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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1954. ' ———- Staple & Fancy Groceries finals Produce—Meats—Fish & Poultry Frozen Foods Friendly Super Mkt. Phone 517 for Home Delivery 1100 Main St. Joe Hipp, Prop. YOUR SPECIAL Christmas Cash Bonus t $2.00 FOR NEW CUSTOMERS We will pay you $24)0 in CASH when you open an account for $104)0 or more with ue. Please endorse when receiving your $2.00 LIMITED TIME ONLY—SO HURRY! SERVICE FINANCE CO. PHONE 1158 S. C. ALTMAN, Mgr. 1506 MAIN § A Laundry Service To Suit Your Needs Call 310 for pick up and delivery ser vice or save 20% for Cash & Carry DAMP WASH, first 15 lb - 60c Each additional lb - 05c HOUGH DRY, per lb. 06c Minimum Bundle - 50c Phone 310 for other prices One-Day Service on Request In by 10—out by 4 NEWBERRY STEAM LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING CO. 934 Main St. Newberry Phone 310 ONLY NEW 5-D PREMIUM GASOLENE HAS ALL 5! Some gasolenes have none of these features! Some gasolenes have some of these features! But only Cities Service 5-D Premium has them all! 1 ANTI-CARBON ! EXTRA-HIGH OCTANE ! ANTI-RUST UPPER- CYLINDER LUBRICANT i ANTI STALLING CITIES SERVICE FARMERS & FUEL GO. GEORGE W. MARTIN, Manager Wholesale Distributor CITIES SERVICE Petroleum Products Ssfcsvs EXCLUSIVE PAWSIENNE MILLINERY i -Mu -Mu u M-U e *aS Z 5 > . « Darling, quick! Run over to Purcell’s” ■:S.\ ■ - I.U mi Purcells is ready to lend money on any car to help you finance your needs. PURCELLS M Your Private Bankers’* 1418 Main St. . Newberry * THE NEWBERRY SUN ■■— SociarSecurity By MISS MARTHA F. PRESSLY (Mgr. Greenwood S. S. Office) Old age and survivors insurance rights will no longer be impaired or lost entirely due to a long per iod of total disability which pre vents a worker from engaging in any substantial gainful work. This provision, which is a part of the 1954 amendments to the social se curity law, is known at the dis ability “freeze” and it will pro tect present beneficiaries as well as persons retiring in the future. Present beneficiaries who were seriously disabled before they became 65, and who are still dis abled, may have their benefit amounts refigured with an exclu sion of their period of no earnings due to disability before they were 65. Those disabled persons who are not yet 65 may apply for a freeze which will protect their average monthly wage, on which future old age and survivors insurance benefits are based, and their in sured status. This provision does NOT involve the immediate pay ment of benefits to the disabled worker who is not ^et 65. In all cases, the disability must be med ically determinable. The disabled worker must have at least five years of covered em ployment or self-employment out of the ten years immediately be fore his disability. And one and a half of those five years must have been during the three years rigjit before his disability began: His disability can be either a physical or mental impairment. Disabled persons may apply for the “freeze” beginning January 1, 1955. The disabled person. Whether he is al ready receiving retirement bene fit checks or not, must be still dis abled at the time of application. A period of disability in the past from which the individual has re covered cannot be considered for the “freeze”. The disability must have lasted for at least six months before a period of disability can be established, and it must be ex pected to be of long and indefinite duration or to end in death. A per son whose disability extends for years into the past and who meets the work requirements described above, may have the “freeze” ap plied to his whole period of dis ablement if he applies before July 1957. After June 30, 1957, the ‘freeze” will be retroactive for only one year. A freeze will apply to a period of disability as long as it lasts, however, for social se curity purposes, no period of dis ability may begin after the work er is 65. July, 1955, is the first month in which a benefit refigur ed because of disability may be paid. PROSPERITY NEWS (Continued from page 2) The Columbia College contin gent, Misses Drucie and Jewel Connelly, Joy Thomas, and Doro thy Nell George are spending their Christmas holidays at their homes here. Miss Mary Langford, who is teaching in North Augusta, is spending the holiday season with her sister, Miss Susie Langford. Miss Joan Hawkins of Winthrop College is spending the Yule vaca tion with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Hawkins. Mary Elizabeth and Tommy Lof- tis of Charlotte, N. C. are spend ing the week with their grandpar ents, Mr. and Mrs. W#E. Taylor. Mrs. J. S. Wheeler is spending Christmas weekend with her daug- ter, Mrs) Murray Hughes, Jr., and Mr. Hughes in Lancaster. Mrs. Bernice D. Bjonerud of Wilmington, N. C., is spending the Christmas season with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Domin ick. Miss Katherine Counts of the Greensboro, N. C. School Faculty, is spending her holidays with her mother, Mrs. E. O. Counts. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Leaphart, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Bedenhaugh and their little daughter, Earlye, spent the weekend in Greenville as guests of Mr. and Mrs. David Lee. Mrs. H. P. Wicker spent Friday in Greenwood. Mrs. A. B. Hunt and Mrs. Fran ces Spotts attended the West-RI- ley wedding in Unioii Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Sykes and their two sons, Johnny and Steve are spending the Yule holidays with Mrs. Sykes’ parents in Lan caster and Mrs. Sykes’ parents in Raleigh, N. C. 1 NOTICE TO CREDITORS All persons having claims against the estate of Ella Williams deceased, are hereby notified to file the same, duly verified with the undersigned, and those indebt ed to said estate will please make payment likewise. Henry C. Holloway, Executor 33-3tc < and worlds of good cheer and happiness in abundance... that’s the Christmas wish we make to every one of you. WILLINGHAM BROS. GARAGE Greenville Cut-Off , Newberry, S. C. Dec. 10, 1954.