The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, January 02, 1953, Image 6
PAGE SIX
THE NEWBERRY SUN
FRIDAY, JANUARY 2, 1953
\V in iNational Awards lor 4-H Kecords
H IGH RATING records of'achievement in the 1952 National 4-H
Achievement, Garden, Health Improvement, Meat Animal, Rec
reation and Rural Arts and Tractor Maintenance programs have won
*ix South Carolina club members top national honors. The winners
and their awards follow:
Billy B«iles Willie Rochester
BILLY JOE BAILES, 18, Un
ion, S. C., a national winner in
the 4-H Achievement program,
is a 9-year 4-H’er. He sells grade
A milk from 40 Guernseys. At
eight he bought a grade gilt. He
sold the sow and her first litter
for $65, then bought a Guernsey
calf. He added beef cattle and
poultry, and extended his graz
ing program. At local, state and
interstate fairs his Guernseys
•won several grand champion
ships. Billy Joe has been.a presi
dent of his club, county council,
and 4-H Dairy Calf Club.
WILLIE GRACE ROCHES
TER, 17, of Walhalla, S. C., a
national winner in the 1952 4-H
Garden program, kept a record
of her costs in 1949 on two acres
of garden for the state market
growing, contest. Seeds and
plants cost $5.65, fertilizer $5.07,
sprays and dust $1.07, hired la*
bor $4.00 and cost of fitting the
seed bed $2.00, for a total of
$18.42. Income was put at
$189.94.
EARLINE PAGE, 19, Lake
View, S. C., improved herself in
17 wavs telling about it in a 4-H
radio broadcast. She made health
posters for exhibits and dem
onstrated “Good Health Habits.”
In addition to her all expense
tr*p to the National 4-H Club
Congress, she received a $100
Savings Bond from Kellogg Co.
of Battle Creek, Mich.
CHARLES F. MARSHALL,
19, Sumter, S. C., a national win
ner in the 4-H Meat Animal pro
gram, tried hard for years to
produce a champion. In his eighth
year in 4-H, his Hereford calf
was champion in both the junior
and open class at the Florence
fair. He carried out of the ring
a trophy, two purple and two
choice ribbons, and $37.50 in
Earline Page Charles Marshall
Nancy Williams James Hill, Jr.
prize money. The calf weighed
1260 pounds and sold for 70 cents
a pound. He closed the year with
six Hereford cows, three steers
and 46 hogs.
NANCY WILLIAMS, 20, of
Ruffin, S. C., a national winner
in 4-H Recreation and Rural Arts
program, started her career as
a recreation leader when made
program chairman of her club
at 12. As president of her school
senior club she helped organize
a recreation council and subse
quently served the state 4-H
council meeting in training song
leaders. She planned and led
daily song periods for the 1952
State 4-H Conservation Camp
and at three district achievement
meetings. For her national award
record, U. S. Rubber Company
provided a trip to Chicago Club
Congress.
JAMES RILEY HILL, JR., 17,
Abbeville, S. C., a national win
ner in 4-H Tractor Maintenance
program, says that a new trac
tor bought in 1950 turned James'
interest to tractor maintenance.
As he and his brother were the
ones to operate and care for the
tractor, he felt it was his respon
sibility to learn all he could
about proper maintenance, so this
year James kept over 300 hours
of service records on his tractor.
In addition to an all-expense trip to the Chicago Club congress,
the following 4-H’ers received a $300 college scholarship. Billy Bailes,
Achievement, Ford Motor Company; Willie Rochester, Garden, Allis-
Chalmers; Charles Marshall, Meat Animal, Thos. E. Wilson; and
James Hill, Tractor Maintenance, American Oil Co.
These programs are under the direction of the Cooperative Exten
sion Service.
ORDER FROM THIS
NEW CATALOG...
w
✓ Gigantic White Goods Sale
eat Family Shoe Sale
Winter Hardware Sale
Jl&Sale of Unpointed
IFvmittfre
■ ■: •X'X\V . .''x-'-'' ■
> e# Bras and Corsets
t% of Curtains and
jDhrdpas '
‘ V Cut Frice Sale on Tires
✓ Sale of Home Appliances
and Many Others
PHONE 911 •
if you cant visit us to check
this now Catalog. Our Cata
log exports will explain how
you can Catalog-Shop by
FiP
mm
III.
