The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, October 31, 1952, Image 5
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1952
THE NEWBERRY SUN
PAGE FIVE
NOTICE OF ELECTION
State of South Carolina,
County of Newberry.
Notice is hereby given that the
General Election for State and
County will be held at the voting
precincts fixed by law in the
County aforesaid on Tuesday,
November 4, 1952, said day being
Tuesday following the first Mon
day, as prescribed by the State
Constitution.
Before the hour fixed for open
ing the polls Managers and clerks
must take and subscribe to the
constitutional oath. The Managers
elect their Chairman and Clerk.
The polls shall be opened at
such voting places as shall be
designated at 8 o’clock in the fore
noon, and close at 6 o’clock in
the afternoon of the day of elec
tion, and shall be held open dur
ing these hours without intermis
sion or adjournment; and the
Managers shall administer to each
person offering to vote oath that
he is qualified to vote in this elec
tion, according to the Constitution
of this State, and that he has not
voted during this election.
The Managers shall have the
power to fill a vacancy, and if
none of the Managers attend, the
citizens can appoint from among
the qualified voters, the Managers
who, after being duly sworn, can
conduct the election.
At the close of the election the
Managers and Clerks must pro
ceed publicly to open the ballot
box and count the ballots therein,
and continue without adjourn
ment until the same is completed,
and make a statement of the re
sults for each office, and sign the
same. Within three days there
after the Chairman of the Board,
or someone designated by the
Board, must deliver to the Com
missioners of Election the poll list
the box containing the ballots
and written statements of the
results of the election.
At the said election qualified
electors will vote upon the adop
tion or rejection of amendments
to the State Constitution, as pro
vided in the following JOINT
^RESOLUTIONS:
STATE - WIDE CONSTITU
TIONAL AMENDMENTS
NO. i
A JOINT RESOLUTION Propos
ing An Amendment To Section 2
Of Article II Of The Constitution
Prohibiting Any Person From
Holding Two Offices Of Honor Or
Profit At The Same Time So As
To Provide That This Prohibition
Shall Not Apply o Any Delegate
To A Constitutional Convention.
NO. 2
A JOINT RESOLUTION Propos
ing To Amend The Constitution
Of 1895 So As To Repeal Section
6 Of Article XI Of The Constitu
tion As Amended, Which Provides
That The General Assembly Shall
Provide For A Liberal System Of
Free Public Schools For All
Children Between The Ages Of
Six And Twenty-one Years, And
For The Division Of The Counties
Into Suitable School Districts.
LOCAL CONSTITUTIONAL
AMENDMENTS
NO. 3
ALLENDALE COUNTY
A JOINT RESOLUTION Propos
ing An Amendment to Section 20,
Article V, Of The State Constitu
tion With Respect To The Terms
Of Office Of Magistrates In Allen
dale County, So As To Increase
Their Term of Office From Two
Years To Four Years.
NO. 4
HORRY COUNTY
A JOINT RESOLUTION Propos
ing An Amendment To Section 20,
Article V Of The Constitution, So
As To Increase The Terms Of
Office Of Magistrates In Horry
County From Two Years To Four
Years.
NO. 5
A JOINT RESOLUTION Propos
ing An Amendment To Article X
Of The Constitution Of South
Carolina, 1895, By Adding A New
Section Which Would Authorize
The General Assembly To Em
power The Corporate Authorities
Of The City Of Ocean Drive Beach
To Assess Real Property Served
By Sanitary Sewer Lines To The
Extent Of The Benefits Resulting
Therefrom.
NO. «
A JOINT RESOLUTION Propos-
posing An Amendment To Section
6, Article X Of The Constitution
Of South Carolina By Adding A
Proviso Authorizing The General
Assembly To Empower The Cor
porate Authorities Of The City
Of Myrtle Beach To Assess Real
Property Served By Sanitary Sew
er Lines; To Cause The Assess
ment To Be A Lien On The Prop
erty; And To Empower The Cor
porate Authorities To Issue Sewer
Bonds Without The Necessity Of
An Election.
