The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, April 09, 1959, Image 4

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v ;j - PAGE FOUR THE NEWBERRY SUN THURSDAY, APRIL 9, 1959 Hospital Patients Heyward V. Aughtry, 1409 Jef ferson St. Mrs. Agnes Bledsoe, lit. 4, Sa luda. Mrs. Ida Baker, 639 Main St. Edson J. Catlin, 2310 Main St. Ray H. Crooks, Rt. 2, Poraaria. Miss Tommie Sue Duckett, Rt. 1, Silverstreet. Derrill Darby, 820 Boundary St. Jarrett J. Frier, Rt. 1, Whit mire. Miss Wanda Faye Giles, Spring- hill Apts. Mrs. Alfreida Hendrix, Rt. 3. Miss Annie Knotts, Prosperity. Miss Dianne Lunsford, Carol Ct. Apts., B-3. Mrs. Lula Langford, 603 Bound ary St. Mrs. Betty McGill, 1134 Hunt St. Mrs. Julia Fay McSwain and Baby Girl, 1214 Walnut St. William Milam, 1314 Glenn St. Mrs. Euna Mize, Rt. 1. Mrs. Estelle Marlowe, 1519 Harrington St. Mrs. Rubye Nance, 1414 Cole man Ave., Whitmire. Mrs. Ola E. Riser, Rt. 2, Kin- «rds. Joseph Tinsley, Rt. 2. Mrs. Alice Westmoreland, 2101 Ola St. Fred Jennings Sr., 706 Broome St., Whitmire. Mrs .Katie Ammons, 1600 Main St. Mrs. Alma Herndon, 2023 Mont gomery St. Thomas Virgil Cromer, Rt. 1, Pomaria. Malcolm F. Carter, Rt. 1. Mrs. Lillie Rodelsperger, 1730 Hutto Ave. Mst. Von Dennis, Rt. 2, Pros perity. Mrs. Margaret Roland, 45-L Springhill Apts. Mrs. Sayra Nichols, 2301 Henry Mrs. Hazel Gilfillan, Rt. 3, Box 52. Mrs. Annie Laurie Sutherland, 2006 Luther St. Edna Mae Boyd and Baby Boy, 225 Werts Ave. Bernard Brooks, Rt. 3, Prosper ity. Babv Mildred Blair, Rt. 3, Box 94. George Caldwell, 314 Boundary St. Thomas Johnson, 129 Duckett Ave., Whitmire. Norma Jean Mayer, Pomaria. Mary Elizabeth Miller, Rt. 4, David Sease Rikard, 1508 Kin- ard St. MILLS CLINIC PATIENTS Little Mike Dowd, Prosperity. Mrs. Francis Epting, Newberry. Mrs. Laura Eargle, Chapin. Mrs. Nettie Mills, Prosperity. Mrs. Vesta Metts, Prosperity. Mrs, Reba Lindler, Newberry. Cancer Drive Is Underway The American Cancer * Society Crusade is not just a drive for funds, Mrs. Myra Addy, publicity chairman of the Newberry unit, said today. “To knock out cancer we will need a ‘one-two’ punch,” she said. “The number one goal of the Crusade,” she explained, “is to save one out of two of those who develop cancer. That is the numb er who could be saved by broad application of present knowledge and skills instead of one out of three we are now saving. “The second target of the Cru sade is for funds urgently needed to step up the Society’s nation wide research program which of fers a promise of solving the can cer problem. That promise has never been as great as it is today. Until that final goal is reached we must apply every bit of know ledge and skill to saving lives to day.” “At least 1000 life-saving leaf lets will be given away in our house-to-house canvass her e,” Mi-s. Addy said. “The leaflets are designed to save lives that might otherwise be lost to America’s number two disease killer by alert ing those who receive them to the dangers of neglect and delay.” The American Cancer Society has a three-pronged program of research, education and service to patients in its all-out effort to conquer cancer. Mid-Carolina Music Groups To Perform The Mid-Carolina Band, under the direction of John Conover, will play for the Prosperity PTA meet ing tonight (Thursday) and for the Little Mountain PTA at its regular meeting Monday, April 13. Both meetings will be at 8 p.m. at the school auditorium. Miss Lynda Pugh, Mid-Carolina’s representa tive to the State Solo Contest at Winthrop College, will be cornet soloist. Mrs. Jenny lee Foster, who or ganized and directed the Mid-Caro lina High School Chorus this year, will present some of the best num bers the chorus has learned on fi nal concert of the year May 1 at 8 p.m. at the Mid-Carolina audi torium. Several high school pupils, including students