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m PAGE EIGHT THE NEWBERRY SUN CLASSIFIED*^ ADS ELECTRIC MOTORS New-Used-RebuJlt Bought-Solc -Exchanged We repair all types Satisfaction Guaranteed Mann Electric Repair Co. 2329 Main St.. Columbia. S. C. PICNIC SUPPLIES — PAPER Plates, Spoons, and Forks, Drink ing Cups, Hot Cups with handles, Napkins, Paper Towels, Ice Cream Cones, also Deep Freeze supplies. R. DERRILL SMITH & SON,Inc. Pomaria Closing Exercises Sunday Commencement exercises for Pomaria school will begin on Sun day, May 20 at 8 p.m. with the' Rev. J. E. Roof, formerly a pastor of St. Paul’s Parish delivering the Baccalaureat ^sermon to the grad uating class. Rev. C. H. Stucke, a former pastor of St. Philips Luth eran church, will serve as Litur- gist. On Thursday evening, May 24, at 8 the graduation exercise will be held. James D. Browm, county superintendent of education, will present State high school diplom as to the following seniors: Jerry Alewine, Peggy Berley, Judy Bo land, Jacqueline Counts, Tobie Enlow, Donald Epting, Cecil Ful- Engineering Data Needed In Watershed Planning Wholesale Grocers, Newberry.^ ^ Evelyn Grahami Mae Lath ' rop, Lawrence Lever, Norma Liv- $400 MONTHLY SPARE TIME Refilling and collecting money from our five cent High Grade Nut machines in this area. No selling! To qualify for work you must have car, references, $640 cash, secured by inventory. Devot ing 6 hours a week to business, your end of percentage collections will net up to $400 monthly with very good possibilities of taking over full time. Income increasing accordingly. For interview, in clude phone in application. Write Eastern Distributing Co., 11 N. .Juniper Street, Philadelphia, 7, Penna. ingston, Virginia Piester, Martha Rawls, Robby Ruff, Berlin Stuck, Valeria Stuck, Edith Williamson. Kathy Ruff, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bates Ruff of Po maria, and Albert Shealy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Shealy of Prosperity, will be the class mas cots. Edith Williamson has been nam ed valedictorian of the ’56 class and Peggy Berley is salutotorian. Other speakers will be historian, Judy Boland; prophet, Mae Lath- rop; testator, Jacqueline Counts; and poet, Evelyn Graham. ENGINEER CHARLES VAUGHN with the Bush River Water shed survey party, determines elevation of land by use of a level, at a proposed damsite in the Bush River Community. Rush River is at the extreme upper right corner of the picture. The hill rising to the left of the river and extending some distance back makes this an ideal location for a dam. (Sunphoto by Doris A. Sanders.) SUMMONS FOR RELIEF State of South Carolina, County of Newberry. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS Walter Dudley Nobles, Plaintiff. Against Mabel Eugenia Fulmer Nobles Smith, Defendant. SUMMONS FOR RELIEF (Complaint Served) To the Defendant above named: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint in this action, of which a copy is herewith served upon you, and to Golden' Daughter Burial Monday Final rites for Nita Lynn, 11- month-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry S. Golden, who died early Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Stockman on Nance street, were conducted at 5:30 Monday after noon at McSwain Funeral Home by the Rev. Jamps A. Grigsby and the Rev. Harold Smith. Bur ial was in Newberry. She was born' in Anderson, where her father is the principal of Homeland Park Elementary serve a copy of your answer to; School. They have made their the said complaint on the subscri-• home in Anderson for the past m ber at his office, Exchange build ing, Newberry, South Carolina, within twenty days after the ser vice hereof, exclusive of the day Of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the Plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. R. AUBREY HARLEY, Attorney for the Plaintiff TO THE NON-RESIDENT DE FENDANT MABEL EUGENIA FULMER NOBLES SMITH: You will please take notice that the Summons and the Complaint herein were filed in the office of the Clerk of Court for Newberry county on May 8, 1956 and that the same are now there on file. R. AUBREY HARLEY Attorney for the Plaintiff 3-3tc. \ if mb - ■ ■ SHERIFF FINDS . . , (Continued from page 1) convictions in the future. Doc and his partners *have this record for the past year: 81 stills cut, each averaging about five barrels, 405 barrels; 20,250 gal lons of mash poured out. This amounts to a minimum of three gallons of liquor to the barrel, where the amount of sugar i s short and five or six gallons if enough sugar is used. Thirty- three persons were captured at the stills while they were in op eration, and 350 gallons of illegal