The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, July 25, 1952, Image 5

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m m V-r / FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1962 21 Licenses To Wed Issued For Month Of June In spite of the fact that June is supposed to be the most popu lar month for marriages, licenses issued by Probate Judge E. Maxcy Stone numbered only 21 for the entire month. Of the 21 couples applying for certificates at the probate office, 15 couples were from Newberry county. They are: John Dan Horton, Bethune, and Elizabeth Kearse, Walterboro. Wayne Boozer and Peggy Anne Hipp, Prosperity. • Lee Nelson, Newberry, and Ina Mae Sherfield, Clinton. James Clyde Hawkins and Miriam Edith Fulmer, Prosperity. Cecil Vess Hardin and Nancy May LeClair, Whitmire. James O. Hart and Hilde Tischler, Sullivan, 111. David Pinner Kinard, Prosper ity, and Mary Frances Morris, Newberry. Shannon Eubanks and Margaret Stevenson, Laurens. Carl Heller and Lillie N. Grad- dick, Newberry. James Harvey Berley and Eliza beth Edna Suber, Pomaria. William Ray Dickert and Nancy Clara Shealy, Newberry. George Roy Graham and Janelle Lynette Livingston, Pomaria. Walter Edwards Barker, Baton Rouge, La., and Dorothy L. Dailey, Peak. John Paul Epting, Newberry, and Melver Grace Cromer, Po maria. THE NEWBERRY SUN PAGE FIVE STRICTLY FRESH DRITISH doctors say snoring Is 0 healthy. Not if the boss catches you. • * * Miss Do Ray has been admitted to the Melbourne, Australia Con* servatory of Music. Those Aussies do things on a grand scale. A New Jersey boy asked a G.I. in Korea to send him some hand grenades so he could blow up the kid next door because he played his bugle too much. That boy’s destined for big things in South American politics * • • This is the - season when a mar ried man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of how to sneak golf clubs out of the house. Hermon O. Evans, Newberry, and Mabel Louise Johnson, Joan na. Walter Herman Bowers, New berry, and Una Summers, Pros perity. Claude E. Dominick, Silver- street, and Virginia Dare Swind ler, Newberry. John W. WeHunt, Kinards, and Chivolette Stephens, Newberry. J. N. Thomason and Ethel Morris, Newberry. T. Everette Summer and M.' Edith Hawkins, Newberry. Joe C. Pitts, Silverstreet, and Druscilla G. Garnette, Newberry. mt 1952 POLIO PRECAUTIONS GET CHILLED mmmsmmm mmm RECOMMENDED BY THE NATIONAL FOUNDATION FOR INFANTILE PARALYSIS Seven-y«ar-old Karen Blech^t enacts 1952 polio precautions recommended by the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis. When polio is around, the National Foundation cautions parents' to watch for these signs: headache, fever, sore throat, upset stom-; ach, tenderness and stiffness of neck and back. A person showing 1 such symptoms should be put to bed at once, away from others, f Then, call your doctor and follow his advice. If polio is diagnosed, ? call yom: local chapter of the March of Dimes for advice and assistance, including needed financial help. with MOORE REGISTERS REGISTER FORMS AND ACCESSORIES IH »•" MOOftl R*Sist*r Form* osiuro rotioMo record*. Oito copy of oath •ot of tMrets may bo automatically filod in tho 7%/-~ repUCor** icifcod compnrtmont ovoMlwg cmtomor moom miiundorcfcmdlm and pra von ting lost capias, ypfOOd I flling statplHWs dotty audit. MCISTCI III MCISTCR ftlll Ml (Klf MIN Of IIIIKSS \ *4 . .. ftr Conplett liforMtfoi THE SUN Conn. Plant Moving To Simpsonville Purchase of 21 acres of land near Simpsonville pn which will be built a plant to manufacture mill specialties and parts, includ ing loom crankshafts,- wire parts, springs and other items, was an nounced recently. The announcement was made by Salvator DiFrancesca, Jr., of the Trinacria Speciality Manu facturing company of Norwich, Connectiut, L. W. Bishop, director of the State Research, Planning and Development Board, and R. M. Caine, president of the Green ville County Planning and De velopment Board. The company will have its architect begin work Immediately on plans and specifications for a 20,000 square foot building and hopes to let a contract soon enough for the plant to be oc cupied by the first of the year, Mr. DiFrancesca said. Initially the plant will employ about 100 people. Both the size of the. plant and the working force wil be increased gradually. The plant is expected to reach 80,000 square feet within a few years. Mr. DiFrancesca said that the company was happy to locate in South Carolina and in the heart of the textile industry which pur chases so much of its output. He said that selection of South Carolina was due to the “excellent cooperation” received from the state development board, state of ficials, including Governor James F. Byrnes, and the local Green ville board and chamber of com merce and the general attitude of the