of Mrs. Ruth Davis, Mid-Carolina’s piano teach er, will appear as soloist. Guest soloist will be William Brittain, first drummer with the University of South Carolina band. Band num bers wil include “God and Coun try Overture” by George Wingard, textured cotton brunchcoat trimmed with nylon lace Your most flattering fitted brunch . . . textured cotton with a soft finish that's cool as a breeze and never needs the hot breath of an iron. To wrap and tie, with a generous overlap, big pocket. V-back detail, traces the collar and comfort-cut sleeves with nylon lace. Pink or Aqua. Sizes 10-20, 38-44, l4l/ 2 -20l/ 2 . $5.98 Carpenters NEWBERRY. S C. Champion Paper To Dedicate Pilot Forest Karl R. Bendetson, Vice Presi dent, Pulp & Paper Manufactur ing, The Champion Paper & Fibre Co., Hamilton, Ohio, will be prin cipal speaker at the dedication of the Pilot Forest in Greenville County, to be held on the second annual southwide Pulp and Paper Day, April 14. Announcement of the dedication program was made by David W. M orison, of Newberry, county chairman for the Pilot Forest. The dedication will be held at the site of the Pilot Forest, which is located on the property of R. Ligon Garrison, near Piedmont, Mr. Morison said. “Pulp and Paper Day, which is being sponsored throughout the South by the Southern Pulpwood Conservation Association, will mark the dedication of 91 such Pi lot Forests in twelve southern states.” Mr. Morison explained. “The project is designed to pro vide permanent educational ex amples of proper forestry prac tices, thereby encouraging small landowners to grow more trees.” Mr. Morison said that The Champion Paper & Fibre Com pany of Newberry, and Canton, N. C., is doing a complete forestry job on the Garrison property, in cluding planting, thinning, hard wood management, hardwood con trol, kudzu and honeysuckle con trol, and wildlife food plantings. “If all undeveloped timberland in Greenville County were brought into full production, the effect would be the same a substan tial new industry here,” Mr. Mori son said. It is estimated that over 125 people will attend the Pilot' Forest dedication on Pulp and Paper Day, he concluded. Also to be included on the pro gram, in addition to Mr. Bendet- sen’s talk, will be the following discussions: Does Tree Farming Pay the Farmer? by Joe Douthit, a farm er; Proper Land Usage by Hernias Grenade, Soil Conservation Ser vice; Thinning and Conservation to Loblolly Pine by Dave Morison; Planting Pines and Fire Protec tion, L. M. Duke, S. C. Commission of Forestry; Hardwood Manage ment, Joe Youorski, of Champion; Hardwood Control, by Sam Mar- but, extension forester; Honey suckle and Kudzu Control, Joe Jones, Greenville County Agent. The introduction and summary will be by Tom Wynne, of Cham pion. Mr. Bendetsen will use as his subject: “Pilot Forest Points the Way.” (FHTNC) — Robert W. Luns ford, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Lunsford of College Street, com pleted recruit training Feb. 26 at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island. director of South Carolina’s top class “C” high school band at Clover. Also included will be sev eral arrangements by Mr. Cono ver. The public is cordially invited to hear each of these concerts. Tick ets for the final concert are being sold by members of the Mid-Caro lina high school band and may be purchased at the band office at Newberry high school. all new HEARING AID VfcHiTgL quality PREMIER Y_ \u only * New Styling! ★ 4 Powerful Transistors! * New Battery Saver Feature! FREE DEMONSTRATION' Ygm** -«> Living Sound HEARING AIDS BATTERIES for your Hearing Aid regardless of make . . can be bought at our store. STATE 4-H CITIZENSHIP WINNER GIVEN NATIONAL AWARD C L E M S O N, April 4. Robert Glymph, Newberry county, 1958 state 4-H club winner in citizen ship, has been named