NO. 7
A JOINT RESOLUTION Propos-
j ing An Amendment To Section 7
Of Article VIII And Section 6 Of
Article X Of The Constitution So
As To Provide That The Limita-
I tions Of These Sections Shall Not
Apply To The Bonded Indebted
ness Of The Town Of Myrtle
Beach, And To Authorize The Is
suance Of Bonds By The Town.
NO. 8
A JOINT RESOLUTION Propos
ing An Amendment To Section 13
Of Article II Of The Constitution
Relating To Bonded Debt In Mu-
niciptlities So As To Provide That
The General Assembly Shall Pre
scribe As A Condition Precedent
To The Holding Of An Election
In The Town of Myrtle Beach For
The Purpose Of Bonding The
Same, A Petition From Twenty-
Five (25%) Per Cent Of The
Freeholders.
NO. 9
KERSHAW COUNTY
A JOINT RESOLUTION Propos
ing An Amendment To Section 1,
Of Article V Of The Constitution
of South Carolina Of 1895, Relat
ing To The Judicial Department
Of The State So As To Establish
A County Court For The County
Of Kershaw With Such Jurisdic
tion As May Be Provided By The
General Assembly Of This State.
NO. 10
A JOINT RESOLUTION Propos
ing An Amendment To Section 5
Of Article X Of The Constitution
Relating To The Limit Of The
Bonded Indebtedness Of Certain
Political Subdivisions So As To
Permit The County of Kershaw
To Incur Bonded Indebtedness Up
To Twenty Per Cent Of The As
sessed Value of The Taxable Prop
erty Therein.
NO. 11
MARION COUNTY
A JOINT RESOLUTION Propos
ing An Amendment To Section 21
Of Article V Of The Constitution
Of South Carolina, 1895, Relating
To Jurisdictiqn Of Magistrates,
So As To Confer Additional Juris
diction On Certain Magistrates In
Marion County.
NO. 12
ORANGEBURG COUNTY
A JOINT RESOLUTION Propos
ing An Amendment To Section 1
df Article V Of The Constitution
Of 1895 Relating To The Judicial
Power Of The State, So As To
Provide For A County Court For
Orangeburg County, And Fix The
Term Of Office And Salary Of
The Judge Of The Cohnty Court.
NO. 13
YORK COUNTY
A JOINT RESOLUTION Propos
ing An Amendment To Section 5,
Article X, Of The Constitution Of
South Carolina, 1895, Relating To
Bonded Indebtedness Of Counties,
Townships, School Districts, Etc.,
By Adding Thereto A Proviso In
creasing The Debt Limit Of York
County.
NO. 14
A JOINT RESOLUTION Propos
ing An Amendment To Article V,
Section 21, Of The Constitution Of
South Carolina, 1895, Relating To
The Jurisdiction of Magistrates,
So As To Increase The Jurisdic
tion In Civil Cases Of Magistrates
In York County To Where The
Value of Property In Controversy
Or Amount Claimed Is Not More
Than Three Hundred Dollars
($300.00.)
MANAGERS OF ELECTION
The following Managers of El
ection have been Appointed to
hold the Election at the various
precincts in the said County:
Ward 1.—H. D. Whitaker, Mar
ion Baxter, T. S. Humphries, man
agers. Voting at Police headq’rtrs.
Ward 2.—Mrs. W. Roy Anderson
Mrs. W. F. Partridge, Coke Dick-
ert, managers. Voting at Smith
Motor Company.
Ward 3 No. 1.—Henry T. Can
non, Mrs. Cyril Hutchinson, Mrs.
Tom Summer, managers. Voting
at Boundary Street school.
Ward 3 No. 2.—J. E. McConnell,
Rev. Horace Lindler, A. N. Greg
ory, managers. Voting at Mollohon
school.