(xvX Phono. It's easy!
Nttv:*.
Sears regular catalog prices are al
ways (ow . . . but in this new sales
catalog, our Merchandise Department
Managers have shattered records in
value-giving! They’re bargains you’ll
recognize immediately and stock up
with for months to come.
Come in . . . see this new book with
more than 5000 price cuts and con
vince yourself that you can save many
dollars by buying thru this catalog,
nearly everything you need for your
self, your family, your home, farm or
automobile.
You Don’t Need All Cash . ..
Buy the things you need now at these
extra-low Midwinter Sale prices and
pay for them later ... on Sears Easy
Payment Plan. All catalog purchases
that total $20 or more can be made
this easy way. Drop in at our Catalog
Sales Department and let us show
you how easy and satisfying it is to
buy and save the Catalog way.
State Spending
Near 165 Million
COLUMBIA, Dec. 29—Appro
priations will occupy their usual
No. 1 place on the legislative agen
da of the new 90th General As
sembly that convenes here Jan. 13.
Odds are that the money bill
will show state spending from all
sources of about $165 million.
About $145 million of this may
show in the appropriations bill the
assembly will enact. The rest will
come from certain earmarked
revenues and from federal aid.
Such a budget would be In line
with this year’s, which is pegged
to $104^ millions in state spend
ing shown in the money bill.
If requests from state agencies,
institutions and departments were
met, tho over all state budget
would be about $200 million.
The basis of the money bill will
b6 the Budget and Control Board’s
annual report and recommenda
tions, due to be made shortly be
fore the assembly meets.
Biggest pressure on the board
has been to recommend a general
pay increase for state employees,
including public school teachers.
The employes have asked for 20
per cent, and the teachers are in
terested in varying increases that
will average between 20 and 30
per cent.
Public welfare wants more state
dollars for its joint federal-state
aid program.
RISERS RETURN FROM
SERVICE IN TOKYO
Maj. and Mrs. W. W. Riser, Jr.,
and two children, John and
Kathy, who returned to the States
on December 20th from Tokyo,
Japan, are visiting Mrs. Riser’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Clary
on Wheeler street. Major Riser
was in Japan for three years.
Mrs. Riser joined him there 18
months ago and three-month old
Kathy was born there. At the
termination of Major Riser’s leave,
he will report to Maxwell Field,
Montgomery, Ala.
STATE DEATH TOLL
FOR '52 NEAR 800
COLUMBIA, Dec. 29 — South
Carolina’s 1952 highway death toll
neared the 800 mark today.
With two days to go, the fatal
ity total stood at 790 after 17 road
deaths were reported for the four
day Christmas holiday.
The Highway Department has
yet to announce an official com
pilation of the deaths beyond Dec.
20, when the year’s total was 773.
Some additional deaths not
counted in the Christmas holiday
period have occurred.
The official total to Dec. 20 last
year was 706.
In the Book oj
Time, may the
page headed
1933 be written
large as one of
your very hap
piest!
CAPITAL LIFE AND HEALTH
INSURANCE COMPANY
"Founded on Faith—Dedicated to Service"
Martin Seymore
Martin Luther Seymore, 56, died
early Monday morning at his resi
dence near Whitmire after a lin
gering illness. v
Mr. Seymore was born near
Prosperity and was the son of the
late Bob and Texanna Wicker Sey
more. He was a member of
Bethesda Baptist church and was
a carpenter by trade. He was a
veteran of World War I.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs.
Anna Rochester Seymore; two
sons, R. Russell Seymore and M.
L. Seymore; two daughters, Mrs.
Frank Alexander and Mrs. Fred
Shields; one brother, Benjamin
Tillman Seymore, and three grand
children, all of Whitmire.
Funeral services were conduct
ed at 3:30 .p.m. Tuesday afternoon
from the Bethesda Baptist church
by the Rev. Toy T. Waddell and
the Rev. Gilliam Johnson. Inter
ment followed at Lee cemetery.
G ENERAL Douglas MacArthur’s
proclamation before the NAM
that he has an almost bloodless
plan to end the Korean war was
a grandstand play—even though he
has such a plan.