one of five boys in the nation to receive awards in the “Time of Your Life” Contest sponsored by the Elgin National Watch Company. As state citizenship winner, Ro bert won a trip to the National 4-H Club Congress in Chicago last fall. He won a gold wrist watch by writing a story of his trip en titled, “The 4-H Secret, What My Trip to National 4-H Club Con gress Means to Me.” His watch was recently delivered to him by J. O. Donkle, Newberry assistant county agent. Robert is now a freshman at the University of South Carolina and a page in the State Senate. He has been a member of the Po maria 4-H Club for 8 years. His club activities have centered around projects in soil and water conser vation; electricity; safety in the home, farm, and community; and leadership. He has served as an officer in his community, county, and dis trict clubs, and by talks, news writing, and other phases of pu blicity has helped to promote the 4-H club program. He has also been active in school, church, and community programs. Robert based his winning story on his conviction that the secret of 4-H club work is that it is a positive program designed to be constructive and helpful to young people as they try to improve themselves, their homes, communi ties, counties, and nation. > In commenting on his experi ence at the 4-H Club Congress, he says: “In that band of almost 1,500 young people of predomin antly rural background could be found the personification of the ideals of our American heritage. These youths, each with some thing in common with all the rest, gathered in Chicago from across the nation and many other coun tries. These young people were having the time of their lives, not as a reward for something they Attend State ADK Convention The Alpha Delta Kappa state convention was held in Charleston Saturday and Sunday. Attending from Newberry were Mrs. Frances Beck, Mrs. Ruby Abrams, Mrs. Naomi Epting, Miss Lorraine Paris and Mrs. Margaret Epps. While there, the group visited the Charleston Gardens, also a play, “Syllabub,” at the Dock St. Theater. They attended Sunday morning services at The Citadel Chapel. had had to do, but because of what they had done voluntarily in the way of making a better life for their families and communities. They sprang from the heart of American democracy, the freedom of rural areas, the farms and small towns of the nation. “I concluded that the ‘high vi sibility’ stressed at the congress, is the secret of successful 4-H club work. Because the young people I met at 4-H congress had aimed above and beyond the ordinary goals, helped me to reach this con clusion,” he adds. RITZ Theatre THURSDAY Spencer Tracy, Jeffry Hunter, Dianne Foster, Pat O’Brien The Last Hurrah Mrs. Merrill Burial Here Mrs. Angele Merrill, 36, wife of Sgt. Charles L. Merrill of Fair fax, Va., died Monday night at a hospital in Washington, D. C., af ter an illness of several years. Mrs. Merrill was born and rear ed in France. Since her marriage to Sgt. Merrill, who is a nephew of Mrs. T. H. Julian of Newoerry, she had become a citizen of the United States. She made her home with Mrs. Julian for almost a year after coming to the U. S. She was a member of Fairfax Baptist Church. Funeral services were conduct ed Thursday morning at Fairfax. The body will arrive in Newberry Friday morning and will be car ried to McSwain Funeral Home. Graveside services will be conduct ed Friday at 2 p. m. at Newberry Memorial Gardens by the Rev. Kenneth Wilson. The body will be at the funeral home. The family is at the home of Mrs. Julian on Glenn St. FRIDAY & SATURDAY Double Feature Program Marshall Thompson, Marla Landi, Robert Ayres, First Man Into Space Laurence Harvey, Dawn Addams, John Clements, The Silent Enemy MON., TUBS. & WED. Sandra Dee, Cliff Robertson, James Darren, Jo Morrow, The Four Preps, ii GIDGET” CLOVER