Ward 4 No. 1.—Mrs. Ethel Fell
ers, Mrs. Elizabeth Wicker, Miss
Clara Bowers, managers. Voting
at Chamber of Commerce.
Ward 4 No. 2.—A. P. Parrott,
Miss Minnie Havird, Miss Corrie
Lee Havird, managers. Voting at
rear of Layton’s store.
Ward 5.—Eugene Shealy, Mrs.
O. S. Goree, Mrs. Fred Jones,
managers. Voting at Corley’s Bar
ber shop.
Ward 6.—Mrs. Nancy Copeland,
Mrs. Metts Fant, Mrs. Dave Hayes,
managers. Voting at W. H. Davis
and son office.
Bush River.—F. M. Satterwhite,
W. M. Buford, Hugh M. Kolb,
managers. Voting at Bush River
school house.
Central.—Mrs. L. D. Aull, E H.
Koon, Mrs. E. S. Shealy, Managers.
Voting at Central School.
Chappells.—R. D. Marrett, I. Q.
Watkins, J. J. Boazman, managers.
Voting at Werts Service Station.
Dominick.—H. T. Oxner, J. H.
Wallenzine, H. E. Brehmer, man
agers. Voting at J. H. Wallenzine’s
store.
Fairview.—Herbert Fulmer, Col
ie Mills, Floyd Martin, managers.
Voting at Fairview school.
Garmany.—William Hentz, Mrs.
Vinhie Kate Price, Mrs. T. R.
Crooks, managers. Voting at
Crook’s Store. ,
Hartford.—H. L. Shealy, W. B.
Goggans, J. W. Cromer, managers.
Voting at Hartford School.
Helena.—A. T. Attaway, Mrs.
Nellie Coats Davis, J. R. Wood,
managers.. Voting at J. R.
Wood’s home.
Jalapa.—Junius F. Long, John
Swittenberg, B. S. Derrick, man
agers. Voting at C. C. Wallace and
Sons store.
Johnstone.—John F. Banks, Jno.
R. Boozer, Mrs. Rosine Willard,
managers. Voting at Newberry
Animal Hospital.
Jolly Street.—G. I. Kinard, T. L.
Boinest, L. H. Kingsmore, mana
gers. Voting at Jolly Street school
house.
Kinards.—W. D. Boozer, J. J.
Johnson, G. W. Johnson, manag
ers. Voting at Johnson's store.
Little Mountain.—Mrs. Robert
Shealy, Maloy Wheeler, Claude
Clark, managers. Voting at Dr.
Sease’ office.
'Longshore.—Henry Dorroh, W.
O. Senn, Horace L. Boozer, Sr.,
managers. Voting at Neel Broth
ers store.
Beth Eden (Long Lane)—Lee
Hargrove, J. G. Glenn, Mrs. J. H.
Phibbs, managers. Voting at Beth
Eden School House.
Maybinton.—A. H. May bin, Jno.
Hardy, Bannie Cathcart, manag
ers. Voting at T. W. Henderson’s
store.
Midway. — Horace Richardson,
Berley Boland, Clarence Counts,
managers. Voting at Horace Rich
ardson’s store.
Mt. Bethel.—Lang Alewine, Hor
ace Cromer, Furman Epps, man
agers. Voting at Mt. Bethel-Gar-
many school.
Mt. Pleasant. — John William
Smith, J. T. Gilliam, Mrs. Pauline
Adams, managers.. Voting at Mt.
Pleasant school house.
Mulberry.—Oscar Graham, How
ard Boland, Arthur Felker, mana
gers. Voting at Oscar Graham’s
house.
Oakland.—Oscar Attawty, C. J.
Swindler, Andy Bowen, managers.
Voting at Oakland Parking lot.
O'Neal No. 1.—F. O. Koon, Noah
A. Moore, J. H. White, managers.
Voting at Mt. Olivet church.