state's citizens. The plant site is half a mile north of Simpsonville and haa both highway and rail frontage. The size of the site will allow adequate room for expansion of the plant. Mr. Bishop said that the Trinacria company was a wel comed addition to the diversified industry settling in South Caro lina and that he was certain that the company would enjoy a profitable experience here. SEMINARY STUDENT BE HEARD SUNDAY Charles Dawkins, son of Mr, and Mrs. J. Ray Dawkins of New berry, formerly of Prosperity, will be guest speaker at Grace Luther an Church in Prosperty Sunday. Mr. Dawkins, who is a mem ber of Grace Church, is a gradu ate of Newberry College is at tending the Lutheran Theological Seminary in Columbia, where he has served as student assistant to the pastor of the Lutheran Church of the Incarnation. Dur ing the summer, he has been supply pastor at Mt. Pleasant Lutheran Church In Saluda. Ih V ' • V COOL OFF, BUB! . . . Ump Papa re Qa grabs Ferris Fain as A’s 1st baseman goes for Yank hurler Tom Morgan whom Fain aocssed of tossing s bean ball in Yankee Stadium game. Payments Upped In Law Change this week's/^ patterns SY AUDREY LANE 2640 SIZES 12 - 40 mw- No. 2840 la cut in sizes 12 to 20; 8« o 40. Sizs 16, 3Va yds. 35-in. 1% vds dging. No. 2653 is cut in sizes 4 to 10. Siz< i dress and suit, SV* yds. 35-in. Ric rar 'a yds. Send 30c for EACH pattern witi iame. address, style number and siz* o AUDREY LANE BUREAU. Box 368 Madison Square Station. New York 10 N.Y. The new Spring-Summer Fashloi Book shows 125 other styles, 25c extra About 3,800 people in the Green wood area will receive higher social security payments as a re sult of the social security amend ments which President Truman signed into law last Friday. The first increased checks will be for the month of September, de livered early in October. Miss Martha Pressly, manager of the Greenwood social security office, emphasized that no one needs to apply for the increased payments. “The Social Security Administration is already chang ing the amounts,” she pointed out. “We expect to get them changed in time to have them in the mail October 3, the regular delivery date, but If in a few cases we don’t meet that schedule we’ll send the regular check and make up the difference in a latter check.” Miss Pressly pointed out that although nearly every family re ceiving payments would receive an increase, the additional amount would not always be divided among all the* members of the family receiving monthly checks. In some cases the entire increase will go to the retired worker. Under terms of the law, most families will get an increase of about $5; some will get less, some will get more. A few benefits now being paid, and most of those payable in the future, will be based on earnings after 1950 instead of after 1936. The amend ed law provides a new formula for determining the amount of the payments in these cases. Under it, a retired worker's monthly benefit would be 55 percent of the first $100 of his average monthly earnings plus 16 percent of the remainder up to $300. Beginning September 1, the new law increased to $75 a month instead of $50 the amount of mon ey a beneficiary may earn and still receive the monthly benefits. Self-employed people entitled to old-age and survivors insurance benefits may receive the payments for each month of the year if their net earnings during the en tire year are not over $900. The amended la'tf' contains a provision of special importance to self-employed people who have retired or plan to retire during 1952. Before the passage of the amendments their earnings for the year in which an application was made could not be used to figure their old-age benefit pay ments. Now, those self-employed people who originally applied for benefits in 1952 may re-apply at the close of the taxable year and have their 1952 earnings used in figuring their monthly benefit payments. —In general, this will increase the monthly benefit pay ment to self-employed persons.' A similar change in the law now permits insured wage earn ers who retire in 1962 to have their wages for this year used im mediately in figuring the amount of their benefit payments. Here tofore, it was necessary for them to come back after the end of the year in order to have all of their covered wages for 1952 included in the computation of the benefit amount. Another amendment allows beneficiaries aged 75 or over already on the rolls to take ad vantage of the higher benefit payments provided under the new formula, if they have had at least a year and a half of covered work after 1960. The amended law allows social security wage credits of $160 for each month of active military or naval service after /uly 24, 1947. This provision is simply an ex tension of the one which already gives social security wage credits to