The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, January 28, 1954, Image 5
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THURSDAY, JANUARY 28, 1954
THE NEWBERRY SUN
PAGE FIVE
1 THE BAFFLES
By Mahoney |
m
•XvKIv-XvX
EXCUSE ME,SIR. I JUST NOTICED
YOUR PITIFUL FORI*. TM AN IN
STRUCTOR HERE AT THE ALLEYS
AND I COULD IMPROVE
YOUR SCORE.
BUT I
JUST
BOWLED
170/
MAYOR McGUP By John Jarvis
JUST AS A MATTER OP
CURIOSITY, HOW FAST
WILL THIS CAR GO ?
MAYOR, YOU OUGHTA
HAVE AN AUTO LIKE THIS.
IT DOES 130 MILES
PER HOUR AND IT ,
STOPS ON A DIME.
AND WHAT<S THIS GADGET?
7HAT<S THE PUTTY KNIFE
THAT SCRAPES YOU
OFF THE WINDSHIELD/
jWINTHROP COLLEGE AUDITORIUM
Tuesday FEBRUARY 2nd At 8:10 p.m.
— Ed Sullivan, N. Y. Raws
DIRECT FROM EUROPEAN TRIUMPHS!
cid Rtcord-Brtaking engagement en Broadway!
CHAS.E
GREEN
/^ese/irs
JOSE
GRECO
and hi)
SPANISH DANCE COMPANY
Admission—$3.00, $2.40, $1.20 (Tax included!):—Box Office opens Jan. 25
•Mail orders NOW and checks payable to A. M. GRAHA..I,
Winthrop College, Rock Hill, 3. C.
Telephone 2844
ANNOUNCING
THE RE-OPENING OF
JIM’S WATCH REPAIR
Due to illness it was necessary for me to be absent
from my office for a month. I am now ready to serve
you again with the same expert service as I have in
the past.
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
Watch, Clock and Lighter Repairs
Crystals fitted while you wait
%
Popular lines of watch bands
JAMES (JIM) CONNELLY
1221 Nance St. Newberry
Hospital Patients
Robert Lee Beaty, 1311 Milligan
St.
Mrs. McFall Bedenbaugh, Route
2, Prosperity.
J. B. Coward, Newberry.
E. O. Covan, Vincent St.
Lewis Davis, 1520^ Boundary
St.
Mrs. Frank DeVore, 1234 Cal
houn St.
Mrs. Edwin B. Dublin, 1102 Sin
clair Ave., Whitmire.
Mrs. W. E. Elmore, 1325 Pel
ham St.
Bedford Ensley, Sylvia, N. C.
Miss Janice Fields, 523 Duckett
St., Whitmire.
C. A. Force, 1518 Harrington St.
Mrs. Edgard Frick and Baby
Girl, Chapin.
W. L. Griffin, Kimbal House,
Digby St.
J. O. Havird, 1016 Main St.
Mr. H. H. Hendrix, Route 3,
Newberry.
Collie Hogge, 717 Wright St.
Baby Loretta Hopper, E 21 Carol
Court Apts.
Mrs. George Howard, Blairs.
Mrs. Eugene Hunter, Route 2,
Prosperity.
Mrs. Cornelia Joye, 3103 College
St.
Mrs. James King and Baby Girl,
Chapin.
Mrs. Sally Leopard, 617 Wright
St.
Miss Fannie McCaughrin, 1917A
Harper St.
Mrs. Sam Marlowe, 1519 Har
rington St.
Arthur Maybin, Route 2, Whit
mire.
Mrs. James D. Perry, 2110 Ade
laide St.
Mrs. Callie Quattlebaum, Route
3, Prosperity.
Mrs. Donald Shealy, 1724 Harp
er St.
Mrs. Tressie Shealy, Route 1,
Prosperity.
Mrs. Lillie Timmerman, College
Ave., Ext.
P. F. Turner, 414 Wright St.
Mrs. Callie Wilbanks, 1302
Broom St., Whitmire.
L. A. Wilson, 2123 Brown St.
COLORED PATIENTS
Charles E. Caldwell, Route 2,
Pomaria.
Hoad Cromer, Route 1, Pros
perity.
Baby Loraine Hawkins, Route
2, Prosperity.
Ethel Hipp, 1816 Lindsey St.
Dorothy Mae Hunter, 116 Y)uck-
ett Ave., Whitmire.
Addie Kinard, Box 50, Helena.