LEAF DRIVE-IN Theatre FRIDAY & SATURDAY Creole Elvis Presley, Carolyn Jones, D^an Jagger, Added Color Cartoon-Houseful SUNDAY The Geisha Boy Jerry Lewis, Marie McDonald, Harry The Rabbit, Added Color Cartoon-Span TOf IT TURNER JEWELER FOR THE SPRING HOLIDAYS or just a weekend at the beach How about a visit to Jekyll Island? The weather’s ideal for most activities, and there’s plenty to keep you busy if you want to be. If you’d rather just relax and enjoy the natural beauty of Georgia’s Golden Isles, you couldn’t pick a nicer spot! . . . And for the finest in modern beach-front accommodations, make your reservation at The Wanderer , i Georgia’s Largest Resort Motel JEKYLL ISLAND, GA. 96 Family-Unit Apartments • Phone ME 8-2511 Don’t be disappointed . . . Make your vacation reservations now! Receives Letter Of Appreciation The following letter was re ceived by Chief Colie L.. Dowd from Jan J. Piper, executive Vice President of the South Carolina Restaurant Association, Inc., Co lumbia: Cashiers CJieck for $351.26 has been received for ‘Coffee Day’ for Newberry County. “Congratulations for a job ‘well done.’ 1959 will be the best ‘Coffee Day’ ever held in South Carolina. “Your outstanding work has certainly contributed to its suc cess. Fairview Church Has Revival Fairview Baptist Church will open a series of revival services Sunday, April 5, and continue ser vices daily at 7:30 p.m. through- Friday, April 10. The Reverend J. W. Spillers, pastor of Calvary Baptist Church of Clinton will be the visiting preacher. The Reverend Spillers has conducted many revival meet ings in South Carolina, North Ca rolina and in Florida. A cordial invitation is extend ed to the public by the pastor, Rev. T. B. Altman. Student From Silverstreet Is Show Chairman Dick Neel of Silverstreet, a stu dent at Clemson College, is serv ing as general chairman of the Clemson Little International, an nual spring showmanship and jud ging contests for Clemson agri cultural students and state 4-H and FFA high schoolers. The event is to be Saturday, April 18. Originated by the Block and Bridle Club, Clemson’s student animal husbandry organization, the one-day show will have a co sponsor this year for the first time. The Dairy Club, comprising dairy science students, will add a dairy judging contest to the after noon program, with its traditional livestock judging competition. Col lege freshmen, 4-H and FFA mem bers will compete in both events. The morning program will show fat lambs and sheep, Hampshire! gilts, Berkshire and Poland China! gilts, Hereford steers, Angus and Hereford heifers. A queen, yet to be selected, will! reign over all events at the R. F. Poole Agricultural Center. Assist- 1 ing chairman Neel in the arrange-' ments is assistant chairman, Tom my LeMaster of Gaffney. combat training at Fort Jackson. The 21-year-old soldier attend ed Newberry High School. Before entering the Army, he was em ployed by Firestone Retread Shop* Jacksonville, Fla. Boys In Service SCHWEINFURT, GERMANY (AHTNC)—Oline R. Alewine, sow of Mr. and Mrs. Bessie L. Alewine* Route 1, Pomaria, recently was promoted to specialist four in Germany, where he is a member of the 37th Armor. Specialist Alewine, a tank driv er in the armor’s Company D, en tered the Army in December 1957 and received basic combat train ing at Fort Jackson, S. C. He ar rived in Europe in July 1958. The 23-year-old soldier is a 1953 graduate of Little Mountain High School and was employed by the South Carolina State Highway Department in Newberry, before entering the Army. Drunks Keep Police Busy Sixty-nine arrests were made by the city police department during March, according to Police Chief Colie Dowd. The various charges, and number of persons arrested for same, are: Intoxication, 24; assault and battery, 11; no driver’s license, 1; failing to yield right of way, 