O’Neal No. 2.—R. M. Monts, J
P. Fellers, J. F. Dawkins, mana
gers. Voting at O’ Neal School.
Peak.—Joe E. Mayer, H. L. Su
ber, J. Clarence Miller, managers
Voting at Town Hall.
Pomaria.—L. A. Mayer, T. H
Shealy, E. O. Stuck, managers
Voting at Town Hall.
Prosperity No. 1.—B. T. Young
C. F. Saner, Asbury, Bedenbaugh
managers. Voting at Town Hall.
Prosperity No. 2.—M. S. Taylor,
Mrs. Lucile Hancock, Mrs. Colie
Wessinger, managers. Voting at
Shealy Motor Co. show room.
Saluda No. 7.—-C. S. Fellers,
James Sanders, John Kunkle, man
agers. Voting at Kunkle’s store.
Silverstreet.—T. B. Boozer, Har
old Bowers, J. M. Alewine, mana
gers. Voting at Silverstreet High
School gymnasium.
Stoney Hill.—Heber Leaphart,
Raymond Lester, Hoyt Morris,
managers. Voting at Stoney Hill
school house.
St. Paul's.—C. H. Epting, N. C.
Wicker, L. B. Bedenbaugh, mana
gers. Voting at St. Pauls.
St. Philips.—M. E. Enlow, John
D. Koon, Perry Halfacre, mana
gers. Voting at St. Philips school
house.
Trinity.—J. H. Dickert, Henry
Hendrix, Ralph A. Martin, mana
gers. Voting at Trinity church.
Union.—George S. Enlow, M. L.
Long, J. C. Kinard, managers.
Voting at Union school house.
Utopia.—Ernest P. Derrick, Geo.
Blair, E. O. Lake, managers. Vot
ing at Ernest Derrick’s.
Vaughnville.—Frank B. Stewart,
Wilbur Salter, Pressley N. Boozer,
managers. Voting at the Workman
house on Gettys Coats place.
Walton.—George Hentz, Mrs.
John Parrott, M. B. Crooks, man
agers. Voting at Mrs. Pauline
Crooks’ home.
Wheeland.—J. Q. Metts, Ned
Boland, C. C. Fulmer, managers.
Voting at Wheeland school house.
Whitmire No. 1—T. J. Abrams,
Dewey M. Abrams, R. C. Lake, Sr.,
managers. Voting at City Hall. ^
Whitmire No. 2.—S. C. Young,
W. H. Miller, J. W. Gary, mana
gers. Voting at Y building.
Zion.—Forest Lee Graham, J. L.
Ringer, Mrs. J. B. Eargle, manag
ers. Voting at Zion school house.
Managers may secure the
boxes Saturday, November 1
at the County Court House.
JOHN A. MAYER
EUGENE H. SPEARMAN
BEN H. CALDWELL
Commissioners of Election For
Newberry County, S. C.
24th October 1952.
■ —■ - -
FARMS AND FOLKS
By J. M. ELEAZER
Clemaon Extension Information Specialist
RICE COMING BACK
Our once vast rice industry was
a product of slavery. When slavery
went, it was staggered. Then
later it went with a storm that
broke the dikes and salted the
fields. : ' .
Now for a half century, the rice
lands have been growing back
into thw jungle and marsh from
which they were hewn by slaves.
And the gator, the duck, the coon,
and the marsh hen again took
over their old domain there.
In very late years men have
been toying with the idea of bring
ing rice back to the rich muck
lands that have slept for over a
generation beneath the enriching
jungle. M. L. McLeod of Ravenel
was the first one I saw doing that.
Ten years ago he had modern
mechanical monsters in the^e sub-
ducing large areas on which he
has since been growing rice. And
several others have been trying
their hand at it too.
The whole movement received
great impetus when some Texas
rice growers came there last year
and tried out a considerable acre
age to rice. It did well, and this
year there is over 1,500 acres of
fine rice down there. When I
visited Colleton with County Agent
Alford they were combining 56
bushels per acre from the field we
saw them harvesting. And the
Texans told us that this was good
rice.
A modern rice mill is being con
structed at Green Pond. And up-
to-date drying and storage facilit
ies are now provided at Estill.
C. E. Lloyd, agricultural agent
with the Seaboard Railroad, has
worked on this project a lot. He
told me that the outlook was for
10,000 acres of rice down theye
B C D i . 2-3
YOU CANN0W MAKE
//nu yion urttk
DURO DECAL
Transfer Letters
and Numbers
DOORS WINDOWS TRUCKS etc.
-WILL STICK ON ANYTHING
•LAST A LIFETIME
•EASILY APPLIED
• MADE IN 8 SIZES FROM V TO SV
VERY /HEXPENS/VE
The Sun Office
next year; and that there are 100,-
000 acres of those old fertile rice
fields awaiting their turn to go
back into production.
£ ' l ' ' ' . *
Change, change, the constancy
of change!
Here a great industry, that ad
vanced on the bare feet. of slaves,
gradually died when slavery went.
Now we see it coming back on
the powerful pneumatic wheels of
mechanization.
CATTLE OILER
Beh Seymour, a colored man on
the C. P. Key farm down in Colle
ton, got’ tired of helping get the
herd of. beef cattle up and spray
them against flies. So he put his
head to work and devised an eas
ier way.
Mr. Key has the standing offer
to the folks on his farm that if
they devise a better way of do
ing a farm chore they wiil get a
cash award. So Ben got his for
this.
He took an old rusty steel cable
that had been lying there in the
bushes since it was used for pull
ing stumps years before. It was
securely tied to two trees there
in the shade where the cattle con
gregated and got salt. It was
tied about 4 feet from the ground
on the trees and sagged at the
center to about two feet off the
ground. On it he wired a big roll
of burlap sacks, about 6 inches
through. These he soaked with
old used oil in which he put the
fly poison.
The cattle immediately took to
rubbing on it. They would get
under the high parts and get the
material rubbed on their backs.
And they would get astraddle it
at the low place and get the ma
terial all on their under parts too.
When I went by there with County
Agent Alford the cattle had used
it so much that the cable had
worn deep into the trees from the
constant movement. A costly
patent cattle oiler nearby had
been used little or none by these
same cattle. The idea in it look
ed plausible to folks, but not to
the cattle.
Soon after that a piece came out
in. a national farm magazine about
some research work in South Da
kota in which this same method
has beeh worked out as effective,
and a bulletin had been put out
describing it
Now, folks, there is a coinci
dence for you! That man on the
Key farm can’t even read; so he
couldn ? t have learned about what
South Dakota was doing, even if
it had been published before he
made his simple effective arrange
ment.
They just pour more material
on the burlap as needed. Mr. Key
m
■mm
FOR HIS MEMORY BOOK . . . Emotions from apprehension to curiosity to flee are mirrored on the
faces of these Korean children as they pose for the camera of an American sailor at Inchon. Little girl
at left is carrying baby brother in approved Korean manner.
BOYS ARE
THAT WAY
By J. M. ELEAZER
Adding Machine Paper
Mimeograph Paper
THE SUN OFFICE
Mrs. Helen Kibler announces
her intentions to apply to
the tax commission for a
transfer of license 841 to
new location at intersection
of Clinton Hwy. and Market
St. for purpose of operating
a retail liquor store in Whit
mire, S. C. 24-3tc.
just one grease, Sinclair
Litholine, you can lubricate
chassis, wheel bearings, water
pumps, universal joints...
of your car, truck or tractor...
winter or summer.
Farmers find it does a better
job at each lubrication point
than the '‘specialized 1 * greases
they formerly used.
FARM ADVANTAGES ot-o-gloiM:
1. A finer grease of every point.
2. Less danger of applying th# wrong greaso. v
3. Quicker greasing operations.
4. Smaller grease slocks -? one instead of 3 or 4.
5. Fewer grease-guns.
6. Less waste.
W« dillrtr direct to far,rt. Phone or wtif* vs.