liquor were confiscated either at stills or in the homes of boot leggers. Sheriff Fellers is proud of the record being made by his new detective along with his deputies, and is considering making Doc a permanent, honorary, but work ing member of his force. six years. Mrs. Golden is the former Miss Barnette Adams, of Newberry. She is survived by her parents, one brother, James Ernest Gold en, of the home; one sister, Har riett Marie Golden, of the home; the grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Olin Adams and Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Golden, and her great-grand father, W. E. Schumpert, all of Newberry. Mrs. Culclasure Rites Wednesday Mrs. Sarah Inez (Nellie) Cul clasure, 60, wife of L. R. Culcla sure, died Tuesday morning at Newberry County Memorial hos pital. She had been in declining health for the past eight years' and was seriously ill for the last several years. She was born and reared in Newberry, the daughter of the late Ed Franklin and Mrs. Mary Franklin Watkins. She was a member of Epting Memorial and and member of the Women’s mis sionary society. Surviving are her husband, L. R. Culclasure; two daughters, Miss Minnie Culclasure and Mrs. J. C. Griffin, both of Newberry; one half-sister, Mrs. S. H. Fuller, of Greenville; six half brothers^ J. E. Watkins of Trenton, N. J.’* George A. Watkins of Greenwood, Olin Watkins of Greer, Loyd-Wat- kins of Laurens, Curtis Watkins of Philadelphia, and W. E. Wat kins, with the Merchant Marine. Funeral services were conduct ed Wednesday afternoon from Epting Memorial church by Rev. E. R. Bradham and Rev. H. J. C. Lindler. Burial followed in the Newberry Memorial gardens. (During the past weeks. The Sun has published interviews with the leader, hydrologist, economist and geologist of the Bush River Watershed survey party. The final interview this week is with Charles Vaughn, engineer. News about the wat ershed will appear from time to time in The Sun as work on the survey progresses.—Ed.) Charles Vaughn, engineer, des cribes his duties with the Bush River Watershed survey party as follows: Directs the operations of sur vey parties in gathering basic en gineering data for use in develop ing practices to be included in watershed work plans such as flood water , retarding structures, channel improvemeat, roadside erosion control, drainage and irri gation. Responsible for work of others, supervising three to six aids mak ing basic engineering survey for structural and conservation meas ures; Helps design, plan and specify for floodwater and sediment con trol structure, channel improve ment, roadside erosion control and irrigation; Sets stakes for sediment and flood pool elevations on property; Maintains all data and field notes pertaining to surveys com pleted. The engineer’s first job is t o locate permanent bench marks along the watershed to determine the elevation above sea level. He then establishes a number of temporary benchmarks and after establishing the elevation, makes “cross sections.” These sections give the level of the streams, channel, and valley and, in con nection with other data, help the hydrologist in determining the amount of water the river at that particular point will accommodate with any given rainfall. Mr. Vaughn has compiled data on 80 cross sections in the Bush River watershed to date, and has set some 200 temporary bench marks for futrue use. Cross sections! are made at pro posed damsites to determine the number of cubic yards of dirt in the area. Additional cross sec tions are usually run at these points to find the storage capa city. There are two pool levels at each dam site; one a permanent pool, called a sediment pool, the other a flood pool, the amount of space necessary to take care of overflow' from the permanent pool. So that property owners may know what to expect, Mr. Vaughn places stakes on the land to sh.ow T the outline of the sedi ment pool and also the floodpool. The engineer estimates the cost of the dam, which is determined by the number of cubic yards of dirt which must be moved in or der to build the flood control structure. He makes surveys of road banks in the watershed and if they are eroded or barren, recommends planting of vegeta tion or other measures to prevent erosion. Mr. Vaughn stated that there are 15 miles of road banks in the watershed which need to be stabilized. The material compiled by the engineer in his surveys is used either directly or indirectly by all other members of the survey party. The economist has the final job; that of determining from all the information given him by other members of the party, whether the Bush River Water shed will be economically practi cal. The next step will be