servicemen of World War II. It applies to service in the armed forces up to January 1, 1954. Of advantage to the survivors of deceased service people is a provision in the amended law ex tending the time for claiming a lump-sum death payment. This applies to servicemen who die abroad and are later returned to the United States for burial or re burial. Survivors who pay the burial expenses may, now claim reimbursement up to t^jo years after the reburial instead of two years after the Serviceman’s death. ‘At Sword’s Point,’ Technicolor Film, Playing At Wells The smashing excitement of “At Sword’s Point,” RKO Radio's ad venture romance, is equalled only by the colorful production show ing Monday and Tuesday at the Wells Theatre. Starring Cornel Wilde and Maureen O’Hara in the film in Technicolor, “At Sword’s Point” brings to the screen a sec ond generation of the famed Alex andre Dumas characters. The original defenders of the throne of the 17th-century France are too old to repeat their daring deeds, and when their aging queen calls on them to help her defeat the machinations of the traitorous Due de Lavalle, they send their sons. Young d’Artag- nan, young Aramis and young Porthos willingly offer their ser vices; the daughter of Athos, herself expert with a rapier, joins them. But they reckon without the bitter enmity of the queen’s trust- Voting In Presidential Election In November Expected To Be Light If South Carolina lives up to past performances, only a relative ly small percentage of its po tential voting strength will be cast in this year’s’ presidential election, according to the Charles ton District Office of the U. S. Department of Commerce. In a study of Bureau of the Census data on the number of persons 21 years old and over In South Carolina, plus the official vote cast In the presidential elec tion of 1948, C. W.,Martin, Com merce Department District Mana ger, found that only 13.6 percent of the potential voting strength in the State was counted In that contest. Four years ago, it was stated, there were 1,049,000 persons 21 years old and over in South Caro lina of which 142,511 voted in the 1948 presidential election. In the last “nose-counting” job made in 1950, the Census Bureau found that South Carolina had i 1,150,841, 21 years old and over. Prognosticators and others in terested in the voting potentials should not assume that all per sons 21 years old and over count ed in the population are eligible- to vote by any means, Mr. Mar tin pointed out. Actual voting is goverehed by registrations in South Carolina and many persons for different reasons do not regis ter. ed lady-in-waiting who is, in real ity, on the side of the enemy. The situation leads to a seres of fast-paced adventures, in which the advantages sway from side to side as the film reveals its color ful romantic plot. Lewis Allen directed and Jer- rold' T. Brandt produced “At Sword's Point.” The screenplay by Walter Ferris and Joseph Hoff man captures the excitement and adventure of the period, which Is enhanced by the _ glowing hues of the Technicolor film.' JAMES WALLACE FARMER DIES OF WOUNDS James Wallace Farmer, 14, son of Lewis and Anna Selgler Far mer, died suddenly at fete home near Winnsboro about 2 o’clock Saturday afternoon from wounds received in the head when a .22 rifle which he was shooting birds in the yard of his home accident ly discharged. James was born and reared in Joanna, and for the past two years has lived in the Lebanon section of Fairfield county. Besides his parents he is sur vived by one brother, Marion Farmer; one sister. Linda Far mer, both of Winnsboro. His grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Farmer, and a number of uncles and aunts also survive. Funeral services were conduc ted Sunday afternoon at the resi dence of his grandparents in Kin ards. Interment followed in Rose- mont cemetery. MIMEOGRAPH PAPER ADDING MACHINE ROLLS THE SUN OFFICE FOR C010RFUC... WASH ABU WAUS! ■-S2i PATVIRtON-SAftaiNT THI WONDIftONI-COAT WALL PAINT MAPI WITH Pill I $3.75 ii sow toady ID smIn jkMf Mod# with off Mr J -V .4* jp, ^ » apply, oo Chapman - Hawkins Hardware Thanks! Words cannot express my apprecia tion for the vote cast for me in the first and second primaries in my race for Commissioner for District 1. I shall w strive to merit your confidence. Sincerely, T. C. (Ted) McDowell SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO. ! Ends August 15th Our Big Midsummer SALE is now on! We don’t want you to miss any of the bargains! Come in NOW and take advantage of the many price cuts offered in our wonderful SALE catalog. JUST THINK! Over 4,000 price cuts in one catalog. Come in TODAY! Or, if more convenient, just telephone 430. Remem ber, the SALE ends AUGUST 15th! SEARS ORDER OFFICE 1210 Caldwell Street — Phones 911 - 430 — Newberry ♦