*
Strother C. Paysinger
. - 7 . •
Suppliers of Sinclair Prod.
Newberry, S. C.
LITHOLINE
^LTI-PURPOSf
GREASE
About the hottest and most ag
gravated I ever got was plowing
old Frank on an August day In the
garden.
That is a bad place to plow at
best. In the short rows there it
seems you are always turning
turning around and the horse is
stepping -all over everything and
butting into the fence before you
get started good.
We had grown a patch of early
corn in that part of the garden,
ate the ears, and cut the stalks
and thrown them over the fence
for the milk cow. Rank grass and
weeds had sprung up there and
the corn stubbles were still in
the ground. It became my job to
break that piece of land up good
for a fall turnip patch.
For heavy plowing like that,
you need a steady mule, not a
fractious driving horse. But that
was all we had. We didn’t have a
mule. My daddy was the country
doctor, had two horses, and we
worked the one he wasn’t driv
ing.
Well sir, I aggravated along
with that task. As I got hotter
and yelled at old Frank and jerk-
said they needed a better way for
doing that to avoid waste. He
thought of trying a piece of hose
with holes in it lashed to the cable
before it was wrapped. That
could be carried on out and se
cured to a tree. With a funnel,
the material could be poured in
that and it could leak out in the
burlap roll, thus recharging it
from the center.
FIRST THINGS FIRST
Rural churches! Some are
dwindling. Others are thriving.
While riding with County Agent
Evans of Lexington the other day
I saw one of th^ latter. It was
in the rather bleak sandhills of
lower Lexington. All of a sudden
we came to a new 75,000 dollar
edifice right out there in the sand
hills. It was the Pond Branch
Methodist Church. Thrifty .hard
working folks had lately built it,
along with a nice new parsonage.
“Putting first things first,” I
thought, as I saw what small, hard
working farmers had done there
on lands where a less thrifty and
devoted people would have starv
ed.
ed him around with the line, he
got faster and faster,^ foaming
over most of his body. The plow
would choke up before going '10
feet. I’d yell “Woah” and he
wouldn’t stop. I’d turn the handles
loose and just fall backwards with
the line. That would yank his
head around and he’d continue to
walk around me In a circle, drag
ging the plow. I made such a
ruckus that my mother came down
there to see what was happen
ing. 1 was in a lather the same
as the horse and swore I was
J going to either quit or kill old
I Frank. She assured me I’d do
' neither. She proceeded to talk
gently to him and lead him a few
rounds. I eventually got that job
done.
But, man, both old Frank and
I were sure in a dither. I was
supposed to have more sense than
he did. But I didn’t show it that
day. I think the main trouble
was, I didn't want to fix that tur
nip patcl) in the first place,
of the other kids had gone
ming down in the creek.
... — IM
JUST ARRIVED IN THIS CITY—THE WOMAN WHO KNOWS
■■■■' Don’t Fail To See
MADAM MOORE
Not to be classed with Gypsies
Located in Studio Trailer College St. Ext
Near Whitener Lumber Co. Newberry, S. C.
LOOK FOR HAND SIGN
ft I |
k Mr*
&
This phychic palmist will amaze you vith her power. She
will bring about every desire and ambition of your entire life.
Cast off every fear and every obstacle that may be in your way.
/wvru
‘Migosh! I shoulda told Joe that Purcells sta^s open till 5 p.m.!’
‘More people swing over to Purcells daily
when it comes to borrowing money!”
Purcells
“Your Private Bankers”
1418 Main St Newberry
Sales ... BUICK
— AT— _
. Service
Gasque
Buick
Company
“Authorized-Dealer”
Factory Engineered Parts and Accessories
Factory Trained Mechanics
“The Post Office Is Across From Us”
Phone 1576 1305 Friend St. Newberry