up to the supervisors of the Newberry County Soil Conservation District, who are sponsoring the water shed project, to decide along with the landowners i n the area, whether the watershed is worth the cost. Newberry Pupils Place High In Mental Contests The 1956 high school mental league contest conducted annual ly by the examining and counsel ing bureau of the University of South Carolina was held recently with the Newberry County stu dents listed below plcaing in the top 20 percent: Senior English: Jacqueline Crooks, Russell Aubrey Harley, Anna 'Coe Keitt, Sarah Claire Perdue, all of Newberry, and Cor nelia Angeline Riser, Richard Long Robinson and Clair Wil liams of Whitmire. Junior English: John Robert (Bobby) Davenport, Silverstreet; Mary Nance Huff, Whitmire; Car ol Ann Setzler and Rebecca Sue Wood, Newberry. Junior Algebra: Janie Lee Al exander, Whitmire and Robert Edward Livingston, Newberry. Senior Algebra: Russell Aub rey Harley, Roman Kolody, Sarah Olaire Perdue, William Randoplh Wright, Newberry; and Richard Long Robinson, Whitmire. Plane Geometry: Jacquelihe Crooks, Newberry. American History: Frances Eli zabeth Earhardt, Newberry. Armed Forces Day Saturday Armed Forces Day will be ob served in the city Saturday, May 19, and merchants are asked to display their flags, according to A. E. Morehead, president of the Chamber of Commerce. A display will be set up on the public square by the 228th AAA Group, and the 107th AAA Battalion, New berry units of the South Carolina National Guard. The 107th will display its M-19, tank with twin 40 millimeter guns and a radar set for tracking aircraft. The 228th will show the operation of the Rawin set, meteorological equipment, and will send up and track weather balloons. Other equipment of the two units will also be on display. Proclamation WHEREAS, May 14 through May 19 has been officially desi gnated National Cotton Week, and WHEREAS, cotton is the most widely used of all fibers, meeting approximately 70 percent of our domestic fiber requirements, and WHEREAS, cotton is the most versatile of all fibers with its qualities of comfort, strength, launderability and long wear, and WHEREAS, the cotton crop with its fiber and seed helps sup ply the three basic necessities of life — food, clothing, and shelter as well as hundreds of products which contribute to the high standard of American living, and WHEREAS, cotton is America’s most important crop, accounting for about one-fourth of, the total income from U. S. farm crops, CLOVER LEAF DRIVE-IN Theatre THURSDAY & FRIDAY Davy Crockett, King Of The Wild Frontier Fess Parker, Buddy Ebsen, Basil Rusydeal Added Color Cartoon. providing livelihood for some 14 million people and representing a total investment of nearly $20 billion, and WHEREAS, cotton and its pro ducts not only are important to the economic welfare of our coun try but also are essential to the maintenance of its industrial strength, now THEREFORE, I, Cecil E. Ki- nard. Mayor of the City of New berry, do hereby proclaim the week of May 14 through May 19 as COTTON WEEK in the City of Newberry, and call on my fel low citizens to join me in this tri bute to cotton and the cotton in dustry through increased use of cotton and cottonseed products. Cecil E. Kinard Mayor WE|§S Theatre THURSDAY Duel On The Mississippi Lex Barker and Patricia Medina Also a COLOR CARTOON SATURDAY Spy Chasers Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall, Lisa Davis Added Color Cartoon—Boo Ribbon SUNDAY & MONDAY Son Of Sinbad (In SuperScope and Color) Dale Robertson, Sally Forrest, Lili St. Cyr Added Color Cartoon—Dishes. FRIDAY & SATURDAY Outlaws Hold a Whole Town Hostage! Fury At Gunsight Pass David Brian & Neville Brand Also A COLOR CARTOON —and— “PERILS OF THE WILDER NESS” THURSDAY. MAY 17, 1956 Cotton Week Is Observed Here National Cotton Week opens its- second quarter century when the 26th observance of the event is held this May 13 to 19. Pick your cottons now — First choice for you and your home” is display materials for 1956. Feat- disply materials for 1956. Featur ing a stylized version of the historic Mississippi River steam boat, the posters also emphasize cotton’s summertime benefits — “naturally fresher, cooler, smar ter.” The first National Cotton Week was announced May 10, 1931, at a conference among Sec retary of Comn^erce Lament, Se cretary of Agriculture Hyde, and industry representatives in Wash ington, and the first observance washeld June 1 to'6 of that year. Since 1939, Cotton week has been sponsored by the National Cotton Council, central organisa tions of growers, ginners, ware housemen, merchants, spinners and cottonseed oil crushers — the six segments of the raw cotton industry. RITZ Theatre THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY James Cagney, Don Dubbins, Stephen McNalley, Irene Papas Tribute To A Bad Man (In CinemaScope and Color) Also Cartoon—Wolf Pardon. Late Show 10:30 Sat. Nite and MON., TUBS., WED. & THURSJ PICNIC William Holden, Kim Novak & Rosalind Russell Also—Walt Disneys “Chips Ahoy” Admission—10c & 50c this show ' only. MONDAY, TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY Gregory Peck, Jennifer Jones, . Fredric March The Man In The Grey Flannel Suit Also Cartoon—Rattled Rooster. SEARS kOEBUCK ANDCO 1956 Midsummer Prices reduced from now to Aug. 15 j'-.sC* Wtf r-v. > '.rX.; i SPECIAL Nice Voiles Regular $1.19 THIS WEEK END ONLY 98c Per Yd. Also a Nice Selection of other thin materials from— 49c, 69c to 79c per yard Newberry Fabric Shop 1217 Nance St. Newberry • /-V. U. S. Gallman To Be Honored v < “■ f V Ulysses S. Gallmanf retired Jeanes supervisor of Newberry county, will receive the honorary degree of Doctor of Pedogogy during the Morris collfege com mencement exercises on Wednes day, May 23, 1956, at 11 a.m. Mr. Gallman was born April 2, 1885 in Newberry. He was. grad uated from the Hodge graded school June 2, 1904, receiving - 2nd honor in a class of 15. In the autumn of 1904, Mr. Gallman entered South Carolina Agricultural and Mechanical col lege, Orangeburg where he re mained until his graduation in 1908. Later he was elected principal of the public school for negroes in Prosperity, which position he held until he was appointed sup ervisor of Negro schools in New berry county by the late Profes sor George D. Brown o£ the State department of education, then County Superintendent of Educa tion for Newberry county. Mr. Gallman held Jeans supervisor for 40 years, re tiring in 1935 after working with nine county superintendents of education. In connection with his work as supervisor, Mr. Gallman did special study at Hampton Insti tute, Tuskegee Institute, Clark University, and South Carolina State Agricultural and Mechani cal college. Mr. Gallman was the first president of the Jeanes Supervis ors Association of South Caroli na and organizer of the first Colored School Fair in 1913. He was also pioneer in the Rosenwald School -Building program. He served as a member of the Executive committee of the Palmetto Education Association for the third congressional dis trict, chairman of the Jeans tea chers at Hampton Institute Sum mer school, and steward of his church. The father of eight successful childien, Mr. Gallman has seen six of them receive college de grees. v One of Mr. GallftiaH’s most re cent honors was th^ naming oi the newly erected Newberry.,coun ty high school in his honor^ Gall man high school stands as a sym bol of respefct and appreciation for his* hard work and devotion to teaching. Mr. Gallmap attrib/utes his suc cess to hard work, faith in the people who cooperated with him while he was active in the teach ing profession. Poppy Day To Be Saturday, May 26 Members of the American Le gion Auxiliary, and boy and girl scouts of Newberry will sell Pop pies on Saturday, May 26 in New berry. The sale is sponsored by the Auxiliary each year. Poppies are made by disabled veterans in VA hospitals and profits from the sale are used to assist disab led veterans in Newberry County, and needy children of veterans, the position of The public is asked to cooper ate in this cause by buying a Poppy on Saturday, May 26. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Ruff and daughter, Mrs. Julia R. Smith, and Mrs. Charlie Ruff spent Sun day in Winnsboro. The J. H. Ruff’s and Mrs. Smith visited Mrs. Ruff’s sisters, Mrs. Eloise Morris and Mrs. Ray Hall, and Mrs. Charlie Ruff spent the day with her sister, Mrs. R. R. Mac- Fie. on Flag Be Donated At ceremonies to be held Tuesday, May 22, at 9:30 a. m., Tom Hayes, representative of Woodmen of the World, will pre sent a United States Flag to the Newberry County Court house to be used in front of the building. % You’ll want to see our BIG CATALOG of SEARS MIDSUMMER SALE VALUES. Big reductions have been made in practically every wanted item, and remember, THESE REDUCTIONS come RIGHT AT A TIME WHEN YOU NEED THESE ITEMS. Come in today and get your BIG SALE CATALOG and see for yourself the many, many values to be had. Literally Thousands Of Items Reduced KENMORE BRAZIER ELGIN OUTBOARD MOTORS ALUMINUM FOLDING CHAIRS MEN’S PUTTER PANTS BOATS LADIES’ CLOTHING — COLDSPOT AIR CONDITIONERS — WINDOW FANS — MEN’S SPORT SHIRTS — CHILPREN’S PLAY SHOES — CAMP SUPPLIES — ELECTRIC APPLIANCES Call 1702 Today! Sears Catalogue Sales Store 1211 Main Street Phone 1702 Newberry, S. C. 'jtsm ; -*vll • Vf-'-S | ■fJm m -ih m it:: .. m ■ v: '•..v ■ . ■■ v.', ,