2; improper turns, 1; driving too fast for conditions, 1; creating distur bance, 3; passing at intersection, 2; driving intoxicated, 2; driving under suspension, 1; reckless driv ing, 3; disorderly conduct, 1; no muffler, 1; defective brakes, 1; driving too close, 1; disregarding stop sign, 1; driving without lights, 1; nuisance, 1; speeding, 1; unlawful weapon, 1; resisting arrest, 1; storing illegal liquor, 1. §, WHITAKER FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE PHONE 270 Hipp Completes Officer Course FORT BLISS, TEX. (AHTNC)— Army 2d Lt. Joseph F. Hipp Jr., Newberry, recently completed the surface-to-air missile officer basic course at The Air Defense School, Fort Bliss, Tex. During the 27-weeks of instruc tion, Lieutenant Hipp received training in map reading, artillery survey and electronics and gained a thorough working knowledge of the capabilities of the Nike-Ajax missile. The 27-year-old officer is a 1949 graduate of Newberry High School and attended Clemson College. PERSONAL MENTION CAMP LEJEUNE, N. C. (FHTNC)—Magnus F. Wicker, constructionman ( Ccinstruction Battalion), USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Wicker and Durward K. Huffman, construction electrician’s mate third class (Construction Battalion), USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy O. Huffman, all of Little Mountain, are undergoing six- weeks training with mobile Con struction Battalion Six at the Ma rine Corps Base, Camp Lejune, N- C. The Rhode Island-based Sea- bee Battalion began its training; on Feb. 27. NAHA, Okinawa (FHTNC), Navy Lt. (jg) Thomas J. Kirk land son of Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Kirkland of 2106 Johnstone st.* artd husband of the former Miss Sara R. Warters of Knoxville* Tenh., is serving with Paired Squadron Four at Naha, Okinawa. He reported to Naha Feb. 21. Before entering the Navy in June 1953, Lt. Kirkland attended The Citadel. Mr. and Mrs. John H. Half acre spent the weekend in Pomaria with Mrs. Halfacre’s mother, Mrs. A. E. Epting. Mr. and Mrs. John G. Ross and daughters, Marcia and Laura of Charlotte spent Sunday with Mr. Ross’ mother, Mrs. Maude G. Ross and other relatives. Takes Training In Arkansas (AHTNC)—Army Pvt. Johnnie P. Livingston Jr., whose parents live at 2102 Charles st., completed eight weeks of advanced individual artillery training March 27 at Fort Chaffee, Ark. Livingston received experience in firing the 105 millimeter howitzer and was thoroughly indoctrinated in the responsibilities and duties of an artilleryman. He entered the Army ip Nov ember 1958 and received basic ELECTRIC MOTORS NEW ¥ JSED—REBUILT Bought, Sold, Exchanged We Repair All Types Satisfaction Guaranteed Mann Electric Repair Co. 2329 Main St. Cottfthia* S. G. FOR QUICK SALE to fishermen* one 27-ft. Lighthouse house trail er, sleeps four. Electric ice box* oil heater and gas cook stove- $300.00 if moved in 30 days. Cai» be seen above Brown Lumber Co.* Strother, S. C. J. B. Timmerman* Rt. 2, Box 23, Strothers, S. C. 48-3tp LOOK MEN—Is your job gone or in doubt? You can have your own permanent business as a Rawleigh Dealer. Write at once for particulars. Rawleigh’s* 'Dept. SCD-162-558-B, Richmond* Va. 49-4tp FL0RSHEM GIVES MESH NEW SMARTNESS Cool Comfort plus Handsome Styling! T. ROY SUMMER, INC. “THE MAN’S SHOP” CAROLINA METAL WORKS Sheet Metal - Heating - Air Conditioning COLLEGE ST. EXTN. TEL. 115 A. G. McCAUGHRIN, President & Treasurer. Save Where Your Savings Are Insured IT PAYS TO SAVE All funds invested here on or before April 10th receive full earnings from April 1st. Accounts are insured to $10,000 by Federal Savings and Loan In surance Corporation — an agency of the United States Govern ment. Building & Loan Association 1117 Boyce Street Newberry, S. C. The State Building Pinckney N. Abrams, Sec.-Treas. “ $3*3 • ^ ^88 41