Hattie Kinard, Route 3, New
berry.
Jue Jordan Patterson, Route 1,
Saluda.
Lillian Summer, Little Moun
tain.
Margaret Wilson, Route 1,
Newberry.
Widow Of Regnery
Dies In Illinois
Mrs. William H. Regnery, widow
of William H. Regnery, died sud-i
denly last Sunday in Hinsdale,
111.
Mr. Regnery for nearly 50 years
president of Joanna estern Mills
Co., of which Joanna Cotton Mills
is an affiliate, died Jan. 16, 1954.
Funeral services were held
Tuesday at St. Jogues Catholic
Church in Hinsdale.
A son Walter Regnery, of New
berry and Joanna, vice-president
of Joanna Western Mills Co., and
executive officer of the Joanna
plant, left early Monday morning
for Hinsdale.
Last year, Mr. and Mrs. Regnery
observed their 50th wedding anni
versary and on that occasion, the
employees of Joanna Cotton Mills
presented them with a gold en
cased clock. The last visit of Mrs.
Regnery to Joanna was in 1952
when she accompanied her hus
band to receive a silver service,
the gift of Joanna employees, on
his approaching 75th birthday.
Before her marriage, Mrs. Reg
nery was Miss Frances Susan
Thrasher.
She is • survived by four sons,
William F., Fred L., and Henry,
all connected with the Chicago
plant, and Walter Regnery, Jo
anna; one daughter, Mrs. David C.
Meyers, Chicago, and 21 grand
children.
W. D. Nance Is
Dead In Florida
News was received in Newberry
last Friday morning of the death
of W. D. Nance, 59, who died in a
Tampa, Florida hospital Thursday
night from injuries he suffered
in an auto accident on Thursday
afternoon.
He was the son of the late Alma
Sease Nance and J. W. Nance,
formerly of Newberry.
Besides his widow he is sur
vived by two daughters, Mrs. Cur
ry Stephens and Miss Martha Ann
Nance of Tampa; two grandchil-
gren, and several cousins in New
berry county.
Funeral services were held in
Tampa Saturday morning.
Opportunity doesn*t knock so
often but temptation seems to
pound away every day.
POW RETURNS . . . Cpl. Claude
Batchelor, American Korea “hold
out” POW, who finally decided
to leave Re da. smiles on way to
Tokyo to Join his Japanese wife.
D. F. Dominick
Services Saturday
Funeral services for D. Frank
Dominick, 70, retired farmer of
the Sardis community of Saluda
Comity, who died at his home late
Thursday night, were conducted
from the Sardis Baptist Church
Saturday by the Rev. H. H.
Hoover and the Rev. H. B. White
of Saluda and the Rev. H. M.
Hodges of Irmo. Interment was in
the church cemetery.
Mr. Dominick moved to Saluda
County in 1912 and joined Sardis
Baptist Church and was for a num
ber of years a member of the
board of deacons and was active
in church and community affairs.
Mr. Dominick was a son of the
late John S. and Thompson Anne
Dawkins Dominick of Newberry
County.
Survivors include his widow,
Mrs. Alice Merchant Dominick of
Saluda County; four daughters,
Mrs. Vera Mae Corley and Mrs.
Mary Alice Herlong, both of Co
lumbia, Mrs. Mattie Lou Lake and
Mrs. Azubah Griffith, both of Sa
luda; two sons, John Frank and
Dudley W. Dominick, both of Sa
luda County; one sister, Miss
Aminee Dominick of Prosperity;
one brother, Dudley Dominick of
Prosperity; 15 grandchildren, and
two great-grandchildren.
Mrs. Sadie Peay
Rites Held Monday
Mrs. Sadie E. Peay, 65, widow of
Harold Peay, died Saturday night
at the home of her son, Davis H.
Peay, in Whitmire, after a long
period of declining health and a
serious illness of six months.
She was born in Augusta, Ga.,
but had lived in Whitmire most
of her life.
She is survived by two sons,
David H. Peay of Whitmire and
William E. Sargent of Union.
Funeral services were conduct
ed at 2 o’clock Monday from the
First Wesleyan Methodist Church
in Whitmire.
know your State
Peep&aThrills
Charter boats for deep-sea fish-
; ing are now available all along
the South Carolina coast. This
exciting marine sport, once en
joyed only by the wealthy, is to-
dfcy available to every sports
man. Its commercial develop
ment is just another example of
the resourcefulness of coastal res
idents.
