. Voting:
W. H. Davis and Son.
BUSH RIVER—F. M. Satter
white, W. M. Buford, Hugh M.
Kolb, managers. Rev. J. R. Mc-
Kittrick, clerk. Voting: Bush
River school.
CENTRAL—Mrs. L. D. Aull, E.
H. Koon, Mrs. E. S. Shealy, man
agers. William Harris, clerk.
Voting: Central school.
CHAPPELLS—R. D. Marrett, I.
Q. Watkins, J. J. Boazman, mana
gers. J. C. Arant, clerk. Voting:
Werts Service Station.
DOMINICK—H. T. Oxner, J. H.
Wallenzine, H. T. Brehmer, man
agers. Miss Nannie Mcfcittrick,
clerk. Voting: J. H. Wallenzine’s
Store.
FAIRVIEW — Herbert *Fulmer,
Colie Mills, Floyd Martin, M. H.
Dominick, managers. Voting: Fair-
view school.
GARMANY—Mrs. T. P. Crooks,
Mrs. Minnie Lightsey, W. H.
Hentz, managers, and Mrs. Ven-
nie Kate Price, Clerk. Voting at
T. P. Crook’s store.
HARTFORD—H. L. Shealy,* W.
B. Goggans, J. W. Cromer, man
agers. J. H. Eargle, clerk. Vot
ing : Hartford school.
HELENA—A. T. Attaway, Mrs.
Nellie Coats Davis, J. R. Wood,
Mrs. Mae Cook. Voting: J. R.
Wood’s home.
JALAPA—Junius F. Long, John
Swittenberg, B. S. Derrick, man
agers. C. C. Wallace, clerk. Vot
ing: C. C. Wallace & Sons store.
JOHNSTONE—John F. Banks,
John R. Boozer, Mrs. Rosine Wil
lard, managers. Mrs. Kate Wil
son, clerk. Voting: Newberry
Animal Hospital.
JOLLY STREET—G. I. Kinard,
T. L. Boinest, L. H. Kingsmore,
managers. Mrs. Clarence Klnard,
clerk. Voting: Jolly Street school
house.
KINARDS—W. D. Boozer, J. J.
Johnson, G. W. Johnson, man
agers. J. B. Smith, clerk. Voting:
Johnston's store.
LITTLE MOUNTAIN—Mrs. Rob
ert Shealy, Maloy Wheeler, Claude
Clark, managers. Mrs. Murray
Counts, clerk. Voting: Dr. Sense's
office.
LONGSHORE — Henry Dorroh,
W. O. Senn, Horace L. Boozer, Sr.,
managers. R. E. Neel, clerk. Vot
ing: Neal Brothers Store.
BETH-EDEN (Long Lane)—Lee
Hargrove, J. G. Glenn, Mrs. J. H.
Phibbs, Sr., managers. Miss Lil
lie Mae Folk, clerk. Voting:
Beth Eden School house.
MAYBINTON—A. H. Maybin,
John Hardy, Bennie Cathcart,
managers. Mrs. J. R. Thomas,
clerk. Voting: Mrs. T. W. Hen
derson’s store.
MIDWAY—Horace Richardson,
Berely Boland, Clarence Counts,
managers. Virgil Shealy, clerk.
Voting: Horace Richardson Esso
Station.
MT. BETHEL — Lang Alewine,
Horace Cromer, Furman Epps,
managers. Mrs. Jason Ringer,
clerk. Voting: Mt. Bethel Gar-
many school.
MT. PLEASANT—John William
Smith, J. T. Gilliam, Mrs. Pauline
Adams, Mrs. Maude Graham. Vot
ing: Mt. Pleasant School house.
MULBERRY — Oscar Graham,
Howard Boland, Arthur Felker,
Olin Lominick. Voting: Oscar Gra
ham's house.
OAKLAND—George Attaway, C.