He should have consulted with
the Chiefs of Staff without a pub
lic drum beating. Or better, he
should have forgotten his pride
for the sake of his country and
submitted his plan quietly to Ike.
If it is workable, Ike’s sharp eye
in military affairs would have rec
ognized its worth at once.
Mac owes it to America to put
the knowledge he has gained from
long experience at the disposal
of his country instead of letting
his vanity hold out until he is per
suaded to give advice. Instead the
general has flown the colors of pa
triotism high while allowing his
ego and senile petulance to blind
him to true meaning of patriotism.
His flamboyant gesturing has re
fused to fade way, but unless this
new plan of his is of any value,
his usefulness to this nation has
faded long ago. He should stick
to military bombing, not political.
His wounded pride is driving him
to try to blast the roof off the GOP
tepee.
Ike’s willingness to give Mac’s
suggestions the benefit of consider
ation was hardly big-heartedness
It would be bad politics for Ike to
ignore the mighty MacArthur leg
end that has grown in this country
and throw Mac’s plan in the waste
basket. If shunned, Mac would as
sume the attitude of a martyr
He’s a good enough actor to con
vince many people that he has
been wronged.
Anyway, Dee needs a few plans
COLUMBIA, 8. C.
NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS
MEETING
Notice is hereby given of a meet
ing of the stockholders of Bergen
Clothing Company, Inc., to be
held at the office of the company
1202 Caldwell street on the 12th
day of January, 1953 at 9 o’clock
a.m. for the purpose of dissolving
the corporation and attending such
other business as may be neces
sary.
Earl Bergen,
Roy Clary
S. W. Epting,
32- 3tc Incorporators
AUDITOR’S 1953 TAX
ASSESSMENT NOTICE
I, or an authorized agent, will
be at the following places on
the dates given below for the
purpose of taking tax returns
on all personal property, new
buildings and real estate
transfers. Persons owning
property in more than one
tax district must make re
turns for each district.
All able bodied male citizens
between the ages of twenty-
one and sixty are liable to
$1.00 poll tax.
WHITMIRE
City Hall, Friday, January 2,
1953.
Aragon-Baldwin Mill, Monday
and Tuesday, January 5 and 6,
1953.
G. M. & R. E. NEEL STORE
Wednesday, January 7, 1953,
from 9 until 12.
SILVERSTREET
Wednesday, January 7, 1953,
from 2 until 5.
CHAPPELLS
Thursday, January 8, 1953.
HOLLINGSWORTH’S STORE
Friday, January 9, 1953, from
9 until 12.
KINARDS
Friday, January 9, 1953, from 2
until 5.
PROSPERITY
Monday, January 12, 1953.
ST. LUKE’S
Tuesday, January 13, 1953, from
9 until 12.
O'NEALL
Tuesday, January 13, 1953, from
2 until 5.
LITTLE MOUNTAIN
Wednesday, January 14, 1953.
PEAK
Thursday, January 15, 1953.
POMARIA
Friday, January 16, 1953.
JAMES HOMER CROOKS STORE
Monday, January 19, 1953, from
9 until 12.
A. E. & R. E. REESE STORE
Monday, January 19, 1953, from
2 until 5.
At Auditor’s Office to
March 1st, after which a
penalty of 10 per cent will be
added.
PINCKNEY N. ABRAMS
Auditor Newberry County
33- lltc
LISTEN. PAW/
SOMEBODY !5
THE^RADIO/
I COULp USE SOME C .~tSTMAS~ H f 71 TWOLi6HT>
SHOPPING MONEY, CAD-HOW ITOOiPSVI VOU SAVED
ABOUT 525 1 MUXTura FROM VOIR
WAIT A =■=^-7/ ALLOWANCE,
ALL YEAR LONG
FOR CHRISTMAS
fcBUVIN&[
DID, AND IT
AMOUNTED TO
JUST WHAT I'M
ASKING FOR
525!
JEEPER5, MERVIN, LOOK AT
THE CROWD AT THAT SALE
COUNTER! IU BE ALL DAY
GETTING WAITED r
^ ON!
MAYOR McGUP By John Jarvis
THE BAFFLES
By Mahoney
MAYOR, WE'D LIKE TO
> RUN A SERIES OF •
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES
OF OUR LEADING CITIZENS.
THE BAFFLES
By Mahoney
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