In coastal South Carolina and
throughout the state, the United
States Brewers Foundation Di
vision Office works constantly to
encourage maintenance of whole
some conditions wherever beer
and ale are sold. As in other
states, the program calls for close
cooperation between law-en
forcement officers and beer licen
sees throughout South Carolina.
Beer belongs . .. enjoy it.
United States Brewers Foundation
South Carolina Div., Columbia, S.G
The beverage
of moderation
Milton Shealy
Dies Of Heart
Attack Friday
A. Milton Shealy, 66, of Little
Mountain, died suddenly of a heart
attack FYiday night at the home
of his danghter, Mrs. Richard E.
Surber, in Manning.
Mr. Shealy was born and rear
ed in Little Mountain, a son of
Jane Chapman Shealy and the
late Noah E. Shealy. He was a
member of Holy Trinity Lutheran
Church and a member of the Lit
tle Mountain Masonic Lodge. His
wife was Mrs. Alice Frick Shealy,
who died in 1949.
Surviving besides his mother are
one son, A. Fritz Shealy, Little
Mountain; two daughters, Mrs.
Margaret S. Hardeman, Charles
ton; a,nd Mrs. Surber, Manning;
four sisters, Mrs. George Eargle,
Little Mountain; Mrs. Forrest
Shealy, White Rock; Mrs. Earl
Lindler and Mrs. Frank Lowman,
both of Chapin; seven brothers,
Boyd and L. C., Chapin; Darr,
Thomasville, N. C.; H. O. Bain-
bridge, Md.; Fran, Raleigh, N. C.;
N. E., Columbia; and A1 Shealy,
Chester; and seven grandchildren.
Funeral services were conduct-,
ed Sunday at 3 p.m. at Holy Trin
ity Lutheran Church by Dr. L.
Grady Cooper. Burial followed in
die church cemetery.
Active pallbearers were J. C.
Lindler, N. E. Shealy, Carroll Ear
gle, J. W. Counts, Robert Shealy,
John Page.
Honorary pallbearers were mem
bers of the Men’s Sunday School
of the Men’s Sunday School of
Holy Trinity Lutheran Church.
Flower attendants were nieces.
Drayton Rutherford
Chapt Meets Tuesday
The February meeting of Dray
ton Rutherford chapter will be
held on the afternoon of Tuesday,
Feb. 2nd, at 3:30 in the home of
Mrs. Elmer Shealy with Mesdames
Briggs and fester as associate
hostesses.
Mrs. Holland Sligh will have
the program, the subject being
“The Part Women Are Playing in
Civil Defense and Patriotic Activit
ies.”
""■ssr
\
If all New Year’s resolutions
were laid end to end they wouldn’t
reach to the first of February.
Any rise of typo on any riso
RUBBER STAMP froin Ae
very •mnlleet »e the very
largest.
RUBBER
STAMPS raggedly built to
y*ar* anti years
at prices far
t-aras m ana see ns on any
RUBBER STAMP needs
that yon nay have. We also
* »ride selection of
MARKING DEVICES for
The Sim Office
MIDGET SUB . . . This two-man plastic submarine. 12 feet long
and weighing 155 pounds, operates by batteries or .oot pedals. It •
being manufactured in Los Angeles.
iv ip n l
HSFT&Pt ’if
38lfit«til> <<»
Jf a'gSSi# r P 'WPS 9 jWJ? S SSf
LAYING UNITS . . . One poultryman reduced the number of
broken eggs in a multiple-neat unit by replacing his regular equip
ment with units made by racking ordinary nail kegs in rows one
above another, as shown. Racks are constructed so that kegs
uniformly inclined at an ancle of about 39
YOU TOO
can get into the fight!
Si
Against That Dread Disease — Polio!
Containers
Have Been
Placed In
Conspicuous
Places All
Over Our
City. When
You See One
Of Them
Please Drop
Your Loose
Change In.
No Amount
Too, Large
And
None Is
Too Small.
Infantile
*
Paralysis
Knows No Color
Barriers, No Age,
—You
Or Your Child
May Be Next.
Help In The
Campaign ‘
Against Polio.
Make Your
Contribution
Soon. The March
Of Dimes Lasts
Thru
January
Give To The March of Dimes
Give Not Until It Hurts — Give Til It Helps
Presented In The Public Interest By
Newberry Federal Savings and
Loan Association
John F. Clarkson, President
J. K. Willingham, Secretary-Treasurer