J. Swindler, Andy Bowen, man
agers^ Mrs. Bobby Wessinger,
clerk. Voting: Oakland Parking
lot
O’NEAL, No. 1—F. O. Koon,
Noah A. Moore, J. H. White, man
agers. Pat B. Wise, clerk. Voting:
Mt. Olivet church.
O'NEAL, No. 2—R. M. Monts, J.
P. Fellers, J. F. Dawkins, Popeat
Long. Voting: O’Neal school.
PEAK—Joe E. Mayer, H. L.
Suber, J. Clarence Miller. Voting:
Town Hall.
POMARIA—L. A. Mayer, T. H.
Shealy, E. O. Stuck, managers. EL
O. Stuck, clerk. Voting: To’irn
Hall.
PROSPERITY, No. 1 — B. T.
Young, C. F. Saner, Asbury Bed-
enbaugh, managers. Mrs. Nannie
Ward, clerk. Voting: Town Hall.
PROSPERITY, No. 2 — M. S.
Taylor, Mrs. Lucile Handcox, Mrs.
Colie Wessinger, managers. Mrs.
W. B. Ackerman, clerk. Voting:
Shealy Motor tJo. Show Room.
SALUDA, No. 7—C. S. Fellers,
James Sanders, John Kunkle, man
agers. Harry Burgess, clerk. Vot
ing: Kunkle’s Store.
SILVERSTREET—T. B. Boozer,
Harold Bowers, J. M. Alewine, R.
C. Neel, Jr. Voting: Silverstreet
high school gymnasium.
STONEY HILL—Hpber Leap-
hart, Raymond Lester, Hoyt Mor
ris, managers. Charles Wise,
clerk. Voting: Stoney Hill school
house. .
ST. PAULr-C. H. Epting, N. C.
Wicker, L. B. Bedenbaugh, man
agers. D. L Wedeman, secretary.
Voting: at St. Paul.
ST. PHILIPS—M.‘ E. Enlow,
John D. Koon, Perry Halfacre,
managers. Govan Sease, clerk.
Voting: St. Philips school house.
TRINITY—J. H. Dickert, Henry
Hendrix, Ray A. Martin, managers.
Clarence Wardrop, clerk. Voting:
at Trinity Church.
UNION—George S. Enlow, M.
L. Long, J. C. Kinard, managers.
J. J. Sligh, clerk. Voting: Union
school house.
UTOPIA — Ernest P. Derrick,
George Blair, E. O. Lake, man
agers. F. S. Cannon, clerk. Vot
ing: Ernest Derrick’s home.
VAUGHNVILLE — Frank B.
Stewart, Wilbur Salter, Pressley
N. Boozer, managers. Mrs. ISsther
H. Coats, clerk. Voting: Workman
House on Getty’s Coats’ place.
WALTON—George Hentz, Mrs.
John Parrott, M. B. Crooks, man
agers. Mrs. Pauline H. Crooks,
clerk. Voting: Mrs. Pauline
Crook’s home.
WHEELAND—J. G. Metis, Ned
Boland, C. C. Fulmer, managers.
Mrs. D. C. Boland, secretary. Vot
ing place: Wheeland School house.
WHITMIRE, No. 1—T. J.
Abrams, M. Abrams, R. C. Lake,
Sr., Catherine Riser. Voting:
Whitmire City Hall.
WHITMIRE, No. 2 — S. C.
Young, W. H. Miller, J. W. Gary,
W. C. Scott. Voting: “Y” Building.
ZION—Forest Lee Graham, J.
L. Ringer, Mrs. J. B. Eargle, man
agers. Mrs R, L. Ringer, clerk.
Voting: Zion school house.
B. V. Chapman, Chairman
Mrs. A. H. Counts, Secretary
m
SAINT* AMAND
IS A GOOD MAN FOR
SOLICITOR
Twenty Years Experience as a lawyer in our courts.
Notice of closing for
On account of legal holiday
JULY
4th
the.undersigned Banks will
be closed Friday, July 4
South Carolina National
Bank
Newberry County Bank
Newberry Joanna
BOYS ARE
THAT WAY
By J. M. ELEAZER
When we were kids, we had
a little bantam hen that started
laying in the baby bed that was
stored upstairs. Houses didn’t
have screens then and she would
wait around until she found a
door ajar and up she would go.
We tried to break her, but to no
avail.
^ Soon she became broody and,
since we were anxious for some
little bantams, we set her up
there. After she had been there
about two weeks my brothers and
I, who slept up there, couldn’t
sleep much for things crawling
over us. They brought a lamp
up to see what the trouble was,
and mites were all over us. She
and her nest were just teeming
with them and at night they
spread out to us.
Well, next day we had a
cleaning up there, burned the
nesting material, painted the bed
with kerosene and thought all
was well. And it was for a
while. But a sparrow had built
its nest back of the blind just
outside our window there. And
evidently the mites had found
it too and put up there the
same as in the bantam’s nest.
Soon we found things over us
again at night. The lamp was
brought back up there and we
found mites again. The hen’s
nest was clean and then we dis
covered the bird’s nest literal
ly alive with mites. In fact
the old bird had quit her nest,
and they were feeding on us en
tirely. Well that called for
another clean-up, and we slept
undisturbed the balance of the
summer, despite the mosquitoes
I know must have come. in those
unscreened windows.
Burton Willingham
Awarded Bronze Star
Warrant Officer Junior Grade,
Burton A. Willingham, was re
cently awarded the Bronze Star
Medal for meritorious achieve
ment in Korea.
Willingham was cited for his
services as assistant supply of
ficer of the X Corps, 955th Field
Artillery Battalion. He has been
in Korea since last March.
A former student at Newberry
High School, Willingham entered
the Army in 1939. He was sta
tioned at Raleigh, N. C., before
his overseas assignment.
The X Corps took part in the
early delaying actions of the
Korean fighting and during the
initial UN offensive, fought its
way -to the Manchurian border.
Wari^mt Officer Willingham’s
wife, Nellie, lives at 1308 Pop
lar street, Newberry.
ABOVE THE
HULLABALOO
By LVTLE BULL
^NUR FOREIGN policy has been
so manipulated that it has lost
China for us, is fast losing the po
tential support of 400 million Mos
lems, and has prevented the
strengthening of the one sure bul
wark against Russian conquest of
Europe—Spain. The Truman-Ache-
son government has another six or
seven months to "manipulate” in,
and if we are still a going concern
by that time, we will need every
ounce of our strength to pull out of
the hole which the New Deal has
dug for this nation—and the world-
in the last 20 years.
We can’t depend upon anyone to
help us; we have no real friends
left in this world. So we had bet
ter begin thinking more in terms
of "America’’ and less about
others.
To be strong we must coordinate
the work of our muscles. One of
these muscles is industry; another
is union labor. At the moment they
are functioning in suicidal opposi
tion to each other. Then principal
reason is also a New Deal legacy—
‘industry-wide bargaining”. Under
this system a single labor czar can
stop the operation of an entire in-_
dustry and cause inestimable dam
age to the nation and to all its cit
izens. In time of war he could lose
that for us.
Ralph . Gwinn, Rep. of New
York, and O. C. Fisher, Dem. of
Texas, have introduced a bill in the
House of Representatives which
"would restrict industry-wide and
multiple—employer bargaining and
thus return collective bargaining to
its proper place at the local 4evel”
It places industry and labor in
proper relationship to each other
and eliminates the New Deal de
vised abuses which have so weak
ened the structure of our free econ
omy. .
Write Committee for Constitution
al Government, 205 East 42nd.
Street, New York City, for Spot
light on this bill—and then write
your congressmen. This means as
much to you and your family as
anything except war.
PAGE THREE
Newberry Farm Women Get Special
Recognition At Rock Hill Convention
ROCK HILL — Mrs. Gordon
Blackwell of Saluda was unani
mously re-elected president of the
State Council of Farm Women at
the closing session of the coun
cil’s 32nd annual convention at
Winthrop College last Thursday.
Holdover officers include Mrs.
J. H. Long of Silverstreet, secre
tary.
Highlighting the final conven
tion session was the announce
ment this afternoon of annual
state awards for outstanding work
during the last year.
Berkeley and Anderson county
councils of farm women received
top honors for the year.
Other blue ribbon winners were
Abbeville, Aiken, Calhoun, Chero
kee, Chesterfield, Dorch e s t e r,
Greenwood, Lee, Newberry, Pick
ens, Sumter aud York.
Melvin Goggans
Returns From Korea
Pfc. Melvin Goggans, Jr., Route
1, Newberry, is returning to the
United States from Korea under
the Army’s rotation plan.
He was a member of the 25th
Infantry Division, one of the first
U. S. units to fight on the
peninsula. It has recently been
engaged in patrol activity near
the 38th parallel.
Goggans, a gunner in Battery
C of the 21st Antiaircraft Artil
lery Battalion, entered the Army
in January 1951 and arrived in
Korea in August.
Lindsey Receiving
Training In 111.'
Julius N. Lindsay, fireman,
USN, of Route 1, Chappells, w&a
among the men to report at U. S.
Fleet Training Center, Norfolk,
Va., for a course of instruction In
Chemical • Warfare.
Lindsay entered the Navy May
29, 1950, and received recruit
training at the Naval Training
Center, Great Lakes, 111.
The course gives students in
formation in the use of ship
board chemical defense equip
ment.
Upon completion of the course,
Lindsay will be returned to his
originating command, either on
board ship or shore installations.
• cm
Chesterfield and Newberry coun
ties, previous winners of the Gee
Book Shelf and therefore ineligi
ble to receive the award again
were presented special purple rib-
Chappell Undergoes
Navy CB Training
Thomas E. Chappell, chief
mechanic, USNR, son of Thomas
H. Chappell of 1630 Boundary
street, ip undergoing a two-week
Naval Reserve traing program
with the Construction Battalion at
the U. S. Naval Training Center,
Great Lakes, 111.
The CB’s receive training in
operating heavy c o n s t r u ction
equipment, building camp sights,
constructing advanced bases,
building roads, temporary dock
ing and landing facilities. They
are also trained in fire fighting,
operating fire arms and Naval
regulations.
bons for their outstanding rec
ords.
Sen. Burnet R. Maybank ad
dressed a joint assembly of the
farm women and the Winthrop
College Summer School. He de
scribed the prosperity which has
developed in the United States
during the last 20-year period of
Democratio administration, and
congratulated the farm women on
the great strides in agricultural
progress in South Carolina.
"Your contributions,” he said,
“have made it possible for South
Carolina to achieve more than Its
proportionate share of the na
tion-wide advances.”
James A. Rogers of Columbia,
executive vice president of the
South Carolina Farm Bureau, was
also a featured speaker. He of
fered the farm women a challenge
"to pass on to succeeding genera
tions the freedom passed on to
us,” through devotion and firm
resolution to the simple ideals.
JOLLY STREET
July 4th
y f
Annual Barbecue
Campaign Day
Prominent Speakers
Meeting at IO a.m.
DONT MISS IT!
Pig foot stew and steak supper night
before—serving begins at 6 p.m.
..T*
1
■j'S-
■ :
Closing
Notice!
The Following Jewelry Stores
Will Be Closed
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
July 3rd, 4th and 5th
For Holidays
These business firms will be open for
business at 9 A.M. Monday, July 7th
NOVELTY SHOP
T. M. ROGERS <&• Son
W. E. TURNER, Jeweler
FENNELL’S JEWELRY STORE
v
Ak.
‘ ■
■